VOL.101, No. 121
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE UNIVERSITY DAII KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1991
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'Hawks celebrate good times
UNITED NATIONS REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE WORLD ORGANIZATION FOR A FAIR EARTH
AUGUST 24, 1987
A student dives from a light fixture in front of Wescoe Hall. An estimated 25,000 people gathered Saturday night to celebrate Kansas' victory against North Carolina.
Patrick G. Brungardt/Special to the KANSAN
A reveler sips beer from a keg during the victory party on Jayhawk Boulevard on Saturday despite laws barring alcohol on campus.
25,000 fans migrate to campus after game for boulevard bash
By Sarah Davis
and Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writers
Within 10 minutes after the Jayhawk's victory Saturday, about 25,000 fans gathered on Jayhawk Boulevard for a little party.
Fans carrying beer bottles and toilet paper filled Wesco Beach. Some brought whistles or fireworks, but most were just content to shout, jumping and thrusting their fists in the air.
Those still arriving looked almost stunned that a celebration this huge could happen. But as they approached the epicenter, Wescoe Hall, reality hit: Kansas was in the championship game.
Meghan Birmingham, Overland Park freshman, said that she felt like nobody was a stranger that night.
"It's like everyone is your friend," she said. "On the way up here we were just screaming to everyone. There were eight to 10 people in the office of our pickup. If we win on him, it's going to be Armageddon."
Frank Loye, Chicago senior, was draped in toilet paper and clutched a blue-foam "No. 1" finger.
"It's such unity," he said. "No one has any harsh feelings toward anyone. It's all for one and for one. This is what college is all about."
ice treated 19 people for minor injury, mostly cuts from beer bottles, and one person was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Mullens said that instead of trying to halt all the minor infractions on the street, the police tried to see that did not get too far out of control.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the crowd, which he estimated at 25,000, was fairly well-behaved
"First of all, we are trying to keep people from getting hurt and from hurting others." he said.
But many strange events occurred under Saturday's new moon.
Students dove from light fixtures outside Wescoe into a crowd that usually caught them. One of the light fixture's plexiglass covers broke during the construction, and people rushed around him to grab souvenir pieces of the lamp.
Trees in front of Wesco swayed to the beat of songs played by the disc jockey, David Hull, Wichita junior. Up to 10 people branch to branches as they rocked the trees, bearing off paper wrap, branches to branches. By 8 p.m. the trees looked as if they had been attacked by a chain saw.
Spectators pointed at people shimmying up light and flag poles and shouted, "Go, go, go," until they made it to the top.
Hull, a Student Union Activities volunteer, said the crowd liked rap and rock 'n' roll songs the best. As if to prove him right, the crowd roared its approval to "You Shook Me All Night long" by AC/DC.
Douglas County Ambulance Serv
Whatever Hull played, the crowd seemed to find a way to shout "Go KU" to its beat. "We want Vegas," "KU-U U-" and "Let's go." Jayhawks' were among the less obscene chants the crowd shouted.
"This is great. We're going crazy," said Felipe Echeirvie, Medellin, Colombia, graduate student, while carrying a friend on his shoulders. "do that. I'm the hit (in South America). This is how to let of all your excitement."
Sid Goch, Lawrence resident, said he had collected more than 60 bags full of aluminum cans Saturday night. After the celebration of KU's 19th anniversary, the university recycled $1,000 worth of cans, which he donated to the Special Olympics
Brad Smith, Merriam senior, said Saturday's celebration was much sweeter than the one he was in after playing for the NCAA championship in 1988.
"This is so much better because we are a better team this year," said Smith, who painted his face crimson and wore a red celebration. "We're going all the way."
Dawn Pickett, Bonner Springs senior, said the team had given her the ultimate graduation present.
"I was here in 88 when they won," she said, clutching her bottle of champagne. "We came in winners, and we're going out winners."
More fan reaction Page 10
Celebration spawns glut of injuries hospital jam
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
As in any war zone, there were casualties.
The KU campus celebrator
Saturday night was described
by many as a war zone, as
the city is one of the few
flying beer, bottles and caps.
An ambulance was stationed between Snow and强壮halls to treat people injured on campus
Ingrid Hollrah, Overland Park senior, was one of the people treated at the ambulance
"A beer bottle just hit her in the head" said Steve McPhilliam. Leawood senior
Hollisa said the ambulance paramedics told her that she could go to Lawrence Memorial Hospital's emergency room to get stitches for the cut if she wanted to but that she should be prepared to wait. She decided not to.
"They're backed up at Lawrence Memorial," Holrlah said. "I have a small headache, but it's nothing."
The emergency room at the hospital was kept busy treating casualties of the celebration of the national day brought in by an ambulance.
Judith McFadden, director of community relations for the hospital, said 20 KU students were treated in the emergency room Saturday night. All of the injuries were minor.
A Life Flight helicopter flew one person from the hospital to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. The patient never was admitted to Lawrence Memorial's emergency room, McFadden said. He was brought in by the Douglas County Ambulance Service.
A police officer said the man's head was cut open when he fell out of the back of a truck he celebrated the KUY's victory.
Kevin Latinis, Prairie Village junior, brought a friend to the hospital.
"It's crazy in there. It's packed. There is a band of people who just got beat up on campus," he said. "We went to Watkins. It wasn't open, so we went here."
Betting favors Duke
Meghan Othick, who works in admissions at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said about 10 students had come to Watkins by 2 p.m. yesterday for treatment of injuries.
Watkins was not open Saturday night, but it will be open all night tonight.
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Odds are Kansas won't beat Duke tonight.
Gordon said early indications were that Duke would also be the local betting favorite.
At least that was the opinion of casino officials in Las Vegas yesterday.
"Duke is favored by three right now, and everyone is betting on them," said Mark Gordon, sports manager at the Dallas Mavericks and Casino in Las Vegas.
The Blue Devils' upset of previously unbeaten Nevada-Las Vegas was a key factor in making the game even more interesting in tonight's game. Gordon said.
That means the Jayhawks will be in the same underdog role they have been in since playing their first at the East Regional at Charlotte, N.C.
"I imagine Duke will be bet very heavy moving the line up to four, and then everyone will bet the dog late." he said.
Bill Davicky, also of the Sands,
said the NCAA Championship game was usually a high-interest
game. "We're not going to Gas," but this year was different
Under a Nevada state law, casinos in Nevada cannot take bets on UNLV athletic events.
Before this weekend, interest in the NCAA tournament had been high because of the highly-anticipated favorite, UNLV Runnin' Rebels.
The Rebels' elimination has opened up the betting windows on tonight's game, but that does not mean it be any long lines at the windows.
The intense local interest could not be transformed into heavy wagering on the Rebels. however.
Jayhawks hoping to bedevil Duke
Williams knows a lot about Blue Devils because of his tenure in North Carolina
By S. J. Bailev
INDIANAPOLIS — Bedlam erupted in the Hosier Dome Saturday following the Duke Blue Devils' 79-77 upset of top-torched UNV.
Kansan sportswriter
But as the Blue Devils exalted at center court, coach Kike Krzyzewski tried to subdue his ecstatic players.
"Hey guys, calm down," he told them. "You still have one more game to go. Kansas. remember?"
Duke returns to the title game for the second straight season to meet a Kansas team looking for its second national title in four years.
Krzewyza said yesterday that he knew his team could not afford any type of emotional letdown when they took the floor tonight against the Jayhawks with the national championship on the line.
"We've got to be ready to play very hard against a team like Kansas," he said. "They're very difficult to defend because they can score from any position on the floor and they have such a great bench."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was not at all surprised the Jayhawks would face the Blue Devils who scored of the heavily-favored Running' Rebels.
"I said Friday that I thought Duke was in great position," he said. "Psychologically, they had every advantage. Duke is a very good basketball team, and one capable of winning the national championship."
Williams said he thought the Blue Devils would be ready for Kansas because of their familiarity with another Jawhawk-like team.
"I think they'll be comfortable
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
Mike Krzyzewski Duke basketball coach
'We've got to be ready to play very hard against a team like Kansas.'
playing us because we are so much like North Carolina," he said. "But I do know a little bit more about Duke than some other teams might
because of my time at Carolina."
The Blue Devils are led by junior forward Christian Laetner, who averaged 19.6 and 8.7 rebounds a game this season and scored 28 points in Saturday's victory against UNLV.
"He is very strong and very mobile for as big as he is," senior forward Mark Randall said. "He likes to post up, but he also likes to go outside. There were even a couple of games this season when I saw him go out and shoot the three-pointer. He really does it all for that team."
Sophomore guard Adonis Jordan said Duke guard Bobby Hurley also would pose a threat in the championship game.
"He is a very tough player." Jordan said. "He does an excellent job running the team and getting the ball out there." He can also be a scorer when he has to.
21
More game coverage Page 11
2
Monday, April 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Forgotten cigarette causes mattress fire The Associated Press
TRAIL, Ore. — Steve Macy said his neighbor's dog, Buffy, more than repaid him for months of table scraps when the dog roasted him from his bed during a fire early Saturday at the historic Rogue Elk Hotel.
"I think the dog saved my life," Macy said after the 5-month-old cocker spaniel came scratching on his door.
Macy said he was sleeping soundly
in the second-floor room he rents in the 75-year-old hotel when the fire broke out in another room.
"The smoke was so thick, it looked like a New England fog," he said. "I just scooped up Buffy and ran down the stairs."
Fire Capt. Rick Mendenhall said the blaze was caused by a cigarette that ignited a mattress.
Firefighters arrived in time to contain the blaze to a second-floor room of the hotel, where such guests as President Herbert Hoover and Vilain Zane Grey stayed during local fishing expeditions. One was nust
Police report
A car valued at $8,000 was stolen between 2:30 and 4:30 a.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Jana Drive, Lawrence police reported.
A television with remote control and a stereo remote control valued together at $300 were taken between 6 p.m. Friday and 1:20 a.m. Saturday.
A car stereo, amplifier and two speakers valued together at $900 were taken between 9 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. Saturday from a car in the 3700 block of Clinton Parkway, Lawrence police reported.
from a residence in the 500 block of Grayscale Drive, Lawrence police reported.
A 14-karat gold ring with a ruby stone valued at $400 was taken between midnight and 10:30 a.m. Saturday from a car in the 900 block of Wellington Road, Lawrence police reported.
Two speakers valued at $200 were taken between 10 p.m. and midnight from car in the 3700 block of Clinton Parkway, Lawrence police reported.
Corrections
Because of misinformation given to a reporter, David Cleveland was identified in a front-page story in Friday's Kansan as the president of the KU alumni chapter in Indianapolis. Larry L. Heck, a 1962 KU graduate, is the president
Because of misinformation given to a reporter, John Bitker was incorrectly identified on Page 1 of Friday's Kansan as John Ditker.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 1, 1991
3
EWEAR Since 1980
Three-alarm fire
Nationwide search for vice chancellor will begin this fall
Firefighters search for hot spots on the roof of the European Tan, Health & Hair Salon, 2449 Iowa St. See story on Page 12.
By Eric Nelson
Kanson staff writer
Kansan staff writer
A national search for an executive vice chancellor will begin in the fall.
It was announced Friday that search committee will be formed this summer in consultation with University governance. Del Shankel, professor of biology, has filled the position since Judith Ramaley left last spring to become the president of Portland State University.
The search will follow guidelines in the faculty handbook, although it does not give procedures specifically for executive vice chancellor search.
Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said that he was unsure of the exact proceedings, but that the dean would consist of faculty, students and staff.
"We will conduct it, by and large, as we have conducted the last two." Scally said. "We hope the committee will be able to move expeditions."
In a released statement, Chancellor Gene A. Budig said, "I am confident that KU's strong national reputation will attract a number of excellent candidates."
Frances Ingemann, chairperson of the Faculty Executive Committee, said that she had not heard any calls to such court but that she expected governance to be involved in the nomination of members to the search committee.
Shankel, who was the school's first executive vice chancellor from 1974-1980, served on the last search committee but was unsure whether he would be directly involved with the national search.
Although he said that he looked forward to continuing teaching, he is happy with his position in the chancellor's office.
Six candidates to aim for commission seats
"I'm enjoying the job," Shankel said. "I like the people I work with."
With the search beginning in m. fall, he expects to continue his duties in the chancellor's office for up to another academic year.
"We'll just kind of see how it goes," Shankel said.
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Vanessa staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Tomorrow Lawrence voters will elect three candidates to the Lawrence City Commission.
Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
The following six candidates are running for two four-year terms and one two-year term. The two candidates with the most votes will serve two four-year terms and one with the next highest votes will serve the two-year term.
Dudley: consensus can improve policy
Establishing a consensus on controversial issues is the key to an effective City Commission, Toni Dudley said.
"Whenever a city grows, change is never easy," she said. "Our city is in
Toni Dudley
state of transition. The changes that come about can sometimes divide the community When conflict becomes divisive, that's when the commission can take
NORTHWESTERN STATES
a real lead and sit everyone down together."
Dudley, who is the director of children's ministries at Plymouth Congregational Church, said that establishing consistent policies, particularly for granting tax abatements would diminish some of that conflict.
"When citizens know that the city has followed set guidelines to grant a tax abatement, there will be less confusion," she said. "Any time we make a consistent decision, we have more credibility."
The biggest issue of the campaign is not simply the future growth of Lawrence but how the city will grow, she said.
Dudley she strongly supported Horizon 2020, the new comprehensive plan for Lawrence's growth into the 21st century, and the preservation of
downtown as the primary commercial district.
While commercial development needs to expand to fit the needs of Lawrence's population, she said, it is important not to diminish the value of downtown, which she called "the envy of cities across the country."
"If we build a suburban shopping mall, people from Topeka and Kansas City are not going to come to Lawrence to shop there," she said. "Where they're going to shop is downtown. I think we're smart enough to learn from the mistakes of other cities."
Horvath: city must
cut restrictive laws
cut restrictive laws
Paul Horvath says he wants to give government back to the people.
"Maybe I'm Jeffersonian in the sense that Jefferson said government that rules the least is the best," he said.
"The more laws you have, the more opportunity you have to abuse those laws, and the ones who get hurt are the citizens."
Laws such as some planning regulations and
---
the historical preservation ordinance inhibit people from exercising all of their rights, Horvath said. Providing basic services and protecting people from crime is how government best serves the people, he added.
Horvath, who manages Morning Star Management, said that as a property manager, he knew how to work cost-effectively.
When you're in business, you've got to make money efficiently," he said. "If you're a bureaucrat, you've work under rules and regulations."
Horvath said that if future commercial development slowed to preserve downtown as the primary shopping district, both downtown and the rest of the city eventually would suffer.
"A lot of people say they want downtown to remain the primary commercial district," he said. "You can't have both; you can't have vitality and stagnation. Effectively, that's what people are trying to do through things like the historical preservation ordinance."
choices loom ahead
Nalbandian: tough
The key question of the election is how to maintain a strong downtown and still provide for the city's commercial retail needs. John Nalbandian said.
edge the need for neighborhood shopping centers," he said. "And we're going to have to acknowledge the need to continue business growth."
"We're going to have to acknowl-
PABLO ZAMORA
John Nalbandian
Nalbandian, JOHN Nalbandian professor of public administration at the University of Kansas, said that the city would be successful as long as city policies promoting downtown were for the good of the entire community.
"Those of us who believe in downtown concerns have to be conscious of decisions that solely protect downtown," he said. "We will lose it if we decide that appear to selfishly protect the downtown merchants."
"I think that acknowledges that a lot of people don't have a share in that," he said. "How do we broaden our sense of community? One way is through the appointments to boards and commissions. New people and people who haven't participated before are included more."
How to maintain a sense of community while Lawrence expands is an issue Nalbandian said had not been addressed enough during the election. As the city grows, people representing fewer segments of the community have a say in local decision-making, he said.
Establishing a simple, consistent tax-abatement policy would decrease debate among City Commission members, Nalandian said.
"On the new commission, there will be very much debate on tax athemates," he said. "It will be reasonable request for a tax abatement."
Penny: laws must not overregulate
When laws are inappropriate, it is up to the moral integrity of citizens to maintain stability within a community. David Penn said.
"The best parts of Lawrence that we have were done without zoning."
said Penny, who has deep roots in old W e st w Lawrence. "A lot of it depended on the moral integrity of the people. A lot of things you can't legislate, but it takes leadership within the community."
PETER LAMBERT
Penny said that just as rigid zoning laws were a symptom of overregulation, so was a historical preservation ordinance.
"We've been able to do a lot more historic preservation without a rigid ordinance," he said. "I don't know what its redeeming quality is."
During his campaign, Penny also has taken a strong stance against a gay rights amendment to Lawrence's human rights ordinance. An amendment, he said, would promote gays and bisexians to a special, privileged class.
"It's a moral issue, not a racial issue," he said.
The present ordinance prohibits discrimination based on race, religion, sex, color or nationality.
Penny, one of two incumbents running for re-election, said that his experience as the owner of Kaw Sand Company cost effectively as a commissioner.
"If we can produce a high-quality service and if we can keep that cost
down to a minimum, then the people will benefit," he said. "The problem is city government is a monopoly in several areas."
Penny was elected commissioner in 1989.
Schulte: city needs big tax abatements
Discontent within the community and divisiveness within the City Commission are reasons for which Bob Schute decided to run for commis-
"I heard a lot of dissatisfaction in
public with what has been going on in the commission," he said. "It made me think that a reasonable person could get on the commission and listen to all of the issues."
PETER MCCALLEN
Much of the debate on the present commission stems from its taxabatement policy, said Schulte, vice president of Gene Fritzel Construction and a former announcer for Radio Tata abatements should be used to help reduce jobs but also lower paying jobs for unskilled workers, he said.
"We need to attract a variety of industries," he said. "We need some significant blue-collar jobs as well as white-collar jobs."
Schulte said an effective tax-abatement policy should be based on the number of jobs and the amount of seeking an abatement could provide.
“If we want to attract some larger industries, we should be prepared to exceed 50 percent,” he said, referring to the city's current policy of granting a maximum of 50 percent for a tax abatement.
Adhering to Plan '95 and Horizon 2020, the city's comprehensive plans for continued development, would guarantee the preservation of downtown streets in a commercial district, he said. Although small shopping centers would not threaten
downtown, a suburban shopping mall would, Schulte said.
"Any mall that we are going to construct is going to devastate the downtown," he said.
Schumm: leaders need experience
More than 12 years of local government experience have given Bob Schumm the opportunity to help develop some of the city's biggest projects and policies, Schumm said. Having that perspective is vital to the
future planning of Lawrence.
"That 12-year stretch will help me with bringing the history to the table when we draft those plans," he said.
One of the achievements
Schumm said he was most proud of was the ethics policy the commission adopted Tuesday. He and other commissioners have worked on the policy for almost a year.
"I was the original presenter of that idea and I took a lot of criticism for it," said Schumm, a local restaurant owner. "But I think everyone sees it as an important piece of literature."
Adhering to Horizon 2020, a comprehensive plan for the development of Lawrence into the 21st century, is a responsible future growth, he said.
"It will be very important to follow that plan," he said. "If we do a poor job, it will have a low credibility and will be set aside on many issues."
Another important issue facing the new commission will be development of a more effective tax-abatement policy, Schumm said.
A successful policy would be flexible to provide more incentive to attract companies that would generate a lot of economic activity, he said.
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Monday, April 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official misconduct
Supreme Court's ruling on coerced confessions sends mixed message in wake of police beating
W Just wait when every station across the country has played and
What timing! Just wher
Just when every news station across the country has played and replayed the tape of Los Angeles police officers beating a traffic violator, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision last week that coerced confessions do not automatically void a conviction.
Confessions are considered to be coerced if they result, for instance, from violence against a suspect, threatened violence, extended interrogation or assurances such as "just tell us what really happened, and we'll let you go."
Although the Los Angeles incident did not result in a confession, it does illustrate the importance of laws that regulate government misconduct.
The Supreme Court said in 1967 that the use of a coerced confession always must result in reversal of a conviction.
But the justices ruled Tuesday that a coerced confession could be excused as "harmless error" if the defendant was found guilty without it.
But how can a jury find someone innocent when it has heard or read that the defendant confessed to the crime?
And how can anyone be sure that other evidence was not obtained through the coerced confession?
Justice Byron White wrote in his dissenting opinion that a coerced confession "is fundamentally different from other types of erroneously admitted evidence" that fall in the harmless-error category. He wrote, "There are some rights so basic to a fair trial that their infraction can never be treated as harmless error."
Michigan Law professor Yale Kamisar said in a recent New York Times article, "The reason most often for throwing out coerced confessions is that no confession can be harmless. But the real reason is that the Court used to feel so strongly about this that it wanted to condemn, in the strongest terms, police threats of violence."
In reversing their 1967 ruling, the Supreme Court effectively told the police that as long as they have other evidence against a defendant, they now can use intimidation or force to get a confession without fear that their improper behavior will result in the case being thrown out.
Elicia Hill for the editorial board
Handgun-control advocates should face the Constitution
This is in response to the article "Enact the Brady Bill," which appeared in the University Daily Kansan on March 29. Congress should finally allow the Brady Bill to die.
Most gun-control advocates take comfort in the well regulated militia clause of the Second Amendment because it allows them to reason that the amendment created no individual right to own a gun. This line of thought is good enough for the American Civil Liberties Union, the bastion of the Second Amendment's emerging member of the National Coalition to Ban Handguns.
Such ill-conceived notions fly in the face of our nation's evolving constitutional experiences. The phrase "right of the people" appears four other times in the Bill of Rights. In all these cases, there is agreement that citizens are the right to exercise citizenship, not just some collective right of states as a whole.
PUNJABI KUDAHAR YEAR 1928
American law is also deeply rooted in English common law. The most famous jurist of that tradition, Sir William Blackstone, listed in his Commentaries the "right of having and using arms of self-preservation and defense," brought to bear on Englishmen is older than the Constitution itself.
In the years between 1778 and 1783, four states adopted bills of rights specifically recognizing "the right of the people to bear arms," guarantying protection for the security of the armed populace. Though none of the other six states adopted
L. Mark
Taylor
Guest columnist
bills of rights, the political and cultural values expressed in those states were consistent with those in states with bills of rights.
There was a clear consensus among the Founding Fathers that the right of the people to bear arms was indispensable to a free republic. In Virginia, Thomas Jefferson stated, "no freeman shall be debarred the use of arms." Richard Henry Lee observed that, "to preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of people always possess firearms."
In North Carolina, a young lawyer named James Reddell, who would go on to become a justice on the Supreme Court, wrote his mother in regard to a set of pistols she had sent him. "It is a satisfaction to have the means of Security at hand (even) if we are in no danger, as I never expect them to be attacked, unless them was not only an abstract right, but also a constant practice of the Green Mountain Boys of Vermont, led by Etha and Ira Allen.
kind in common use* among law abiding people today; (2) useful and appropriate not just for military purposes, but also for law enforcement and individual self-defense and (3) linearly descended from the kinds of laws enforced by the legislature. Clearly then, while the amendment would not protect the possession of
I will concede that this right is not absolute. Under the tripartite test established by the Supreme Court in United States vs. Malkin, the court of the ownship of arms from regulation by the federal government as: (1) "of the
'There was a clear consensus among the Founding Fathers that the right of the people to bear arms was indispensable to a free republic.'
automatic assault rifles, handguns obviously fall within the amendment's protection from federal regulation.
As Michael Kinsley has noted, the maintenance of these freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights entails social costs. This applies as equally to the Second Amendment as it does to the First, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth. The purpose of inscribing those basic freedoms within the Bill of Rights is to prevent them in the whim of the majority. Whether the right is as vital to freedom today as it was in 1792 is completely irrelevant — the fact is that the right is still there and should not be infringed upon by Congress.
UNLV vs. N. CAROLINA APRIL 1ST, 1991
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L. Mark Taylor is a Louisville, Ky., graduate student.
Supporting the Brady Bill' helps stop random violence
Ten years ago, Press Secretary James Brady was seriously injured and left disabled in John Hinckley's attack on Ronald Reagan. In the last few years, Brady's wife, Sarah, has been actively lobbying for handgun legislation. Because of Brady's high-profile position, his wife has been heard despite the lobbying efforts of strong groups opposed to gun control lead by the National Rifle Association. She has also been allowed to testify before various Congressional committees when less influential voices might not have been heard.
Congress is now debating the "Brady Bill," a piece of legislation Sarah Brady has strongly lobbied for this bill, if passed, would require a seven-day waiting period for handgun purchases nationwide.
The NRA, as expected, has spoken against out against this legislation. The NRA has fought for years against any bandgun-control legislation. It would be better to let the late second Amendment's guarantee of the right to bear arms.
This is ridiculous. The 'Brady Bill' says nothing about depriving people of the right to own weapons. What this bill actually calls for is a seven-day waiting period between the day of purchase and the day of delivery. This is a very good idea for several reasons:
- It would allow time to check for criminal records (and certain criminals are prohibited by law from possessing weapons).
- It gives the person buying the weapon time to think about why they are buying a firearm. This helps them stay focused and is often against themselves or others.
Patrick
Brungardt
Staff columnist
Murders aren't the only crime this bill would help prevent. Several years ago, a student at KU went to a gun show at the Holidome. Although Douglas County had a three-day waiting period on firearms purchases, he was able to walk out of the Holidome that day. Later that weekend, he put the gun in his mouth and pulled the trigger.
More than 10 years ago, a man in Leavenworth walked into a shop and bought a shotgun and shells. When the salesperson asked why he was buying them, the man said, "I'm going to blow my wife away." He then drove to the Sirion Stortford office, but that murder probably wouldn't have occurred if a bill such as the "Brady Bill" had been in place.
Not only are laws such as this needed, but they need to be uniform, which the "Brady Bill" would guarantee. A three-day waiting period in one city does no good when a nearby city does not have any sort of waiting period.
Some people say that criminals always will be able to get weapons no matter what controls the government tries to enforce. This may be true, but it also depends on how effort rather than do nothing. And while a person who really wants to commit suicide can find a way, this bill still can help prevent such trage
dies from occurring.
ture, and if she has any regrets it is probably that her mother ever found out.
I have never understood why the NRA lobbies against handgun legislation. I would assume by their name that their main focus is on rifles. Don't get me wrong, they do very well in gun safety. But if the "R" in NRA stands for rifles, they should stick to that type of weapon.
'The Brady Bill says nothing about depriving people of the right to own weapons. What this bill actually calls for is a seven-day waiting period between when a person buys a weapon and when he can pick it up.'
If the NRA wants to include handguns in their platform, then perhaps it could offer safety courses similar to the courses it offers to hunters.
Both guns and people kill people. Guns kill people when the people who have access to them have no idea as to their safe use.
Handgun safety is everyone's concern. People are killed every year because they do not know how to handle weapons safely. Others are killed because of the easy availability of weapons.
The "Brady Bill" would help reduce senseless deaths, while still guaranteeing the Second Amendment's right to bear arms.
How, then, can a pregnant teen be forced to continue a pregnancy? That
I have worked as a counselor for women who have chosen to have an abortion. At that time there was no parental notification law, but it was the policy of the clinic that the woman herself had to want the abortion. If a young patient told me that her parents were forcing her to have the abortion, it was my duty to send her away without having the abortion, explaining that, for many reasons, it had to be her choice.
Patrick Brungardt is a Leavenworth senior majoring in political science.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Parental notification
I am writing in response to the article March 28, concerning the proposed Kansas parental notification bill that requires doctors to notify at least one parent before performing an abortion.
this makes me, especially the testimony of Carolyn Matlock. She is the perfect example, leaving aside the constitutional problems, of why there should not be parental notification or consent: It takes the choice out of the hands of the pregnant teen and right into the hands of the parents. This Matlock lady "mourns" for her aborted grandchild, and claims that "it still hurts my daughter." What does she expect? The pooh girl has been married to a mother, her mother's non-support of her decision for over a year. The mother apparently has finally broken the daughter down into some guilt-rufted crea-
I cannot ever explain how angry
Isn't this what choice is all about?
is the result of this statute. That would have been the result for Matlock's daughter. Either way, this girl would have suffered emotionally. Since she chose to have an abortion, she must forever be subjected to her mother's horrible badgering reaction, not to mention her public outcries. This is why any notification or consent statutes are wrong. Teens should have — must have the choice of telling their parents or not.
Julie Gorenc Lawrence law student
Shirt; tacky free speech
I would like to respond to Michaea, Breen's letter to the editor March 27. I believe one underlying theme of his letter was that of free speech vs. the freedom of responsible speech. Let's face it. The questions screaming to be answered here are: Is a shirt depicting a Ayahyk lift the tail of a cat in a gesture that quite obviously spells rape more offensive or less offensive than a shirt with a couple of letters crossed out?
Of course it does. Let's face the uncomfortable, tired fact that this difference in taste (or lack of) will
always be the most difficult aspect to address in arguments concerning the right to freely express ourselves.
Another issue with which I must differ is the belief that jumping on the proverbial bandwagon of mud-slinging is a fun, responsible form of free speech. Associating with people who "don't dish it out" is "boring"? Please! Personally, I recently have discovered that people who do dish it out (while you're the one who's expected to take it) are sadly arrogant, and associating with them can be dehumanizing, even dangerous.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 1. 1991
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Monday
Applications for KU's Japan Summer Institute in Lawrence the sisterity Hirsatsuka, Japan, will be available at 203 Lippincott Hall.
- Applications for KU Study Abroad Program's summer and academic year/semester will be available at 203 Lippincott Hall.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a "Stress Management" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Recycling Force Will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Accounting and IRS will sponsor a volunteer income tax assistance workshop at 6 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday
KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will conduct a workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
Union.
KU Triathletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas
KU Study Abroad in Spanish-speaking countries will have an informational meeting 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 Wesco Hall
VOICE will meet at 7 p.m. at 1204 Oread Ave.
*Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Power Plays: Decision-Making Skills for Women" workshop with faculty at Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For more information call 643-3891 or Headquarters at 843-2342.
Wednesday
KU Accounting Club and IRS will conduct volunteer income tax assistance workshops at 9 a.m. and 4 pm. at the Kansas Union.
- KU Wellness Center will sponsor a "Stress Management" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
- KU Study Abroad will have an informational meeting at 2 p.m. at 303 Lippincott Hall.
University Placement Center will conduct a "Better Resumes" workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union. Enviroins will meet at 6 p.m. at the
Skyview Rooft in the Kansas Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet 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.
- Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Women Entrepreneurs" workshop at 7 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Frisbee Club will have a frisbee golf information meeting at 8 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Thursday
KU KWellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
- KU Triathletes will conduct a group bike ride at 4 p.m. in front of Wescos Hall
Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Friday
**Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Woman Speech and Silence" workshop at 8 p.m. at Alderdon Auditorium in the Kansas Union.**
Sunday
- KU Triathletes will have a group run at 1 p.m. in front of Wescoe Hall.
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AFRICAN AFFAIRS STUDENT ASSOC. AFRICAN AWARENESS WEEK
Monday April 1 - Friday April 5: FREE
• Artifacts and clothing display and video corner in the SUA Art Gallery at the Kansas Union.
Monday April 1:
• Lecture on "Militant Women and African Nationalism" by Dr. Ajay from 7 - 10 p.m., in the Centennial Room at the Kansas Union.
Tuesday April 2: FREE
• Talk on Ethiopia from noon to one, in Alcove D at the Kansas Union.
• Movie "Dry White Season" at 7 p.m. in Lippincott, Room #3 (down stairs).
Wednesday April 3: FREE
• Movie "Chocolate" at 6 p.m. in Lippincott, Room #3 (downstairs).
• Slide Show on "Egypt, Past and Present" by Dr. Mirham at 8 p.m., in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
Thursday April 4: FREE
• Panel discussion on the African and the Diaspora from 7 - 10 p.m. in Parlor A & B, in the Kansas Union. Professor Freeman, Dr. Sherwood Thompson, Dr. Ajayi, and Dr. Peter Ukpokodu will by among the participants.
Friday April 5: FREE
• Movie "Cry Freedom" at 7 p.m. in Lippincott, Room #3 (downstairs).
Saturday April 6: FREE
• African Night
- Cultural exhibition and dinner in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries (ECM) Building from 5 - 8 p.m.
- Party at Four Rivers Restaurant from 9:30 - 2 a.m.
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Base hourly wage increases to $4.25
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The minimum wage increases by 45 cents an hour today to $4.25, but labor advocates already are pressing for more.
About 3 million Americans earn the minimum wage, and millions of higher-paid workers may benefit as well when the minimum increases from $3.80 an hour. But workers' advocates contend the increase still is far too paltry to lift low-wage workers out of poverty.
"They can't support a family on this and in many cases can't support themselves," said Rudy Oswald, chief economist of the AFL-CIO.
The 14.2 million-member labor federation has called for boosting the minimum wage to $5.75 an hour by April 1994. And Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, has promised that his committee would take up minimum wage legislation during the current Congress, either this year or in 1992.
Small Kansas towns strive for consideration as jailers
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Small Kansas towns, facing declining populations and economic peril, will become the nation'sailer.
More than 40 residents from Atwood and Washington showed up at a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting Friday to deliver that message by opposing a bill that would prohibit small towns from owning and operating private prisons.
Representatives from the towns said the ability to build these prisons, which would take inmates from states that have been allowed to house them, was the towns last chance for survival.
"We just want one more chance," said Richard Mills Jr. of Westridge Associates, a Topeka consulting firm hired by the communities. "Washington County has lost 70 percent of its population. They are out of time."
"If it continues on the same course it has in the last couple of years, the city of Washington will be dead in 45 years."
Bill Beamgard, Atwood mayor-elect, agreed.
"Our most precious product is our children," he said. "We're tired of seeing them leave. We're dying and we see this as economic development."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr.,
R-Lawrence, said that the
issue had been discussed for
more than a year and that lawmakers had made their minds up to support the bill to prohibit the private prisons
"This is a matter that the Legislature has considered very, very extensive," he said. "But it's hazardous to take prisoners in from other states."
Winter added that the committee would act on the bill this week.
State Sen. Richard Rock, D-Akansas City, said liability issues needed to be cleared up if any measure could be passed
"I would love to sit up here and do things for the small communities in the state," he said. "I live on the state as a whole. I'm convinced that there are some profound problems."
State Sen. Sheila Frahm, RC, collyed, one of those problems was the state's responsibility to provide security if the prison's private security staff would go on strike.
But Mills said that the communities would keep coming back to lobby for private prisons because they represented the last hope for the towns' continued existence.
"We know that prisons are viewed as ugly, but the ugliness is on the surface only," he said. "We believe we can see some beauty in these projects."
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Nation/World
7
World briefs
Agiers, Algeria
Fiiacker surrenders peacefully
A hijacker thought to be armed with grenades surrendered today after releasing all passengers and crew members aboard an Air Algeria et authorities said.
The man, who was not identified, sought a postponement of Algerian elections scheduled for the end of 2016.
The hijacker gave himself up after several years of negotiations with Interior Minister
Airport sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the hijacker had been among the passengers on the flight to Houari Bouri Boumoussa in Algerians From Bechar in southwest Algeria.
After the talks with the interior minister, the hijacker released 24 passengers, mostly women and children. He freed about two dozen other passengers shortly afterward.
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
U.S. troops continue withdrawal
The United States is trying to maintain its withdrawal of roughly 3,000 troops a day from the region while awaiting a permanent cease-fire, military officials said yesterday.
More than one-quarter of the U.S. troops have departed and the number remaining has already dropped to under 400,000 from a peak of 540,000, the U.S. Central Command said.
The U.S. VII Corps, up to 100,000 troops, is in occupied Iraq. It will remain until the United Nations approves a formal cease-fire, which could come as early as this week.
The 1st Infantry Division, based at Fort Riley and the 3rd Armored Division from Germany are patrolling the demarcation line established by a temporary cease-fire agreement March 3.
Mexico City
Radio broadcasts Easter service
Cuban radio broadcast an Easter service for the first time since Fidel Castro's Communist forces took power 30 years ago, apparently easing the official policy of atheism.
It was only the second time a religious service was broadcast on state-run radio, the official Prensa Latina news agency said in a dispatch monitored in Mexico City. The first was last March.
The broadcasts signal a thaw in church-state relations after decades of official atheism. Communist Party leaders also are considering worshipers of various faiths into the party.
From The Associated Press
Iraq claims recapture of two northern cities
The Associated Press
NICOSIA, Cyprus - Kurdish rebels said Iraqi forces backed by helicopter gunships, warplanes and artillery pounded two provincial capitals day after but had not managed to capture the cities.
Iraq, however, claimed it had chased the rebels out of the northern cities of Dohuk and Erbil and said government troops were welcomed by cheering residents.
It was impossible to verify either side's claims.
It was impossible to verify either side's claims. The Kurdish rebellion flared in northeastern Iraq five weeks ago, when the Persian Gulf War ended with a rout of Saddam's forces by the U.S.-led allied coalition. At the same time, Shiite Muslims revolted in the south.
Forces loyal to Saddam launched a major offensive last week against the Kurdish insurgents, who had captured nearly all of their historic homeland.
Government troops on Thursday recaptured the oil center of Kirkuk, and yesterday they appeared in southern Iraq.
She said that burned corpses, cars and trucks still littered the streets, and that many buildings were damaged.
Wafa Amr reported from the city.
Iraqi authorities accused the rebels of going on a rampage of murder, looting and destruction while carrying out the attack.
The insurgents, however, have accused Saddam's troops of atrocities against civilians, and have blamed the war on his own.
But the United States has said it will not intervene in the civil war, although it has shot down Iraqi military planes that have taken to the air over Baghdad. The U.S. forces have not shot down helicopter gunships.
The Iraqi News Agency said yesterday that the Baghdad government, in a message to U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar, ordered military operations of its airspace by U.S. and Saudi warplanes.
Iraq also complained in the message that U.S troops occupying southern Iraq were plundering civilians.
Warsaw Pact alliance ends
U.S.S.R., five satellite nations to sever military ties
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 1, 1991
The Associated Press
VIENNA, Austria — The once-mighty Warsaw Pact, a symbol of the Cold War and Soviet domination, shipped into history yesterday as a military alliance.
One Hungarian newspaper called the occasion "the winning of the Third World War."
The end of the Warsaw Pact comes less than 18 months after demonstrators climbed alot sections of the Berlin Wall in protests that began the collage of Communism across the Soviet bloc.
The ties that bound the Soviet Union's military to the eastern European satellites for 36 years were to be faded.
Eastern European officials said that the end of the six-nation pact will lead to changes in the Western NATO alliance, and that the former EU nations would seek new security agreements.
"its importance lies not only in the fact that we became independent, but it also gives us a chance to establish a good, new type of relationship with our country," said Minister Geza Jeszensky on state radio.
But the end of the pact was barely noted in the other pact nations — Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bulgaria — which already had been erased by easing themselves away from Moscow's control.
Albania left the pact in 1962, and East Germany coexist to exist following German reunification in 1990.
The 16-mission North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Warsaw Pact members signed a non-NATO treaty.
In the Soviet Union, Gen. Pyrat Lushev and Gen. Vladimir Lobov yesterday gave up their titles as Warsaw Pact commander and chief of staff, respectively.
But Lobov said in a Tass interview that he hoped the Soviets would continue cooperating with their Eastern European neighbors.
The Warsaw Pact continues to exist as a political organization, but the Eastern European countries have urged that it fully end by early next year.
Lobov said the Warsaw Pact committee of defense ministers, its joint command, and its military, scientific and technical council all were scheduled to be disbanded.
The pact had not functioned as a military alliance for months. Its generals and other officials have been leaving Moscow since the signing of the treaty, which ended on Feb. 25 setting today's deadline to disband.
The Eastern European countries have gotten a start on building a new security system in East-West Europe.
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Attention Students, Faculty, and Staff,
Nominations are now being accepted for the Graduate Student Teaching Award. The KU Endowment Association and the Graduate Student Council are sponsoring five awards to recognize excellence in teaching by graduate students at the University of Kansas.
Anyone may nominate a graduate teacher by writing to the Graduate Student's department or program. Your letter should be submitted to their department by no later than Thurs,April 4.
For further information, please call the Graduate Student Council, 864-4914, or the Graduate School, 864-3301.
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Monday, April 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Student Senate finishes budget; some groups will lose financing
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
When Student Senate completed its budget for next year, many Senate members breathed a sigh of relief. A long process, which began at the beginning of the semester, was finally over.
But for some of the organizations that requested money from the Senate, a longer process had just begun. The senate is operating without Senate allocations.
Consumer Affairs is a Lawrence-based organization that helps consumers by providing information and advice on how to stay between businesses and consumers.
"We started in 1972 as a KU organization and in 1978 became a community-based organization because the team was there," said Julia Pitner, director.
Last year, Consumer Affairs was allocated $8,000 by Senate, which was nearly 25 percent of its budget. Its budget is not denied entirely by Senate last week.
Troy Radakovich, finance committee chairperson, told the Senate that the finance committee had determined that Legal Services for Students performs the same services as Consumer Affairs. Legal Services will receive over $180,000 from the agency.
Pitner said Consumer Affairs did not have any attorneys on staff.
"We don't do court stuff," she said. "Legal Services for Students refers people to us all the time."
Pitner said that her organization handled about 350 calls a month, but that the number of calls would probably decrease.
"We're going to have to cut back on
our time to go to have to go to
part-time hour."
The organization currently has two time and one part-time employee.
Approximately 28 percent of the services provided by Consumer Affairs go to KU students, she said. The services were free to students because the Senate allocated student money, she said.
"We're going to have to start charging students for some services," she said.
Most services, like filing a formal complaint against a landlord, will
cost students $10. Pitner said.
Another organization, VOICE, had never received money from the Senate. VOICE, an organization dedicated to preserving peace, requested $2,733 for next year, and was denied financing from the Senate.
"We will continue, regardless," treasurer Cynthia Ingham said.
The money that the organization requested from the Senate would have allowed it to reach a larger number of students, she said.
The Senate finance committee had recommended that the group receive no money, because it was a partisan group opposed to the war in the Persian Gulf. Student Senate does not give money to political organizations such as College Republicans or KU Democrats.
"Now that we don't have to restrict our focus to the war, we can take on a new perspective." Ingham said.
VOICE was not opposed only to the war, she said.
"The militarism is the attitude behind it," she said.
Ingham said she planned to visit the Senate in its last meeting Wednesday.
Local grocery stores promote conservation
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Local grocery stores are encouraging Lawrence residents to conserve by giving shoppers alternative methods of packaging their groceries.
The Dillons chain of grocery stores has a money-for-bags program. Customers bring in the paper or plastic bags they have used before and receive 5-cent discounts for every bag the reuse.
Steve Etzel, a cashier at Dillons,
said the program had been successful.
Etzel said that Dillons sold canvas bags and that customers received 5-cent discounts if they used the canvas shopping bags.
"Saturday alone we had 224 bags returned," he said. "It was a busy day because of Easter and the game. I went out about 150 bags returned every day."
Community Mercantile Co-op. 700 Maine St., also has canvas bags for sale
Sheryl Robertson, assistant man
ager, said, "When people use canvass bags, we give them 10 cents off of their purchases."
She said many people brought their own paper bags or string bags to conserve paper. Some people also bring reusable bags to the store to avoid using new ones.
"We encourage people to re-use the 'ew containers,' she said. "There's no point in throwing them away when you can reuse them. We have a peanut butter grinder and, let alone make in their own jars and save glass."
Checkers grocery store, 2300 Louisiana St., has an informational display about how people can become more environmentally aware.
The display has fliers about such things as conserving water, composting waste and recycling.
Angela Herr, a supervisor at Checkers, said many people were interested in the fliers and stopped to look at them when they left the store.
"We refill the fliers almost every week," she said. "They have a lot of information on them."
Romanians pack markets as food prices increase The Associated Press
BUCHAREST, Romania — Panicky shopping empties state stores as the government prepared to more than double basic food prices today. The move is meant to help the economy, but critics say it will devenowerty and miserly.
In the days before the increases, Romanians snapped up chickens, bread, sugar and anything else that was for sale. Only bread and milk stores open yesterday, and only briefly.
The government hopes that the price reforms along with parallel salary increases and a currency devaluation will breathe some life into other sectors of the economy.
Reforms were required by the International Monetary Fund in exchange for a $1 billion aid package to Romania, which is expected to receive final approval Friday.
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9
Arraignment set for 2 men charged in bomb planting
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A federal judge ordered one man charged with planting a pipe bomb under a KU security jeep held without bond until trial.
A second man, a 20-year-old student at the University of Kansas, was allowed to post $10,000 and was released in an order by federal Magistrate Judge Ronald C. Newman.
Arraignment was scheduled April 9 for Joseph N. Ceresko, Derby freshman, and John A. Bitker, 20.
They are accused of making a pipe bomb and putting it under a security jeep on the KU campus.
The two are charged with using explosives at an institution receiving federal funds.
A police officer found the bomb and moved it to a
nearby field, where it detonated before dawn Thursday, shattering a car windshield and a lobby window at Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
The officer found the bomb, which was equipped with a timer and battery, after he saw someone running from the jeep. There was no time to evacuate the nearby residence hall before the bomb exploded, said Lt. John Mullens of the KU police.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said the school would aggressively seek prosecution in the case because of the number of bomb threats that had been received this year.
Mullens said the motive for placing the bomb underneath the car was not political.
Center offers enrollment help
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
For those students who need extra help planning their classes, the Advising Support Center will be available throughout the advising period.
Advising for Fall 1991 begins today, and the center, at 4017 Wescoe Hall, is open to all students who have advised questions.
"Some students just need more attention than a faculty member is in the position to give them," said Joe Garcia, associate professor of nursing at Weimar. "We're always here, and we can
provide that."
He said that the center was not meant to take the place of a student's adviser but, instead, both the teacher and the student should help the student make decisions.
"It's not an either/or situation," he said. "We think of ourselves as supporting the faculty members in their advising."
The center, open since 1983, helps students select majors, plan schedules and make sure they are on schedule for graduation. The center also provides the dean's stamp for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Nine people are on hand to assist students.
Manju Velathampalli, Colombo,
Sri Lanka, graduate student, is one of
those people.
She said she looked forward to advising because, as a student adviser, she could relate to students' questions.
"We understand their problems"
"We hampamphila said. 'That's one of the"
"problems we face.'"
Albanian elections end single party rule
TIRANA, Albania — Excited Albanians crowded polling stations yesterday for historic multiparty elections called after protests and desperate refuges from hardline Stalinism and isolation.
The Associated Press
The parliamentary vote, conducted less than four months after opposition parties were legalized, was described by Western observers as free but tainted by the incarnation of the media and government.
Some opposition leaders charged President Ramiz Alaz's ruling Communists with fraud and threat, but if the problems were widespread.
Genc Pollo, Democratic Party spokesperson, said he had received reports of police intimidation of Democratic Party candidates and supporters, unsealed ballot boxes and Communist posters and stickers on the walls of polling stations.
The official ATA news agency said 95 percent of the 1.9 million eligible voters turned out.
Lawrence's Salvation Army Safe House closes
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Although the Lawrence Salvation Army Safe House closes today, no one who has used the shelter will be forced out onto the streets, said the president of Douglas County's United Way.
"We are committing emergency funds to the problem of homelessness in Lawrence," said Sandy Praeger, president of the county's United Way.
The United Way has not committed money directly to the safe house, but the emergency money will help the
people who have lived there, Praeger said.
Praeger said the United Way had explored possible long-term solutions for Lawrence's homeless by turning agencies and cities for guidance.
The safe house is closing because it incurred a $70,000 debt and failed to find a stable form of support since it opened last year in January.
Praeger and about 50 people from the Lawrence community met at City Hall on Friday to discuss Lawrence's case. "We were very anxious," and the shutdown of the safe house.
Jeannie Blankenhapk, director of homeless services for the Lawrence Salvation Army, said she was disappointed that the United Way did not commit money directly to the safe house but was encouraged by the community involvement at the meeting.
Blankenship said temporary hous
"We are not going to throw anyone on the streets," she said.
Blankenship said that two families and four individuals were turned down by the safe house this week.
Bill Simons, a Lawrence resident who attended the meeting, said he did not understand why an affluent community like Lawrence could not come up with money for the safe house.
"The community should be challenged that there is a need for moral and ethical growth." he said.
The city is continuously giving tax breaks to businesses and spending money for city expansion, but not for
the homeless, Simons said. Simons is also coordinator for Project Acceptance, a support group that helps people with mental illnesses and tries to place them in housing after they are released from mental hospitals.
"Because of our affluence, we don't realize the problems we have," he said.
At the meeting, Simons said he would commit $1,000 from his church, the First Christian Church, to help the safe house.
Simons said the meeting should have raised awareness about Lawrence's homeless problem so that other people, churches and agencies would find a way to donate money to help.
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Monday, April 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
March Madness, Jayhawk style
LIGHT
Joel Stuart, employee of Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St., fills a pitcher during the Jayhawks-THeeagels game.
KU fans enjoy rally at Indianapolis Zoo
Rv Karen Park
Special to the Kansan
INDIANAPOLIS - Jubilant KU fars from the past and present attended a pep rally yesterday at the Indianapolis Zoo.
About 700 well-wishers ate fried chicken and barbequed ribs as the KU pep band and spirit squads chanted fight songs.
Lance Smith, Wichita sophomore attended the rally.
"The game was incredible." he said. "A lot of experts are out of a lot of money now."
Smith said he would rather be in Indianapolis than in Lawrence during the Final Four.
Smith left Lawrence late Friday afternoon and arrived in Indianapolis about 4:30 a.m. Saturday.
Travis Edenfield, a 1969 KU graduate and marketing director for the zoo, said he was glad that he could be placed for the KU fans to celebrate.
"I'm just trying to give something back to a place that has given so much to me," he said.
Edendif said he had planned for about 1,000 people to attend the pep rally. About 1,500 pieces of chicken, vegetables and beer were ordered for the occasion.
Sean Williams, Lawrence resident, who is a sixth-generation KU alumnus and co-sponsor of the rally, said he had called several marketing companies in Indianapolis that told him there was not any place avail
"We did something that people said
that we didn't. "It's just like
our basketball team."
able to hold the rally
Duke University fans attended a pep rally for their team at the zoo on Saturday. Williams said leftovers were being served at the KU rally.
"We're eating Duke's leftovers today, which is appropriate because tomorrow we're going to eat their lunch," he said.
Michelle Strader, Girard senior,
and several of her friends, who
bought tickets through the KU lottery
to attend a trip from Lawrence to Indianapolis.
“It’s wonderful,” she said referring to being at the Final Four. “There’s no place better to be.”
Strader said she liked being in Indianapolis more than staying in Lawrence because she had met a lot of new people.
'Hawk fans jam local bars
"Everyone is a stranger here even though we go to the same school, but we all have a common bond," she said. "We know what's on back there, but know what's on back there."
"You can always be at school, but this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."
This year, Bliss held on to his ticket.
"I sold my tickets in '88 for $750,
he said "That's a lot of money to a
business."
Matt Bliss, St. Louis senior,
traveled with Strader.
"I wouldn't trade this for anything," he said.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
When KU scores big, so do Lawrence bars.
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The staff at the self-proclaimed largest sports bar in Kansas, Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill. 1601 W. 23rd St., had record-setting crowds Saturday.
John Hetler, Benchwarmers co-owner, said before Saturday that he would bet that the bar would fill to capacity for the Kansas-North Carolina game.
If he had needed to be in line that formed at the door before 9 a.m. Saturday,
If he had bet, he would have won.
Several groups of Jayhawk fans had card games going to open the hours until the bar opened. Others worked in the backroom,
When the doors opened at noon, it was only a matter of minutes before all the tables and booths were occupied by the revelers. More than 550 cheering Jayhawk fans crowded into the bar.
By 12:30 p.m. all of the beer pitchers were gone. They were all in use. The waitresses had trouble wading through the masses of basketball fans
"I didn't get a seat but I'm not disappointed. I came here for the atmosphere," she said. "It's a nice place."
Keith Potter, Lawrence senior, got in line at 11 a.m. and received number 50.
milling around the bar.
Pep bands are another basketball tradition, and Benchwarmers was right in with the tradition. A pep band consisting of a bass guitar, a trumpet and an accordion is the screening fans cheer the Jawhavors to victory.
The band played KU fight songs before the game, during commercials and half time, and the band played it in a movie.
Shirley and Larry Verbon, parents of Leigh Ann Verbon, Kansas City, Kan., junior, were sitting on the bar's bleachers with their daughter singing the fight songs with the rest of the rowdy crowd.
The whole family was wearing a multitude of KU paraphernalia. Shirley had a Jayhawk painted on her face and her daughter had a Jayhawk beak on her head. Larry was wearing a Jayhawk baseball hat.
"I'd rather be here watching the game than be at the actual game in Indy," said Larry Verbon, who
Jerry Neverve, owner of Kanaa Sports Bar, 701 Massachusetts St., said a line formed outside the door.
"It was nuts. It was packed. It was standing room only. It was absolutely crazy here," he said.
Kelly Driscoll, owner of the Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St., said he knew from experience that he should stock the bar with more beer than usual.
"Our sales were two to two-and-one-half times more than a regular Saturday," he said. "We did
Yacht Club bartender, Ryan Manecke, Prairie Village senior, said Driscoll told him that he did not ever remember making so much money in one night.
"It was so crowded here you could hardly walk through the bar," he added. "The crowd got wilder as the night went on."
Manecke is scheduled to work tonight, the night of the championship game.
"It will be the biggest night ever here," he said. "We've stocked up with extra kegs."
KANSA
WATERS
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill patrons cheer wildly as the Jayhawks score in their 79-73 victory against the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Kansan staff writer
After party's over, someone has to clean it up
By Patricia Rojas
After Saturday's celebration on campus, there were some who stayed behind to clean up after their fellow fans.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said about 30 people worked to clean up campus after about 25,000 people celebrated the Jayhawks victory against North Carolina
Richardson said crew members worked from about 10 p.m. to midnight Saturday and from about 6:30 to 10 a.m. yesterday picking up garbage.
David Copp, maintenance crew member, said they filled up at least 300 large bags with garbage include toilet paper, broken glass and cups.
He said the most difficult part of the job was cleaning up the pieces of broken glass.
"We're all for the Jayhawks, too," he said. "But if they are going to drink. I wish they'd drink from cans
instead of bottles. The broken glass takes a lot of our time to clean up."
Larry Grammer, crew member,
said the smell of beer and the broken
wheel of the truck. He too is a Jayhawk fan and celebrated the victory Saturday night.
"I had partied a little bit," he said. "The way I felt and the way it smelled didn't combine. But it was glass that looked really got in the way."
Grammer said it was sometimes hard to deal with picking up everyone
else's mess.
"But we manage," he said. "It's monotonous, but it's a job, and somebody's got to do it. You can't just get and let others do all the work."
Clarence Rayton, crew member working yesterday on campus, also said he worked without anger.
"It can be tiresome, but it's OK," he said. "I'm a true KU fan, so I believe in the party afterwards."
"A little partying and screaming? That's no biggie. If they dirty it up, we clean it up."
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 1. 1991
11
Jayhawks win, Smith ejected
KANSAS
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CAROLINA
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Indianapolis, Indiana
March 30-April 1, 1961
FINAL FOIL
Two North Carolina guards swarm Jayhawk guard Adonis Jordan.
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — It did not surprise anyone to see North Carolina coach Dean Smith shake hands with Roy Williams and the members of the Kansas Jayhawk basketball team.
But the circumstances surrounding Smith's exit from the floor came as a shock to every one of the 47,100 fans in attendance at the NCAA national semifinal game at the Indianapolis Hoosier Dome.
Smith was ejected from the game after his second technical foul only 35 seconds before the final bauer gave the Jayhawks a 79-73 victory against the Tar Heels and a chance at the national championship.
"I was shocked." Williams said, "unbelievably shocked at what happened I was disappointed that it was not something I wanted anything that required a technical."
The call came after Tar Heel forward Rick Fox fouled out of the game with 35 seconds remaining on the clock. Smith had received a technical in the first half for arguing an official's call, but the second "T"
Smith walked out of the coaches' box and asked referee Pete Pavia how much time he had to make a substitution for Fox.
came in an autogener different manner.
"I simply said, 'Pete, how much time do I have?' " Smith said. "He answered my question with a technical. That was ridiculous.
"I don't want to take away from Kansas' great victory. I'm as happy as I could for Rov."
On his way off the floor, Smith stopped to shake hands with his former pupil and many of the Kansas coaches and players.
"That was a very classy thing to do," sophomore guard Adonis Jordan said. "Coach Smith is a great coach and a first class individual."
Smith's ejection, which had no real on the game, shifted the focus from what was otherwise an hard-fought contest on both sides.
Kansas jumped out to an early 9-4 lead before being blitzed by a 23-10 North Carolina run during the next eight minutes, which gave the Tara Heels their largest lead of the half at 27-19.
A 20-3 Kansas run gave the Jayhawks their largest lead of the half at 39-30 before taking a 43-34 advantage to the locker room at the intermission.
Then it was the Jayhawks' turn to mount a charge.
Kansas continued to hold off North Carolina in the second half, until the Tar Theils made another move at the 14:50 mark. The Tar Theils scored six straight points to cut the Kansas lead to four at 33-49.
S six minutes later, a Rick Fox basket brought North Carolina to within a point at 58-57, but that was as close as the Tor Heals would come
A 9-0 Kansas scoring spurt, keyed by a Sean Tunstall three-pointer, and lay-ins by Jordan and freshman Richard Scott, boosted the lead to 65-7 and forced Smith into a timeout with 5:31 remaining.
"I didn't really know how big a basket that was until after the time-out," Tunstall said of his three-pointer." It was the first open shot I'd had in a while, so I took it and it went in."
North Carolina pulled to within five after the Jayhawks could not convert the front end of several one-and-one free throw opportunities. But the Tar Heels also had a problem hitting foul shots down the stretch, allowing Kansas to hold its lead until the final gun.
However, the key to the Jayhawks' victory did not come from the free-throw line, but on the backboards.
Kansas outbounded the taller Carolina squad 51-42, including 11 rebounds performances from senior forward Alonzo Jamison and junior forward Alonzo Jamison.
"They were bigger than we were, and we knew we would have to box out well if we waisted to stay in the game," Jamison said. "We did a lot better job in the second half getting to the ball and keeping them off the glass, which made a big difference in the game."
The Jayhawks' season comes to a climax when they take on the Duke Blue Devils for the national title at 8:10 p.m. on CBS.
Percentages: FG-49, FT-49, FB-38, Three-point game: 4-14 Jordan 2,六潜 T-3ull, 1-2 Brown 41- blocked shots: 1 (Jamison) Turnovers: 8 (Jordan 5, Maddox 3, Jamison 2, Richey 2, Brown, Rwand, Randelli) Steals: 5 (Jordan 2, Brown, Maddox, Tunnelite) Technicals: none.
Arkansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lunch | 30 | 5 | 8-7 | 3-6 | 5 | 2 | 13 |
| Fat | 24 | 1 | 3-6 | 3-6 | 1 | 2 | 13 |
| Chilcutt | 27 | 7-8 | 3-0 | 11 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| Rice | 27 | 1-6 | 1-4 | 3-4 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| Davis | 3 | 9-16 | 5-5 | 5-1 | 1 | 0 | 25 |
| Rozer | 3 | 1-6 | 5-5 | 5-1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Phelps | 10 | 1-1 | 0-1 | 1-1 | 1 | 4 | 2 |
| Rodi | 10 | 1-1 | 0-1 | 1-1 | 1 | 4 | 2 |
| Rodi | 1 | 0-1 | 0-1 | 1-1 | 1 | 4 | 2 |
| Sultan | 11 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 2-0 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
| Harris | 1 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 2-0 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Percentages: FG, 38.4, FT, 60.9, Three-point goal: 3/16 (Davies, Reese, 1-1; Chilcutt, 0-1; Chilcutt, 2-1; Chilcutt, 4-1; Chilcutt, 2, Montross, Rodi). Turnovers: 1/5 (Fox, 4 Lrench, 4 Rice, 3 Davis, 2 Rodi) Meals: (Chilcutt, 2 Lymph, Davis, Harris, Reese, Reese, Rodi, Sullivan) Technicals: benzo d
Kanns
| | M | 25 | 48 | 31 | R | A | F | 11 | 29 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 15 | 2 | 18 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 9 | 4 | 9 |
| Maddux | 27 | 34 | 4-10 | 2-2 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 10 | 16 |
| Randall | 24 | 31 | 4-12 | 4-6 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 10 | 16 |
| Brown | 24 | 1-10 | 0-10 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 16 | 16 |
| Tunstall | 18 | 2-0 | 1-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 16 | 16 |
| Woodberry | 6 | 0-0 | 2-2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 14 |
| Scott | 16 | 6-9 | 2-9 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 14 | 14 |
| Rice | 10 | 0-1 | 2-2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 10 |
| Richey | 10 | 1-1 | 2-2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Johanning | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Haftime: North Carolina 34, Kansas 45
Officials: Donaghy, Hightower, Pavia.
A: 47,100
Kansas
Jayhawks
Coach: Roy Williams
Record: 27-7
Duke
Blue Devils
Coach: Mike Krzyzewski
Record: 31-7
VS
PROBABLE STARTERS
Kansas 79
Kansas 79 North Carolina 73
Player Ht. PPG RPG
F - Greg Koubek 6-6 6.1 2.9
F - Grant Hill 6-7 11.2 5.0
C - Christian Laetnert 6-11 19.6 8.7
G - Bobby Hurley 6-0 11.3 2.4
G - Thomas Hill 6-4 11.9 3.7
Player Ht. PPG RPG
F -Alonzo Jamison 6-6 10.7 6.4
F -Mike Maddox 6-7 7.4 2.9
F -Mark Randall 6-9 14.9 5.9
G -Terry Brown 6-2 16.4 3.4
G -Adonis Jordan 5-11 12.3 3.1
Game Notes: Kansas will play Duke in the championship game at 8:10 tonight. Both teams are rich in NCAA tournament tradition. Each team is among the top 10 winning programs in tournament history. Duke is first and Kansas is third in tournament wins over the last six years. Both schools have made nine Final Four appearances, tied for third with Kentucky behind UCLA (14) and North Carolina (10). Kansas has been to the
appearance in 1988 ending in a national championship. Duke has made the trip the last four years in a row, and has never won a national championship.
first schools
kky behind
CONVERSE
WAS
ANSAS
Kansas forward Mark Randall reaches past North Carolina guard Hubert Davis for a rebound
Earl Richardson/Topeka Capital-Journal
Randall nurtures ties to Blue Devils player, coach
Bv S. J. Bailev
Kansan soortswriter
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. — Five years ago, Mark Randall wanted to be a Devil. A Duke University Blue Devil, that is.
"I came close to going to Duke and playing for Coach K," KU senior forward Randall said. "I liked him after the first few meetings I had with him and thought I would be really happy playing there."
Duke coach Mike Kryzewski said he remembered trying to land tile
"He was a great player that we thought would have fit into our system extremely well." he said. "We've had them." He has had we've been a pleasure to coach him.
So why did the highly-touted prep
player from Englewood, Colo.
choose Kansas rather than Duke?
"It came down to family." Randall said. "It was a matter of my parents only having to drive about 10 hours to see me play rather than having to spend a lot of money on round-trip plane rides to Durham."
But last summer, Kryzezwski and Randall developed a player-coach relationship when Randall played for him in the GoodWills Games in Seattle, Wash., and the world basketball championships in Argentina.
"I kind of hesitated when I was picking the team, because I remember he was one of those guys who didn't like being far away from home," she said. "My smile. "I asked him if he thought he wanted to go to Argentina, and he
said he could probably handle it."
“Obviously, he is one of the best coaches around, and it was an honor for me to play for him,” he said. A class guy and a class coach. Playing him is something I will look back on and cherish for the rest of my life.”
Randall said he considered himself lucky to have had the chance to finally play for Coach K.
Krzyzewski had similar praise for Randall.
"Mark is a terrible player," he said. "He's much more than just a scorer. He's so good at doing the other things, like passing, running lanes, and rebounding, that you forget just what a scoring threat he can be."
had the opportunity to play alongside Duke starters Christian Laetner and Bobby Hurley.
"You learn a lot about people when you spend such a great deal of time with them," Randall said. "I played with Christian in both the Goodwill Games and the world basketball championships, but Bobby didn't play in the world championships because he hurt his leg."
Randall said that spending a great deal of time with Laetner allowed the two to become close off the court as well as on.
During the summer, Randall also
"There wasn't a whole lot to do in Argentina," Randall said. "We spent most of our time playing basketball, but we did have time to just hang out or walk around the markets or things like that."
Laettner said his friendship with Randall had carried over into this year's basketball season.
"Mark and I still keep in touch," he said. "About once every two weeks we talk on the phone, but we usually don't even talk about basketball that much. We just kind of goof off and find out what's going on."
Laettner said their friendship would not affect the way he viewed Randall's potential in tonight's championship game.
"Mark's greatest asset is that he's such an active player," he said. "The thing I really remember about Mark is that he was really easy to play with. He's the ultimate team player, but now we're not going to be on the same team. He's just going to be like any other opponent."
Sports briefs
Kansas swimmers fail to reach NCAA finals
Freshman Tim Davidson and senior Jeff Stout failed to reach the finals in the men's NCAA swim championships in Austin, Texas.
Davidson scored 406.85 points on the three-meter board, earning a 30th place finish.
Stout, a returning All-American, swam the 100-yard backstroke in a time of 50.15 and placed 28th. He was also the finalist in backstroke in 1:51.13 and finished first.
At last year's meet, Stout finished 18th in the 100 and 21st in the 200.
'Hawks sweep 'Huskers
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
The Kansas baseball team swept four games from the Nebraska Cornhuskers during the weekend and placed a stranglehold on first place in the Big Eight Conference in the process.
In games played at Hoglund-
Maupin Stadium, the Jayhawks
defeated Nebraska 11-1 on Friday,
and won the game and day 43
yesterday afternoon.
"I don't know the last time that has happened," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said of the Big Ten, even known if it has ever happened."
In fact, the sweep is the first one in Bingham's four seasons at the Jayhawk helm and believed to be one of the few, if not the only.
Baseball
sweeps in Kansas baseball history. "It was huge for everyone in our program, confidence-wise," Bingham said.
In yesterday's game, Kansas right hander Curtis Mitch picked up his second victory of the season and gave five Huskers and walking none.
Schmidt said, "I didn't have my great stuff today. I tried to keep the ball down and let my infidel do the work, but even if they do score, our offense has been hitting the ball well."
runs off of 10 hits.
Kansas did the most damage in the fourth, scoring three runs off a two-RBI double by catcher Garry Schmidt and a throwing error by Nebraska shortstop Vince DiGrandi.
At the plate, the Jayhawks slapped Nebraska pitches Trey Rutledge and John Izumi for eight
The Jayhawks scored another run in the fifth and two runs in both the seventh and eighth innings.
Bingham were the Jayhawks were in a good position in the conference race, but they must have been out. That what was built up over the weekend.
"We've put five together at home," he said. "Now, we need to be able to take it on the road."
Freshmen shine in track meet
The Jayhawks, 19-12 overall and 6-2 in the Big Eight, travel to Southwest Missouri State tomorrow.
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Youth and experience shone brightly Saturday for the Kansas men's and women's track teams.
The Jayhawks were in Baton Rouge, La., for the Louisiana State Purple Tiger Invitational.
In her first collegiate competition, freshman Heather Berlin threw the javelin 108 and placed first in the shot put, then prior to Saturday's was 148.7.
"It feels good." Berlin said. "I got everything to come together for me. I just hope it can continue through the rest of the season."
Berlin, who was the 1990 Kansas State High School Javelin Champion, is now in the Kansas record books with the second best throw in Kansas history. The top mark was set by Ann G. Baeras in 1984. She threw 160-1.
Berlin's throw also earned her provisional qualification in the NCAA meet.
"I don't think they realize they are freshmen," she said. "They go out there and do their job as well as anyone else."
Freshman Helena Hafstrom also placed first in her event, the 1,500-meter run. Hafstrom won the event in 4:36.88.
Rochford said she was impressed by the freshmen's performances.
The time was especially satisfying for her because of a poor outdoor season last year.
Senior Patty Rochford finished third in the 1,500-meter run.
Rochford's time of 4:40.36 was a personal best for her.
"I was sick at the beginning of last year, and I never really got to the level I should have been." she said
"It makes me feel really good to
have started off this year so well. It makes my goals seem more attainable."
Senior All-American Pat Manson got his outdoor season off to a good start, placing first in the pole vault. Manson cleared 16-83%.
The rest of the vault squad filled the top four positions.
Jayson Lavender finished second with a jump of 16-23, John Bazzoni came in third with a jump of 15-9, and Brandon Blain finished in fourth place, clearing 15-3. All three athletes are freshmen.
12
Freshman Harun Hazim collected two second place finishes in the long jump and the triple jump with leaps of 23%, and 48%, respectively.
Kansas finished the meet in fourth place. Nebraska won the meet.
Rochford said that the meet was a good start for both teams, but that it didn't show their true potential.
12
Monday, April 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Fri. & Sat.
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Three-alarm fire damages 4 shops
FOR THOSE WHO HOME TO WICHITA
D'Egage Dancewear, European Tan, Health & Hair Salon, Pizza Hut Delivery and Shin Asian Supermarket, all at the west end of the shopping plaza at 2449 St., sustained damage in the fire.
Jim McSwan, Lawrence fire chief,
said the blaze was called in at 9:39
p.m. and was under control and
confined between European Tan and
the adjacent Pizza Hut Delivery
within 20 minutes.
A three-alarm fire damaged at least four businesses last night in the Holiday Plaza shopping center at 24th and Iowa streets.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Cause of Holiday Plaza blaze unknown
All 25 Lawrence firefighters on duty were called to the scene, McSwain said.
"The crews really made a good stop," he said. "They did an excellent job."
McSain said that it appeared the fire started inside Europe Tan but that the cause of the fire was still under investigation.
Kansan staff writer
The 2,000-square-foot store has been in the building since 1980 but moved to the current suite in 1987, he said.
Lorena Keefe, owner of D'Egage Dancewear, which is adjacent to
Achita State offer five Summer Session option
Presession: May 28-June 7
8-Week Session: June 10-August 2
First 4-Week Session: June 10-July 5
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Workshops Throughout the Summer
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Now's your chance to make more of that summer visit! Whether you are an undergraduate or graduate student, you can earn additional college credit by enrolling in Summer Session courses at Wichita State as a guest student.
Jerry Meyer, owner of European Tan, said he had no idea how the fire started. He was at home when it started.
Shuttle mission to test tools for space station
Wilma Grover said she and her husband lived near the building that was on fire.
Schmidt said he thought his store did not sustain any damage.
"I thought our place was a goner," he said. "That baby was burning down at the other end."
No damage estimates were available.
Wilma and Russell Grover were two of the more than 100 people who stood in the parking lot and watched a rollout from the roof of the building.
BE OUR GUEST FOR THE SUMMER
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For more information, call (316) 689-3085;
in Kansas, call toll-free, 1-800-362-2594.
Or return the form below.
The Associated Press
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Cut Here
Yes! I am interested in attending WSU as a guest student.
Address___
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — American astronaut head into orbit this week for the first space walk in more than five years to test techniques for building the biggest Tinkertover ever — the space station.
□ Please send me additional information and the Wichita State Summer 1991 Schedule of Courses.
Roxanna Bowman, shift manager at Pizza Hut Delivery, said she called 911 when employee Robert Woodard moked in the Pizza Hut storage room.
European Tan to the east, said she thought her store sustained smoke and water damage. The front door also was broken out.
Tony Schmidt, co-owner of University Photography Photoc., which is the farthest suite in the building to the east, said he was in his office when he saw the fire trucks outside the window
The five-day flight of Atlantis may be short for a shuttle mission, but it promises to be long on drama. In addition to the space walk, the crew will release the heaviest civilian spacecraft ever carried by a shuttle, an astronomical observatory weighing 17 tons.
Name___
Mail to the Office of Undergraduate Admissions, The Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas 67208-1595.
"I looked out and saw lots of smoke in European Tan and I knew there was a fire," said Woodard, who brought the pizza he was having for dinner out with him during the evacuation.
"It was a good thing I had a sale before this happened," she said.
City___ State___ Zip___
Atlantis is scheduled to blast off at 8:18 a.m. Central Standard Time on
'The five astronauts' main job aboard Atlantis will be orbital delivery of the monstrous $600 million Gamma Ray Observatory, which will observe star clusters and star stars for traces of gamma rays, the most energetic radiation known.
Classified Directory
The Gamma Ray Observatory will be put into orbit on the third day of the five-day flight. On the fourth day astronauts Jay Apt and Jerry Ross will spend six hours in the open bay testing tools and equipment for NASA's planned space station Freedom.
Friday. The countdown begins tomorrow morning.
100's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Personal announcements
140 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Dwg. TSC, Tee. Joe. You give may be able to
find a roommate for the couple ANDRE
ANDRE KOLE will when he comes to HU?
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Eating Pizza
BUY ONE PIZZA
& GET THE SECOND
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Those crazy people at Pyramid Pizza are letting you buy any Pyramid Pizza & get the second Pizza (of equal value) FREE!
Monday
Mania
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
(limited lunch delivery area) Also,try our Colomba Frozen
X
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
842-3232
14th & Ohio
(under The Wheel)
400's
Honey available at request for additional cost
300's
A
PYRAMID
CAFE
110 Bus. Personal
Notice: Any information from individuals who have been charged with crimes against women between cities and police or between citizens and security personnel during James Addison conviction or whose application was solicited and requested to contact J. Howe (Addison) will be made available.
$300-$1,000 wk. call for FREE if needed 1.800-955-6516
Habits phobias, stress, anxiety, pain,
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Temporary Tattoos
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737 Mass. 834d011
120 Announcements
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fisheries
Earn $1,000/Month Free transportation Room
and $200/month necessary Male or Female for 6 page employment
8400 South Seattle WA 98124-8400
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Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods, General Store, 725 Mass.
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money will be donated to 1881-1884 (CULLE SCHOOLLASHIP and SCHOOLLASHIP Joule, Mo602-1881-1880-497-7495).
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called return by counselors). Headquarters 841-235 or KU info 844-3360. Sponsored by
SAVE A PLEASE RECYCLE!
now accepting tapes for Day on the Hill
EARTH SPRINGS Living Myth Through Inuit Workshops. TSPARTS, April 9-May 38. Free introductory lecture April 2, 7:30 pm, Lamphainer Books, 1 P. Nithil
SUA
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115.
SUA
Area talent may
SUA Box Office
♪
Level 1 Kansas Union
Tapes must be in by Monday. April 8 at noon.
Former details, call the SUR Office 864-3477
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE! Recover from stress and injury so you can enjoy the warmth of a massage. Massage Therapy 418-062-7 go fly a kite. Suffering from abortion? Write HeartResist.
TIME TO LOVE THE WINTER PUDGES" GOOD tasting, naturally. nutritionally balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money back or you fail. Call for information. 1 800 672 4538 1 800 672 4538
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Suffering from abortion? Write Hearts Restored,
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Applications in the SUA office Kansas Union - level 4 Due 5pm Monday April 1
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content oriented BBS.
850-624-3177.
140 Lost-Found
FOUND: KEYS-4th floor Wescoe, 864.1117 tt
claim. Leave message
KEYS-K with bp pass. Call 842.4997 tt
FOUND: KUID with bus pass. Call 842-6987 to claim.
Large Beward-for-for return of, or information leading to return of black mountain lake skibet from Cornucope Restaurant Tuesday evening 2/29/91 Call 841-646 Confidential.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
AIRLINES HIRING
Seeking students and grades to fill many positions Airline will train Excellent salary and travel benefits. 300-441-2455
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for Spring and Summer wintake. Prior service required. Applicant must be in person 9:1 or 2:3 at 1069 Crosgate. ATTN Psychology, Education, Sociology WANT special needs youth with special needs youth with behavioral difficulties has positions for locations located on lake near EI. MN and Boundary Waters Canoe Area in Superior National Forest (421-857-6276) available Contact Ed 485-3037 or Tom Bauer (421-857-6286) 311 W. Brodway, Minneapolis.
The Math department is accepting applications for the position of math tutor for MATH 181 and 182, with a range of experience in tutoring students with wide ranges of abilities in a variety of mathematical topics. Applicants must have completed a minimum of five hours of calculus, have strong command of calculus and/or differential or integral mathematics skills. If you are interested in application, please send your resumes to Math Department.
Travel from Texas to Montana working on a wheat harvesting farm. Guaranteed monthly wage and bounty with room and board. Family operation of 40 years. 40 hours required. 913-567-648
CAMP COUNSELORS for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, canning, sailing, waterboarding, gymnastics, horseback riding, camping, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $100 up more. add 4&b Kids. browse 785 Miles, Nild, Mkd
CHILLA CAREER WORKER. Residential facility for adolescent boys. Full-time and summer positions Must be 21, high school graduate or equivalent experience in field a plus. We drastically test. Send resume to P.O. Box 4079, New York, NY 10003.
Convenent Store Clerk-$4.25/hr Weekend shift, cash register experience. Apply in person at Phillips 66. Desert Short Stop. 1-883-3053. Customers, 20 hr per week, nights, experiences with floors, bathrooms and trash removal $4.25/hr. Apply with 2 work references at 331 789-3053.
Montreal, China - 12-leading Academy 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, computer lab, office space or above, with at least a B average, and are computer familiar. Manpower needs you as a Collegegirl Hop to promote the sales of the college. You will have the opportunity to accept that pays you. Call Loret 749-3800
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with cute kids for 35 hours weekly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts June 4 and be you call Caleb at (818) 276-9000.
Hired Wanted: Daytime Bardener, Part-time
summer. PRIVATE CLUB, experience pre-
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842-9033
Radio Board Operator. Part-time. Experience required. Contact Brian Schiel, KLZR, 843-1320.
O.E.F.
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1-232-6829.
RACING ENTHUSIASTS: We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday projects at a major race facility in Houston. Please visit www.houstonracing.org, ubers, ubers, hostesses, gate attendants, and parking人员. If interested apply at Manpower, 211 East 8th.
STUDENT CLEERICAL ASSISTANT I. Deadline:
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filing, and performing all assigned clerical
duties within Office Services; performs re-
quirements for office operations; takes
photoypeory from Computer Center Staff;
takes phone messages, sets up meeting, etc.
to apply; compile an application available at
Student Center. Respresentation to EOA
EMPIRE.
Jayhawker Towers Assistant Manager
A 12-month half-time, live-in position for the Assistant Manager is primarily responsible for policies and programs for residents in the daycarewaker and schoolmaster positions. The Assistant Manager reports to the Towers Manager and is also responsible to the Department of Student Affairs. Provide assistance to the Complex Manager. Help develop a sense of community through programs and training for students. Provide support to residents and supervision of student employees. Enforce Department policies. Participate in curriculum development and evaluation sessions. Monitor policies established for residents and guests. Make maintenance of facilities and equipment required. Assess student status preferred. Group living experience required-residential management experience or a related professional field. Prefer experience working with persons from other cultures. Position available through an employer. Pursued two-bedroom apartment plan a stipend of $50.00 per month. Send a cover letter to Fred McElaine, KU Student Department. Pursued Fred McElaine, KU Student Department. Hire 40th Width, Ithu Shell DSH, Lawrence Hall, KU. Contact Monday, April 15, 1991. EEO Employer
Management Team for medium sized Apartment
buildings. Bookkeeping, maintenance. Call 749-665.
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Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year Templeton Nanny Agency 842-4441
Lake of the Dazarks Summer Employment. The Harep Floating Restaurant is accepting applications for the position, excellent salary and tip. Great work environment. Excellent training. Good housing is still available. Contact Frank
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225 Professional Services
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Attorney
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenders other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor of the Woman Word Processing Journal and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type 845,360 days or evening.
2-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor of the Woman Word Processing Journal and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type 845,360 days or evening.
3-001 double-spaced page Call Heisters 841,797 Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence
4-001 double-spaced page Rush jobs no problem
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25/double-spaced page Call Mrs. Mattila 10am 6pm, 841.129
Research Projects! Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional who enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires Call
Key Works. 942-8977
will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible papers. Help 841-6255.
K's professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm 841-6345.
WordPerfect, word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners, Phone 843.8508
300s
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1999 Trek 7006 Mountain Bike. Aluminum, **218**. $65.00 new. $85.00 old. **605-888-0130** BIANCHI road bicycle. **237** men's with many accessories. Over $450 invented $225 obsolete
For sale: Hoda Spree and Smith Corona Word
Processor. Phone 865-0679.
For sale: Miyata Eight-SE ten speed bicycle, royal blue, in very excellent condition. Call 843-7826, ask for John.
4
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, projector, sound system. $2000.00 816-531-8769
for sale. Maximum weight is pro-
vided. Suit size: $2000; $318-$519;
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleep bags, backpacks,
tents, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
snowboard equipment.
CARHARTT WORKWEAR. Mon-Sat 9-5-
4:47-7:24 St. Marys Surplus Sales St. Marys, MS.
Lined, black fabric skirt, size 18/60. KG
(50) for sale.
14. Col. 397
Large amounts of discarded and trash boxes. Large quantities at discarded stores. Small quantities. Walks welcome. Call 853-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
NEW REALIZE BIKE WITH SCHWANN 1998
PUMP (INCLUDES GUIDE) $420, 841-914-96.
Specialized Mountain Bike—One year old-
Kryptonite kite, $300; Calibre 825-245 Leave
340 Auto Sales
1971 VW camperbus, rebuilt engine with 600
weight, good condition, *Mount* Call 822-3423 MWFS
1972 Black Trans Am, AC, New Paint, Great
Condition, Beautiful Car, 851-8651, Pat.
1980 Red Honda Civic bickleback. AC, stereo, 2K, one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas mileage. Call Mo evenings 740-2575.
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. detail call Bill Lee, 843-3500
For sale: 1882 Nissan Stanzas, 100K miles, good condition. $150 obo. Call 864-6332.
370 Want to Buy
Wanted-Used mountain bike. Men's large frame
843.7800
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
2-8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842-8971/843-1601.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 1, 1991
13
1-3-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-897-1031/842-169-161
2.AC Studio Apts; avail. June 1 for next year. Also
1 bdmr apf for summer sublet only. 945 mo.
490-616 eyes.
48 dax in lapurple. Available in fall or summer on 12 month lease. DW, low in offices, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit. Call 482 8784 For Tracy or have message.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
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, gender, origin, or an intention, to make any such 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.
Available Aug 1 at 107 Tennessee, 794-603-581
basement appt. $35/month plus insurance, 1 year
baseball season. 1 year car insurance, driver/derv
driver. 1 hrATC appt. $30/month plus
insurance, 1 year lease, 1 month insurance, off street
parking.
Available June. Extra large one bedroom, could be as 2 bedroom in nice older home. New bathroom. Wood floors. $440 Gas/water paid. Neets. B11-1074
Available June 3 bedroom apartment in rier
newer home. Walk to KU/Ridownat,
C/A dishwasher, off street parking, wood floors. $265.
Water paid. No entries. 841-1074.
Basement alp for qti graduate student. No pets. Live alone, good morals, no smoke take of app. Off street parking. Individual rate. $200 plan for apartment. Income tax: B1-337 workweek, weekday.
BIG 1 bedroom for sublease. Available June 1 with option to renew in fall. Pool, balcony, close to campus. Rent receipt: 842.876
Now leasing for summer & fall
studios -3 pools
1&2 BR apts -tennis courts
2&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
(on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE APTS
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado
2 & 3 B-RAvailable in May or August,
between 10am and 4pm on microwaves, patio or deck, laundry facility. Onsite Management. KI has route, off-street parking for summer or fall 749-1566.
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$399 415/mo. Call 843-2116.
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apartment in May. Call M44-8315.
Extremely nice, spacious, 3 bdrm townhouse /wave:
garden 2 female non-smoking rooms needed,
year bed base beginning Aug and/or summer
lease. b2s0 t_3 utilities. Kerr 843-6062.
Excellent Location; 1 block to campus; 2 bedroom
at 4 inple, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA,
no pets, available 1. $360 At 1314 Ohio Orn
842-4242
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water费 $300; mail Call 841-2582. Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and receive it on your two for 2 months. *Studio 1, and 12bdm apts. *Heat and water paid. *Across the campus. *Center Rainbow Tower Apt. 813-981-863.
Large 2 bedroom apt for summer sublease. Swimming pool and volleyball. Close to bus route. Call 855-070-Leave message
hey KU. Med. students-move in 1 and receive $t_2$ off your rent for 2 months. "Studies, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Heat and water paid." Hey KU. Med. Center. Red River Flows. Apts. 91-83-983.
LEASE NEW FOR FALL. Bossy 3 or 3+plus DB on busline on dial. Basement, garage. CA/W D/hookup. no Pets. Lease & reqs. ref $440/mo and up. Negotiable. 8437-7256 then
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $200.00.
841-9113. leave message.
LEASE NO FALL FOR ALL. Extra nice 2 BR duplex apt in foreign Location. Extra large MAR; garage; laundry/storage y/nets No pets. Lease & $60/month rent for $850. Pricing $365/month. #847-7336 after 5.
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF! Summer sublease form 2 BR apt. May pcd. Dail pcd.option for fall. Very close to campus. 843-7492
Mackenzie Place Aps: 3 bdrm lux apt, new leasing for August; 1 yrs ago, washer/dryer, microwave, ceiling fan. lcd: 2 decks, 1 year lease, no energy. Room: 6773 days and weeks, 841-8218 daytime.
1+ BR, 4+ BR. Washers/dryers in each unit, microwave fires, fanware, fireplates, 2 full baths in 3 BR on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call today: 740-1566.
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 suite with large master bathroom, central air, gas, carpet, dress and blinds. Low utilities and pool batue. Quiet rooms. 60'x120' span. SPANISH GREAT APEARTMENTS HI 841-359-7230
Spacies 3 bedroom. 8475 Sublease for summer or sooner. 1866 W. 27. 842-4630 or 841-5979.
Spacies one apartment机饭 for summer sublease.
Spool yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apt.
WD/DW/microwave/disposal. Sublease $395.00.
Call 865-3837.
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Special
S
Swan Management
* Gazebo
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downstairs: $25/mo., gas & water paid.
841-566 after 4:30
SUMMER SUBLEASE June 1 4 bedroom
townhouse. Sunrise Village. $185 each negotiable.
749-2400.
SUNRISE VILLAAGE summer subasebe. Can fit up to 5 people for $13/mo. dishwasher, microwave, pool, summer parties. First keg is on us for new tenants. Please call 842-7714.
West Hill 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!)
(water paid!)
-2 bedroom ants 950 sq. ft.
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft $365 to $415 per month
Great location Near campus
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
ach apartment feature
-Washer and dryer
-Microwave
-Gas heat, central air
-Large bedrooms
-Min blinds
-On KU bus ride
-Carports available
-1 bedroom $35, $350
-2 bedroom $44, $460
-3 bedroom $560
-office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Harddee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
2 Large Bap bpr in Meadowbrook Apts. Available mid-May through August. Water and cable paid. close to campus, Great for 1.2.3, or r people to share. 450 per mo. 849-6097
APARTMENTS: Small, large. Walk to KU Medical Center, Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many exits. 816-361-3928
...on KU bus route
...studios
...townhomes
...2,3 Bedrooms
...Free cable
...Water paid.
...Pool
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
...
苹果
Free cable
Qulet studio
Pool
Water paid
Georgetown Apartments
Close to KU bus route
U Bus Route-Holidome
24 hour Maintenance
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- O=Sir MOT/Broadcom
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- On Site MGT./Reliabl 24 hour Maintenance
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Low Security Deposit
- Microwaves & Dishwashe
- Fenced pool area with
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- No pets
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus, on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-914.
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue.. Thur.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
Subleases Available Immediately
--oth & Gateway
MADRID
PANORAMIC
VIEW
Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Colony Woods, May
20Aug 10 w/ 3 weeks free. $215/month plus
utilities. 865-3538
Sunrise Apts.
1. 2,3 & 4 Bedroom
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748, afterworks.
- Studios
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
& Apartment Living On Rue Du
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with dressing area unstairs
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
- Luxurious Town Home
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Rools
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at VIII
841-1287 or 841-8400
2 Bdmr townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
Some Summer Subleases too!
Open House Daily
Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two with fireplaces
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
Newly remodeled apartments
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sun 8-5
Sat 1-4
--the move now!
842-4200
OPEN DAILY
Enlarged to Show Texture
meadowbrook
HELLO COMIC READER!
I HAVE BEEN ASKED
TO DEFINE A TARHEEL
FOR YOU, THE COMMON MAN.
TAR HEEL- WHAT YOU GET
ON YOUR BOOTS
AFTER WORKING
THROUGH
MANURE!
GO KU!
BUT ADDISON... WHAT?
A BLUE DEVIL?
1-5 P.M.
Reserve Your Home NOV
We offer
Completely Enriched
Designed with you in mind!
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
- Custom furnishings
•Designed for privacy
•Private Parking
•Close to shopping & KU
•Many great locations
Equal opportunity housin
Offering:
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 9415255
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749 241
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
Campus Place - 841-1429
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
842-4455
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
- Free utilities
- 2 bdm triplex available mid May D/W, disposal,
W/D hookups, very nice inside and out
$400 month. #845-5232
- Computer Center
* Great social events
* "Dine Anytime"
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor
Pool
Wise up and make
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
A
$355 - $425
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
Models Open Daily
Mon - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun,12-4 p.m.
AH... THE BLUE
DEVIL is a BEAST
THAT LIKES TO EAT
THE TAR HEEL
FROM JAYHAWK BOOKS
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
by Brian Gunning
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 60044 (913) 843-8559
Summer Sublease. Trailridge 3 bedroom lowhouse. Furnished Pool, patio, dishwasher. compactor. $30 plus utilities. #419128
Summer two-season 1 term,urnamed apt. June-Aug.
Call nights 8:45am to 9:45am for more info.
Summer sublease. Unfurished 2 bedroom apt. 2
blocks from office on Alamo Blvd. 906-799-3350.
Summer sublease. 12th & Ohio 3 bedrooms (3-4 people). Sizes low. Towers小 (85% mo. 653-362)
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at complex, Sundance. Call Angle. 865-492.
Summer sublease at Sundance. Studio, completely furnished. Available May 11, 2019 thru Aug 10, 1991. Call evenings, 841-5786.
Summer sublease with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call 852-290.
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit
842-3940 or 749-888. Ask for Jennifer.
430 Roommate Wanted
Large studio for summer sublease. Available mid-May. May rent paid. $275/mo. 841-6794 after 6pm.
Roommate needed immediately. Close to campus.
$180 plus utilities. 841-4535.
One or two female roommates needed for 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom, apt. at Orchard Corners starting August 19. Call Shannon at 784477
- Policy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626.
Roommate needed for 3 bedrooms; $240
a month. $24 deposit plus 1/3 utilities. Includes
spacious rooms, patio, on bus, fireplace, 1/2
bath. Call Steve. 843-6456
Roommate now. Very nice, very large, W/D. Pets OK. See to believe! Only $125. 841-2746.
Roommate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house.
Two rooms for 1-2 people. Reasonable rent/utilities. Alison. 865-2578.
Female roommate wanted for summer sublease.
Furnished am at Campus Place—great location
$181 mo/£4 utilities. Please call Michelle,
855 0699
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in BALL Face count as 3 words.
Roommate wanted: 3rd person, 3 bedroom apt.
939 Indiana. $15/month plus utilities. Call
749-3989 or 841-9131.
Summer Sublease. Female wanted to share 4
bathroom, shower, option or fall $180/mm.
$160 deposit per room.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered lines count as 7 words.
3 Bedroom (or summer sublease. Please call
749-3477; economical).
Classified Information Mail-In Form
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
- No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising
Blind box ads! please add $4.00 service charge.
- Deadlines
Tearlessheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
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.
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.
| 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 |
Cluccificione
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 370 want to buy
110 business persons 105 help wanted 340 auto sales 405 for rent
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous 430 noontime wk
130 entertainment 225 service types
Address (phone number published only if unclosed below)
please print your ad one word per box:
MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST I
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
DLOW KANSAN POLICE
check账付5账扣
Hawaiian
Institute of Haitian
10 Staffer Flam 110
SKA, KS 60459
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
I'll call you
"It's Mrs. Griffin across the hall. ... Seems a giant tentacle smashed her door in today, grabbed her little shih tzu, and dragged it away. ... She called the Harrisons, but their squid is over at the park!"
14
Monday, April 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Sierra Club is selling out, critics say
Leaders accused of compromising environment for political support
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Dissident members of the Sierra Club say the environmental group is selling out, and saying they are not as it gains political clout in Congress.
"There's a climate of almost revolt at the grass roots level. The business of making deals and using our native forests as a bargaining chip is appalling," said Margaret Hays Young of the club's New York City group.
The critics say they want to publicize the internal wringing over the new rules. The other organization will be shared into endorsing more extreme proposals to
halt logging on federal lands.
Club leaders think they are on the verge of winning congressional approval of unprecedented protection for old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest, but club activists in New York, Oregon, California, Texas and Louisiana are among those who continue to push for proposals that many in Congress consider radical.
"We have destroyed 95 percent of America's forests. We should be trying to save every last stick of what is left," said Tim Hermach, a 30-year member of the Sierra Club's Oregon chapter who launched a splinter
group in 1988 because of his frustration with the Sierrans' search for moderate, middle ground.
National leaders say they welcome the internal debate, but fear the more radical proposals could threaten their cause.
"If you embrace the most radical or visionary proposals, my sense is you are not going to be able to rally sufficient political support in the next five years to pass anything and, as a result, we will lose everything," said Bruce Hamilton, director of field services for the club.
George Russell of Huntsville, Texas, the forest practices chairperson for the Sierra Club's Lone Star Chapter, said the group's lobbyists had developed too cozy a relationship with politicians, especially Oregon Sen. Mark Hatfield, the top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee.
"They are losing sight of the fact their mission is to save ecosystems, not to have lunch with Sen. Hatfield," Russell said.
The growing dispute centers on environmentalists' efforts to protect the Northwest's oldest forests. The Sierra Club has endorsed Indiana Rep Jim Jontz's Ancient Forest ban logging on potentially more than six million acres of the region's old growth forests.
The club has withheld support for Hermach's proposed Native Forest Protection Act, which would end clear-cutting and road building on all national forests and prohibit timber harvests on all previously uncut federal lands.
Ranchers upset that wolves may return to Yellowstone
The Associated Press
HELENA, Mont. — Gray wolves stalked through Yellowstone National Park until being removed from the park by man 60 years ago. Now, the government is considering bringing them back, and that has nearby ranchers in an uproar.
Wolves disappeared in Yellowstone in the 1930s after ranchers and the government eradicated them. Now they are predatory activity, it still is.
The wolf could help limit growing herds of elk and bison, but tens of thousands of domestic cattle and sheep graze just across the park boundary.
"We're trying to coordinate this so everybody gets a chance to speak and nobody gets hurt," said Joel Scarafford of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The Wolf Management Committee appointed by Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan meets with the public here today. It is the last public hearing before the committee to make its recommendations, due May 15.
The militant environmental group Earth First!, which supports wolf reintroduction, and the New Wool Growers Association, which opposes it, are mar shaling their forces for a show of strength.
Discover Downtown This Spring
MARIO LEYNO
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Thursday-Monday
20% off All Shorts
Congrats!
Kansas is in
THE FINAL
FOUR!
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British Khaki • River City
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839 Massachusetts Street
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Eastons LTD.
Eastons LTD.
839 Massachusetts Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 843 5755
BARGAIN
BARGAIN HUNTERS!!
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FIRST COLONY
The First Colony Coffee & Tea Company
the BayLeaf
725 Mass.
842-4544
501
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Available in Preshunk or
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March Madness in Lawrence at King of Jeans 740 Mass 843-3933
Give Her What She Really
Wants, A pair of brilliant 1/10 carat (total weight) diamond earrings set in 14k gold. She'll love them & you.
$135.00
Kizer Cummings newelers
Pier 1 imports®
A Place To Discover.™
736-738 Massachusetts
Hours:
Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30
Thurs 9:30-8:30
Sun 1:00-5:00
Coming Soon... Spring Fashion Section in Color!
Wednesday April 17
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BIG SALE
on Women's
EYE GLASSES
Single vision lenses and frames
Frame Values to $130
$65 *
Price good thru April 30
Over 200 selected frames to choose from
SPECTRUM
OPTICAL
841-1113
4E7th
Downtown Lawrence
SPECTRUM
OPTICAL
841-1113
4E7th
Downtown Lawrence
It Goes Like The Wind,
Climbs Like A Beast,
And Is As Comfortable As
The Living Room Sofa.
SPECIALIZED. ROCKHOPPER, $399
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts, 843-5000
Spring Has Arrived!
Come
See
Us!
THE LOFT
Contemporary Women's Clothing
742 Massachusetts
9:30-5:30 M S
Til 8:00 Thurs
1:00-5:00 Sun
(
72-65
"We finally won a game in April." - Coach Mike Krzyzewski on Duke's first national championship in its ninth Final Four.
- Kansas made only 13 of 22 layup attempts and 4 of 16 on other shots within 10 feet. Duke was 10 for 10 on layups and 2 for 8 within 10 feet.
Classes canceled 1:30-3:15 p.m.
Complete game coverage, Page 9.
Homecoming rally at 2:30 p.m., Memorial Stadium
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.101,No.122
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
T UESDAY, APRIL 2, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
Loss sparks violence
NEWS: 864-4810
KU
KU
DUK
KANS
DUK
KANS
D Tester Medical Special to the KANSAS
Kansas' Mike Maddox tries to wrestle the ball away from Duke's Grant Hill. Duke won its first NCAA championship 72-65 last night.
Joseph J Lies/KANSAN
JEREMY SCHUMANN
Two KU police officers remove an unidentified man from in front of Wescoe Hall. Police removed him after an effigy of a Duke Blue Devil was burned in a tree in front of Wescoe.
The Homestead Grays and Caribe, two Lawrence bands, played music while the crowd danced, lit fireworks, cheered and drank beverages that would have been used to shower fellow fans if the Jayhawks had claimed their third national championship.
An estimated 15,000 people gathered on campus last night to celebrate the success of the Kansas basketball team this season, despite its loss to Duke University in the NCAA championship game.
Consolation turns to chaos
Kansan staff report
Students skipped hands and hugged each other as they recalled the numerous victories throughout the regular season and the NCAA tournament and pledged support to and confidence in next year's team. Many shouted, "We're No. 2." or "We're better," the best, or "Wait till next year."
But within an hour the mood of the
crowd changed. Reports of injuries ranging from a broken ankle to minor cuts and scrapes began pouring in to paramedics and KU police. At one point, all of the ambulances assigned to Jayhawk Boulevard were in use. Officials at Lawrence Memorial Health Center blamed flying debris such as beer bottles and fireworks for most of the injuries.
The camaraderie that was displayed at past boulevard parties and early last night disintegrated as they lost their grip. The police said they, broke up six fights.
KU police also reported two incidents of armed men threatening people in the crowd. No injuries were reported as a result.
A KU police representative said the mood swing could be attributed to the frustration of the loss.
▶ See related story Page 8
Season's finale a heartbreaker
Kansan staff report
The Kansas basketball team's storybook season came to a close last night as the Duke Blue Devils defeated the Jayhawks 72-45 to claim the 1991 NCAA national championship.
Poor shooting stifled the Jayhawks throughout the game and put them in a hole they never could climb out of. Although they trailed by only eight at halftime, a 5-minute scoring drought midway through the second half looked to seal the Jayhawks' fate.
A Kansas run at the Blue Devils with only a minute remaining gave the thousands of Kansas fans at the Indianapolis Hosier Dome a spark of hope. However, in the end it was Duke who would walk away with
college basketball's ultimate prize.
Kansas shot 41 percent for the game, including a dismal 38 percent in the second half. The Blue Devils capitalized on Kansas' inaccuracy from the field and hit 57 percent of their shots.
Free throws also played a tremendous role, as Duke went to the foul line 20 more times than the Jayhawks. The Blue Devils drilled out of 28 free throws, including 12 of 12 by the tournament's Most Outstanding Team, which accounted for 35 percent. The Jayhawks hit four of their eight free throws for 50 percent.
9
Jayhawk seniors Mark Randall and Terry Brown, playing in their final game in Kansas uniforms, beat the 10-point performance respectively.
2
Tuesday, April 2, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
Sunny Day
TODAY
Rainy
HI: 73
LO: 52
54/41
70/31
58/31
64/36
70/48
78/54
76/62
Kansas Forecast
Warm and mostly cloudy with thunderstorms by afternoon. Continued warm through the week.
Salina 70/40 KC
Dodge City 70/41 72/42
Wichita 74/45
Wednesday - Cooler and
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
3-day Forecast
Cooler and mostly cloudy with rain by afternoon and evening. High 64, low 47.
Thursday - Warm and partly cloudy. High 71, low 46.
Friday - Partly cloudy with a chance of rain. High 78, low 50.
forecast by Mike Schinkel Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-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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■ African Affairs Student Association will conduct a talk about Ethiopia at noon at Alceve D in the Kansas Union. The movie "A Dry White Season" will be played at 7 tonight at 3 Lincottico.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 1:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Study Abroad in Frenchspeaking countries will have an information session at 4 p.m. at 2055 Wescote.
KU Study Abroad in Spanish-speaking countries will have an information session at 3 p.m. at 3040 Wescow
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A KU student's car valued at $8,918 was taken between 2:30 and 4:30 a.m. on Saturday in the 1000 block Drive, Lawrence police reported.
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Stereo equipment, a radar detector and 10 compact discs valued at $1,700 were taken from a KU student's car between 11:30 am and Saturdays. Sunday in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
A wallet and its contents valued at $111 were taken between 8:30 and 8:32 p.m. Sunday in Robinson Center, KU police reported.
Meeting Tonight 7 p.m. Kansas Room, Kansas Union
been planned. For information call
GLSOK at 864-3091.
KU Chess Club will meet at 7 tonight at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
- KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 tonight at the southwest lobby in the Burge Union.
- Women's Resource Center will sponsor a workshop called "Power Plays: Decision-Making Skills For Middle School" in the Pine Room in the Kansas City, Missouri
Golden Key National Honor Society will meet at 6 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
■ Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will have an eating disorder support group at 7:30 tonight at 20 Watkins Memorial Health Center.
■ Car speakers and a radar detector valued at $270 were taken between midnight Saturday and 9 a.m. Sunday in the 240 block of West 25th Street, Lawrence police reported.
**Items valued at $00 were taken from a KU student's car between 10:30 p.m. Saturday and 12:40 a.m. Friday to Lawrence Lawrence Police and Street, Lawrence police reported
A KU student's car window was broken with a rock between midnight Saturday and 12:30 a.m. Sunday in the 1000 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car totaled $500.
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Nominations are now being accepted for the Graduate Student Teaching Award. The KU Endowment Association and the Graduate Student Council are sponsoring five awards to recognize excellence in teaching by graduate students at the University of Kansas.
For further information, please call the Graduate Student Council, 864-4914, or the Graduate School, 864-3301.
Anyone may nominate a graduate teacher by writing to the Graduate Student's department or program. Your letter should be submitted to their department by no later than Thurs,April 4.
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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.
place so people know where to find them!
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:
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 2, 1991
3
Hail, Final Four party take campus by storm
Labor hours cost $774 after Saturday's celebration
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Between last week's bail storm and KU fans celebrating the Jayhawks' Four First victory, the damage done campus buildings, trees and vehicles has been costly.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, says, "The storm damage is much more widespread, whereas the effects of the celebrating have pretty much been confined to the Wesco area."
Storm damage included roof leaks, broken roof tiles and broken windows in buildings and cars.
Steve Green, associate director of facilities operations, said damage was caused not only by the hail but also by a storm that passed through the property.
"Hail damage and wind damage has come to $3,907 in time and materials so far," he said. "I can't say that everything has been repaired. There probably will be more to add to the remair list."
Green said there had been $774 worth of labor hours related to damage done during the Final Four celebration Saturday night.
Richardson said the facilities operations crew that cleaned up the campus after the celebration had found evidence of broken windows.
"We're going to have to remove three of those trees in front of Wescoe," he said. "That's several thousand dollars worth of damage."
Richardson said some lights in front of Wescoe were broken, people climbing on them.
"Generally speaking, we weren't hurt too badly." he said.
Richardson said the damage was comparable to the damage when KU won the national championship in nine.
"We had some damage to some juniper bushes in front of Wescow that night," he said. "They were just taken out on the ground."
Richardson said that facilities operations did not put anything up to prevent students from climbing the trees on the rooftop.
"People come up here to have fun, and we don't want them to get hurt by climbing the trees," he said.
Property owners, tenants disagree over placement of campaign signs
According to regulations, owners can place signs on property
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
As local political campaigns come to a head, some Lawrence tenants complain that rental-property owners and candidates have put words in their mouths by putting signs in their vards.
According to Lawrence Building Inspection Office regulations, rental-property owners have the right to place yard signs with political slogans on the property they rent. However, some tenants said the signs made it appear that they endorse candidates they do not support.
Steve Lytle, a Lawrence senior who leases a house at 2301 Massachusetts St., said he objected to David Penny campaign signs on the property and asked his landlord to remove them.
"There were about 20 Republican signs in the yard," Lytle said. "We didn't want to support them."
Dick Lynch, who manages the property for Lynch Real Estate, 1711 Massachusetts St., said he removed the signs upon the request. However, which reserved the right to determine which signs were placed on the property.
"As long as I maintain the lawn, I decide," he said. "Some of them get sneaky and pull them down anyway."
Lynch and other rental-property owners said that campaign officials contacted them during every election season to ask whether they could put property signs on the rental property.
"I always say, 'Ask the students before you put them up.'" he said.
'It's really up to them. I try to stay out of it. When you get into the political part of it, you get a lot of headaches.'
Roger Tuckel Rental property owner
Lytle said nobody had notified him or his roommates about the signs.
Roger Tuckel, who also owns rental property, said that he usually complied with candidates' requests for his tenants, and that his tenants had the final decision.
Apartheid laws linger despite reform efforts
"It's really up to them," he said. "I try to stay out of it. When you get into the political part of it, you get a lot of headaches."
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
The struggle to end apartheid in South Africa continues even though there has been less media attention focused on the region since the Persian Gulf War, said some African-American students at KU.
"Everybody shifted their focus to the gulf, but now we need to shift back." said Cory Anderson, executive board member of Black Men of Today. "The effect the media has on American society is phenomenal."
Anderson said that students needed to be aware that inequality still existed in South Africa and that they should work together to that have investments in the region.
"Black people as a whole will never be free until Africa is a free continent." Anderson said. The American group did not make it a truly democratic society."
Tonya Sanchez, Brooklyn, N.Y., junior, said apartheid in South Africa continued to be a neglected topic in the United States.
"The U.S. was so eager to liberate Kuwait," she said.
"The economic basis is in the hands of the whites," she said. "The Africans have no power there."
Sanchez said Western economic interests in South Africa obstructed the United States from applying for further democratic reforms.
People's apathy toward South Africa contributes to the growing problem of racism in the United States, Sanchez said.
"How can you go and try to liberate people in another country when the people in your own country aren't liberated?" she said.
"There is no question that racism and discrimination in the United States guides the thinking toward South Africa," said Bhana, who is from Johannesburg and teaches South African history.
Bhana said inequality still remained in the region even though F.W. de klek's government had tried to institute reforms.
"He (de Klerk) is playing the game to secure for the whites the best amount of power instead of handing it over to the Blacks." Bhana said.
He said Western nations put faith into de Klerk's reforms because of their own commercial interests in South Africa.
The Hawkmobile
Kerry Menzie, Derby junior, paints a Jayhawk on the side of his car. Menzie began of the men's basketball team. He said it would take him 5 or 6 hours to finish all the painting Jayhawks on the sides, front and back of his automobile vesterdav in support painting.
Survey gauges student opinions about Watkins
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The Student Health Advisory Board is conducting a survey to determine how KU students perceive Watkins Memorial Health Center.
The survey is being conducted by selected members of Student Senate and the health advisory board. Each member of Student Senate gives numbers and first names of students
that were taken from the student directory, said Aime Hall, student body vice president
To get a random sampling of 500 students, the name of every 52nd student was taken, Hall said. The Senate and board members are supposed to call the numbers and conduct the survey by telephone.
Cindy Snyder, chairperson of the patient relations subcommittee of the
health advisory board, said the survey took about seven minutes for each student to complete.
The individual responses to the survey are confidential, Snyder said.
The idea for the survey is not new, Hall said. Both she and Mike Schreiner, student body president, discussed the survey when they decided to run for office last year, but t did not become a campaign issue.
she said.
When the appointments to the health advisory board were made, the survey was put on the board's agenda, Hall said.
"It it was something that we felt would benefit both the image of Watkins and the student body," she said.
The survey contains questions about satisfaction with Watkins,
whether students have health insurance and whether students receive care outside of Watkins.
Snyder said the health advisory board would release the results of the survey to Watkins. The results probably will be ready by April 12.
To get an accurate survey, Snyder said those conducting it would have to get responses from about 80 percent, or 400, of the students listed.
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Tuesday, April 2. 1991 / University Daily Kansar
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Loss to Duke does not detract from Jayhawks' achievements over the course of winning season
Last night's final score attempted to deny what Jayhawk fans knew to be true: The KU basketball team is a group of outstanding athletes.
The team has given fans plenty to write home about, including breathtaking victories, sportsmanlike conduct in defeat and enough "remember when" stories to fill a scrapbook
taken when stories of the victims Today we will welcome home the athletic heroes in a pep rally at 2:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium.
Fans will remind the players that they have been supported all season, not only after victories, but also in the face of defeat.
Proof of this unyielding support has been shown in the recent, large post-game turnouts on campus, the Student Union Activities' grand finale in front of Wescoe Hall and the enthusiasm that has reached from the Lawrence campus to alumni homes across the country.
Yes, victory against Duke would have been sweeter.
But what the team gave was the experience of the Final Four and a shot at the national title.
Not bad. Not bad at all.
Not bad. Not bad at all.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
Homeless problem
Lawrence needs money to maintain Safe House; no other resources available to city's homeless
The Salvation Army has estimated that 350 people without homes live on the streets of Lawrence everyday.
At night, many of them used to turn to the Salvation Army Safe House for a place to sleep. But today they will have to find shelter with a friend or sleep on the streets because the Salvation Army cannot afford to keep the safe house open.
A $70,000 debt and no promise of a significant increase in donations forced the Salvation Army safe house to close its doors.
An emergency shelter still is available, but a Salvation Army official said the shelter only could house a maximum of two families. The safe house provided counseling and job training in addition to housing. The emergency shelter will not be able to handle the needs of the people or give them the tools to gain self-sufficiency.
The Douglas County United Way, which has donated about $56,000 annually to the Salvation Army for the past two years, has
been a generous donor to the organization. The Lawrence City Commission also has given about $7,000 to the organization this year. Both of these groups need to find a way to allot more money to the Salvation Army so that the safe house can remain open for many years to come.
Nowhere in the city is there another safe place for homeless people to go. There are specialized facilities, such as a shelter for battered women. But many of the homeless are single women with children and families who receive state aid. Their needs are not specific or special. Rather, they are quite simple - a warm place to stay, proper nourishment and a means to get back in mainstream society.
The citizens of Lawrence have a responsibility to help people who are homeless in the city by putting pressure on private organizations and the city to save the Salvation Army Safe House.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
LETTERS to the EDITOR
A defense of the disc
by a Frisbee and has trouble contem-
ter large issues in the "age of the
Frisbee."
I resent the blatant prejudices of Rosenfield's cartoon sketch (March 28) depicting a woman that is "hwacked" or "wham o-bamowed").
This strip is pure prejudice against the true spirit of the disc. Discs are not violent or evil. Discs are an ultimate expression of spiritual freedom that can be developed from and in harmony with modern technology (see Tao of Disc, Chapter 3, the Age of Plastics).
Other cultural prejudices are riddled in this strip. "Heads up,
Babe" is cruel, childish name calling. The character bears no resemblance to a gigantic blue ox, and I simply hope no sexual bikes play into that name. One should also not publicly refer to a "100-year-old" bear, as their face, or their body; but trees are humble beings and consider it bad manners to brag about it, especially in the presence of annuals.
T. J. Meehan
Boring, Ore., graduate student
DEFENSE!!
92
AIR GEORGE
Natural Ties aims to break misconceptions of disabled
Ever since Natural Ties started the campus-wide effort to include people with disabilities into organizations, I have tried to think of different ways to recognize and thank all those who have volunteered their much needed time
I would like to recognize these people because they are doing something a little different, something people may laugh at, something maybe our society is really due for. They are trying to make the difference necessary to really help someone.
Two years ago I met Jay. He is mentally retarded, but as we spent a lot of time together, I began to realize that this guy who I thought was so different from me because of my previous knowledge and experiences was really no different at all. We all have our own difference in intelligence, but I look past the label of mental retardation, Jay is the same in every aspect.
A. K. S. M.
He sleeps, drinks, has sexual desires (What?!) Sexual desires? Surely not! ) and wants to have friends just like you and me, but until you spend time with them, really will have the same misconceptions that I had.
After people heard of my relationship with Jay, they wanted to know how they could be involved with something like that. Well, because I was interested in learning the thought of myself as an expert in the disability field, initially I did not
Patrick
Hughes
Guest columnist
Natural Ties is designed for any organization to "adopt" or befriend a person with a disability and to make them part of that organization. Because everyone has been involved in the community during their upbringing, all the organizations involved with Natural Ties work differently.
really look to myself for that answer. Eventually as more people expressed an interest, I started realizing that maybe I could start something here. As I approached Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic to introduce it to the greek organizations, I received great response and from there we presently have 17 natural ties created. So far, the only organizations involved with Natural Greeks are the ties.
At this point, I want to recognize those that have founded Natural Ties within their organizations. Thanks to
'Two years ago I met Jay, Jay is mentally retarded, but as we spent a lot of time together, I began to realize that this guy who I thought was so different from me because of my previous knowledge and experiences was really no different at all.'
David Lies (Sigma Phi Epsilon);
Scott Schroff (Delta Upsilon); Karen Mullen and Kris Walt (Pi Beta Phi);
Jack O'Brien (Sigma Chi); Steve Bolling (Delta Chi); Andy Shore (Zeta Beta Tau); Kim Schmidt (Alpha Omicron Pi); Tim Barton (Triangle);
Amy Bortz (Delta Gamma); Gayle Prichard (Kappa Kappa Gamma);
Jon Taulbeer (Delta Tau Delta);
Shelly Dasko (Gamma Phi Beta);
Sherry Foresel (Delta Delta Delta);
Jennifer Stoner (Kappa Delta) and Doug Barnes and Bart Fisher (Sigma Alpha Epsilon). My hat goes off to you all. Thanks.
I encourage any organization to get involved with Natural Ties as it does not take a doctor or a professional to know how to be a friend. If you would like more information, call 843-1670 or attend our monthly meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union. Please come
Patrick Hughes is an Evanston, Ill. senior majoring in communications and human development.
Poll results vary on students' belief in Jesus' resurrection
"O n the first day of the week,very early in the morning,the women
took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb. They found the stone rolled away from the tomb, but when they entered, they did not find the body of the Lord Jesus." (Luke 24:1:3)
How does one explain the mystery of the missing body? For two weeks before Easter, KU students were polled by InterVarsity Christian Fellowship to answer the following questions:
- Do you believe that Jesus actually rose bodily from the dead? Why or why not?
Of 46 students polled from the InterVarsity book table in the Kansas Union, 22 expressed a belief in the bodily resurrection of Jesus, 17 did not believe it happened, and seven were unsure.
If yes, what difference does it make in your life?
Reasons why some students believe in the resurrection varied, but most were highly personal. A
M. A. FARRALD
Ed Killeen Guest columnist
senior majoring in psychology who is a believer in the resurrection said, "I have a personal relationship with Christ, and it saved my life."
A sophomore majoring in communications wrote that she believes 'because he lives inside of me, and it is what makes everybody possible.'
A freshman wrote, "I believe in the resurrection because the Bible says so, and I know that he died in my heart. Now I can spend eternity in heaven."
Other KU students were unsure of Jesus' resurrection. A junior majoring in political science wrote, "I am not entirely sure of my religious beliefs. I do believe Jesus existed, but I find some aspects of the Bible
hard to believe."
A freshman wrote, "The Bible says he does (rise) and he is the holy trinity, but sometimes I question my faith."
Finally, there were those who do not believe that Jesus rose from the dead.
A sophomore wrote, "Easter means the Easter bunny brings candy."
A junior majoring in psychology wrote, "I believe that Jesus was a great man who introduced many wonderful philosophies to mankind; but nothing truly proves that he rose from the dead. I find blind faith to be wrong for me, so I cannot believe he rose from the dead."
To claim that Jesus rose from the dead places him on the same level as God, and even students who did not believe it happened were faced with
One junior wrote, "I don't believe in Jesus: he is not God."
Others did not believe because they were athiest or Jews.
A junior business major said it was scientifically impossible.
the underlying claim of Easter.
If he did rise, he is indeed God, and
he deserves our personal response to
For these who claim he did not rise, what explanations do they offer for the empty tomb? Perhaps someone stole the body — either Romans or the Jews or the disciples. Does this make sense? The first two groups are unlikely grave robbers because they had done everything in their power to secure the tomb of Jesus. Historians tell us that Roman guards were placed outside the tomb. The troupe comprised 14 well-trained men with swords and shields. The disciples, on the other hand, had fled in fear, and one must wonder whether each of them would have suffered torture and martyrdom without even having admitted to such a deception.
Another explanation might be that Jesus was not dead — that he had merely passed out from exhaustion and loss of blood and that in such a condition was buried. Is this reasonable? Would three days in the cold
'A junior majoring in psychology said, "I believe that Jesus was a great man who introduced many wonderful philosophies to mankind; but nothing truly proves that he rose from the dead. I find blind faith to be wrong for me, so I cannot believe he rose from the dead." '
tomb — without food or medical attention — revive a dying man so that he could push away a huge stone door, terrify Roman guards, travel miles on wounded feet, and then somehow convince people that he was the Prince of Life?
Perhaps the resurrection accounts are legends. This explanation seems equally unlikely. First, the two most reliable documents giving detailed
accounts of the event are the records of eyewitnesses. Also, both of these documents were written within 14 years of the actual event — far too early for any legendary growth. Finally, the details of the accounts are too vivid and anecdotal to compare the 33rd chapter of Isaiah, which was written 700 years before Jesus was born, to Luke 23 is to see fulfillment.
No skepetic is ever convinced by evidence. Thomas, the doubting disciple, needed to probe his fingers into Jesus' wounds before he would proclaim, "My Lord and my God!" (John 20:28). Only Jesus can give us the faith to believe. Ask him, as Thomas did, to give you the certainty where you have doubts, and above all, tell him that you would like to meet him personally if he is there. He will do the rest. "If you confess with your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord,' and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved."
Ed Killeen is a St. Louis junior majoring in illustration.
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CHRIS SIRON
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Letters should be typed, double space 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 use standard fonts.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 2, 1991
5
METROPOLITAN DYNAMIC REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNION FOR AMERICAN FOOTBALL
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
After party repairs
Alex Toledo, facilities operations employee, removes the broken light fixtures in front of Wescoe Hall. Toledo said the fixtures would be replaced now that the NCAA finals are complete.
Poor wire installation caused fire
An electrical malfunction caused Sunday night's fire in the Holiday Plaza shopping center at 24th and 19th streets, fire officials said yesterday.
Kansan staff report
He said European Tan was the only one of the six stores affected by the fire that sustained fire, smoke and water damage.
Jim McSaw, Lawrence fire chief, said fault installation of a ground wire near the sauna area in the rear end of the European Tan, Health and Hair Salon triggered the malfunction.
D'Egage Dancewear, Pizza Hut Delivery and Shin Asian Supermarket sustained water and smoke damage; Sharon's Bridal Boutique sustained smoke damage; and Cross Reference Bookstore and University Photography studio sustained light smoke damage.
McSain said it would take the fire department at least two days to assess damage because of the variety of the stores.
Lorena Keefe, owner of D'Egage Dancewear, east of European Tan, said her store remained closed yesteryear and department said the roofs were not safe.
"I don't know if I'll have to relocate." Keefe said.
Edmund Goldring, manager of Pizza Hut Delivery, west of European Tan, said his business also remained closed. He did not know whether he would have to relocate or what the cost of the damages was. He said the company would try to assess damages today.
The manager of European Tan was unavailable for comment.
School finance bill in danger of Finney veto
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - The House rejected all amendments to a school finance bill yesterday, moving the bill within one step of being sent to Gov. Joan Finney, who threatened a veto unless a tax package also was passed to provide more money for public education.
The House tentatively approved, following two hours of debate, a bill revising the distribution formula under which more than a half billion dollars would be distributed to state aid would be distributed to district schools next school year
If the House passes the bill on final roll call, scheduled for this morning.
Finney issued a statement as soon as House debate ended yesterday, saying a potential $159 million property tax increase that the bill could trigger was unacceptable.
"I cannot, in good conscience, be of any plan that risks property tax."
Actually, it looks like "I cannot, in good conscience, be of any plan that risks property tax." The hyphens are there to separate the words. I'll just use standard punctuation.
One more check on "property tax".
It looks like "property tax". Yes, it's a common abbreviation for property taxes.
Final text:
"I cannot, in good conscience, be of any plan that risks property tax."
Let's re-read the instructions again.
"Write a single paragraph with a clear message."
Yes, that's what I should do.
Okay, let's finish the draft.
I cannot, in good conscience, be of any plan that risks property tax.
The bill debated yesterday would revise the school finance formula, under which the state's 304 school districts receive state aid based on a system that gives more money to poorer districts in an attempt to equalize per-student financial support.
spending more on education for each pupil that the statewide median to raise their budgets by 1 percent next year. Those below the median would benefit from their budgets by 3 percent to help them catch up with the richer districts.
Two amendments attempted to change the formula for determining district wealth, both aimed at helping rural school districts.
The bill would allow districts now
Rep. Lee Hamm, D-Dratt, offered an amendment that would have counted 75 percent of a district's income as wealth in the next school year, 50 percent in the 1982 school year, and 34 percent in the 1984 school year.
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Tuesday, April 2, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Swendolyn
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For further information call 864-3506 or 864-8016.
U.N. cease-fire resolution draws criticism from Iraqi ambassador
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Iraq's U.N. ambassador yesterday called the Security Council's proposed ceasefire resolution highly objectionable and humiliating, saying that Iraq could not tolerate unbridled U.S. coercion.
Ambassador Abdul Amir Al-Anbari complained to reporters after meeting with the non-aligned nations, "The resolution doesn't call for a permanent cessation of hostilities — simply a cease-fire. To us, a cease-fire is very dangerous in the sense it implies the existence of a
state of war or hostilities, but for the time being the parties have ceased firing."
Iraq finds the resolution humilinating and thinks it will punish innocent Iraqi for generations to come, the envoy said.
the resolution demands destruction under U.N. supervision of Iraq's chemical and biological weapons, nuclear weapons-grade materials and munitions to the United Nations would demarcate and patrol the Iran-Kuwait border
Some non-aligned nations object,
arguing the resolution gives the
United Nations power to infringe upon what are properly domestic
The draft holds Iraq liable for injury, damage and loss of property stemming from its Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait.
Iraqi rebels have claimed the Iranian rebels are fighting alongside Iraqi security forces suppressing the Islamic State in Iraq. The sion denies that, but says it has fought Iranian troops that intervened in Iraq.
Car thieves steal six dissected human heads
The Associated Press
It says Iraq must return all loot and documents taken from Kuwait.
NEW YORK — A doctor's mistake.
Car thieves. A protective and curious cabbie. Put them together in Manhattan's East Village and you have got an errant box of partially dissected human heads.
The story begins with William
The six heads, facial features intact, were found in a box in a gutter early yesterday, said Scott Bloch, a police representative.
Portney, a physician, of New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, who decided to leave the sealed carton of heads in the back of his hatchback when he parked in the East Village.
The second error came when thieves brake into Portney's car and stole what they apparently thought was marketable booty.
And the hero in this ghoulish tale?
Cabbie Gheorge Casas, who shooed
away a bevy of rubbernecking street people and stashed the stolen heads in his trunk until police showed up
"This stuff only happens in New York," said Bloch.
Portney was transporting the partial heads — the backs were cut away but the faces left intact — from New York Medical College in Valhalla to Boston, where they clas in medical dissection. They were from bodies donated for research.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 2, 1991
7
World briefs
Moscow
Only 14 percent of Soviets polled in a nationwide survey said they would pick Mikhail Gorbachev to be president, while 70 percent said that if they could, they would vote for Gorbacha.
Most Soviets prefer Yeltsin
The poll, conducted for U.S. News & World Report magazine by a Soviet firm, graphically showed the plummeting popularity of Gorbachev, in power six years and recipient of the 1990 Nobel Prize. Gorbachev is significantly more abroad for his Soviet reforms than at home.
The poll also found that more citizens supported Democratic Russia, rather than the Communist Party that has ruled the nation since 1917. Democratic Russia is a coalition uniting various reform groups seeking, among other things, popular election of political leaders.
Kurdish rebels yesterday retreated on foot into their traditional mountain strongholds, surrendering more urban centers under a steady onslaught by Iraqi loyalist forces.
Dohuk, Iraq
Iraqi loyalists storm Kurds
Low on morale, frightened refugees asked why President Bush and his allies were allowing Saddam to use artillery and helicopters to break the rebellion.
Also yesterday, Iraq said it had captured documents proving the complexity of more than one foreign government in unrest designed to unseat Saddam Hussein and accused the United States of provoking 29 reeonnaissance flights last weekend, many of them over Baghdad.
Baghdad said its troops had retaken Doukh, Erbil and Zakho — the last large cities in the north held by the Kurds. The Kurds, who seized more land from Iraq after the end of the Persian Gulf War than they had in their decades-long conflict, are now being ordered by loyalt forces.
Hundreds of thousands of Kurds fearing government reprisals were fleeing by any means possible into the mountains along the Iranian and Turkish borders.
Israeli cuts at Palestinians
Jerusalem
Tough measures adopted by Israel to counter attacks on Jews could devastate the Palestinian economy, undercut Western peace efforts and lead to more unrest. Arab leaders said yester-
Esa Erakat, a Palestinian political science professor from the West Bank, characterized the penalties as a strong negative Israeli justice and made efforts by the United States and Europe.
Erakat warned that if fully implemented, the penalties could make life for Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip totally unbearable.
Israel's 14-member Defense Cabinet on Sunday agreed to step up the use of harsh penalties for those who violate security laws.
Some of the measures, such as deportations and house demolitions, have been used throughout the 39-month-old Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation.
Others, including restrictions on Arabs working in Israel and a ban on private Palestinian cars entering the country, have been enforced in November. January, at the outset of the Persian Gulf War.
Asked about the Israeli restrictions on Palestinians, State Department representative Richard Boucher said yesterday. "Israel should be looking for ways of developing dialogue and trust with the Palestinians, not imposing new restrictions."
From The Associated Press
Treasury names firms involved in Iraqi deals
WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department said yesterday that two U.S. businesses were among $2" front companies it had identified as being in the nation's worldwide financial and arms trading network.
Says Saddam may be one of world's richest men
The Associated Press
"We want the network exposed and we want it neutralized," Treasury Deputy Secretary John Robson said at a news conference. "We are putting the world on notice when you deal with them," Siddam said.
The department also named 37 individuals, none based in the United States, who it said had acted as intermediaries for the Iraqi government, using the companies to hide billions of dollars that Saddam's family skimmed from Iraq's oil revenues. The front companies were used to buy weapons, tools, spare parts and raw materials for Saddam's war machine, officials said.
Civil penalties of up to $250,000 also may be imposed, the Treasury said.
There were no answers to repeated telephone calls to戏 industries in Santa Monica and no answer to a phone call from a company.
Robson added that there were many more cases under investigation, but he declined to give details.
The two U.S. companies are Bay industries inc., an engineering firm in Los Angeles, and Matrix Churchill Corp., the U.S. machine tools subsidiary of a British corporation.
The department said U.S. companies and citizens were prohibited from doing any business with Iraq front companies and intermediaries without the department's permission. Convictions of violations could mean criminal penalties of up to 12 years in prison and $1 million in fines.
Treasury agency seized the assets of Bay Industries on March 22, along with those of Anees Wadi and his wife Shamsaban al-Hayderi. Wadi controls Bay Industries, and the government alleged that all three had helped Saddam procure arms for Iraq.
The government shut down Matrix Churchill's Cleveland, Ohio, plant last September while the
U. S. Customs Service investigated allegations that the company was involved in arms shipments to Iraq.
The plant was a front for Saddam to disguise the flow of technical expertise and items from the government.
The Treasury also listed Iraqi Airways offices in Los Angeles, Southfield, Mich., and New York City as among the front companies. It has been illegal for U.S. citizens to fly on Iraqi Airways since 2014. Bush instituted an embargo and asset freeze against Iraq following its invasion of Kuwait last Aug. 2.
The Treasury named 49 other Iraqi front companies, more than 30 of which are based in Britain. Others are in Egypt, Brazil, Germany, Italy and Honduras.
The investigation determined that the Iraqi president's family had skimmed $10 million in oil profits since 1981 and had used the money to buy weapons, aid and other items. The United States, a U.S. government source said last week.
"Worldwide cooperation will help eliminate this network." he said.
The department also identified 160 merchant ships owned or controlled by the Iraqi government. It said U.S. companies and citizens were prohibited from using the ships, subject to the same penalties as for doing business with front companies and agents.
Yesterday's announcement was part of an investigation by the U.S. and Kuwait governments into Iraq's worldwide financial network. The probe led to power backup in 1970, is one of the world's richest men.
Iraqi investors working for Saddam have purchased nearly $1 billion in shares of publicly traded legitimate companies, including French company JAIA, according to the chief investigator, Jules Krule.
Robson said cooperation from friendly foreign governments had been good, but he declined to be
Supreme Court says it is illegal to exclude jurors on race basis
WASHINGTON — Prosecutors who exclude African-Americans as jurors because of their race violate the rights of white defendants, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday.
By a 7-2 vote, the justices ordered further lower court hearings for Larry Joe Powers, a white Ohio man convicted of two murders by a state court. In response, Americans were excluded from serving on the jury.
The Associated Press
The high court in 1986 ruled that when prosecutors disqualified potential jurors on the basis of race, it violated the 14th Amendment's guarantee of equal protection. That case involved an African-American defendant and African-American jurors.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the court,
it was it unlawful to exclude jurors because of the
prosecution.
The principle would apply equally if whites were excluded from a jury because of their race from African-American America.
"The purpose of the jury system is to impress upon the criminal defendant and the community as a whole that a verdict of conviction or acquittal is given in accordance with the law by persons who are tried."
Before today, the court had not said whether unlawful racial discrimination in jury selection occurred when the defendant was of a different race than the excluded jurors.
Kennedy said that racial discrimination in the selection process violated the constitutional right of equal protection under the law and threatened to undermine the integrity of the nation's system of
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"A criminal defendant suffers a real injury when he or her trial excludes juries on his or her own trial, not access added."
"To bar defendants like Powers from suing." Kennedy continued, "would be to condone the arbitrary exclusion of citizens from the duty, honor and privilege of jury service."
Kennedy also said discriminatory jury selection violated the rights of prospective jurors.
justice.
He was joined by Justice Byron White, Thurgood Marshall, Harry Blackmun, John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Chief Justice William Rehquist joined a dissenting opinion by Justice Antonino Scialla, who said the Court should not override the decision.
"Today's supposed blow against racism, while enormously self-satisfying, is unmeasured and
"If for any reason the state is unable to reconvict Powers for the double murder at issue here, later victims may pay the price of our extravagance," he said.
It was not apparent immediately that Powers will get a new trial.
Just stop and
"Think About It"
Tonight's Topic: The Political Atmosphere on Campus
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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
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Tuesday, April 2, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
HARVARD
The Fans: Frenzy on Oread
KU
ucky charms finally fail to work their wonders for 'Hawks
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The outcome of last night's NCAA championship game depended on MAYOR'S PERFORMANCE.
At least that is what Adler, Northbrook, III, senior, thought before the game.
"I'm wearing the same clothes I he said. Exemple the same underwear."
Adler said he was so superstitious that yesterday he wore the same pair of Chicago Cubs boxer shorts, the
same green-and-white jersey and the same Chicago Cubs baseball cap that he wore for the Kansas-North Carolina game.
Too bad it didn't work
Superstitions abounded in Lawrence as Kansas advanced through the NCAA tournament to the championship game. Some basketball watchers were so superstitious that they believed their actions had a direct effect on the outcome of games.
John Vanlandingham, Shawnee
senior, said he did not believe that his clothes could affect the basketball score. Instead, he believed that the team came home depended on where he watched it.
"I watched three NCAA tournament games at home in my living room, and we won," he said. "I won't go anywhere else."
Maybe he should have gone out.
May 6 he should have gritd out.
For Game 1, he was still ill. So,
the superstition was just the opposite.
He was at the game in Indianapolis on Saturday.
"I came back from Indy to party in Kansas," he said. "My superstition is that I have go to a different place to watch each game."
Maybe he should have stayed in Indianapolis.
Rosanin Wilkerson, manager of Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Massachusetts St. said that store had its own club about national championship games.
In 1988, the store began printing KU national championship T-shirts at 9:30 on the morning of the national
championship game on the assumption that KU would win.
"We went with tradition and did it again this year," she said. "I've been predicting the games this week, and I'm expecting each time. I pretty sure we'll win."
But she wasn't completely sure.
Even KU basketball team members had superstitions about how to win a game.
Forward Mike Maddox said he would not wear his 1988 championship ring during this year's tournament. He said he did not want to jinx this year's team.
"I'm going to seclude myself during the championship" he said.
Fists fly during campus wake
But Eric Kenyon, Camarillo, Calif., freshman, could not watch Maddox play because of superstition. He said that he did not watch Saturday's game and KU won, so his friends were going to lock him in the room during last night's game so that he could not watch it.
ICORRLEE
At least he did not have to see the Jayhawks lose.
Many fights drive students to seek help at hospitals
An unidentified man unsuccessfully tries to stop one of the many fights that broke out during the consolation party on Jayhawk Boulevard. Tempers flared after Duke
By Amy Francis and Mike I. Vargas Kansas staff writers
By Amy Francis
University defeated Kansas in the NCAA championship game. KU police said they broke up at least six fights last night.
Kansan staff writers
The crowd was smaller than Saturday's campus celebration but much rowder, said KU police Lt. John Mullens. At 11:30 p.m., the crowd was estimated at 15,000.
Injuries pervaded last night's KU campus. The team was intended to cheer up fans, not to hurt them.
Lacerations caused by flying debris were common for students both nights.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital had treated about 15 people in its emergency room as of 1:30 a.m. today for lacerations and abrasions.
Douglas County Ambulance Service transported four people who were struck in the head by flying bottles and beer cans to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Mullens said.
The ambulance positioned at Jayhawk Boulevard and Poplar Lane treated more than 22 people for similar injuries. Another ambulance was positioned at Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road.
"Everybody started throwing cans." Mulens said. "They have to come down some."
Paul Neidlein, St. Paul, Minn., freshman, said he was standing at Wescoe Beach when he was hit with a bottle. Neidlein immediately brought medical attention for his head wound.
Watkins open all night
Watkins was open all last night and will stay open until 10 tonight to treat students with injuries.
Stephanie Yaney, a student at the University of Kansas Medical Center, was one of the students who were
there "
"I was trying to be really careful because I saw people throw things earlier," Yancey said. "Somebody just threw a beer can and someone else got it." The ambulance, there were a lot worse people
Brian Knduson, Omaha, Neb., freshman,
also was treated at Watkins, but for injuries
Knudsonused his frustration about the earl's loss by hitting a wall. Knudson's son, Evan, hit the wall.
Liz Riegel, Dodge City freshman, said, "He was unset about the game."
Another of Knudson's friends, Steve Helvey, Overland Park freshman, said, "I'd imagine there are a lot of people that have injuries, but they just aren't coming in"
Jody Woods, director of nursing at Watkins, was not scheduled to work at Watkins last night, but she came in to see whether she was needed.
"I'm glad we stayed open for the stu.
dents," she said. "I think it started a pretty good flow around 11."
Watkins had treated about 23 students by 2:45 a.m., but none of the cases were serious. Woods said that the number of students in the lobby was deceptive because most of the those who needed treatment were accompanied by friends.
Two physicians and four nurses treated students, Woods said. Personnel could treat up to three patients while taking X-rays on another.
Celebration violence
Although the party began peacefully, tempers flared after Kansas' loss to Duke.
David A. Scott III, Topea resident, was charged with aggravated abuse and unlawful use of a weapon after a fight at Benchcraft's headquarters, said Lawrence, police set. Ronald Palombiers
After beer was spilled on the suspect during the game, a fight broke out and the suspect pulled out a knife, cutting one person above the eye, one on the finger and another on the arm. Dalquest said. The injured themselves to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
On campus, KU police had 35 officers on duty, assisted by three officers from the Douglass County Sheriff's Office. Mullens and his team were placed in buildings throughout campus.
Mullens said KU police broke up six fights during the course of the night. People involved in some of the fights were treated for minor injuries.
In another incident, Scott Campbell, a concession worker, said that a man waved a gun after spilling popcorn and drinks and turning off the power to the stand.
The man disappeared into the crowd in front of Wescoe Hall before police or Campbeltown.
Mullens said the same suspect was thought to be connected with another incident, saying that the two descriptions he had received were similar.
"People were frustrated." Mullens said. They got emotional and had a juvenile medicine appointment.
Greg Hill, St. Louis freshman, said a man pulled out a gun and pointed it at his friend's head. "I don't think I should get in there," he said.
His friend was hit in the head by the gun as he was trying to get away. Hill said
Retailers claim game profitable Liquor sales soar until Jayhawks' championship season shot down
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
Even though the Jayhawks did not win last night, the game was profitable for Lawrence luxury retailers.
Greg Dixon, manager of Myers
Retail Liquor, W. 92rd St. said
yesterday's sales were seven times
larger than that of a normal Monday.
The Jayhawks' loss last night caused $1,000 to $1,500 in lost liqueur sales after the game, he said. The store was open for about an hour from the final buzzer to closing time at 11 p.m.
"It was unbelievable," he said. "It was unreal in here. It was a zoo."
A 30-foot line had formed outside the store by 2 p.m., yesterday, he said. All three registers were ringing up sales noton until game time.
At Schwartz Retail Liquor, 1215 W
6th St, employee Mitsiwatts,
Lenexa senna, said the stores sold out
Bush and Busch and Coorn
products yesterday.
The store sold 40 kegs of beer and 10 cases of champagne yesterday, Dixon said.
"It started out like it was going to
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine & Spirits, 800 W St.23 st. said extra employees worked to help with the surge of game-day business. He said he thought there would be a lot of
"But people are still buying to drown their sorrows." Dixon said.
"The loss probably won't help any," he said. "But it's a huge day, a bik weekend."
'It was unbelievable. It was unreal in here. It was a zoo.'
— Greg Dixon manager, Myers Retail Liquor
Louie Riederer, owner of Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. 2rd. St., said the bar was filled to its 350-person capacity all day yesterday with Jayhawk fans waiting to watch the game on one of eight televisions.
be the biggest day yet, he said. "But
it was not loss, it was not as good as
expected."
Reed Brinton, co-owner of Benchwarmers Sport Bar & Grill. 1601 W. 23rd St, said he prepared for yesterdays' sale. The grill was canned beer and 40 kcws for the bar
Darrell Condon, Shawnee senior, said he was the first person in line at Benchwarmers yesterday. He played football and spades, read the newspaper and slept to pass the six hours before the doors opened at 3 a.m.
"After the game, people will run up to campus for about 30 minutes and then come back to drink," Riederer said.
"People were waiting in line to get in here when I arrived here at 9 a.m." he said.
He said he missed two math classes to get one of the tables closest to the big-screen television.
"I missed the classes for a good cause," he said.
EUDORA
EMS
FIRST RESPONDER
Post-game casualty
Lawrence emergency personnel, in conjunction with Emergency Medical Service units from Eudora, treat an unidentified person who was injured in festivities in front of Wescoe Hall. Thirty-one injuries were reported last night to medical authorities.
1
DEVILS
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 2, 1991
The Title: Opportunity Lost
9
KU
Devils clip Jayhawks' wings
Frustration mounts as shots miss
KANSAS
42
DUKE
23
Kansas' Mark Randall misses a dunk but draws a foul from Duke's Brian Davis. Randall scored 18 points last night.
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
INDIANAPOLIS — The fairy tale season is over.
The Kansas basketball team's Cinderella quest for an NCAA title came to an abrupt end last night. Their carriage transformed into a fiery spectacle before the stroke of midnight in Indianapolis.
The Duke Blue Devils, who lost the title in an embarrassing blowout to UNLV last year, redeemed themselves with a 72-65 victory against the Kansas Jawhaws.
"The only team in America that wouldn't trade places with Kansas right now is Duke," a puffy-eyed Roy Williams said after the game. "I've never been around a group of kids that I have been as proud of as those in that locker room."
The Jayhawks trailed by as many as 14 points in the second half before scaring the Blue Devils with a little more than a minute left to play in the game.
But Kansas' problems started in the first half as Duke jumped out to an early 9-3 lead that it would never relinquish.
But most of the Jayhawks shots simply would not fall. They made numerous layups
Kansas twice pulled to within one point at 11-10 and 26-25, both on three-pointers by senior guard Terry Brown.
"You put pressure on the other team by scoring." Maddox said. "We couldn't hit the easy shots, and it's tough to come back and win against the team if you can't make the easy baskets."
Duke continued to fire away at the Jay-
cock and increased their advantage to 42-34
at halftime.
Senior forward Mike Maddox said the missed#7 shots frustrated the Jayhawks at 14-6.
Senior forward Mark Randall and Duke's Christian Laettern provided the offensive firepower for their teams in the first 20 minutes of action.
"We came out flat and just could not get into our game." junior forward Olonzo Jamison said. "They weren't doing anything special defensively. The shots just wouldn't
The Blue Devils scorched the Jayhawks in the first half, hitting 13 of 22 shots from the floor for 59 percent. Kansas ended the period making only 4 of 31 shots for 45 percent.
Laetnet scored 18 points, including a perfect 12 of 12 from the free throw line, matching Randall's 18 points on seven-of-nine shooting from the field.
As they had done on numerous occasions during the season and in the tournament, Kansas charged at Duke during the opening minutes of the second half. The Jayhawks cut the lead to 44-40 before the Blue Devils began to answer every Jayhawk bucket.
"We made a run early and started to play Kansas basketball." Jamison said. "But they started matching us basket for basket. They killed our run with about 15 minutes left."
But then the Jayhawks stopped themselves. A Richard Scott tip-in at the 12:46 mark preceded a five-minute scoring drought that ended with a Kirk Wagner basket with only seven minutes remaining.
After the card opens, Jackie asks,
At that point, the Jayhaws could have folded up their tents and gone home but
instead had one more trump card left to play.
Trailing 70-59 with 10 remaining, two baskets by sophomore guard Adonis Jordan and one by junior guard Sean Tunstall, each after Duke turnovers, turn out to the lead 70-65.
But Duke would seal the victory seconds later as Brian Davis pounded the final nail into the Javhawk's championship coffin.
Williams said he thought the Blue Devils deserved the championship after playing a
Duke reacted to everything we threw at
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOLK
them," he said. "This team has played with poise all season, but there were a few times tonight I thought we lost our poise for a moment. But as much as it was Kansas not doing the things it had to in order to win, it was also a case of Duke executing very well."
Randall led the Jayhawks with 18 points and 10 rebounds, a performance that was good enough to put him on the 1901 Final Four team. He had three rebounds in the game with 16 points, and Jordan added 11.
Duke was led by Laettten, named Most Outstanding Player of the tournament. He
scored 18 points and pulled down 10 rebounds. Reserve guard Bill McCaffrey added 16, and scored 12 points.
The Jayhawks will return tomorrow afternoon for a rally at 2:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium. Due to the rally, classes between 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. have been canceled.
Kansas is blue after Duke loss
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
INDIANAPOLIS - For many members of the Kansas basketball team, last night's loss to the Duke Blue Devils was a painful reminder of the agony that can accompany the ectasy of playing college basketball.
"How much does this hurt?" a bleary-eyed Alonzo Jamison asked himself in the locker room after the game. "I can't even put it into words right now."
Jamison said that although the Jayhawks came in second in the quest for a national title, that would
A. A. Owolowo
"Not when we had first place right in our hands," he said.
Senior forward Mike Maddox said he had not totally realized the fact that he had to work with the team.
"I'm sure it will sink in over the next couple of days when there's no practice to go back to," Maddox said. "It's difficult to come that close to winning a national championship and come up just short."
THE AMEZAN UNIVERSITY
However, Maddax
said the loss should not dimm
the season because it would
season the team.
"We had a great season, and I'm very proud of the way we hung together and played."
Senior forward Kirk Wagner said the defeat could not overshadow the great times he had as a member of the Jay- hawks.
"It's tough, but I've got a lot of special memories that I wouldn't trade for anything else in the world," Wagner said.
Senior guard Terry Brown added that the loss was not the way he'd planned to do it.
"I feel really bad that we didn't win, because it would have been nice to go out with a national championship," Brown said. "But I'm not complaining. Like nobody else. It's one hundred and ninety-some teams out there that would like to have second place."
Couch Roy Williams said the loss could never take away from the feelings of pride in her.
"So much time is spent talking about the bad things in sports," Williams said. "But tonight you saw the good things. Those things you saw you saw who put on a great show tonight."
I really proud of those kids of mine. I hope they will always remember how they came together and played their hearts out at the end of the season."
Old, new 'Hawks thrilled
Recruits look to the future; alums recall past victories
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The excitement about the Kansas basketball team is not limited to the players who rampaged through this year's NCAA tournament.
Yesterday, before the championship game, it also was alive in the hearts of former KU players and fans. It would not yet put on a Kansas uniform
"It's awesome," said Kansas signee Greg Osterglast of Duncanville, Texas. "I can't wait until next year. I think we can back again."
The 7-foot-1 Ostertag said he had watched all the tournament games with his family.
"I have picked them to win all the way," he said. "I think they — uh, we — will do it tonight."
School in Overland Park, said his first-of-the-year doubts about the Jayhawks had been steadily erased throughout the season.
"I knew they were good enough to do this." he said. "They're overachievers. It's going to be fun to see how far we'll go the next few years."
Another Kansas signee, Greg Gurley of Shawnee Mission South High
Danny Manning, a crucial player in the Jayhawks' 1888 championship drive, said he had followed KU's path to the tournament in the past weeks.
While Ostertag and Gurley look to the future, former players now in the NBA took pride in this year's Jay-hawk team.
"I'm really proud of what Kansas has accomplished," the Los Angeles Clippers forward said. "Mark Runyon was the player who got the finals before. They and the other
seniors know what it takes to win
Golden State Warriors guard Kevin Pritchard, another member of the 88 championship team, said that he had been "very much" in Roy Williams and his style of play.
"I wish them the best tonight, and everybody should be proud of what they have accomplished," Manning said.
"I'd do anything to be in Lawrence tonight," he said. "We've decorated the house with posters and everything."
Pritchard said he liked the Jayhawks' chances against Duke because of the deep bench Williams had developed.
"If you look at us last year, I think it's a similar situation," he said. "He's got them peaking at the right time, and that's what it all about."
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Kansas coach Roy Williams buries his head in his hands during the closing minutes of the 72-65 Jayhawk loss to the Duke Blue Devils.
| | M | FG | FT | OA | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 15 | 1-10 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 2 |
| Maddux | 19 | 2-4 | 0 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 |
| Randall | 13 | 7-9 | 3/6 | 10 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 18 |
| Jordan | 31 | 4-6 | 3/6 | 10 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 18 |
| Jordan | 34 | 4-6 | 1/2 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 11 |
| Woodberry | 18 | 1-4 | 1/2 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Scott | 15 | 3-9 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 6 |
| Tussettal | 15 | 1-5 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 2 |
| Wagley | 13 | 1-5 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 2 |
| Johnhamn | 3 | 1-1 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Richey | 3 | 1-1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Percentages: 4.5G, FT. 15, 8.0T. Three-point
percentage: 7.18 (Brown 4.11) 4.24 (Jordan 2-2)
Randall, Jordan 2-2 Blocked shoes: 2 (Maddox, Scott). Turnovers: 14 (Randall 3, Jordan 3, Maddox 2, Brown 2,
Jamison, Woodberry, Tunstaill). Steals: 6 (Jordan 3, Jordan 4, Woodberry, Technicals). non
DUKE
M M FG FG FG A R F TP
Koubek 17 14 24 5 4 0 1 5
G. Hill 28 46 26 8 3 1 10
Laetner 32 6-12 18-12 8-1 3 0 18
Hurley 20 35 44 9 1 9 12
Jenkins 40 4-5 4-4 4-2 1 2 18
Davis 24 15 12 1-2 1 4 12
Palmer 9 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lang 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lang 68 68 2-2 1 0 1 18
Percentages: FG 56.1, FT 71.4. Three-point goals: 6-10 McCaffrey 2-, Hurley 2-, T 4-, T 1-, Koubek 2-. Blocked shots: 2 (G Hill 2)
10
Tuesdav. April 2, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
V
Championship Sidelights
KU
'Hawk fans not disappointed
Rv Karen Park
Special to the Kansan
INDIANAPOLIS — Cheers, not tears, followed the KU basketball players last night as they exited the court after a 72-46 loss to the Duke
Cheerleaders did not cry, and fans stood and chanted, "Jayhawks" and "Roy' Roy" as the third-year KU players and his players left the arena.
Cory Conklin, Westmoreland sophomore, said he was pleased with
the team's performance in the NCAA tournament.
"I think we played as hard as we could," he said. "We had a great year, and I don't think this overshadows our season."
Conklin and other KU students were not disappointed that they had traveled from Lawrence to attend the Final Four.
"It was well worth the trip," he said. "Duke executed really well, and they were just a better team this
night."
Even though Duke led 42 at 34 half time, KU faithfully still had hope that their team would come back. After all, Roy Williams and the Jayhawks came back from a 12 point half-time lead to win the second ranked Arkansas Razorbacks.
"I didn't think it was over until the last second — at least I didn't want to believe it," said Kelly Davidczyk, Chicago sophomore.
KU could not overcome the eight-
point halftime deficit and lost the game by seven points. But KU fans remained optimistic about the season and next year.
"It was sad, but we'll be back next year," said Chad Libertus, Coolidge junior.
Davidczky and several friends left Lawrence early yesterday morning and arrived in Indianapolis an hour before the championship game.
"I'm not disappointed," she said. "We're going to be here next year."
Duke revelry similar to KU's
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Even before the Blue Devils' victory last night. Duke University students were planning to celebrate.
Last night, more than 10,000 people, decked out in their faithful Duke-blue sweatshirts and T-shirts, watched their team win the NCAA men's basketball championship on a huge projection screen inside Cameron Indoor Basketball Stadium.
Martin Bullock, a junior at Duke, said the school had many bonfire traditions. Students toss wooden benches into the flames, dance made and run through the flames, dance, and soft drinks are provided by the University.
After the game, as they did after their victory against the top-ranked University of Nevada-Las Vegas, about 20,000 students celebrated with a huge bonfire, and some took part in mocking warfare. About 10,000 rectangular gravel pit.
In anticipation of Duke's win, Bullock said he
and many of his friends looked forward to the traditional festivities.
"It's going to be a huge party," Bullock said in a telephone interview yesterday afternoon. "Everyone is pumped. The excitement is pretty high." Eric Foss, a freshman at Duke, agreed.
"I immediately after the game, everyone went crazy, yelling and screaming, and everyone started filing out to the bonfire," he said. "Saturday night kind of pales compared to this."
The post-game celebration last night at Duke mirrored that of the one at the University of Kansas. Hoards of people gathered with beer, champagne and toilet paper in hand. People climbed trees as well as friends' shoulders amid the crack and pop of fireworks.
The jubilant celebration enticed several Duke men to shed their clothes and dance naked around
“It’s unbelievable, incredible, truly amazing. I don't think words could describe it,” said Jeff Feldstein, Duke sophomore. “I'm having so much
fun. I don't know what to do. Get naked? Drink
beer? Get champagne?"
The beer-splashed crowd reveled in the thrill of victory and shouted "We're so. We did it!"
the university. The university plans to have a celebration rally at Cameron to welcome home its players.
Foss said that he was proud of the players and that Duke earned this victory.
that Duke earned his victory.
"I think we need of deserve it after nine Final Fours and no championships in the school's history," he said. "Kansas is a pretty good school, so we don't really have a rivalry with them. I don't hate Kansas."
Conversations within the past few days at Duke have centered on basketball, and that certainly
"It's just like basketball heaven," Foss said.
"When I think of Duke, I think of basketball.
Kansan reporter Joe Goose and Duke University Chronicle reporter Michael Saul contribute information to the journal.
KANS
2
DUKE
11
After bumping into Kansas 'Alonzo Jamison (le), Duke's Bobby Hurley tries to keep the ball in play before stepping out of bounds.
Steve Gonzales/Special to the KANSAN
Championship isn't an excuse
Players must make up work like others
By Rick C. Honish Kansas sportswriter
"I had mono." is worse.
"My grandma died," is a popular one.
But, "I" was playing in the NCAA championship game in Indianapolis," has to be the best possible excuse for missing class.
When the Kansas basketball players return to Lawrence, they will be greeted by grateful fans and loads of academic make-up work.
Tim Allen, assistant director of student support services in the athletic department, said that basketballs miss more days than most athletes.
"The football players only miss about four or five days a year," he said. "These basketball players, they are missing a lot more."
When the Jayhaws return from Indy, they will have to make up much of the academic work they missed.
Especially during the last couple of weeks. With the pressures of NCAA tournament play and travel from victory to victory taking up most of the players' concentration and time, the players often take a back seat to their footwork.
David Shulenburger, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that the University did not have an attendance policy.
"Making up school work is a matter between the faculty member and the student." he said.
Diana Prentice-Carin, assistant professor of communication studies, said that her rules for student-athlete make-up work were the same as for
anyone else who missed class.
Plenty Carlin said she had had football players, swimmers and tennis players in her classes as well as senior basketball player Kirk Wag
the athletes have one advantage over the average student, because they know in advance when they will be gone" she said.
"In some ways, though, it is more difficult for the athletes, because they come back and have to do what the rest of the class is doing as well as the other work they missed," she said.
Prentice-Carlin said she almost always got a schedule in advance that gave the dates when a student-athlete would be out of town.
"The athletes are responsible for letting me know," she said. "Advance warning usually lets me assign work ahead of time, or if it is a test, they can make it up when they get back."
get back. Prentice-Carlin said she usually gave a week to make up tests.
"These are my own policies, and they apply to all my students," she said. "They are no different for athletes than they are for someone who's grandfather has died or someone who has a musical performance."
Former high schools watch Javhawk alums
Allen said that notifying faculty was the most important part of keeping the student-professor relationship stable.
"The faculty is very cooperative about these things," he said. "In the end, it all comes down to the student and how badly he wants to succeed."
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Tom Weston, one of Mark Randall's former basketball coaches at Cherry Creek High School in Engelwood, Colo., said yesterday that many people at the high school were wishing Randall a good game.
The high schools from which each player graduated have followed the progress of their alumni and were cheering for them last night.
He said everybody at the high school was a Jayhawk fan, even though Duke used the high school's gymnasium to practice when the Blue Devils were in the Final Four last year in Denver.
"We are all just excited for Mark. Mark was the best player to come through here and made a difference in our high school. We have real affection for him."
last year in New York.
"We were forced into letting them use our gym last year," Weston said.
T. C. Hardesty, activities director at the school, said, "All the faculty members who knew Mike are rooting for him." The staff is to wear two championship rings."
Although Mike Maddox graduated before any of the students at Putnam North High School in Oklahoma City enrolled in the school, the faculty of the school is rooting for the Jay-hawks.
Richard DeVito, mayor of Clyde,
N. Y. Terry Brown's town, home,
that they had not worked out the
solution, and the town was
planning a Terry Brown day.
For other fans, the excitement of having a high school graduate in the NCAA finals has spread beyond the high school to the whole town.
Brown's former high school coach has a new nickname that shows how important Brown's presence in the finals had become to the school.
Mrs. Walters, who works in the guidance office at Clyde-Savannah High School, said, "The kids no longer call Tony Batanzon 'Coach Batanzo', they say, 'there's Terry Brown's coach.'"
Fire jumping
WKSI
Students jump through fireworks sparks in celebration of the Jayhawks' trip to the championship game of the NCAA tournament. KU fans gathered in front of Wescoe Hall, recognizing the Jayhawks despite the loss to Duke last night.
KU bash covered by aura of gloom
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
A surrealistic mood invaded the campus as silhouettes of dancing bodies were sketched under the almost-full moon, and the sound of firecrackers blended with the music of the playing bands.
At a slow, uncertain pace, as though unsure of what to expect on campus, KU fans made their way to Wescoe Hall last night after the Kansas State nunned it to lose a championship in the NCAA national championship game.
KU fans were looking for a good time.
'I feel great. It was awesome just being in the finals because everybody said we couldn't do it.' -- Andy Buller
Andy Bulle.
Parsons sophomore
Like Broeckelmann, many KU fans talked about the games the Jayhawks won in the tournament and during the regular season instead of yesterday's defeat.
"How can you not be happy," said Kurt Brouretmann, St. Louis junior. "We didn't lose. We still No. 2. I mean, for Christ's sake, we did the unbelievable. We made it where no one expected us to make it."
Mike Molina, Overland Park senior, said, "I wish we'd've won today, but we didn't, and I proud of anyone expected to go."
Two local bands, the Homestead Grays and Caribe, provided some fun for the fans who still wanted to celebrate.
From fan to fan, the comments were unbeat and encouraging.
Andy Buller, Parsons sophomore, said, "I feel great. It was awesome just being in the finals because everybody said we couldn't do it."
It seemed the fans were trying to recover the triumphant spirit that spread up and down Jayhawk Boulevard on Saturday after the 'Hawks defeated North Carolina 79-73 in the Final Four semifinal game.
The upbeat mood, however, did not last forever. About 11 p.m., a little less than an hour after the game ended, the team was in the mix of pouring beer on strangers'
Jennifer Moser, Overland Park sophomore, said, "They just got way too rough. It was OK for a while, but it got too rough."
By midnight, many students were leaving campus because they feared getting injured.
Dawn Strahan, Wichita senior, said as she was leaving. "People were throwing each other down the stairs. I was standing in the back, and I am just ready to go."
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 2, 1991
Sports
11
'Hawks leave injuries behind
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Healthy minds and even healthier bodies will be on the side of the Kansas men's tennis team when it plays Southern Illinois-Edwardsville at 2 p.m. at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The Jayhawks played almost the entire month of March at less than full strength.
"I feel good about where we stand as far as health," Kansas coach Scott Perehlman said "The timing of doing healthy is excellent for the team."
“Chris” Walker has had arm problems, but he’s better now and will play his best tennis in April.” Perelman said. “Pat Han is coming off a broken foot that, knock on wood, hasn’t been giving him problems
"Rafael Rangel is coming off of mononucleosis, but in the last two weeks it seems he has had as much strength as he had last November."
With the 'Hawks at full strength, Perelman said he was eager to go after Kansas' first Eight Conference championship since 1988.
"I don't think we've come anywhere close to peaking," he said. "This hasn't been the kind of team where we have to depend on one or two guys, which I think, in the end, is making us a much stronger operation."
The Jayhawks, in spite of their injury woes, have been impressive.
Behind the strength of several victories against top-ranked opponents, the Jayhawks have soared up
- Scott Perelman Men's tennis coach
'This hasn't been the kind of team where we have to depend on one or two guys, which I think, in the end, is going to make us a much stronger operation.'
the national rankings
"The latest ITCA collegiate team rankings have us going from 21st to 14th. Perelman said." That is the same we have been ranked in the top 15.
The 'Jayhawks' impressive early season record, including two victories over No. 5 Tennessee has betrayed the advancement of the other Big Eight teams.
HUTCHER
"To the best of my knowledge, no one else has a win in the top 25." Perelman said. "There's a consensus that we are the favorite to win the conference."
Walker said the Jayhawks needed to concentrate on their own game and not worry about any national rankings to win the Big Eight.
"I think this is the best team I've been on here at KU," the fifth-year senior said. "The rankings show us where there are the best. This team's chemistry is really good."
"This is the first time since I've been on the team. We all got along well," Walker said.
The Jayhawks will play Colorado at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Allen Field House tennis courts in their Big Eight opener.
Ron Klein/KANSAN
Jayhawks handle softball surprise
Craig Wildey prepares for today's match against Missouri.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team was getting ready to practice yesterday when it got a big surprise. The team played today and we play today showed up one day early.
Jayhawk freshman pitcher Stephen Williams improved her record to 9-4 after pitching seven innings in eight games, runs and recorded eight strikeouts.
"They were geared up mentally for practice," Kansas coach Kalum Haack said of the Jayhawks. "We had to hustle to warm up, get dressed and get in batting practice. They did a good job."
The surprise did not shake Kansas too much, however, and the Jayahaws claimed a doubleheader victory against Wisconsin in Green Bay 3-0 and 2-1. Kansas improved its records to 19-7 with the victories.
Haack said Kansas could have used the scheduled day of practice, especially because the team had just come off a three-day weekend.
Saxby also had two RBI singles.
In the first game, Kansas junior third baseman Camille Spitaleri went 1-for-2, and junior shortstop Christy Arburnt went 1-for-3, as did senior second baseman Kim Sacco and junior Ty Saxby.
The first game was dominated by the Jayhawks, but Haack said Kansas seemed to go flat in the second game.
"We should have hit off of them
'We had to hustle to warm up, get dressed and get in batting practice. They did a good job.'
-Kalum Haack Kansas softball coach
Arterbum went two for three and scored a run, senior outfielder Jodi Hoyer went two for two with one RBI, and Spatieleri went one for three with an RBI double. Kansas junior outfitter Jennifer Frost had a triple.
better during the second game," Arterburn said. "We had opportunities to score in other innings. We should have scored more than two runs."
Kansas sophomore pitcher Jil Bailey relieved Sack and pitched two and one-third innings, giving up three hits and one run.
With one out in the seventh inning, Wisconsin-Green Bay loaded the bases against Bailey.
Williams relieved Bailey and recorded the last two outs.
Arterburn said the one-day-tooearly game was a good test for the Jayhawks, even though they could have played better.
"They weren't pretty, but they're two wins, and we'll take them," Arterburn said.
N. Michigan wins NCAA puck title
The Associated Press
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Northern Michigan has claimed the biggest prize in college hockey, thanks in part to the best little players in the game.
Scott Beattie and Lou Melone are 5-foot-7. Darryl Plandowski is 5-8. Mark Beafait is 5-9. Dean Antos and Bill Pye are 5-10.
The hockey world already has told a number of them that they are not good enough to be pros. But they were good enough to keep their peers, not losing in 26 games (24-0-2) since late December.
The Wildcats (38-5-4) won their first NCAA title with Saturday's 8-7 triple-overtime victory over the Oklahoma State championship longest championship game ever.
Melone, who was not even supposed to play because of an injury, had three assists. Beautiful's perfect pass set up Plandowski's the list that held Boston's top at bay most of the game.
And Pye went all the way in goal, making seven of his 33 saves in overtime and stopping Boston sniper Tony Amonte from point-blank range with one second left in regulation. Pey led the country with 32 victories and finished the season with a 20-0-2 stretch.
Plandowski and Beattie each scored a hat trick. Plandowski's third goal won the game 1:57 into the third OT after 81 minutes, 57 seconds of hockey in a game that took 4 hours, 2 minutes to play. Beattie led the nation in goals (48) and points (89).
"It's tough for a small guy. I used to dream of being 6-2 and 200 pounds," said Plandowski, who
said he was not interested in pro hockey because he was too small.
Beattie, an undrafted 22-year-old sophomore, has not been invited to the Canadian Olympic tryouts.
"I'm ready to sign with anybody willing to take a risk on a 5-7 player," he said. "I've always thought it was a big man's game, but Theo Fleury (of the Calgary Flames) has 50 goals and he's big as I am. There's room for small players in hockey."
Plandowski didn't always think there would be room for him at Northern Michigan.
He was a prolific scorer for his Canadian junior team but quickly found himself overwhelmed in the Collegiate Hockey Association
Boston (28-11-2) had taken a 3-0 lead after one period. Northern came back with six straight goals and still led 7-4 before Amonte McCachener scored, then McCachener's score, and the Terrers made it 7-7 on David Sacco's goal with 39 seconds remaining in regulation.
His 16 goals this season were a career high.
"I played against Darrly's队 by Lloydminder (Alberta), and he had 155 points or something his last year," Beattie said. "I came here last year and went, 'Whew, what happened to you?'
"But what happened (Saturday) made up for it. How fitting can it be for a senior to get a hat trick and the winning goal in overtime for the national title? He worked so hard for so long."
Mavericks' Tarpley faces DWI charges
The Associated Press
DALLAS — The Dallas Mavericks' Roy Tarpley's latest brush with trouble could cost him dearly in money and even prison time.
Police prepared to file a formal charge of drunken driving against Tarlip when the NBA and the CFL decided what to do about the forward.
Tarpley, who twice has violated the NBA's anti-drug policy, was arrested Saturday on suspicion of driving while intoxicated.
Tarpley denied Sunday that he was drunken or that he cursed and verbally threatened arresting officers.
"I didn't do any of those things," he said. "I was very cooperative."
sad. I was very cooperative.
Tarpley said that on the advice of his attorney he could not say whether he had been drinking before his arrest. But he denied that he was drunken.
Brian McIntyre, the league's vice president of public relations, said the NBA was looking into the situation. Mr. McIntyre and his team banned from the league because the
policy states that a player cannot pick up a "third strike" unless he is hit by an incoming ball.
There was nothing mentioned in the police report about drugs.
He still could be suspended without pay, however, if David Lewis, the medical director of ASAP Family Treatment Center in Van Nuy, has a patient at Tarley that未 adhered to his aftercare program for substance abuse.
Tarley is tested an average of three times a week, and none of the tests have warranted a third strike. He has also played the minimum two-year ban from the league.
Tarpley was suspended for 33 games last season after his Nov. 15, 1989, drunken drive arrest.
Tarpley, who suffered a season-
ending knee injury on Nov. 9, is serving two years' probation for a
1989 DWI conviction.
When Tarpley was put on probation
Sept. 5 after his first DWI charge, Criminal Court Judge Mike Schwiew warned that Tarpley failed to meet the terms of his probation, Schwiew would send the player to jail for one year.
“It’s very disheartening.” Mavrerick coach Richie Adubato said. “He’s been doing so well of late with his rehabilitation. He slipped. I can’t comment beyond this until I get the police report.”
The team has not indicated what action it might take against Tarpley.
If convicted on the latest DWI charge, Tarpley could face between 15 days and two years in prison and a maximum fine of $2,000.
Police officers gingerly handled Tarpley's arrest because a crowd of 80 bystanders included two onlookers who were videotaping the scene. A police officer and police said Sgt. Richard Baumgardner, who assisted in the arrest.
Tarpley was pulled over after two Dallas police officers said they observed him in his black 1988 Mercedes-Benz traveling 63 mph in a 35
mph zone.
Baumgardner said Tarpley was cursing and directing a tremendous amount of insults toward the officers. But he said he reminded his officers that physically subduing a public character would probably equally would result in an investigation.
Certain unusual steps were taken during Tarpley's arrest and transfer to jail, Baumgardner said.
"("Tarpie) got into the front seat with me, and I didn't handcuff him because he said he didn't want that," he said. "I let him use my (car attorney) attorney because I wanted to hide him on anything but the ride to fail."
Police representative Ed Spencer said Tarpley, who told officers he was not drinking, took a field sobriety test but refused to take a Breathalyzer or blood test. His alleged refusal could result in his license being revoked for up to 90 days.
However, Tarpley's attorney, Jay Ethington, said police refused to give his client a Breathalyzer test.
Gooden, Mets agree to 3-year, $15.45 million deal
The Associated Press
PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — Dwight Gooden vaulted to No 2 on baseball's salary list yesterday, agreeing with the New York Mets to a three-year contract extension worth a guaranteed $15.45 million.
The average annual value of $5.15 million places Gooden just behind Boston's Roger Clemens, who will average $3.83 million during a four-year extension he agreed to Feb. 8. The two former Cy Young Award winners are the only players with contracts averaging $5 million a year or more.
Gooden's new deal contains a total of $750,000 in performance bonuses that, if earned, would leapfrog his
"It is important, but it's so close that it really doesn't matter." Gooden said of the race for the top spot. "It depends on how you look at
deal over Clemens' contract.
Gooden will be making $2.25 million this year in the final season of a three-year contract worth $6.7 million. When he agreed to the deal on Feb 8, 1989, it made him the highest-paid player in baseball. But Clemens passed him one week later with a three-year $7.5 million contract.
Under the new deal, Gooden gets a $2 million signing bonus and salaries of $4 million in 1992, $5 million in 1993 and $6 million in 1994. A guaranteed $250,000 a year under a
joint video-promotion deal with the Mets that is part of the extension.
Finally, Gooden can make a $250,000 bonus each year if he pitches 200 innings. He would pocket the full $750,000 in bonuses if he pitches a total of 500 innings during the three years.
If Gooden makes all the performance bonuses, he would earn $16.2 million over the three years, an average of $5.4 million each season.
"The bottom line is we got what we wanted," said Gooden's agent, Jim Neader. "The Mets got Dwight for three years, and Dwight got his 5.4 in the last game." The difference is guaranteed, but the difference up to $2.4 million is what he'll get if he
pitches 200 innings, or 500 innings over the three years. And if you know Dawt, that will not be a problem."
The Mets now must turn their attention to left-hander Frank Viola, who is eligible for free agency after the second-round approaching $5 million a year.
Gooden becomes the 43rd player to top a $3 million-a-year contract and the fifth to top the $4 million mark
Jose Cascone is third on the salary list at $4.7 million a year, Tony Gwynn fourth at $4.08 million and Darryl Strawberry fifth at $4.05 mil-
"He will be the best-paid player in the National League," Mets executive vice president Al Harazin said.
Level 2, Burge Union 864-5697
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
MacWhat?
The KU Macintosh Users Group and the KU Bookstores are teaming up to answer your questions about Macintosh computers. We'll help you through some of the basics and get you on your way to using a Macintosh like a professional. You'll be amazed at how much better you and your Macintosh will get along when you understand each other.
April 3,10 a.m.-2 p.m. Level 2 Burge Union
See the new Apple
Ink, Jet printer,
personal laserwriter IS,
Desktop Publishing,
Multimedia and
Hypercard.
Apple
The Power To Be Your Best At KU.
KU Macintosh Users Group
12
Tuesday, April 2, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Association formed for CLAS students
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
A new club has been formed as an extension of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Alumni Club.
we'd been wanting to start a student branch for a long time now," said Amy Davis, Stillwell junior, who was recently elected as president of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Student Association.
She said she had been a student board member of the alumni club for two years and thought a student group would be valuable.
"We want to just get people aware of the college." Davis said. "I hope a lot of people are interested. I think it helps them, and they can help the college."
Edwyna Gilbert, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, serves as the adviser. She said the club was important because she gave students a chance to learn more.
"This is important because it enables students to identify with the college as a unit," she said.
The club, which includes 14 members, has many ideas and several activities planned.
Club members plan to assist during Alumni Weekend at the end of April, give tours of the college complex in Strong Hall when it is completed and help students become more familiar with the college.
'We just want people to be aware of the college.'
Amy Davis
president CLAS Student Association Amy Davis
They also plan to act as a student voice for the college, giving suggestions to James Muyksens, dean of liberal arts and sciences, concerning classes, enrollment and other issues pertaining to the college.
Davis said the group also was looking into creating a condensed form of the KU undergraduate catalog. Among other things, the booklet would contain course, scholarship and graduation information.
They also hope to sell T-shirts in the spring, work with the office of admissions in the summer and create an undergraduate newsletter.
"We're starting from the ground up." Davis said. "As president, I want to have a really open mind and be available to suggestions."
Davis said she hoped more students in the college would join the club. The next meeting will be April 15 at the college office in Stroud Hull.
Gilbert said she also hoped more students became involved.
"I would like to see a group of students in the college who serve as an advisory group to the Alumni Club and college office," she said.
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The University of Kansas Theatre and the Department of Music and Dance Present Gilbert and Sullivan's Comic Opera
Thl P i RAt E S
THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE
3 f
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.
Directed by Paul Hough
CONCERNED, CONFIDENTIAL & PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN
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ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence using hi-chi technology. Prepare for a wide range of audiences Honors and Stress Management Center
Dear Lane C- Fresh as you are -Sweet as you Be
Happy six months to you, Love, Me (CB)
ANNOUNCING: Beauti Caret. Look and feel your very best. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call 1 913 232-6828 for an appointment today!
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
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Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
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B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and accoutrement services. MasterCard & Discover cards accepted.
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 842-7504
The Etc. Shop Rental and Sales. 732 Mass
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense "of Western Civr." makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier bookshelves
Notice. Any information from individuals who witnessed incidents and or confrontations between security personnel during Jane Addams Construction Inc. was confidentially solicited and requested to contact J. Hewett
Not just for Biker Babes anymore
Temporary Tattoos
The Etc. Shop
729 Mass 8430611
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 735 Mass.
Wanted:
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees a more attractive offer for summer. Call 1-800-497-6021
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by headquarters
for care (841-2345)
841-2345 1419 Mass.
Performers for Crown Center Good Times Company
We're looking for talented college-age singers and dancers to perform weekends at Crown Center in Entertainment trope. Please send performance resume, listing all vocal and dance experience, education and training, along with a recent photo to:
Barbara Miller
Barbara Miller
Crown Center Redevelopment #200
2405 Grand Ave.
Chicago, IL 61608
Resume must be received by April 12.
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-0611
120 Announcements
CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN & COSTUMES
732 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE KANSAS 66044
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fisheries
Earn $1,000.00 (more free Transportation Room
necessary) Male of Female of pear exp employment
84008 Washington WA 90124-Satisfaction
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*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. *College Finsel*. Since 1811 COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP LOCATION Box 101. COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP LOCATION Box 101.
EARTH SHIVTS Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesday, August 9, 14:38. Free introductory lecture April 2, 7:30 pm, Lamplighter Books, 10 E Nith
For an anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Consulting. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters for KU Info 844-3560. Sponsored by GLOSK
conquest for Proposals. Grants writer to private boiler plate language for submission to private advertising campaign. Non-salary. For complete project description contact Hankett Houlds Foundation 172-854-17884.
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members.
Call Vickie at 841-4115.
some intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 812-245 or visit 149 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
TIME TO LOSE THE WINTER PADDLE? Good tasting, natural, naturally balanced PATHWAYs more energy for you, no hunger, money back for you, or you call for information. 1-800-472-3926 1-800-472-3926
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-662-763 or fly a kite.
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartsRestored, Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential response/material will follow
130 Entertainment
140 Lost-Found
FOUND KUID with bus pass Call 842-6987 to claim.
Large Reward-for return of, or information leading to return of black mountain bike stolen from Corrucella Restaurant Tuesday evening 7/28/91. Call 841-696. Confidential.
FOUND KEYS-4th floor Wescoe. 864-1117 to
harris lance
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841-7252. 8. N. 1
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions.
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel
benefits. 303-441-2455.
ATN: Psychology, Education, Sociology, and
ATTENRation related majors. Summer program for
special needs co-ed learning disabled/em-
bodied students with ADHD. Teachers and
teachers and counsellor/instructors.
Located on lake near EYL, MN and Boundary
County. On-site tutoring. Salary plus room and board. Internships available. Contact Ed 845-5037 or Torm Ba-
(812)659-2580. W. Bridgway, Minneapolis
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girl summer camp. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing wrestling, gymnastics, volleyball, soccer, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $100 or more. Add Mebl. Magee 7185 N靶, MNb.
CAMPAIGN COUNSELORS: The YMCA is currently seeking campers for its summer day camp YMCA, which will be held at children. June 8-August 6 for $1 per hour; 40 hours for $5 per hour. Vehicles must be Van Buren, TORRYS, KS, or sheraton Wileyville.
CHILDCARE WORKER! Residential facility for adolescent boys full-time and summer positions. Apply online at chldcareservices.com. Available transportation, Training/experience in field in shi. We drop out. Send resume to P.O. Box 10237, Chelsea, NY 11214.
Convenient Store Check- $4.25 Weekend shift, cash register preference. Apply in person at Phillips 66. Desert Short Store 1-3803-8620, Custom 20, hr per week, night, experience with floors, bathrooms and trash removal. Mail to: Children's Learning Center AT 311 Malein, Children's Learning Center E
Alvaram Country Club in now accepting applications for Spring and Summer wait staff. Prior experience a plus, great attitude on a mast a must. Apply in person 1 or 2-5 at 109 Crosgate.
Earn you while learn Mampower is looking for students interested in earning great pay plus commission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training and experience. We are a personal computer. If you are a full-time student, sophomore or with at least a B average, and are computer familiar, Mampower needs you to have a Bachelor's degree in IBM Personal System 2 on campus. For experience that pays, call Lory at 749 2800.
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with kids for 13 days of weekly hours. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts July 5. Call Alizah Calibier at 623-482-6461
Hely Wanted: Diaptime Bartender. Part-time thru summer. PRIVATE CLUB, experience preferred. must have references and be 21. Call for app. 842-0083
International Company seeks career minded in
dividuals to train in the fashion and glamour
industry. For interview, 1,232-6829
Jayhawk Towers Assistant Manager
A 12-month, half-time, live-in position, the Assistant Manager position requires programs and programs for residents in the Jayhawk Towers student apartment complex. The Assistant Manager is also responsible to the Department of Student Housing for coordination of activities. Duties include setting up a sense of community through programs and training. Share office duty and provide after hours services to students. Enforce Department policies. Participate in orientation, training, supervision, and mentoring of new students and residents and guests. Make maintenance reports. Qualifications: Current KU enrollment—250 or more students required—residential management experience or Jayhawk Towers residential experience preferrant from other cultures. Position available through June 30, 1982; may be continued by mutual agreement. Applicant must have a stipend of $50.00 per month. Send a cover letter to Fred McKenzie, KU Department of Student Housing. 422 West 11th, Suite DH5, Lawrence, MA 02761. Contact Fred McKenzie, Monday, April 15, 1991. EOE Employer.
or the Oaklands Summer Employment. The Hanger Flooded Restaurant accepts applications from businesses. Excellent salary and tips. Great work environment. Housekeeping is still available. Contact Frank
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency 842-4440
Looking for ampiim dishwasher. 1-3 days will apply. Looking for ampiim dishwasher. 1-3 days will apply. Applying for Admins Adult Center AEA. Ask for Looking for Responsible girl to babysat 2 children under the age of 5 needed. Looking for r
Management Team for medium sized Apartment
buildings, bookkeeping maintenance. Call 709-6585.
Need money fast! Make up to $125 a day by
training photographs. No experience necessary
RACING ENTHUSIASTS We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, Tuesday, and Thursday at Topkick. Position includes ticket takers, ticket personnel. If interested apply at Man-
Radio Board Operator. Part-time. Experience required Contact Brian Schiel, KLZR, 843-1320 E.O.E
STUDENT Clerical ASSISTANT 1. Deadline:
filling, filing and performing all assigned clerical duties within Office Services; performs reco-
ponse to computer-related issues; photographs reply from Computer Center Staff; takes phone messages, sets up meetings, etc. To be admitted to the Computer Center Reception desk 0E-ACM Computer Center Reception desk 0E-ACM
Summer. ATT MALE ATHLETES
Camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts, Tennessee, WSL basketball camp in Massachusetts,
Temporary, part-time help wanted. Farm experience helpful. Apply at Webster's, 801 N 2nd. The Math Department is accepting applications
for the position of math tutor for Math 101 and Math 102 for Fall 1991 semester. Duties include creating one-on-one environment and grading exams. All applicants must have excellent math skills and strong command of the English language and demonstrate good communication contact Martin Carrson in 611 Snow.
UNIQUE SUMMER JOBS IN BEAUTIFUL MN. Spend 4-13 weeks in the "Land of 10,000 Nurses, salaried nurse room/board Counselors nursery nurse room/board other positions available at MN Camps for children and adults with disabilities Contact MN Amanda Amanudze, MN 500 619 748-4738 at EOE
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
TRAFFIC - DUIL'
FAKE ID'S & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Government photos, passports, immigration,
medications, and arts portals
WSA, color, wave. Call Tom Sullivan 7-941-8200
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ole-Gyn and Aberration Services
Hall 6141 West 32nd Street
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Leupresser, B41-5216.
Title 8 & Dissertation
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street.
843-4600
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your screens into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evenings.
A better price for Word Processing *Fast service*
0.01* double-spaceed page. Call Thesehrs. 844-0776-975
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence
0.01* double-spaceed page. Hush jobs no problem
235 Typing Services
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila
10am-6pm. 841-1219
Call R.J. 7: Typing. Services 841-5042. Term papers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Domna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, sheets, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser printing
and spelling correction. 220 G. St. Mary's,
New York.
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 6255
his professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1 00 pm. 841-6345
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 9217
Masse 841.1071
Research Projects* Experience time and frustration! Experienced professional with your data file from coding sheets/questionsnaires. Call Key Works, 842-8307
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Near Orchard Cotters. Phone 843-6548
Word Processing: Typing. Papers, Resumes,
Dissertation, Applications. Also assistance in
study. Call 843-6548, composition, have M.S. Degree 841-6254
300s Merchandise
18 inch Pyle woofer with custom-made box. Fits
Mustang GT 250 waist coastie $450.00 obo
Call Peter at 749-9362
305 For Sale
For sale. Miyata Eighty- SE ten speed bicycle, royal blue, in very excellent condition. Call 8437826, ask for John.
1974 Honda 650 Rebuild and restored. Good, cheap, fun. Guaranteed to pick up chicks (no mess). Call Elisi, 842-8783.
For sale: Heads Spree and Smith Coronar Word
Processor. Phone 865-0679.
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, proje ctor, sound system. $2000.00 816-531-9769
BIANCHI road bicycle: 23" men's with many touring accessories. Over $450 invested. $225 obo 811-5450
199 Trek 700 Mountain Bike. Aluminum, 21"
Excellent condition $60.00 new. $85.00 - 85.006
Bahamas cruise or Mexican vacation. Both in
three days. Each $80.00 for 3 daves. Each $80.00 for 6-8543
GOVT SURPLUS* Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tent clothing, camouflage, wet weather gear,
combat helmet, and Speedite Boots. Also
47174, St. Mary's Marriages Sales. 47174,
St. Mary's Marriages Sales. St. Mary's, Mars.
Lined, black leather skirt, size 18 (20), $100,
GE¹ color, T t shirt, $150; cup-85-5024
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-ins welcome. Call 843-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
340 Auto Sales
NEW REALEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 100
PUMP (INCLUDES GUIDE) $256 842-914-916
Specialized Mountain Bike-one year old
kryptonite kyte $300 Call 802-245 Leave
189 Red Hood Give hatchback, AC, stereo, 22K,
one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas
mileage. Call 748-6575 2857
1971 VW camperbak, rebuilt engine with 800mile good condition, mileage $0.00. Call 842-3243 MWFs
1976 Black Trans Auror, AC, New Paint, Great Beautiful, Car. 951-8603. Pat.
For sale: 1982 Nissan Starza, 100k miles, good condition
*$1500 obo* 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 Lee. 843-3500
370 Want to Buy
360 Miscellaneous
Wanted-Used mountain bike. Men's large frame 849-790.
On TV's, HYTY, SELL TO ANYCHS
On TV's, HYTY, SELL TO ANYCHS
music instruments, cameras and more. We honor
UC/MAEMC. Disc Jayhawk Pawn &
Jewelry, 184W. 6th 749 1919.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Available Aug 1 at 10:57 Tennessee, 749-6016 H
basemont aspet $235/month plus insurance. 1 year
basemont aspet $125/month plus insurance.
wather/dryer. 1 hr AHT aspet, $30/month plus
insurance. 1 year, 1 month. 1 month, off street
insurance.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in the 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."
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 is available on an equal opportunity basis.
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 by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
13
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 2, 1991
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-897/143-1601
2-bedroom house and duplexes. Available June 1. Sorry, pets. Dick at 897-891/430-1601.
2 Bedroom apt for available summer sublease.
2 BR iq for 10 people. Available in fall or summer
in 12 month leave. DW, low in utilities, off street
parking, close to campus. Deposit Call
482.8748 Aikra for Tracy or leave message.
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
...on KU bus routed
...studios
...townhomes
...2,3 Bedrooms
...Free cable
...Water paid .
...Pool
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1:50-3:
WKNDS BY APT. 630 Michigan 749-7297
EASTERN UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
-2 bedroom $440, $460
-3 bedroom $560
office
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- On KU bus route
- Carpets available
WEST HILL APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
nicious apts. - furnishe
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
Near campus
1:00 - 4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
S
Swan Management
- Graystone
1.2-3.4 bedroom 4p
Open House M.F 1.5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
VILLAGE SQUARE
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
1 & 2 Bedrooms for Summer & Fall
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- mini-blinds
- large rooms & closets
- refreshing pool
843-6446
2166 W.26th
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
APARTMENTS: Small, large. Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many extras. 815-361-9298.
Available June 3. bedroom apartment in nice older home. Walk to KU downtown, A/C dishwasher, off street parking, wood floors $96. Water paid. No pets. 841-1074.
Available June. Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice old house. New bathroom. Wood floors; $440. Gas/water paid. No pets. 841-1074
BIG 1 bedroom for sublease. Available June 1 with option to renew in fall. Pool, balcony, close to campus. Rent negotiable. 842-8356.
Bradford Square Apartments
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
microbes, microwave, board or deck, laundry facility. Onsite Management, KU bus route, of streetpark.
Haz to reserve your apartment for summer
Check out Berkeley Flats, Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300/415/mo. Call 845-211-616.
Excellent level, 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom
in 4-plex, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA,
no pets, available June 1 $60. At 1341 Ohio. Call
815-6742.
apartments
Boardwalk
1 & 2 Redrooms
Showing Units Daily 9-6 842.4444
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Water & trash paid
- Clean & well maintained
- Walk to grocery
- Large closets & living space
- 2 on-site bus stops
524 Frontier
- Unfurnished with
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
-3 Pools
spacious & comfortable
Now leasing
for summer & fall
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment
Double Take
TRAILRIDGE
843-7333
KU. KM. student. June 1 and
hey, receive $2 off your rent for 2 months. Studio 1,
and 2 beetm appts. Heat and water access "Pass
the Center. Rainbow Tower Apts.
86-450-799-3800"
Hey RU Med. students-move in June 1 and receive $2 off your rent for 2 months. "Studies, 1 and 2 become apartments. Heat and water paid up." Med. Center. Med. Center. Rainbow Towers. A$13,851-603.
-Tennis courts on KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
Large 2 bedroom apt for summer sublease. Swimming pool and volleyball. Close to bus route. Call 847-676-lowe message
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $200.00.
841-9113. leave message.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL Boomy n 3 or plus 1D
dublin on bus line. Basement, Garage, CA W/D
hookup. No pets. Lease & reef. req $40/mo and
un. mail. 843,723,1788
Lorinar Towhones, 3801. Clinton Parkway
Quality, space, with all the amenities. Brand
new available. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May July, or for 12 months. 847.8183. 848.743
Furnished living space, 225 plus tui requirements. microwave, faucerall, lg back yard with deck Grad student or students upper classman preferred. 843-1030.
LEASE ONLY FOAM FOR FALL. Extra two 28 bRU duplex in good location. Extra large marry garage; laundry/storage yard No pets Less & Lease #486-7736 after 5.990 mo. not acceptable #484-7736 after 5.990 mo.
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apart ment in May. Call 843-8315.
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt
and water and gas paid $300. Mo. Call 434-216
--summer from campus of onu 865346
Summer subside at sundance. Studio, completely furnished. Available May 21, 1991 thru Aug 10, 1991.
Call evening. Call 865346.
YES, I AM
THROUGHLY
EVIL AND UNITIF
TO EVEN SHINE
POSSESSED
POSSESSED
BOTH BY
SOMEONE
OF YOUR
MAGNIFICENCE
Extremely large, spacious, 3 dbrm townhouse w/ garage 2 female non smoking roomes needed year lease beginning August and/or summer for utilities. Kerr 834-6562
Subleases Available Immediately
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing room.
2 Bdmr townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1410 square feet.
Furnished Studios 435 sq.feet
Some Summer Subleases too!
Newly remodeled apartments
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sun 8-5
Sat 1-4
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two with fireplaces
2.4200
meadowbrook
The sun sets over the city.
Sunrise Apts.
- Studios
- 1. 2,3 & 4 Bedroom
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.
- & Apartment Living
- Tennis Count, Pools
* Free Cable T.V. (PL & Terr
Mackenzie Place Apts: 38 bldm luxury hairstyle for leasing at August; 1yrs old, washer/dryer, microwave,蒸炉, fan, 2 steps, 1 year lease, no room. Room rates: $4773 every week, buildings: 841-8218 days.
- Garages (VIII.)
- Tennis Court - Pools
- Garages (VIII.)
9th & Michigan
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
- Luxurious Town Home
6th & Gateway
**Airports**
2.1 BR, 4.3 BR, 6BR dryers each unit, ectch microwaves, fan microwaves, two full baths in 8BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old Cal today? 749-1568
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Sipirnau Plaza. Apts. 1,834 room, $75.25床室, starts at $30.15 month lease. Water and cable paid remitted to home, new carpet. Call 811-269-9100.
HI, CARRIE? THIS IS COCKER.
New leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments in the kitchen appliances, including dishwasher, refrigerator, dryer and blinds. Low utilities, pool and bus route. Compromise $169.00 SPANISH POINT CREAT APARTMENT
Open House Daily
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets.
Deposit and references required. Off street parking.
749-2919.
841-1287 or 841-8400
New leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Appears West Apt. $500 for 3 bedroom, $775
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to campus.
Call 921-1608 or 921-839
Sunrise Place
电话
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
--summer from campus of onu 865346
Summer subside at sundance. Studio, completely furnished. Available May 21, 1991 thru Aug 10, 1991.
Call evening. Call 865346.
- Close to Campus
Spectacular 3 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer or sooner. 1006 W. 27; 842-4603 or 841-5797.
Spectacular one bedroom bedtion or summer sublease.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid-$300.00. 841-682-682.
OH, YEAH, I'M READY TO MAKE REALLY REPENTANT
Will importize price. Call Saraf, 943-9129.
Spool your yourself in a second nice apartment.
WD/WD/microwire/disposal. Sublease $395.00.
Kg 853-3873
SUMMER SUBLET 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downtown: $295/mo., gas & water paid.
841 5695 after 4:30.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom, very, very close to campus. Call 749-4684
Sublease large one bedroom ap. Close to campus on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-9114.
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
SUNISIE VILLAGE LIVESTUD submarine subase. Can fit up to people for $134/mo. dishwasher, microwave, pool, summer parties. First kkg is on us for new tenants. Please call 842-2714.
Completely Furnished
Reserve Your Home Now!
We offer
Offering:
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartment
-Custom furnishings
-Designed for privacy
-Private Parking
-Close to shopping & KU
-Many great locations
-Equal opportunity housing
Designed with you in mind!
VERY WELL. I HEREBY SHELVE ALL OF MY AMBITIONS TO BE AN
LIKE, FOR LAST
MORE? YOU WANT MORE? YOU
DRIVE A HARD BARGAIN, DEARIE
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Go to...
NAISMITHHALL
BILBAO
The cost of living has gone down at Naismith! NEW LOWER COSTS!
More fun for less funds!
S
Kentucky Place - 749-0445 1310 Kentuki
AMUSEABLE PART
NIVERSE SEEMS
TO ENTER
THE
THE BEAUTY OF MONEY
Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Colony Woods, May 20-Aug 10 w/ 3 weeks free $125/month plus utilities. 865-3238.
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Sundance - 841-5255
Tanglewood - 749-2415
1800 Nuisitm Drive
Lawrence, KS 60442
(913) 835-8559
Campus Place - 841-1429
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
AK RT AS
P
- Free utilities
Summer sublease, 2 bedroom, $1/2 bath, free water, laundering available. $225/month. Call Mark 841-7071.
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 1 bk from KU with off-street parking, no pets. 841-500.
Summer and Fall leaf. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bib from KU off-street parking. Noets. 841-5500.
A PARTY YOU CAN LEAVE
AND I PROMISE THE NEXT
TIME YOU TAVE ME ALONG TO
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Sublease, Traiidgeur 3 bedroom
townhouse Furnished Pools, patio, dishwasher,
compactor. $830 plus utilities. 64-1928
phone (516) 362-6780. Mail resume to:
3 stories. Lots w/ full utility. 865-363-3021.
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748 afternoons.
- Basketball Court
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
---
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
by Tom Avery
- Volleyball Court
YOU LIKE THAT, HUH? IT'S AN OLD PENNSLYVANIA DUTCH SAVING.
TOM AWESON
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tube
- On Bus Route
$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
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Summer suitesule, 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at comund, Sundaise. Compound Angle, 654-892.
Summer sub lease 1 bdrm,urnified apt. June-Aug. Call evenings 8:35:48 for more info.
Summer sublease 1 bdmr, furnished apt. June-ug.
Call evening 85314 for more info.
Summer sublease, Undirified 2 bedroom apt. 2
Mohs from house on 85314 - Office 0857.
Summer subbase with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call 852-2393.
Large studio for summer sublease. Available mid-May. May rent paid. $275/mo. 841-6784 after 60m
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit.
842-3040 or 749-2681. Ask for Jennifer.
Summer sublease: Spacious 2 br, 2 bath apartment. Quit neighborhood. West Lawrence. Dishwasher, Woolen hook, pool. 842-8288
430 Roommate Wanted
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or download by 1460 Tennessee.
- Policy
Female roommate wanted for summer sublease
Furnished apt at Campus Place—great location
$181 mo./s. utilities. Please call Michelle,
955-069-089
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626.
Female roommate summer sublease. Share 3 BR apt with two other females. **1175, 843-6492, leave message**
one or two female roommates needed for 4
bedroom, 2 bathroom, at apet. atkhorn Corners
starting Aug '91. Call Shannon at 749-4797.
Barring Aug. 9, Cal Shannon at 8:49 a.m.
Roommate needed for 3 bedroom townhouse, $240 a month, $240 deposit plus ½ utility. Includes:
Bedroom suite, fireplace, fireplace,路灯, calls. Call Sev. 834-6456.
Roommate needed immediately. Close to campus. $180/mo. plus utilities. 841-4535.
Female roommate needed from May to August to share a 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt. $205 and 1/2 of utilities. Call Monica, 643-4108.
noimmate(s). spacious 4 bedroom. 2 bath house.
Two rooms for 1-2 people. Reasonable rent/utilities. Alison, 855-2578
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Male student seeks roommate for summer job in K.C.-Lenexa, Olathe area. S/115 thru 8/15. Call Scott at 604-814-6167.
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call
749-3477; economical.
Roommate wanted: 3rd person, 3 bedroom apt.
929 Indiana. $150/month plus utilities. Call
749-3898 or 841-9131.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ACE 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.
Fear aids are free for three weeks, no more than 15 words.
Found aids are free for three weeks, no more than 15 words.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Blind box ads; please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheet are NOT provided for classified advertisements
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any
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 at 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 370 want to buy
110 business personals 205 help wanted 340 auto sales 405 for rent
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wa
120 announcement 225 prious services
Iail Order Form Phone ___
Address ___
(phone number published only if included below)
print your phone number; port box:
Please print your name per box
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST GO
Date ad begins
Total days in paper ___
Amount paid ___
Qty ___
KLANS KANST POLICY
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66045
LAWRENCE, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
44.2 Jalerson
Every hour on the hour, a huge truck, made entirely of pressed ham, lumbers its way across Dog Heaven and all the car chasers can decide for themselves whether or not to participate.
14
Tuesday, April 2, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
C
O
COUPONS
O
---
N
Drs. Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
FREE CONTACTS*
One pair of disposable
containte to present
lens wiper
FREE SOLUTION*
B & L Renu
GLASSES
Free U.V. &/or Sunintent
coating on old
prescription glasses
(with exam & coupon)
* WITH COUPONS
Dr. Charles Pohl
841-2866
EXPIRES 5/31/91
Dr. Kent Dobbins
843-5665
S
---
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
15% OFF Jewelry
Largest selection of earrings in Lawrence
Exp. 4/15/91
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
---
50¢ Bowling
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 50¢ game during open bowling.
Limit two coupons per person per visit.
The Kansas Union Jaybowl
Level One
864-3545
Expires 4/16/91
Fantastic Sam's
the Original Family Haircuters
$6.95
Precision Hair Cut
By a professionally trained stylist
Reg. $9.00 (styling extra)
"You don't have to pay
offer expires 4-15-91
23rd & Louisian
a lot to look good!"
749-1976
Fantastic Sam's
the Original Family Haircutters®
$6.95
Precision Hair Cut
By a professionally trained stylist
Reg. $9.00 (styling extra)
Expires 4/16/91
Border Bandido
$1.00 off
Texas Burrito
(No Limit)
Not valid with delivery
15% OFF
all Soul & Rap Cassettes
offer expires 04/05/91
*Not valid with other offers or sale merchandise
15% OFF
all Soul & Rap Cassettes
offer expires 04/05/91
*Not valid with other offers or sale merchandise
KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS
AUDIO / VIDEO
2406 and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (013) 842-1544
KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS
AUDIO/VIDEO
24th and IOWA LAWRENCE KANSAAS (913)842-1344
1st Street graphics
842 TEES
733 Mass
TEAM SPECIAL?
Tank tops with FREE
6" lettering only $6.99!
Numbers & Greek letters available.
Custom screen printing with no art or set-up charges.
XGA Print Four Shirts in four designs.
New Canon Color Laser Copier put photos on
tees, sweatshirts and caps.
ONLY $2.27
1/4 lb. Hamburger,
Quickie Q's, &
16 oz. Soft Drink
-701 W. 23rd Street-
Limit four coupon-Void with any other offer-Expires 4/16/
HAMBURGERS
Quickies
FRIES & DRINKS
SM
VIDEO BIZ
VIDEO BIZ
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa
749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa 749-3507
2 Video Tapes
and VCR
One Night Rental
$5.99 EXP. 4/18/91
• 3 video tapes
• 2 days
Only $3.99!
OMC CORR
* 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
$3.00 OFF
jiffylube*
14 POINT SERVICE
INCLUDING OIL AND FILTER CHANGE
CURRICATION OF CHASSES, SAFTY CHECKS
AND THE FINISHING TOUCHES
Offer expires 4 15/91
914 W. 23rd #0557
Buy any Kenwood car product and
get FREE installation!
Expires
5/5/91
University
Audio/video
KENWOOD
Red Hot Garage
Buy one sandwich and get a second of
equal value for 1/2 price
Open Mon-Thurs 11:00am-10:00pm
Fri & Sat 11:00am-2:00am
Closed Sunday
733 NEW HAMPSHIRE
THE Fitness Factory Expires 4/16/91 3 MONTHS $59.00
AEROBIC STUDIO (The Malls Shopping Center)
842-1983
· Tanning Bed Available!
Super Taco Salad and Med. Drink
A e r o b i c s
...
Super Taco Salad
and Med. Drink
$2.99
TACO JOHNS
Coupon
Not valid with other offers
expires
4/16/91
---
Chips
Onion
$1.00 OFF
Try one of our selection of
veggie or smoked turkey
sandwiches and get $1.00 off!
(served with Krunchers potato
chips.)
CAFE AND ESPRESSO SHOP
12th & Ind. 841-2310
Above Yello Sub
not valid with other offers
expires 4/16/91
CAFE AND ESPRESSO SHOP
12th & Ind. 841-2310
Above Yello Sub
$1.00 OFF
Try one of our selection of
veggie or smoked turkey
sandwiches and get $1.00 off!
(served with Krunchers potato
chips.)
not valid with other offers
(spares all fees)
Taco Grande
Buy any item
Get One FREE !! (same item)
one coupon per customer per visit
not good with any other offer
Offer expires 05/31,9/1
534 FRONTIER (6th and Frontier)
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
Perms
$7 off
Highlights
$5 off
7 TANS $20
or
10 TANS $25
(facials extra)
PRIVATE
HOT TUB
$15 an hour
Sauna, Stereo,
Cable TV & VCR
25th & Iowa • Holiday Plaza • 841-6232
Johnny's CLASSIC BURGERS 9th & Illinois
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
9th & Illinois
99¢ 1/4 Pounder
Try our other Specialty Sandwiches:
Tenderloin, Chicken, Fish, Gyro
Expires 4/15/91
You Know Its Spring Outside, Now Tell Your O Inside!!!
2309 HASKELL A 25% DISCOUNT C
You Know Its Spring Outside. Now Tell Your Car's Inside!!
2309 HASKELL
A 25% DISCOUNT
Let Rainbow International Give Your Car Some Spring Cleaning With Our Upholstrey and Carpet Cleaning Special
Car Upholstrey Cleaning Special
RAINBOW INTERNATIONAL CARPET CLEANING & DNEING CO
RAINBOW INTERNATIONAL CARPET CLEANING & DYEING CO.
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kasson
Westrage Shopping Center
FREE DELIVERY!
842-0600
ROUNDTABLE
Hamburger, Sausage, Canadian Bacon,
Pepperoni, Green Pepper, Mushroom
Black Olive, Onion, with Extra Cheese
Large • $9.95 + tax
2 for $13.95 + tax
MEAT ONE
CANADIAN BACON
SAUSAGE, PEPPERONI
HAMBURGER
Medium • $7.95 + tax
2 for $13.95 + tax
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kassia
Westridge Shopping Center
BUY 1 GET 1 FREE
MARSHAL CARE
VISA
FREE DELIVERY!
842-0600
$1.00 VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
544 W. 23RD
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Not Good With Other Specials
expires 4-16-91
ROUNDTABLE
Hamburger, Sausage, Canadian Bacon,
Pepperoni, Green Pepper, Mushroom
Black Olive, Onion, with Extra Cheese
Large • $9.95 + tax
2 for $15.95 + tax
MEATY ONE
CANADIAN BACON
SAUSAGE, PEPPERONE
HAMBURGER
Medium • $7.95 + tax
2 for $13.95 + tax
Valentino's
Ristorante
expires 4-16-91
Your environmentally conscious University Daily Kansan is printed on recycled paper with soybean ink. Now, please recycle it once again.
BALLZA Shoppe
8th A Kasio
Westridge Shopping Center
MICROBANK
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THE UNIVERSITY DA KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL. 101, No. 123
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3. 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
KU destruction surprises some administrators
Crowd's behavior sours event
By Eric Nelson
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Although KU officials were prepared for the crowd on campus after the game Monday, they were not given any protection by some of the crowd's behavior.
"My basic reaction is that I'm really disappointed that there was so much juvenile behavior," said executive vice chancellor
He said Monday night's activities were unfortunate, especially in light of the class and maturity he had displayed the entire year
Finishing second in the tournament was cause for celebration and not destruction. Shankel said.
"It it put kind of a sour note on what should have been a happy occasion." he said.
The situation began with the crowd celebrating the success of the team. Shankel said the atmosphere was thick, and the crowd put the majority of the crowd.
I don't really know what the makeup of the crowd was," he said.
But Shankel said that although some were KU students, it was speculated that many of the revelers were not.
To avoid further complications,
police did not make any arrests.
Instead, people were taken into
houses and held had calmed
down. Shankal said.
"I think the police made a wise decision to not make any arrests," he said. "Our police handled the assaults effectively when the difficult of the situation."
Shankel did not expect any long-term impact from the events and said the University would take no punitive action because no
identification was taken during the evening.
He said that the University's experience with the 1988 national championship was beneficial to preparation for this year but that he did not see it made for the next time the Jayhawks play for the championship.
Shankel said he was thankful that serious injuries had been avoided throughout the tournament.
Danny Kaiser, assistant dean of student life, said that more than 20 staff members from student affairs were at the scene but that approaching people for IDs could also be used to determine an already deteriorating situation.
The large crowd Monday night was expected. Kaiser said.
"We weren't in a situation where we could go out and grab people," he said.
"What I didn't expect was how negative the feel of the crowd would be," he said.
Kaiser said a possibility that could be considered for future tournaments was the plan Duke University used. Duke had students packed in its gym to watch the game. If KU sponsored a similar event, the excess drinking that was a root of some of the violence possibly could be avoided.
But he said the staff had reported that many in the crowd were not KU students.
He said that the events throughout the tournament ran more smoothly than in 1988 but that groups involved in preparations and cleanup meet in the next few weeks to discuss improvement for the future.
Post-game crowd spurs no arrests
Although KU police said Monday night that they had broken up at least six fights on campus, Burdel Welsl. KU police community services officer, said nobody was in connection with the fights.
"We did have a lot of people taken out of the crowd," he said. "We did what we felt was best under the circumstances."
Kansan staff writer
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Most of the on-campus fights after the game were in front of Wesco Hall because most people converged there, he said.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the 38 police officers working Jayhawk Boulevard on Monday night were able to take care of incidents without having to make any arrests.
Monday night's after-game activities on campus resulted in no arrests by KU police.
An estimated crowd of 15,000 surged onto campus Monday night after the game.
were treated at the scene on campus, Watkins Memorial Health Center received 25 walks and Douglas County Ambulance Service transported four persons with injuries.
Welsh said 37 minor injuries
The on-campus injuries ranged from minor scrapes and bruises to a possible broken ankle, he said.
According to Lawrence police reports, one person was arrested in connection with a stabbing incident at Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St. and one person was arrested in connection with a battery incident at the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St.
Lawrence police Sgt. Kevin Harmon said six arrests Monday night possibly could be attributed to after-game activities.
"Anytime you get a very large number of people together, you have the possibility of injury," Welsh said.
Two people were arrested for drunk driving and two others were arrested for driving with susi- tance. In the game, according to the reports.
Fans rally around team
1
IN OUR
HEARTS!
Kim Builtok, St. Louis freshman, holds a sign she made for the welcome-home rally yesterday, which about 10,000 people attended.
Players' speeches show enthusiasm for next year
By Jonathan Plummer and Sarah Davis
and Sarah Davis
Proud to be a Jayhawk
These words, written in crimson and blue on a sign carried by the Jayhawk mascot, seemed to speak for the estimated 10,000 people who welcomed a welcome-home rally in Memphis Stadium for the Jayhaws yesterday.
Yesterday's rally elicited a different emotion than the one of frustration that swept through the crowd on Jawayh Boulevard Monday night after Kansas' loss to Duke in the NCAA championship game.
"I're pride," said Dusty Workman,
Topela freshman, "I think this shows our appreciation because we support our team even after we lost. They're always No. 1 in the fans' eyes — always No."
"It is my privilege to welcome home the finest young coach in
The feeling, the players said, was mutual.
"It it wasn't for you guys, I don't think we would have got so far," senior manager Terry Brown said. "I really love you for your support."
Though the players seemed tired as they left the bus and stepped onto the platform near the 50 yard line, their mood became more playful.
Coach Roy Williams also was the recipient of much praise from players, fans and other speakers.
"I can't say too much about these guys," junior forward佐罗齐曼SON, said, turning to his teammates. "We are more of a family than we are in school. We do everything together except go to the bathroom together."
Each of the players spoke to the crowd. After nearly every sentence, their speeches were interrupted with applause.
America," said Chancellor Gene A Budig
As the fans began chanting, "Roy. Roy. Roy." Williams grinned and looked down at his feet, his hands in his pockets.
Williams said the rally was yet another reflection of the constant support of the fans.
"This showing today does nothing but signify that we are so far ahead of other places in America. Williams is one of the best place for college basketball."
Although the sky over the stadium had been gray the entire afternoon, the sun broke out of the clouds as Williams assured the crowd that they would be sharing more good times together.
"Last time there was a celebration here, it was after a national championship, and a couple months later you had a coach leave," he said. "I'd like to be here for several more of them, but don't mind I think I'll stay awhile."
Y'S B
Although Williams said he was
willing to allow the seniors will
have to say goodbye.
"It's the hardest thing for me to say it's time for me to move on," senior center Mark Randall said in a lecture last year at the years of my life have been the best.
Pointing to the silver second-place trophy on the front of the stage, Randall bent down to speak into the microphone.
"I want them to come back with the gold next year," he said.
After listening to 6-foot-10 junior center David Johanning speak, sophomore guard Adonis Jordan pulled the microphone down to his height and talked about his dreams of gold.
"For all the fans who will be back next year, we're gonna work really hard this summer so next year we
Kansas forward Richard Scott slaps hands with teammate Mark Randall at the rally. Scott talked about the three championships the Jayhawks would like to win during his next three years at KU.
can have a gold one sitting right here," he said, pointing to the trophy.
While most of the returning players did not mention the fact that the seniors would not be on next year's team, Richard Scott could not hold back.
"I'm sorry about this year, but I have three more years left," he said, laughing. "Right now we can party with silver, but for the next three
years in a row, we are going to party with the gold."
The crowd, as well as the seniors, responded with laughs and cheers.
To end the rally, the pep band played KU's alma mater. The four seniors watched the crowd, which, as always, swaved and sang.
And this time, the four linked their arms and did the same.
Racist incidents on campuses are turning universities into battlegrounds that pit civil rights and the first amendment against each other. See story page 5
Iraqi rebels want U.S. help in struggle against Saddam
WASHINGTON — Iraqi rebels hope to persuade the Bush administration to change its手-off policy in order to preserve President Saddam Hussein's forces.
The Associated Press
A Kurdish representative said in an interview yesterday that U.S. policy may be based on the unfounded fears that the Kurds were seeking to set up an independent state or that Iranian-backed Shiite Muslims would take control of the country if Saddam were to tupled.
"All we want is democracy and territorial integrity and respect for Kurdish rights within the borders of Iraq," said Najmaladin Karim, a Washington, D.C., neurosurgeon "That's what we want. The fear that Iaqu is going to disintegrate is just unfounded."
Karim will represent both the Kurdistan Front and the Kurdish National Congress of North America in talks with Assistant Secretary of State John Kelly and other U.S. officials later in the week
A cross-section of Shite and Sunni Muslims opposed to Saddam's rule were expected to make a similar case at the State Department today. Talks will be with a wide range of Iraqi dissidents for three days.
The likelihood of a shift in U.S. policy appears to be remote.
"The fact that we will be meeting with an increased number of such individuals will, in part, be an occasion to reiterate our consistent policy regarding Iraq," the State Department said in a statement yesterday.
► See related stories Page 7
Phone use surges after games
Kansan staff writer
By Nedra Beth Randolph
The after game surge to campus Monday night was not the only onrush resulting from the championship game.
Telephone lines in Lawrence, Durham, N.C., and Indianapolis were kept busy after the game.
Mike Scott, Southwestern Bell community relations director in Lawrence, said the number of calls to campus swelled from 1,614 an hour to the championship game to 16,638 after it.
"In Lawrence, things that spark local interest, like a big basketball game, cause a big surge in calls," he said.
The after-game surge of callers was not restricted to Monday's game, he said.
"After the Arkansas game, all of our lines to southwestern Bell control were busy," she said. "I'm not surprised it happened here."
After KU beat North Carolina on Saturday, the number of calls made within Lawrence jumped from 18,703 during the game to 41,703 after it. he said The number of calls made doubled from 5,111 to 13,552.
Jan Weller, KU telecommunications director, said she thought all campus incoming and outgoing lines were busy Monday night.
Weller said the campus phone system had 180 direct-inward lines and 156 direct-outward lines. The campus is southwestern Bell office downtown.
"All those lines were all tied up for 2 to 3 hours after the game."
she said.
At Duke University, Dan Webb, telecommunications manager, said the telephone operators were discharged from the NCAA championship.
Steve Toler, General Telephone public service manager in Durham, said he had expected a surge of phone calls after the NCAA championship game, win or lose.
"We had an increase in the number of calls." he said. "But there was no problem with service."
Tony Page, media information manager for Indiana Bell in Indianapolis, said he could not tell if the surge in Indianapolis calls was caused by calls to Lawrence and Durham.
2
Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Kansas Forecast
Showers and a few thunderstorms will move through the area. There is also a chance for lingering showers. Temperatures will warm by the weekend.
Salline
57/46
KC
Dodge City
61/48
58/46
Wichita
60/49
Thursday - Partly cloudy and mild. High 65/Low 49.
Friday - Sunny and warmer. High 78/ Low 50.
Saturday- Warm again High 81/ Low 53.
forecast by Rochester D. Price
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
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■ KU Wellness Center will conduct a stress management workshop at 12.10 p.m. at 138 Robinson.
- KU Study Abroad will have an information meeting at 2 p.m. at 203 Linncock.
■ KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 6 p.m. at the Party Room in the Kansas Union.
■ Environers will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jawahkrow Room in the Kansas Union.
■ African Affairs Student Association will feature the movie 'Chocolate' at 6 p.m. on Tuesday. The students will slide show on 'Egypt, Past and Present' at 8 tionight at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson
**Amnesty International will meet**
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KU Flying Club will meet at 7 tonight at 2002 Learned.
Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Women Entrepreneurs" workshop at 7 tonight at the Regional Room in the Kansas Union.
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'Ar'kansas shirts on sale
Once-banned shirts receive approval
receive approval
The shirts worn by the basketball team after the defeat of Arkansas now will be made available to the public.
Kansan staff writer
Bv Eric Nelson
Mike Reid, manager of the KU Bookstores and director of licensing for the University, said an agreement had been reached with the University of Arkansas so that the shirts could be printed.
receive apj
The shirts had the word "Arkansas" printed on the front with the letters.
Previously, the shirts had not been licensed or approved by officials at Arkansas, he said.
Reid called Arkansas officials to ask permission to print the shirts.
"They thought about it for a second." he said. "They kind of hesi-
But in the end they agreed because Arkansas and Kansas are not regular foes or in the same conference, Reid said. "We've had half the rottings from the shirts."
The shirts are being printed by graphic's, 315 N.E. Industrial Leaf.
The Athletic Department sold the shirts for $15 at Memorial Stadium yesterday during the homecoming rally. Reid said the department sell the shirts in front of the Kansas Union and Wescott Beach today.
He was unsure whether other retailers, including the KU Bookstores, would have permission to sell the shirts.
Tom Wilkerson, co-owner of Jayah Spirit, 935 Massachusetts St., printed and sold shirts similar to the ones worn by the players after the victory against Arkansas. The University requested that the store dis
continue printing.
Wilkerson said that he was not upset about not having the opportunity to print the shirts and that he would buy shirts to sell if given the chance.
But he said the University could make more money by having a large printer, such as Winning Ways in Lenea, print shirts and distribute them to several retailers.
"If you're going to do it to make money, why don't we maximize the thing?" he said. "Why mess with nickels and dimes?"
"I think it's worth looking at," Wilkerson said.
Instead of drawing lines and dividing the retailers and the market, he said a joint venture could prove successful.
Wilkerson said such a venture would create more outlets for distribution and possibly more revenue for the University.
'Hawk fever boosts shirt sales
Loss to Duke sets some stores back
LA VIE JANIS
NAIRAL
CHAPEL
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
Despite Kansas' loss to Duke Monday night, local school printers said the Final Four was beneficial for students and for the community in general.
Chris Piper, co-owner of Screen-EI Graphics, 315 N.E. Industrial Lane and a member of the 1988 championship team, said his company would print shirts congratulating the team on their accomplishments in the tournament.
Mike Turner/KANSAN
He said that this time of the year was special, and that the Final Four appearance alone meant an increase in sales for local printers.
Rossann Wilkerson, co-owner of Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Massachusetts St., prints KU national championship shirts before Monday's game.
"Everyone goes crazy and wants a shirt." Piper said.
But he said the Final Four had been great for business. As the Hawks continued to win, shirt sales increased.
"All of our production is geared toward that," he said. "We'd have to come up with something. Nobody thought about them losing."
"There's a lot of business out there as far as T-shirts go," he said.
Pat Turner, co-owner of Prairie Graphics, 2317 Ponderas St., said the loss would set his company back a little because of all the time that had been spent preparing for a victory
Turner did not print any shirts in advance, just in case the team lost. "We'll just until this morning."
"We'll wait until this evening."
Turner said before Monday night's game. "It only makes good business sense."
what we're doing now," she said.
Rosann Wilkerson, co-owner of Jayhawk Spirit, 933 Massachusetts St., said that she was selling championship shirts Monday but that she printed only a few in case the team lost.
"That's what we did in '88, so that's
Even though the team lost, Wilker son said many liked the idea of having a collector's item.
Joe Cunningham, co-owner of Shirts Illustrated, 844 Massachusetts St., said the team's success had been good for local businesses and the community. He said the loss was tough.
Pre-law advising moves to Wescoe
Kansan staff writer
By Sarah Davis
Marion Dyer, pre-law adviser, said Wescoe advising would be more accessible to students.
"It makes sense to have it here because we're centrally located at Wescow, and it will be easier for students to find," she said.
Pre-law students now can receive pre-enrollment advising at the Advising Support Center in Wescoe Hall and be admitted to the law school had taken place since 1867.
Another reason for the move was to help students feel less intimidated when asking about law schools other than KU's.
The center will be able to help prelaw students with those questions and many others.
"The law school wasn't comfortable because of the conflict of interest," said Joe VanZandt, coordinator of advising. "They didn't feel like students were willing to come in and ask about other law schools."
It will give students information about the LASAT, law school choices, courses to take while at KU and the need for admission to law school.
Dyer said that the center would help KU's 450 pre-law students, who have no pre-law curriculum to follow, and that the center planned to help
the students in several ways.
In the fall, Dyer said she hoped to have a pre-law forum where lawyers and judges would speak to students about law school, minority opportunities, financial aid and law careers.
Other plans include working with the KU Pre-Law Society to see whether its members have any suggestions on the advising process, Dyer said.
"That will help us tailor it to the KU student population," she said.
VanZandt said he was glad the center could take control of some of the pre-law duties.
"We wanted to do more than just the minimal amount," he said.
Police report
An unknown person broke 10 cell tiles on the sixth floor of Ellsworth Hall yesterday, KU police reported.
A student was arrested yesterday
for DUI, reckless driving and no proof of insurance, KU police reported.
An unknown person removed a marble shelf from a restroom in
McColmll Hall and threw it out a window, breaking the window and screen yesterday afternoon. KU police reported.
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Campus/Area
3
Three city commissioners elected
Schulte, Schumm and Nalbandian win
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence voters defied local political tradition last night by electing a Lawrence City Commission candidate. The vote determined a winner in the primary.
As in the Feb. 26 primary election, candidates Bob Schulte and John Nalbandian finished strongly, winning their commission seats hands down. But Bob Schumann, who did not place in the top three in the primary, was on the second ballot; notes this time to win his third term as commissioner in the last 12 years.
Schumm's victory was the first in recent elections in which a city commission candidate did not win, and Schumm won a term in the general election.
"It was a real challenge," Schumm said after the final results were posted. "I was doubtful as the number of people who had ever been done since 1960 or so."
But moving from fourth in the primary to third in the general election was not the only feat Schumm accomplished in the election. Schumm also overcame the tendency of his party to fairly poor in re-election attenuation.
In the past decade, most incumbent candidates have fared well in
the primaries only to lose in the general election.
Another surprise in the election was David Penny's fifth-place finish. Penny, who was the only incumbent running for re-election, finished a second with a primary only to drop behind all but Paul Horwath in the general election.
Penny said his outspoken stance on many issues, including his opposition to a municipal golf course and protecting the interests of downtown merchants, may have cost him the election
"I think Schumm tried to consolate that support," he said. "You can put together a bunch of special interest groups and win the vote."
Nalbandian, who received the second largest amount of votes last night, also moved ahead from his third place finish in the primary. The additional votes, Nalbandian said, helped secure the creation by his success in the primary.
"The momentum was really people getting to know who I was," he said. "The task was to do better in the commercial and business community."
Schulte, who received the most votes, was the only victor who had consistent results in both the primary and general election.
ELECTION RESULTS
City commission:
Toni Dudley 3,829 votes
Paul Horvath 2,636
John Nalbandian 4,776
David Penny 3,614
Bob Schulte 4,873
Bob Summm 3,933
Lawrence School Board:
Kevin Elliot 1,733 votes
Andy Galyardt 3,048
Jerry Hannah 4,677
Renee Karr 3,158
Mary Loveland 4,436
Tom Murray 4,351
Raymond Poteet 2,009
Harriet Shaffer 4,605
Sixth Street Expansion Project:
Yes 7,299
No 4,510
PENN & BURGESS
Dana Vaisini/VAB/DAN
Jerry Hannah congratulates Mary Loveland as they celebrate their victories in the Lawrence School Board election.
Voter turnout up despite game distraction
Bv Patricia Roias
Kansan staff writer
Although the NCAA basketball tournament pulled some voters out of Lawrence, voter turnout in yesterday's county elections was slightly lower, said Patty James, Douglas County clerk.
About 38 percent of the county's registered voters turned out to cast ballots yesterday, Jaimes said. The expected turnout is usually 30 to 35 percent.
Jaimes said a possible reason for this year's higher percentage was an increased number of Eudora voters due to school issues affecting Eudora.
The NCAA tournament, however, did have
some effect on yesterday's elections, she said.
While usually there are no more than 400
absentee ballots in county elections, yesterday
there were more than 500.
Judges said that yesterday's voting went slow at some precincts' voting tables, which caused confusion.
Frances Stephenson, supervising judge at the 5th Precinct in the 3rd Ward, said the turnout there was about what was expected because there were fewer cases, she said she had hoped it would be higher.
By about 6:30 p.m. 271 people had voted at booths for the 5th Precinct in the 3rd Ward, at Checkers, 23rd and Louisiana streets. The precinct had 587 people registered.
Stephenson said she did not think the NCAA tournament kent people from voting.
"We had some people who had come back from the game in Indianapolis," she said.
Jane Klemberg, at the 2nd Precinct in the 4th Ward, said that she was wishing for a higher turnout. After closing, Klemberg said 210 of 513 registered people had voted at the precinct's booths, Babeck Place, 1700 Massachusetts St.
Klemberg said most people showed up about 6 p.m., after working hours.
Camilla Bookwalter, supervising judge for the 6th Precinct in the 3rd Ward and the 4th Precinct in the 2nd Ward, both at Schweiger Elementary School, 2201 Ousdahl Road, said
most people showed up after 6 p.m.
She said it had been very slow before them. The 4th precinct at the 2nd Ward voting tables usually are at Allen Field House but woke up this year because of the NCAA tournament.
Bookweller said that the precinct usually had a low turnout. By 4 p.m., 7 out of 722 people registered at the 4th Precinct in the 2nd Ward had voted.
She said the NCAA tournament probably had some influence but not a very significant one. A lot of registered voters in this precinct are KU students.
"We realize they aren't very interested in this kind of election," she said.
Sixth Street project gets voters' OK
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The bond question, which voters approved 7,399 to 4,510, called for the county to issue $493,750 in bonds to finance the widening of Sixth Street between Monterey Way and Wakarusa Drive. The project, which already has received a $1,944 million state grant and $493,750 from the city.
Douglas County voters last night backed the county commission's original decision to withstand Street construction project.
Douglas County commissioners originally had approved the bonds without a vote last fall. However, a petition demanding a public vote prompted the commission to conduct a referendum even though it felt that the petition had been invalid.
"I would have preferred not to put it on the ballot," Commissioner Louie McEhannay said. "But they signed that in good faith even though it was wrong." I’m embarrassed. “I’m glad we did it.”
MeEllanney said the bond issue's lack of publicity probably contributed to the negative votes cast.
"It's kind of like buying a refrigerator," he said. "Unless you have reasons to decide to buy it, you're going to out and buy something."
But opponents of the bond issue said the county's attempt to publicize the referendum, a measure passed by commission, was one-sided
"I don't believe it was a fair election," said Tim Miller, professor of religious studies. "I wish we could have votes in public offices but have to fight public officials over the use of public funds."
PMS sufferers may see solace in new research
Professor investigates new methods to find cure
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
It has been the topic of many jokes. Some
themselves was invented as an excuse to be in a
bad mood.
But a professor at the University of Kansas Medical Center does not think premenstrual bleeding is a risk factor.
William Cameron, professor of gynecology and obstetrics at the Med Center, is starting research on the causes of PMS and is experimenting on how to cure it.
"No one has ever come up with an effective method of treatment, medical treatment,"
Water pills, valium and suppositories with estrogen do not work, he said. The only proven way to cure PMS is a hysterectomy or removal of both ovaries and estrogen treatment.
"I feel there is an alternative to surgery." Cameron said.
The alternative he plans to experiment with is the use of Lupon, a brand name for Leuprolide Injections of the drug should be given to woman's body to have menopause, he said.
Cameron said he would combine Lupron with estrogen treatments, which may pre-vent fibrosis.
A problem that he said he encountered was
some people did not believe PMS
failed.
"There are doctors who think it is pretty much media hype." he said.
But Cameron said for some women it is not hype.
"They feel as if they lose, for at least a short period of time, everything. They're miserable and not seeing those very little things because 'know there不难 we much can do for them.'"
Cameron's research will study women who have severe cases of PMS. He will monitor their progress by asking whether their symptoms are relieved.
"It's strictly subjective," Cameron said. "I think probably we'll be content to see how the world evolves."
"Anything that women who go through menopause have, could be a side effect," she
He also has done research on endometriosis, which usually is a retrograde menstrual syndrome.
Endometriosis does not have a clear-cut cause, said Cameron, who plans to continue research.
Jane EnnS-Sturgeon, certified registered nurse at the Med Center, is assisting Cameron with the endometriosis research. She said that Lupron also was used to treat women with endometriosis but that the treatment had side effects.
"We usually see it in women who aren't fertile." he said.
LAWRENCE ENG
Ron Klein/KANSAN
Attic fire
Lawrence firefighters battle a two-alarm blaze at the home of Bill Bradford, 2525 Jasu Drive. The fire started yesterday afternoon in the attic of the home and was extinguished within one hour. Bradford said that when he heard what sounded like someone walking in his attic, he went outside, saw smoke and called 911. Fire officials on the scene were unable to ascertain the damage or cause of the fire. After extinguishing the fire, firefighters used axes to remove shingles from the roof to prevent the fire from spreading.
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4
Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rally ban mistake
Many Soviet citizens recall days before reform after Gorbachev's decision to ban public rallies
Last week more than 100,000 demonstrators defied Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's ban on public rallies and showed support for his chief rival, Boris Yeltsin.
Instead of marching to the Kremlin as planned, the Muscovites rallied in favor of the Russian republic president at Mayakovsky Square, within sight of numerous police. KGB troops, barricades and military trucks.
Fortunately, the demonstrators avoided any serious clashes with police by staying away from Red Square.
Nevertheless, Gorbachev made a wrong decision when he called for the three-week ban. Many Soviet citizens could have been injured or killed if either side had not restrained themselves.
In the end, the ban did little but anger citizens who already support Yellsin. Many saw the ban as a challenge. As one proteester said, "I'd never come to a rally before, but today we were challenged by Gorbachev."
Of course Gorbachev is concerned about Yeltsin's growing popularity. He saw the decision as a way to quiet Yeltsin's supporters. But his decision to ban rallies only strengthened the opposition. His actions are paving the way for even stronger accusations that he has turned away from earlier reforms and has returned to hard-line communist traditions.
One Soviet newspaper said the police barricades only showed that Gorbachev and the government feared their own people and were unwilling to talk with them.
Gorbachev's ban, combined with thousands of angry pro-Veltins demonstrators, could have ended in violence. Lithuanians will not soon forget the confrontation in Vilnius two months ago when tank troops were used against unarmed independence demonstrators. More than 15 people were killed.
Many feared the same results from last week's rally. Yet thousands turned out to protest anyway.
Gorbachev must realize that bans will not help him regain support. Instead, the decision was a step in the wrong direction. For many Soviets it has brought back memories of the hard-line tactics used against dissidents in the years before Gorbachev.
Melanie Botts for the editorial board
Senior feedback
Praise deserved for education assessment efforts
A about 100 seniors made a quick $25
March 25 - 28 by telling the University
what they thought about their education
at the University of Kansas.
The students who participated deserve thanks from other students for voicing concerns about education. Seniors in future years must take as much care representing students' concerns so that the quality of education at KU will improve.
The office of academic affairs deserves recognition for conducting the assessment project. By interviewing seniors, the University can gain useful insight about general education, required courses and individual majors.
The University's goals in conducting the assessment project must be commended, as well. Students' appreciation of the arts, capacity for critical thinking, capacity for innovative thinking and attainment of an enhanced awareness of differing values,
needs and customs are areas in which it is vital that students thrive.
The 40 faculty members who volunteered their time to interview the seniors also deserve thanks. The quality of education at the University is sure to improve because dedicated faculty members donated their time.
The office of institutional research and planning also must be praised for helping the office of academic affairs assess how well KU's goals are being met.
Now the University must take on the challenge of using the seniors' feedback.
The ultimate goal must be to make the education assessment project useful for the University administration, students and faculty members. Working together, as they did in conducting the assessment, could improve education at KU.
Debbie Myers for the editorial board
■ Editorials reflect the opinion of the University Daily 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 signed author.
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.
MAGALEY Chicago Tribune
E. L. WALESA
ELECTRICIAN
1
1
1
MORLEY Micapitrubure
YELTSIN
GLASNOST
WELL
Poetry puts war in new perspective
I remember well the tale of Godzilla when he battled the Giant Moth, fierce and dangerous. Half of Tokyo lay in ruin. Many people were mmaired or killed. Life lay on the verge of total collapse.
Why so much destruction to be Rid of an insolent moth when A mere Lighthulb would do?
L. Brian
Patrick
Guest columnist
I do, however, remember a vaguely witty comment that he made
one day while in my English 102 class, bored to tears by the third edition of the Norton Anthology of Poetry. I was pondering the somewhat confusing status of Iraq. The GTA, a rather zealous but cool literary martyr, was on our舒容 soap box teaching about American history.
I remember not much about the poem, but rather the frenzied GTA, with his semi-coherent ramblings about various symbolic blah, blah, blahs, sweating profusely in all his excitement, ironically, as he pushed himself to near exhaustion and cardiac arrest in his fervor; not one of us students seemed to be able to keep our eyes open; I was personally wishing that I had had toothpicks to prop my heavy and drooping eyelids.
regarding creepy-crawlies such as snakes.
He referred to the fact that though most people were frightened by them, snakes, as Marlin Perkins often told me from the safety of his helicopter while Jim struggled with a thirty foot Anaconda in the rain forests as natives blew poison darts at him, are probably more scared of you than they are them. Regardless of this fact, how can something unattractive or frightening such as a snake, spider or bug, even though it might be perfectly harmless, we must kill it and be rid of it forever.
As I juggled this idea with an admiration for the mighty wind that seemed to want to take Wesco Hall to Oz, we started yet another poem, "Design," by Robert Frost. In this poem, the author is captivated by an
intricately patterned spider who is devouring a moth.
Suddenly, the thoughts of the devastation in Iraq, the pointless need to obliterate small living organisms because they are too ugly to cuddle and the intensive rhetoric of my lecturer all came together in a flood of symbolism *Ernest Hemingway*, eat way, eat way, write this poem with, write this poem with, with the above background, should make my point.
I walked out of English 102 that day with a different perspective of the war and some aspects of life itself. Up to that day, I had supported me in my work at the withdraw of Iraq from Kuwait and to a certain extent I still do.
But I cannot help but wonder, in retrospect, if maybe a better solution could have been found.
I only hope that my own lack of foresight with regard to the devastation of Iraq and its people will teach me not to jump to objection. I have rudely discovered, the obvious answer is often the wrong answer.
L. Brian Patrick is a Baldwin sopho more majoring in French and Haitian.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Fans' conduct foolish
The end of the basketball season was certainly not a "consolation" or a "heartbreaker," as the headlines on the front page of yesterday's Kansan suggested. I believe I express the sentiments of many students at the University when I say that I am extremely proud of our men in blue and Roy Williams and thank them for a great year of basketball.
What is a "heartbreaker" is the way many students were acting on Wesco Beach following the game. I was happy to see KU fans in good spirits and was expecting a fairly tame evening of celebration.
the accomplishments of our team, to become the focus of the local media and memories of Kansas' 1991 trip to the Final Four. I hope Coach Williams and his players restores their performance, but of the immaturity of these students. Again, I congratulate them on an outstanding season.
Unfortunately, some students decided the appropriate way to celebrate the success of our basketball team was to deface the campus as much as possible, to injure fellow students and to act like complete jerks. I fail to see the fun in throwing cans and bottles at people climbing poles, sexually harassing them, by The time I left campus at midnight. I was furious that there are such astute people in this world, especially at KU.
It is unfortunate that the foolish behavior of a few students erupted into such chaos causing this, and not
Beth Brady Lawrence senior
Helping the homeless
With the close of the Salvation Army Safe House, there has been a great deal of talk about and sympathy for those individuals who will be most significantly affected by this action, the homeless. Everyone seems to be paying lip service to the issue, but what is being done? Although the shutdown of the shelter is a tragedy, people should nonetheless realize that the homeless other ways of helping them are aside from giving money for shelter. The homeless are not abstract entities, but rather are individuals with needs including, but going beyond, mere shelter.
Project Acceptance is a group in Lawrence that concerns itself with these other needs, particularly those of the mentally ill homeless. The project does not have the funds to raise it; instead, it uses, but it does provide a place where people can come and relate to one another in a non-judgmental
environment based upon the equality of all members. Here one encounters the homeless at a fundamental level: as human beings. Raising money and making speeches have their place, but anyone who earnsly wishes to take up the cause of the homeless should first meet such people face to face in order to understand the true significance of such a cause.
Deborah Heikes Houston senior
Thanks to the 'Hawks
Congratulations to the Jayhawk basketball team. Coach Williams and his players have had a great season and given their fans much enjoyment. They have shown that by working together unselfishly, much can be accomplished. This lesson should be taken to heart by the academic community where little selfish dukesdoms prevail.
I wish the seniors well in their chosen careers. I look forward to watching next season to another textbook case of what unselfish cooperation means and accomplishes. Take it to school, academia.
Again, thanks and congratulations to Roy Williams and Company.
KANSAN STAFF
R. T. Hersh Director of human biology
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Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNIE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
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 Jennifer Reynolds Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Sollin Production mgrs. Rich Harbarger.
Sports Ann Sommerlath Kate Stader
Photography Keith Thorpe Marketing director Gail Einbinder
Graphics Melissa Unterberg Creative director Cirsty Hitsa
Features JH Harlington Classified manager Kim Crowder
**attesters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and phone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Staffer-Fin Hall.
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University Daliv Kansan / Wednesday, April 3, 1991
5
Policy outlaws racist remarks
Universities adopt controversial legislation to deter racism
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
A member of a local fraternity strikes and utters racial slurs to an African-American woman who is delivering pizzas.
A student group invites the Kuwai Klux Han to the University of Kansas to hold a forum. The invitation is widespread student demonstrations.
According to Department of Justice statistics, 53 racial incidents were reported on college campuses in Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri from 1984 to 1989. There were 23 on Kansas college campuses.
Across the country, universities are adopting "hate speech" legislation that outlaws such incidents. Thus, college campuses are becoming the battleground for those who wish to protect civil rights by controlling hate speech. Students should believe the ultimate civil right, the First Amendment, is in jeopardy.
Though some think there are constitutional problems with these policies, others think the rules are too restrictive in theation of racial incidents on campuses.
But these numbers should be doubled because many incidents go unreported, said Bill Whitcomb, mediator for the community relations service of the Justice Department in Kansas City, Mo.
Under a new KU policy, a student or faculty member could face expulsion or dismissal if he or she insults the school's policies, racial, ethnic or religious background.
When a Hispanic woman is late to
class, a KU instructor tells the class
that all Cubans in Miami are at least
twelve hours for class, work and
everything else.
"The reason they are not reported is because a lot of students don't know whether there is a policy to address these kinds of situations." he
Whitecomb said more communities were giving approval to speech restrictions because of such incidents.
"Are you going to allow 'the challenge of civil rights under the cloak of academic treedom?' he asked "The man are saying, 'No, that shouldn't be.'"
The Kansas Board of Regents said "no" in April 1989, when it ordered its institutions to adopt policies addressing the issue.
KU's policy
KU adopted its policy last summer. It prohibits any University community member from making discriminatory, harassing speech that attacks an individual's or group's race, ethnicity or religion.
It defines harassment as behavior or conduct that threatens violence or lawless action, "fighting words" such as insults, and slander, libel or obscenity that advocates discrimination
Berger, the principal author of the policy, said. "The basic tenet of this policy is to provide a mechanism for people who feel that they have been harassed on the basis of their racial or ethnic background. On the basis of the definitions in there, any person has the right to use the policy, providing they personally submit a report."
A person who violates this policy ultimately could face firing or expulsion. Sanctions that are less severe, an oral rebuke, also could be levied.
Thomas Berger, assistant director for affirmative action at KU, said the sanctions were implemented as the result of a formal hearing finding of "probable cause." But he said that the majority of discrimination complaints at KU exceed the norm level and never before the discrimination hearing board.
A judge would consider these definitions to determine the constitutionality of the policy if it ever were challenged in court.
Constitutional concerns
Tom Stacy, associate professor of law, said that the definitions were written with the First Amendment in place. The policy could run into problems.
"The Supreme Court has recognized that in some situations expressive conduct or behavior constitutes speech," he said. "And the state has a little more leeway in regulating expressive conduct than they do in classic speech. But still, there are First Amendment rights."
Stacy, who specializes in constitutional law, also said there was an ongoing debate on whether the fightingords were right to be sent to 1948 Supreme Court case, Chaukpyn v. New Hampshire, was still an acceptable doctrine.
"The broad rationales of Chaplin's seem inconsistent with the thrust of a lot of decisions the Court has rendered in the last couple of decades," he said. "But the Supreme Court has recently cited Chaplin's without indicating that that case is no longer good law, so it is an indication that there is something left of Chaplin."
Victoria Thomas, University general counsel, said the definitions were drafted to walk the fine line between speech and prohibiting discrimination.
"One of the underpinnings of our system of government is that government does not step in and stop speech," she said. "But if you're in one of those groups and there is a person standing up saying outrageous things to you, it doesn't go over very well to have someone hold up the policy and say, 'This isn't imminent lawlessness.'"
Tom Stacy associate professor of law
'The Supreme Court has recognized that in some situations expressive conduct or behavior constitutes speech.'
"The thing you want to know is, Why do I have to be subjected to something short of that?" And that's the kind of tension that's always going to be present."
Thomas said that if an incident concerning the speech occurred at KU, it would have to be determined whether the speech met the policy's definition.
"If you have a specific situation over at Wescoe, and someone is offended by what a person is saying, he or she would first file a complaint," she said. "But then the sorting out has to happen. Has this speech about an ethnic, racial or religious group come over the line and be punished for threatening violence? Or has it became 'fighting words'?"
"That's why we focused on specific definitions. So that if an individual is standing up and expressing an opinion that we may find aberrant and distasteful, in all likelihood that's not going to violate the policy."
Because the policy is directed at
Uncertainties exist
the University community, it is uncertain how it would affect speakers from outside the University
Berger said that any action taken against these speakers would depend on the community's response.
"There are three separate issues here: a person's civil rights, the First Amendment and academic freedom," he said. "I think all of those things should be taken into account by individuals who are somehow involved in bringing or sponsoring speakers on campus who have viewpoints that are not universally accented."
Berger offered the March 8,1988. Klan incident as an example.
However, government and hategroup watchdog organizations around the region take a dim view of hate-speech legislation.
"You had the faculty saying you had to have academic freedom, you had the First Amendment people talking about that issue and you had people who felt that the Klan's very presence had nothing to do with free speech or academic freedom but rather represented discrimination," he said. "This is a diverse community. It's a real complex issue."
Alvin Sykes, president of Justice Campaign for America in Kansas City, Mo., said that the ideals behind hate speech legislation were conceptually interesting but that no form of speech should be restricted.
Organizations disagree
"A lot of time when you re trying to cut off someone's speech opportunity, you kill off a lot more speech at one at little segment." he said.
"The strength of the Constitution is not in something that is said in convenience — that everybody agrees with — that's easy. The test is when there is something being said that we're opposed to and where we allow the people we are opposed to to express their views."
"We believe that good will always prevail over bad, so we feel like, 'Let them in with the hate speech, let them in the boxing ring with their ideas and we'll knock them out with truth and justice.'" he said.
Sykes also said that when hate groups like the Klan did speak, they revealed their true ignorance.
Bob Wolfson, director of the Plain States Regional Office of the Anti-Defaimation League of B'nai B'rith in
According to KU's Racial and Ethnic Policy, harassment is defined as:
1. Behavior or conduct addressed directly to an individual(s) and that threatens violence or property damage, or incites imminent lawless action, and that is made with the specific intent to harass or intimidate the victim because of race, religion, ethnicity, or national origin; or
2. "Fighting Words," such as racial and ethnic epistles, slurs, and insults directed at an individual(s) with the intent to inflict harm or injury or that would reasonably tend to incite an imme diate breach of the peace, or
3. Slander, libel or obscene speech that advocates racial, ethnic or religious discrimination, hatred or persecution.
Omaha, Neb., said his organization was against censoring speech on campus.
"We're not going to win in the marketplace of ideas limiting free speech," he said. "We encourage universities to adopt programs that offer education on the issues rather than surpass speech."
Gordon Risk, Topека American Civil Liberties Union representative, agreed, but said the hate-speech issues were complicated.
"I think actually a lot of ACLU affiliates are wrestling with it, and I think most of them have come down on the side of absolute free speech with the exception of the Southern California affiliate," he said. "Our position is that we desire to be permitted speech should be permitted because legislation would backfire in the end against these people who it is attempting to protect.
"But if the speech is harassment, not just opinions but actual sexual or racial harassment, then it may not be protected."
Continuing questions
The trick is knowing when speech becomes harassment, and there are no clear-cut guidelines on when that occurs.
Berger suggested that the interpretation of the First Amendment was subject to change just as the nation's cultural climate was changing.
"We've grown up and we've become accustomed to this idea that you can say anything; it's your right
Mellissa Unterberg/KANSAN
to say anything, although you can't shoot 'fire' in a crowded theater," he said. "I think one has to look careless with free speech really means."
Ron Griffin, professor of law at Washburn University in Topeka who helped draft similar legislation, said he was sure to be looked at in a historical context.
"If an historically dominant group in society utter a painful remark at an historically subordinate group, the subordinate group may not have the tools or vocabulary to respond in an equal fashion," he writes. "but when the dominant group is being practiced if the subordinate group does not have the vehicle to respond."
Although many organizations and individuals already have established where they stand, the debate on this issue is ongoing. The insurance is guaranteed to continue for years.
Whether or not the Supreme Court considers the dispute and develops a test directed specifically at speech on campuses depends on the consistency, or inconsistency, of future lower court decisions, said KU law professor Tom Stacy.
"The Constitution protects freedom of speech on the one hand, and it probits race discrimination on the other," he said. "These cases involve a collision of those two fundamental civil liberties. They're tough cases. There are no easy answers."
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Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Article (II)
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
A Series of Public Service Announcements to Promote Citizens' Participation in Our Government.
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Get your Study Abroad or Pre-Employment laboratory work done now! (Helpful Hint: The Lab is fully staffed from 8 a.m. until 4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday, but you can be helped most quickly between 8 a.m. and noon.)
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Publicity of alleged rape encircles Kennedy estate
PALM BEACH, Fla. — Police fended off a deluge of publicity yesterday as they investigated an alleged rape on the Kennedy estate, saying they didn't want to compromise the case.
The Associated Press
Investigators have not filed charges in the case and have declined to say whether anyone associated with the family is a suspect, Gunkel said.
"This is definitely the clamor of the town last two days," said Palm Beach police representative Craig Gunkel.
A representative for Sen. Edward Kennedy issued a statement Monday saying he was with his family in Atlanta on Sunday, before weekend, but had nothing to do with
The victim of the alleged 4 a.m. Saturday assault at the compound was identified only as a 30-year-old who lives in Palm Beach County.
the incident.
"The girl is not someone I know. She was not a guest of mine. I assume she was a guest of one of my cousin's." he said.
Gunkel characterized the reported attack as a rape. He also said alcohol was involved, including drinks concomitant to the incident, but he would not elaborate.
Smith, 30, a student at Georgetown University School of Medicine, stayed with friends last night and couldn't be reached for comment.
alleged rape.
The Associated Press
Local newspapers reported Kennedy was with his son, Patrick, and nephew, William Kennedy Smith, Friday night at the Palm Beach louge Au Bar. The newspapers led the manager, Stuart Lichtenstein.
Patrick Kennedy is a member of the Rhode Island House and the youngest of Ted Kennedy's three children. Smith is the son of Ted Smith, his older sister, Jean Kennedy Smith, and the late Stephen Smith.
Patrick Kennedy, 24, said yesterday he knew nothing about the incident and was asleep at the time of the
The rape report came seven years after Palm Beach was shaken by another Kennedy family tragedy, the trial of a 21-year-old Kennedy's son, David Kennedy.
Engineer focus of train crash inquiry
WASHINGTON - Federal investigators are focusing on an engineer's error rather than mechanical failure as the cause of a train collision in Boston that injured 267 people.
Members of the National Transportation Safety Board said yesterday that tests conducted on the locomotive brakes of Amtrak's Night Owl train show no mechanical problems. The trains rolled Dec. 12 and slammed into the rear of a packed commuter train in Boston's Back Bay Station.
When the locomotive brakes were tested earlier this year at the Westinghouse Air Brake Co. in Wilmerding, Pa., mechanical failure did not seem to be a factor, board Vice
Chairperson Susan M. Coughlin said.
the accident. How that erasure occurred is also a focus of the probe, said Bill Pugh, the NTSB chief investigator.
Chairperson Susan M. Coughlin said. That claim was disputed by the attorney representing Rich Abramson of Trumbull, Conn., the engineer trainee who was in the cab of the Amtrak train.
"The brakes were applied where they should have been applied and the train did not slow down," attorney George Cahill said in a telephone interview from his New Haven, Conn., office. "No matter what the NTSB's findings were, the brakes did not work as they should have."
Investigators were able to recover some of the erased data and they concluded that the train was traveling as fast as 110 mph in the mile leading up to Back Bay Station. The final recorded speed of the train when it derailed was 77 mph, which is 37 mph over the speed limit for the stretch of the track where the train derailed.
Precisely when the brakes were applied is the subject of intense scrutiny. Initially, investigators were unable to determine the time because key information on an automatic data recorder was erased after
Although the NTSB is months away from issuing a finding on the accident, the discussion yesterday took place because board member James Burnett proposed that a public hearing on the crash be held in Boston.
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Brussels, Belgium
Kurds take over Iraqi Embassy
About 10 Kurds took over the Iraqi Embassy early today, seizing a guard, ransacking the building and waving Kurdish flags from the windows, police and news reports said.
Police said the group slashed pictures of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, whose army has been battling an insurrection by ethnic Kurds in northern Nigerian Gulf War ended in a cease-fire in February.
Police said the intruders took over the embassy, located in a residential suburb, about 5:30 a.m. It was not clear if the Kurds were armed.
The attackers stormed the embassy after breaking the windows of the modern three-story building.
Police said the Kurds took an embassy guard hostage, apparently the only one on duty during the night, and damaged embassy furniture and office equipment.
Panama City
U.S., Panama agree on treaty
U. S. and Panamanian officials have agreed on the terms of a treaty that will enable investigations into drug money laundering but otherwise remain closed to Panama's secretive banking system, officials said.
The signing ceremony, which a Foreign Ministry official said would occur Monday, will mark the end of more than a year of arduous bargaining in which the United States unsuccessfully tried to pry open the nation's banking disclosure system.
Once the legal assistance agreement is signed, the Central American nation will get $80 million that the United States had withheld from a $420 million program to rebuild Panama after the December 1989 invasion that overthrew dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega.
Washington
Farm exports to Iraq audited
WASHINGTON — Government loan guarantees used by U.S. companies to finance farm exports to Iraq in the late 1980s exceeded the world average of dollars, federal auditors found.
The Agriculture Department's Office of Inspector General, in a report released yesterday, said it found $71 million of significant pricing differences when 47 contracts for $228 million of guaranteed exports to Iraq in 1967, 1988 and 1989 were compared with prevailing market prices.
On 38 of the 47 contracts, the government ended up guaranteeing prices that were more than 15 percent above the world market price, in contrast to the market rate. **From The Associated Press**
U.N. expects resolution for cease-fire will pass
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS -- As diplomats wound up work on a cease-fire resolution that would strip Baghdad of its biological and chemical weapons, the United Nations will to get involved in efforts to halt Iraq's civil war.
But the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union all indicated that the French proposal would not be included in the resolution, which diplomats have responded after the Security Council reconvenes today.
The 3,700-word resolution, spelling out conditions for Iraq's capitulation, intends to render Saddam Hussein incapable of threatening his neighbors for the rest of the century.
Fighting ended Feb. 28 between Iraqi and allied armies after Saddam's forces were driven from Kuwait. But the destruction of much of the Iraqi army encouraged revolts in northern and southern Iraq.
After initial successes that saw them seize dozens of major cities, Shiite Muslim-led insurgents in the south and Kurdish fighters in the north were defeated by Saddam's better-armed forces.
A U.S. declaration of neutrality in Iraq's internal affairs spurred the victory of pro-Sadam forces, as Washington spurned rebel plebs that it down its gunships Iraq was using against the insurgents.
In Paris, Foreign Minister Roland Dumas said France was asking that the United Nations intervene to stop the actions of extermination
France's acting U.N. ambassador, Jean-Marc Rochereau or the sa Liberale, sought a resolution seeking peace talks between Saddam's government and the rebels. The resolution would also have allowed the two sides to Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar in getting humanitarian aid to Iraq's rebel areas.
against Kurds
Turkey's government said it told its U.N. ambassador to request an urgent meeting of the Security Council to discuss the plight of at least 200,000 foreigners who want to enter Turkey from northern Iraq.
Turkey's semi-official Anatolia news agency said some 2.5 million Iraqi were trying to flee into Italy.
U. S. Ambassador Thomas Pickering said the prosecution and Turkish proposals could be discussed after a hearing.
But when the Soviet ambassador, Yuli Vori-tsov, was asked if he thought the council should intervene in Iraq's civil war, he shook his head vigorously to indicate that he did not.
Iraqi Ambassador Amir Abdul al-Ambari ridiculed France and Turkey for making noises about human rights, calling their proposals a rather abusive intervention into his country's internal affairs.
The United States, Soviet Union, China, Britain and France yesterday resisted all but the most minor amendments to their proposed text of the cease-fire resolution.
Kuwaitis who didn't leave during war offered money
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY — How rich are Kuwaitis? So rich that when the emir offers free money, some of them just shrug.
Kuwait's ruler, Sheikh Jailib al-Ahmad al-Jabir as-Sahab, is giving 500 dinars ($1,700) to all Kuwaitis who stayed in the oil-rich emirate during the seven-month Iraqi occupation.
Some say they don't need it. Others say it's not enough. A few think the mind should keep his hands out.
The longest lines yesterday in recently reopened
ware are formed by people buying U.S. dollars,
not kuwaiti dollars.
"I came to get some dollars so I can go on vacation outside Kuwait," Abdul Hameed Jasem said at the Commercial Bank of Kuwait. "I don't need the (emir's) money."
Dahrill Ali, who runs a school bookstore, said he collected his 500 dinars and was giving it to
"The money is of no importance to me." Ali said. "I want to use it to thank the people who helped give us our country back."
Egyptians, Sudanese and other foreigners living in his neighborhood who had assisted Kuwaiti dur ing the war.
With tremendous oil wealth and fewer than 600,000 citizens, Kuwait was one of the world's richest countries before Iraq invaded on Aug. 2. Its annual per capita income was nearly $20,000, though the devastation inflicted by the Iraqis will reduce living standards for years to come.
The government has enough money left to provide free gasoline, water and other necessities
provide free gasoline, water and other necessities. The emir's offer took effect Saturday and applies to all Kuwaitis who stayed put, an estimated 250,000.
Foreigners, who accounted for 73 percent of Kuwait's population and 86 percent of its work force before the invasion, were excluded.
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Attention Students, Faculty, and Staff,
Nominations are now being accepted for the Graduate Student Teaching Award. The KU Endowment Association and the Graduate Student Council are sponsoring five awards to recognize excellence in teaching by graduate students at the University of Kansas.
Anyone may nominate a graduate teacher by writing to the Graduate Student's department or program. Your letter should be submitted to their department by no later than Thurs,April 4.
For further information, please call the Graduate Student Council, 864-4914, or the Graduate School, 864-3301.
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Then fill out your 91-92
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Attention Students-
Are you interested in saving time during Fall fee-payment?!?
Then fill out your 91-92 Options Card during enrollment.
KU on Wheels Pass
Jayhawker Yearbook
Sports Combo Package
All-Arts Card
Board of Class Officers
• Fill out an Options Card to reserve any of the above options.
• Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
• You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
• Must be enrolled to fill out Options Card; Please present enrollment card and KU ID.
• No options card will be available in the Fall; Student will have to visit each individual vendor.
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Douglas County AIDS Project AIDS Awareness Week April 6-13, 1991
Schedule of Events
- Saturday, April 6 - Dance - 8 p.m.
a fundraiser at the Lawrence School of Ballet, 8th & Vermont,
$3 at the door ($2.50 in advance).
- Monday, April 8. Remembrance Service - 7 p.m. music and readings to honor those who have died and those who are living with AIDS, Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
Monday, April 8. Forum: "AIDS and the College Student" - 7-9 p.m.
Speakers Mary Lona (Exec). Dir., Carbot Clinic, K.C.M.) and Calvin Nell (AIDS Educator) will lead the discussion, Walnut Room, Kansas Union.
Sponsored by KU Student Senate Minority Affairs Committee.
- Tuesday, April 9 - Restaurant Night Several local restaurants will donate 10% of their revenues and waitpersons 50% of tips to DCAP. Call 864-9570 for details.
- Wednesday, April 10 - Film Screening and Speaker - 7 p.m.
Film: "Andre's Mother" & discussion facilitated by Beverly Barbo (author, The Walking Wounded) and Jamie Stiles (KU grad & person with AIDS). Place: 3140 Wesco Hall. Co-sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
- Saturday, April 13 - Stamp Out AIDS/Walk for Health
South Park, 9 a.m., 10k (6.3 mline) course, $30 pledge requested.
- Sunday, April 14 - Women and AIDS Program - 7 p.m.
A multi-media, all women performance produced by Marcia Paludan (Lawrence choreographer). Sharon Poindexter (PATH Ministries & facilitator of Good Samaritan Project's Women's HIV+ Support Group) will lead a discussion about women and AIDS. Lawrence School of Ballet. Tickets: $3 at the door.
KNOW AIDS.
For more information about HIV infection, call 1-800-342-AIDS.
The University of Kansas
HIV/STD
EDUCATION COMMITTEE
Goal of multicultural campus stressed through recruitment
Kansan staff writer
Proper recruitment and retention of minority students paves the way for a multicultural campus, said the school's faculty affairs at a meeting yesterday.
By Lara Gold
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said the meeting with representatives of campus minority groups was to update students on current programs in his office.
"We want KU to adapt to the theme, "We are one community," "he said.
Thompson said he was inspired by the camaraderie of the KU basketball team, and everybody should be a part of working for a multi-national camps.
minority affairs, said enhancing minority retention at the University of Kansas was a primary concern.
Sylvia Suarez, assistant director of
She said STEP, Students Together Excelling as Peers, was a program targeted at freshman and transfer priority students to increase retention.
The program pairs a new student with a peer adviser to help make the student familiar with University life.
London Bonds, program assistant for minority affairs, said retention of minority students was one of the factors in the 1991-92 minority student directory.
"It is our hope that it is a user-friendly directory that is especially helpful to incoming students." she said.
Bonds said the directory would include demographic and ethnic
information as well as a student's special skills, major and other interests so that new minority students could meet students who could help them academically and socially.
Norma Norman, associate director of minority affairs, said the office's Outreach Program encouraged junior high school students in the Kansas City, Kan., area to start thinking about college.
"One of the components of the Outreach Program is career awareness," she said. "College counselors are a key component of the Outreach Program."
John Lewis, executive board member of Black Men of Today, said he had not been satisfied with recruitment at KU but credited the minority affairs office for making a needed change.
ASK letter, phone drive to lobby representatives for support for Margin
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The situation in the State Legislature is grim for KU, but the Legislature still could decide to give money to the University, the Associated Students of Kansas campus director said yesterday.
Greg Hughes, ASK campus director, said the organization began a phone and letter drive last night by students in local representatives were.
"Initially, we're targeting Johnson County and, secondly, Wyandotte, Sedwick and Shawnee," he said.
The volunteers are supposed to let the students know who their representatives are and where they can be reached, he said.
Hughes said some members of Student Senate, student organizations, residence halls, fraternities and sorcerers had volunteered to compile lists of students in their groups, with local addresses.
"I would be overjoyed if 400 calls hit Topke next week." Hughes said. "That would have a huge effect. We might actually get some money."
'Initially, we're targeting Johnson County and, secondarily, Wyandotte, Sedowick and Shawnee.'
ASK began the task of listing students' representatives along with the representatives' phone numbers and the students' email addresses that students could begin making calls.
— Greg Hughes ASK campus director
Leslie Lancaster, Nunemaker senator, is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She said she volunteered to lobby the sorority's members to write letters and make phone calls to legislators because the University was in need of money.
"People in our chapter seem pretty concerned about it," Lancaster said.
She said members of her sorority had written 75 letters to Topeka in a few hours earlier this semester.
"I feel more people will be apt to call," she said.
Hughes said the people who volunteered to encourage students to make phone calls and write letters had taken on an important task.
"The contact person has to follow up and make sure the networking happens," he said.
"We want the senators to know that students are concerned so they can change the cuts they've already made."
Gulf war soldiers will be honored tonight on CBS
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Flags, fanfares, allied military attaches, Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts are the opening ingredients of a two-hour television event organized by members of the Persian Gulf War.
The CBS special is an equal opportunity extravaganza, produced and performed by professionals who run the political gaffam from left to right. It is billed as non-political, but it represents the kind in the audience and will make brief remarks.
"All-Star Salute to Our Troops" features, on one hand, actor Alan Alda, a liberal Democrat who played Hawkeye Pierce, the cynical surgeon, on M.A.S.H." The program also showcases conservative Republican Charlton Heston, who makes ads for the National Rifle Association.
Gary Smith, one of the executive producers, said the diversity was no accident.
"There certainly was an attempt to give it political credibility," she said. But it indicates the kind of spirit everybody feels here.
or spirit everybody feels here.
. . . It feels real non-partisan to me."
ALL ROADS LEAD HOME TO THE HILL
JOBS
NEW CITIES
GRADUATE
SCHOOL
Attention, graduating seniors
.
Get ready for a SIX-MONTH FREE RIDE as a new ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEMBER.
.
Your membership trip begins with the SENIOR COOKOUT, 5:30 p.m. April 24 in the Adams Center parking lot.
.
Next stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST, 8 a.m. May 19 for graduates and their families.
.
As you leave town, remember to take along your JAYHAWK BANKCARD. It's the only VISA or MasterCard that lets you carry the KU mascot wherever you go.
FIRST BANK CARD CENTER
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.
Remember, wherever your new life takes you all roads lead home to the Hill. As an Alumni Association member you'll never be far away!
Watch for our brochure in the mail. We'll call you in mid-April about the bankcard-or call First Bank Card Center at 800-222-7458.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav April 3.1991
9
Bill to increase sales tax meets with House defeat
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — It was a tale of two tax bills in the house yesterday as legislators tentatively approved one measure but killed another.
A bill that would have raised more than $90 million for property tax relief by increasing the sales tax rate 0.25 percent and removing exemptions from selected goods and services was only three votes short of approval at one time during the voting process.
But 11 Democrats changed their vote to oppose the bill after they became aware that it was not going to pass. The final vote was 73-49.
However, the House narrowly passed a bill that would provide financing for Kansas school districts and would be indirectly responsible for producing some property tax relief by creating an additional income tax bracket.
The new bracket would tax joint filers who earn more than $50,000 a year at a rate of 7 percent and single filers who earn more than $30,000 at a rate of 8 percent.
— Bruce Larkin State Rep., D-Baileyville
'If we're going to do anything about property tax issues, now is the time to get it done.'
Presently the rates are 5.15 percent and 5.95 percent respectively.
The bill also would increase the tax rate for corporations, financial institutions and incomes of more than $12 million, raise almost $122 million in revenue.
With time running out in the session, some legislators think that the death of the sales tax bill is an indication that a measure directly addressing property tax relief will not materialize.
"If we're going to do anything about property tax issues, now is the time to get it done," said State Rep. Bruce Larkin, D-Bailleyville. "This legislation should provide any kind of property tax relief to the citizens of Kansas."
But Marvin Barkis, speaker of the House, said there was still time.
"There's plenty of time," he said. "It's not over until the end, and we still have a lot of budgets to consider."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said legislators would have to pass a tax increase.
"We still have to put together the spending that the House has already passed," he said. "You can't have it both ways. You can't provide services for poor people unless you pay for it."
Solbach also said that if a tax increase was not passed, legislators would have to cut budgets they already had passed.
The income tax bill passed in a 63-60 vote, and only seven Republicans voted for its approval.
State Rep Sandy Praeger, RLawrence, was one of those Republicans.
"It's good for the city of Lawrence," she said. "It produces some real improvements of K through 12 education."
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Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Grad students may adopt new constitution
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
In an effort to expedite changes in graduate student representation, the Graduate Executive Committee has annulled the constitution of Graduate Student Council so that a new constitution can be adopted.
The new constitution would conform to a Student Senate bill that reorganized graduate representation last month.
The new constitution was approved Friday by the assembly and now President Obama is stepping in.
The council will meet at 3 p.m. Friday at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union to approve the new constitution.
The constitution would transfer legislative powers from GradEx to the Graduate Representative Assembly, allow the assembly to function as a committee of Senate and place graduate representation in Senate within the assembly.
The assembly is composed of a representative from each department with a graduate program. All members of the Graduate Student Council.
Oscar Quiros, executive coordinator of the council, said amendments to the constitution that normally would take weeks to approve could be added more quickly by approving a new constitution.
functions by supervising the budgets of graduate student organizations, supervising the employees of graduate student council and planning lobbying of University and state officials.
GradEx will maintain its executive
"Basically we're shifting powers that GradEx previously held to the Graduate Representative Assembly," Quirres said.
Five percent of the 6,600 graduate students at the University of Kansas, or 330 graduate students, must attend a college. The new constitution to be approved.
Quiros said the changes would improve communication and coordination among the groups representing graduate students.
"It's a positive step because Student Senate will respond to GRA, and the assembly is the most democratic body in the graduating college students," Quiros said.
Heithem El-Hodiri, former
president of Iran, for
the assembly last academic year.
EJ-Hodri said the original idea behind forming the assembly was to create a forum to discuss issues effecting graduate students.
"It seemed to provide the perfect way to get information out to graduate students in a timely manner and to have input from every department," he said. "Potentially you can have a member from every program."
Graduate Student Representation under the new GSC Constitution
Student Senate
Graduate Student Council
All graduate students
are members
Graduate Representative Assembly
One representative from each graduate program
GradEx
elected from mem-
bers of the assembly
If the new constitution of Graduate Student Council is adopted, the assembly will function as a standing committee of Student Senate to address graduate issues.
Melissa Unterberg/KANSAN
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11
Nuclear rocket may be developed
Scientist group says project is secret
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Defense Department is secretly trying to develop a nuclear-powered rocket to lift large weapons into orbit for the Star Wars anti-missile program, an advocacy group said last night.
Nuclear propulsion on a rocket the size of the Titan III, a workhorse of the space program, probably could triple its payload, said Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists.
The federation was formed after World War II by some of the scientists from the Manhattan Project,
which developed the first atomic bomb. The group has been active in pushing arms control ever since.
Aftergood said the organization found out many details of the rocket project, called "Project Timberwind," through interviews with a number of project participants. Some details are not known.
The greater thrust of a nuclear rocket compared with its chemically powered counterpart would be so striking that "it could make a difference" and tempt designers to try to develop a nuclear rocket despite its uncertainties and great expense, he said.
The Titan III payload is 32,000 pounds for low orbits.
The Pentagon's Strategic Defense Initiative Office "has no interest in a man-rated system," so the rocket would not need heavy, payable shielding to keep deadly radiation reaching the crew. After good said.
The shielding problem forced the Air Force to give up efforts to develop a nuclear-powered airplane in the mid-1950s.
It's not clear what the rocket would lift. Aftergood said.
"I've been told the organization hopes to use it to launch directed-energy weapons, beam weapons, in a pop-up mode," he said.
"Pop-up" means the beam
launcher meant to strike at enemy
missiles would remain on the ground
until needed. Then it would be
replaced by an explosive ring
position while the enemy rocket was
still in an early part of its flight.
The rocket reactor probably would use highly enriched uranium fuel encased in small pellets about the size of grains of sand. The fission of uranium would generate tremendous amounts of heat, as it does in a commercial power reactor or a submarine propulsion plant.
That heat would be transferred to a propellant, "most likely liquid hydrogen, which would be flash vaporized and ejected from a nozzle," he said.
Claim of racial harassment stirs up FBI
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Eleven FBI supervisors and agents face possible disciplinary action in the racial harassment of an African-American agent who is demanding that the agency report of the embarrassing episode.
A special task force that looked into allegations by Donald Rochon recommended changes in bureau operations so that such a case wasn't going to happen yesterday to Rochen's attorney. It did not elaborate on the changes.
Rochon said white colleagues threatened and intimidated him when he worked in the bureau's Chicago office in the 1980s and that bureau supervisors covered up the evidence
He sued the FBI and settled last August, agreeing to full salary and pension benefits in a deal that could be worth more than $1 million.
The task force referred five separate matters to FBI Director William Sessions for possible disciplinary action. The judge referred to Rohron's lawyer, David Kairys.
One instance was referred to the Justice Department, which declined criminal prosecution, the letter added.
Based on the task force's findings, the FBI will consider the actions of 11 employees to determine if discipline is warranted, the bureau said in a
Those under scrutiny include agents and bureau supervisors, said an FBI source who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The bureau refused to say whether any of the 11 work at FBI headquarters in Washington.
If Sessions decides to take action, there could be reprimands, suspensions or firings.
This is the largest number of FBI employees considered for discipline in a racial harassment matter, Rochen said. The total would have been more than 20 if others involved in incidents hadn't retired, he added.
Paul Philip, the FBI's highestranking African-American field agent, led the task force investigation.
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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
SAVANNA
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)
MACINTOSH CLASSIC COMPUTERS Second place teams will receive APPLE SWEATSHIRTS.
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Wednesday, April 17th at 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 24th at 7:00 p.m.
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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
AFRICAN AFFAIRS STUDENT ASSOC. AFRICAN AWARENESS WEEK
WEDNESDAY APRIL 3:
- Movie "Cry Freedom" at 6:00 p.m. in Lippincott, Room #3 (downstairs)
- Slide Show on "Egypt, Past and Present" by Dr. Mirham at 8:00 p.m. in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
- Panel discussion on " The African and the Diaspora" at 7:00 p.m. in Parlor A & B, Kansas Union, Professor Freeman, Dr. Ajay, Jr.
- and Dr. Peter Ukupokod will be among the participants.
ERIDAY APRIL 5...
- Lecture on "Militant Women and African Nationalism" by Dr. Ajayi at 7:00 p.m. in the Centennial Room, Kansas Union.
SATURDAY APRIL 4
- Cultural exhibition and African food in the Fcumenical
- African Night
- Christian Ministries (ECM) building 12th & Oread from 5:00 - 8:00 p.m.
-$3.00 in advance/$4.00 at the door
- Party at Four Rivers Restaurant from 9:30 p.m. - 2:00 a.m. (African Music). - $30 in advance/$40 at the door
*for both events*) $5.00 in advance/$6.00 at the door
For information call 749-4981
Black Student Union BSU
BSU Elections
Wednesday, April 3, 1991 Alderson Auditorium 6:30 p.m. Kansas Union
"United We Stand, Come and Cast your Vote"
12
Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Youll easily outgun the competition because the University Daily Kansan reaches 95% of all KU students. And with the Kansan's Belden Market Survey, you'll be armed with the most complete information available about local buying power and shopping trends.
The Kansas is now hiring Account Executives for the spring Business Staff.
Applications are available at the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Application Deadline: Tuesday, April 16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications for OFFICE & WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for 1991-1992 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the SUA Office or the Organizations & Activities Center.
Note: Current tenants must reapply!!!
DEADLINES
RENEWAL Applications-5:00 p.m. on March 29,1991 NEW Applications-5:00 p.m. on APRIL 5,1991
Long-term effects of tanning could be bad for sunbathers
By Amy Francis
'Healthy' look of suntan a misconception, dermatologists say
Kansan staff writer
With warm weather and the sunshine season approaching, students often are turning to getting a tan as a way to look healthy.
Dermatologists say that is a misconception.
"A darned skin is a damaged skin," said Lee Bittenden, Lawrence dermatologist. "I think the people who had it (iodine) cost the price later with damaged skin."
"Anytime you have a tan, you ve had damage." he said. "I'm starting to see more and more young people getting out in the sun more and more."
David Kaplan, Overland Park dermatologist, agreed.
"The problem with sunning is that it has a delayed effect."
The effects of tanning probably will not be seen until 20 to 30 years later.
Bittenbender said some of the effects were a loss of skin elasticity that causes wrinkled or sagging skin, which also damages the skin, liver spots and skin cancer.
The chances of skin cancer occurring increase if a blistering sunburn is experienced at a young age, he said.
Another problem with tanning beds is that the ultraviolet lights used are UVA rays that penetrate the skin more deeply than sunlight. Also, more eye injuries can occur if people do not wear goggles because the radiation in the beds is 10 times stronger than sunlight, he said.
According to the American Cancer Society, an estimated 32,000 new cases of skin cancer and malignant melanomas will occur this year. The two combined will cause an estimated 6,500 deaths this year.
Mary Altenhofen, coordinator of the health education department at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said there would be an estimated 325 additional new cases this year. This is an increase from the estimated 200 new cases in 1989.
"That's not good," she said. "It'll probably increase."
Bittenbender said a possible reason for the increase in cases of skin burns from electrical contact is that
According to the American Cancer Society, people do not have to avoid sunlight completely, but steps should be taken to prevent damage.
"The problem with tanning beds is that you can damage your skin all year round." he said.
Kaplan said tanning beds could cause greater skin damage than just sunlight. People who use tanning beds should take extra care to have a greater chance of getting a
- Avoid the sun as much as possible between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m., because its rays are strongest then.
"There is something about that light that sets you up for greater damage." Kaplan said.
burn than if they had just tanned in sunlight, he said.
A person should wear sunscreen whenever in the sun. Damage can occur anytime regardless of the sea spray also can occur on cloud days.
- Wear protective clothing, such as a wide-brimmed hat and long-sleeved shirts.
- Wear sunglasses because the skin around the eyes is the most sensitive.
Two of Columbus' ships soon may be recovered
The Associated Press
fourth voyage.
ST. ANN'S BAY, Jamaica — Archeologists say they may soon find the 500-year-old remains of two ships Christopher Columbus and his crew lived on for more than a year while marooned in Jamaica.
The ships, the Capitana and the Santiago de Palos, were the last ships Columbus commanded and would be the first recovered
Columbus abandoned the vessels on a beach when he and his crew of 115 were rescued from Jamaica on July 29, 1504, at the end of his ill-fated
The Capitana and the Santiago de Palos are thought to be buried under water, mud and sand at St. Ann's Bay on Jamaica's northern coast about 45 miles northwest of Kingston. Attempts to find the ships began in the 1930s.
Now, with sonar and new research of historical documents, nautical archaeologists have narrowed the search to a relatively small portion of
They hope to recover at least some of the ships' remains by next year.
Project director James Parrent of the Institute of Nautical Archaeology at Texas A&M University thinks the chances are good of finding well-prepared rocks because the ships ran aground in soft sediment and shallow water.
He said the recovery of the artifacts was important because it could provide new insights into shipboard life in the early 16th century and the ways of the Arawak Indians, who traded with Columbus.
which is the 500th anniversary of Columbus' first voyage.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 3, 1991
Sports
13
Silver lining
CHAMPION OF WORLD TENNIS
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Tarpley threatened with revocation of probation
Kansas forward Mike Maddox displays the second place trophy won by the Jayhawks during their 72-65 loss against Duke. Maddox thanked the estimated 10,000 fans that attended yesterday's welcome-home rally at Memorial Stadium for their support throughout the season.
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Prosecutors filed a motion yesterday to revoke the probation of Dallas Mavericks forward Roy Tarpelle, the player's lawyer
Tarpley, who was arrested early Saturday on suspicion of drunken driving, faces an April 6 hearing to consider revocation of the two-year probation given on a previous DWI conviction.
Tarpley was sentenced to two years' probation in September as part of a plea bargain in a DWI case, stemming from a Nov. 15, 1989.
Judge Mike Schwillie at the time, had warned Tarpley that if he failed to meet the terms of the probation, he would face a year in jail.
arrest on a Dallas freeway.
Drunken driving charges were filed Monday against Tarpley in the latest case.
The 7-foot, 250-pound Tarpley, who has twice violated the NBA's anti-drug policy, was arrested early Saturday on suspicion of DWI when his car was clocked at 63 mph in a 35 mph zone.
If convicted on the latest DWI charge, Tarlype could face between
15 days and two years in prison and a maximum fine of $2,000.
Although Tarpley denied he was drunk, police said Tarpley flanked all five scribble tests. Tarpley said he did what was asked of him and said he was nervous and distracted from the scene. He said that in one test he was standing solely on his injured leg, which caused him to wobble.
Tarpure was suspended for 33 games last season as a result of the 1989 DWI arrest, in which it took six days to subdue him and take him into custody.
Rugby team seeks to keep title in annual collegiate invitational
Bv Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
The KU Rugby Club has been practicing this week in preparation for a tournament that will be played this weekend.
Rugby coach Dominick Barnao said the club's collegiate team would play in the Collegiate Invittional Tournament at Kansas City's Swope Park. The tournament, sponsored by the Kansas City Rugby Football League, will begin in a m Saturday. The final games will begin at 10 a.m. Sunday.
Paddy Delargy, a player on the team, said that the club was ready to win the tournament for the third consecutive year.
"We are the reigning champs at this tournament," he said. "We have won the tournament two years in a row."
"We are putting all our best collegiate players in. And I don't have any doubts that we will win."
"Last year it was MU and KU in the final game," he said. "KU won that game, and I am sure we will beat Missouri again."
Delargy predicted a rematch of last year's tournament championship game.
Delargy said that KU would play teams from Oklahoma, Missouri, Oklahoma State, Pittsburg State and Oklahoma Missouri State as well as other
He said that recent practices had gone well for the team.
"We have had a good turnout and good response at practice," he said.
"On average, there are about 50 people at the practices.
"We practice for a couple of hours and go over tactics."
Delray said that the teams practiced twice weekly and usually played about three matches every week against various other schools.
"A lot of us get together and run during the week, also, to stay in shape," he said.
Delargy said that the KU team probably would play three games Saturday and the final game Sunday.
Team works for world tourney
Kansan sportswriter
Bv Lana Smith
Kansas racquetball player Lou Montuli, Orlando, Fla., junior, said he hoped the team would place in the top 20 this weekend at the World Intercollegiate Racquetball Championship in Phoenix, Ariz.
seventh on the SMSU team would be a No.1 player at most schools.
"Some of the teams are underdeveloped," Montulli said. "We're lucky to have the talent we have." The team's first competition would be Southwest Missouri State, which is ranked No. 1. He said a player ranked
"I don't think they'll lose as division," Montelli said. "They've acquired so many good players."
Kansas did not participate in the world championship last year because the team lacked funds. This year, the new student Tee has allowed the racquetball club to participate in more tournaments, and the players still have to spend a large amount of their own money.
Montulli and club president
Jonathan Munger, Anchorage, Alaska, freshman, agreed that one obstacle to getting more money for a better raquetball program stemmed from the instability in the attraction of the sport.
KU will take its top five players to the tournament, in which more than 100 schools will participate.
Going into the world tournament, KU holds second place in the Midwest region.
"Every time you go to a touri ment, you learn," Montull said "It's the only way to build."
9-0 tennis match gives opportunity to try out lineups
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
in a tune up for Sunday's big
Conference opener, the 14thranked
Kansas men's team tennis squashed
Southern Illinois-Edwardsville 9-
yesterday at the Allen Field House
tennis courts.
"They had guys hurt and they were overmatched." Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "It was unfortunate, but it was this ease the rest of the year."
Perelman had a chance to experiment with his doubles lineup after the Jayhawks carved up SUEI's singles lineup without dropping a set.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildley, Jeff Gross and Chris Walker gave the Jayhawks a 3-0 lead after their singles matches.
Three more singles victories by Kansas juniors Pat Han and Paul Garvin and freshman Rihan Buth put the daybreaks up 6-0, and SUE down 3-2.
"I liked the manner in which he handled ourselves in singles," Perelman said. "I wanted to give some other guys a chance to play."
The other guys were sophomore
Cuong Nguyen and junior Gary Stone, who teamed together in the No. 3 doubles spot for Kansas.
Nguyen and Stone played a strong match near the net as they downed SUE'S John Hardiman and Nathan Reeve 7.6, 6.2.
"They've never really played together," Perelman said. "Once they got into the meat of the match, they played really well."
Buth and Ha队 teamed in the No. 1 doubles position and frustrated SIEU's Jason Henderson and Andy Muckas 6-2, 6-4.
TENNIS
The match was marked by Henderson and Muckasi's outbursts over line calls and Buth and Han's strong returns of the SIUE duo's serves.
The best match of the afternoon featured KU's Garvin and Gross against SIUE's Joe Henderson and JenRowan Rowen 2. no doubles.
On the strength of blistering serves, Garvin and Gross rallied from a game down in each set for a 7-5. 7-5 triumph.
The Jahayhwks switch their focus now to the Big Eight season, which will begin Sunday afternoon at the field house courts against Colorado.
Kansas' Jeff Gross returns a serve from Andy Muckasi of Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville.
Hard-throwing Ryan outurls his son in Texas exhibition game
The Associated Press
In an exhibition game with the Texas Rangers, Ryan, a freshman at the University of Texas, gave up four runs in the game and 4-1 to when he left the game.
AUSTIN, Texas — Reid's no Nolan vet.
Nineteen-year-old Reid Ryan found out last night that 44-year-old poppy Nolan is still top gun in the Ryan family.
Nolan led 5-3 when he left after throwing 111 pitches in five innings. He gave up five hits and three runs walked three hits and struck out seven
"I'm not happy with the way I pitched but I have to put it in perspective with who I was pitching
against," Reid said. "It was fun and something I'll always remember. It was frustrating because of some of them. I felt against me against them. They didn't rip the ball."
It was the first known mound duel between a major leaguer and his son. The only father-son combination to win the game was the same time is Ken Griffey Jr. and Jr.
"I was pleased with the way Reid threw and I thought he pitched better than I did," the senior Ryan said. "He made it a couple of those hits. He did a good job."
"My intensity level was not there. I think I was probably distracted watching him. It's two different mind
Nolan was a proud father.
sets and I prefer competing to being a spectactor."
The Rangers took a 1-0 lead off Reid in the first inning on Jeff Huson's double, a fly out and Geno Petrelli's run-scoring grounder. They got two cheap runs in the second on a broken bat single, a double over third base, and a two-run bloom double by Donald Harris.
Nolan brought the "senior heat" at 92 mph in the first inning while Ridel's "junior heat" was clocked at 84 mph on the radar gun.
Facing metal bats for the first time in his career, Ryan gave up consecutive two out singles in the first innings and Shane Halter's ground double
down the left field line gave the Longhorns a run in the second. Texas got two more runs in the fifth on a walk, two wild pitches and a single.
"It was fun, a big thrill going against your son, but I'm relieved it's over," Nolan said. "I thought Reid really kept his composure. But I'm not sure I want to do this again next year."
George W. Bush, a Rangers owner and son of President Bush, said he had "mixed reactions when he met him." "I am the one I'm also the son of a famous guy."
He said, "I was hesitant for Reid to find himself in the position of going against his famous father. It would
with my old man. I love him. I made
Ryan told Bush, "I hope if anybody
be like me debating foreign policy with my old man. I'm overmatched."
has a bad outing it's me, not Reid." But Ryan told Bush he wouldn't hold back.
"This is my final tuneup before the big one next Monday night," Ryan said. "I have to bring the heat."
Nolan didn't have his best stuff, although he struck out the side in the second inning. His velocity son by 206 feet per second 96 mh it shows on the radar gun.
"I'm not real pleased with the way things went because I would have liked to have had a little more peace of mind, but my spring training season," Ryan said.
'Hawks get spotlight in retrospect
Ann
Sommerlath
Nearly six months ago, Jayhawk basketball saw a preview of this year's team at Late Night with Roy McCoy and the beginning of basketball season.
I wrote a column after Late Night, poking fun at the players and coaches. That article almost proved to be a prophetic script itself, though I never could have imagined it at the time.
Monday night, the 'Hawks had another "late night" show of their own that commemorated the very end of that same season. Even if someone were given the opportunity to write a script, I don't think there are so many fit-tails imbuing this team's outstanding performance his year.
Sports editor
'It feels good to be part of Kansas basketball, even if you don't get to play in the games.'
I said that Roy Williams, David Johanning and Patrick Richey couldn't dance. Well, the Jayhawks stomped all over the feet of every partner they were given and boogied their way up the ranks to The Big Dance in Indianapolis.
I mentioned the fact that as fans, we came to expect quality performances — shows — during the Danny Manning era. Little did anyone know that this year's Jayhawks wouldn't have been a national championship game. They would thrive on teamwork and desire to get just as far.
I joked that Alonzo Jamison, based on his performing ability, wouldn't soon be replacing Arsenio Hall. But Jamison starred in a show of his own this season. This year's final episode came in the win over Arkansas, where 'Zo gave the performance of his career.
I pronounced that "considering the youth of this year's team, they can all hold their own." Hold their own and everyone else's, that is. The depth of the Kansas bench this season proved to be phenomenal. Jayhawk fans obviously have a lot to look forward to in years to come.
I noted the fact that Williams, at the time, called Jayhawk fans the best in the country. Thirteen thousand came to Allen Field House to watch the Jayhawks in their first official practice that night and wish they were in their journey through what was touted as a rebuilding season.
Nearly as many flocked to Memorial Stadium yesterday to welcome them home. Even Dukke didn't have to wear a shirt to rally for the new national champs.
Throughout the tournament and the season, the fans showed incredible support for the team that was predicted to finish no higher than fourth in the Big Eight, and was expected to struggle with the loss of four seniors, two of whom are now in the NBA.
The Jayhawks played to capacity crowds at the field house all season, and packed it in to overflowing last summer. They made it on for them for making it to the Final Four.
When the team made it to the championship game, an estimated 25,000 celebrated on Jayhawk Boulevard. Even after Monday night's loss, 10,000 enthusiastic fans arrived with their support for what they consider the best basketball program in the country.
I said that the players showed us they were real people who liked to have fun together, even on the court. Their relaxed attitude seemed to me more interesting than despite the players' disappointment, was evident at yesterday's rally.
The team also let the fans know that not only could they play together, they could work together. It seemed that someone always stepped up as a leader, from seniors Mark Randall, Mike Madlock, Terry Brown and Kick Wagner to freshmen Scott, Steve Woodberry and Richey.
Congratulations, Jayhawks!
Thanks for everything — you showed
the country the class and poise fans
and have to and have some to take for granted.
As Chris Lindley said at yester-
days' rally, it feels good to be part of
Kansas basketball, even if you don't
get to play in the games.
It doesn't get any better than this.
Ann Sommerlath is a St. Louis senior majoring in journalism.
14
Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
HYPNOTHERAPY
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All Members are Welcome!
For more information, call 864-6465
sponsored by:
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WOMEN, SPEECH, AND SILENCE
a lecture by
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Friday, April 5, 1991
8:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium
Kansas Union
Admission is free
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Dr. Sara Paretsky, the noted mystery writer,
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Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 118 Strong Hall. For further information, contact Sheril Robinson at 864-3552
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6th & KASOLD
865.5899
OPEN NIGHTS & SUNDAYS, JUST DROP IN
14th & KASOLD
842-5151
Price hikes to help Soviets, experts say
Lower store prices encourage boarding
WASHINGTON — Imagine going to your local grocery store and finding that ground beef went from $1.59 a pound to $5.56 overnight, that bread, which was $1.09 a loaf yesterday, suddenly jumped to $4.36.
The Associated Press
Now you have an idea of the degree to which Soviet shoppers saw store prices increase this week as their own sales increased. You move toward a free market system.
The problem, of course, is that the Soviet system cannot be related to any U.S. counterpart because the U.S. system has never been as disjointed as Joseph Pelman, George Washington University professor of socio-economics.
The Soviet government has kept food prices at about the same level for 30 years, said Bill Liefert, Soviet agriculture official in the U.S. Department of Agriculture
"What the Soviets have had to do is get rid of their domestic subsidies," Pelzmant said yesterday.
And experts say the Soviets will benefit.
Soviets earn an average 270 rubles a month, and they spend about 50 percent of their income on food, compared with about 17 percent for the average U.S. citizen. There are about 27.6 rubles to the dollar.
And though wages may seem low by U.S. standards, they have risen under Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, while the cost of goods, including food, has stayed the same or risen slightly, Liefert said. This has led to boarding and shortages in the stores.
Pelzman said it was not unusual for a Soviet to get free meals at work, live in an apartment supplied free of costs for employer and have no child care employer.
"Iimagine if the price of goods here were cut in half," he said. "People would buy heavily because prices are lower than he restraining their buying behavior."
This helps explain what has happened in the Soviet Union, he said.
The low prices encourage hoarding and barter as people use goods rather than money to obtain other goods that are in short supply.
Lieften said that the government had to do something to soak up the excess purchasing power so that the hoarding would stop.
"The price increase should though not change per capita consumption of food in the Soviet Union in the short run, which means the country in any real sense will not be poorer than before," he said.
free health care, and everyone either has a job or is receiving some kind of income from the government.
"They will not be poorer," Lieftar said. "There still is going to be as much food available. It will change who gets what share. They could be better off if less food is boarded and wasted.
Animal rights groups called 'anti-science' by the AMA
The Associated Press
"We beginning to see discussions of vegetarian meals and some extremist thoughts in their publica- tion, that we view as anti-sci- ence."
ATLANTA -- The American Medical Association is going on the often sieve against animal rights groups and of undermining science education
"The major threat to science is not terrorism, not radical actions, but ... a more subtle effort to influence thinking." Daniel H. Johnson Jr., speaker of the AMA's policymaking house of Delegates, said yesterday.
In the first of a series of news conferences planned around the country, the AMA complained of activists' opposition to classroom use and advocacy of vegetarianism as a healthier and morally superior lifestyle.
The nation's largest organization of doctors said groups including People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals have destroyed more than 90 research labs around the nation in the last 10 years.
Animal rights groups have also tried to get school systems to outlaw animal dissections. PETA's last such
PETA representative Ron Wiedinger-singer said, "The group's literature tells children the facts; that having any animal in the classroom, even when it is not a wild animal also shouldn't eat meat or use products that involve killings animals."
Wiesinger, a Washington pediatriac, said scientists could use computer or plastic models rather than dissect animals.
attempted last month when Arizona's largest school district, the 67,000 student Mesa system, voted to let teachers decide.
And he said vegetarianism should be ground for the AMA and PCT.
"I don't see how they can attack that when they know a vegetarian diet helps reverse heart disease," he said.
Harrison L. Rogers, a surgeon in Atlanta and past president of the AMA, said he learned to do gall bladder surgery on fetal pigs. Without that practice, he said, he wouldn't have been successful on his patients.
The AMA said about 85 percent of the 12 million to 15 million animals used for research each year were rodents and two-thirds of animals used in experiments were not exposed to pain.
Classified Directory
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Hey Wheeze-aka Sassy-aka Fatty Boomblatti,
I'm not sking it, I'm working! It work, it work,
move it, move it,-c- ASA. K-FA
Brad-our students are drenched-come over! *S N A Dave, Rass, Doug and Mark-Coffee has never been so much fun. You guys are the best! Gaby, you are the greatest tutor. Cross
Rico Suave Roseberg-You aren't Silking it!
Claudia & Burke
Jazz, you're the greatest spahid tutor. Cross your fingers for Wednesday night. CS
To the man with dark curly hair, I see you in the Union everyday. Who are you?
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, culture and study skills, boost self-confidence using h-btech audiobooks, and improve communication. Hyposis and Stress Management Center.
110 Bus. Personal
ANNOUNCING: Beauti. Consult. Look and feel your very best. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call | 913-262-6829 for an appointment today!
an evening with you and Andre. Lemon Drop.
Tweedie Dumber---'This she--I'm code-
Immulative-Geek Check-from us.
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and acclimation. Auto body repair. VISA Mastercard & Discover cards accepted
Union everyday. Who are you?
Triangle man, I gladly accept your invitation for
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-9611
ETC.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
AVIREX LEATHER JACKETS
BOAT HOUSE ROOF SWEATTS
CAMP SHIRTS
CAMIZ PANTS
CAMIZ SWEATERS
CHRISTIAN DIOR SOCKS
CAMP SOCKS
CAMP SOCKS
LEATHER BELTS
TAUROUS LEATHER BAGS
LYNTONE WALLETS
LORUS WATCHES
BULOVA WATCHES
RAY BAN SUNGLASSES
OSSIL WATCHES
The Etc. Shop
ITM
CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN * COSTUMES
732-896-1015 JETTIS
LAWRENCE KANSAS 68044
913-843-0611
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
dental & Sales 729 Main
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking,
weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy
Center, 842-7504
If you’re Welsh please contact Gwyneth Winni,
910-894-5242 or NASA ASIA庆祝 Culture of Cultures.
Attend "We Are the Civilization" made of wonders of Western City or Available at Jaywalk, Great & Towner Crest.
HEY YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
814-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always online.
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 735 Mass.
WHEN YOU CARE ENOUGH TO SEND IN JEST. When the relationship has ended or feelings gone astray, send that certain someone a message to make their day. Will deliver a 841-567
120 Announcements
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Foheries
Management Board! 8/2013
and Board! 8/000 1.000 hours. No experience necessary. Male or Female For 64 pimp employment. Must have Bachelor's degree
ALL BUILDS, 80% OFF
Quitting business sales continue at the Book End,
in Quaintilly Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire
weekends. 10/5.
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finest! Since 1801 COL. MUST BE A TEEN AND A PARENT. May 24, 2012. Maureen, Mc4822; 1-800-787-4537.
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP
Sunday, April 14, 1:30pm
Community Hibd, 115 W 11th
$80). to register. mail 842-57527
EARTH SPIRITS Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesdays, April 9 - May 18. Free introductory lecture April 2, 7:30 pm, Lamplighter Books, 10 E Ninth
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice Free. confidential referral calls returned by counselors Headquarters or KU into 846-5906 Sponsored by GLOSX
MWM, forty something, walks on water, seeks companions for a magical evening Saturday April 6. Hoch Auditorium, 8 pm
Rainbows and DeMollays welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-415
Request for Proposals. Grants writer to develop better plate language for submission to private libraries and for promoting campaign Contract. For complete project contact, Helen Gee. Haskell Foundation.
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE! Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-602-662 or fly a kite.
Suffering from abortion? Write Hearts Restored,
Box 94, Grinnel, KS 67338 Confidential
response (material will follow)
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841 234 or visit 1419 Mass . Headquarters Consulting Center
TIME TO LOCK THE WINTER PUGGED! Great tasting, natural nutrition balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money back for you. Call for information, 480-970-6211.
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
841-7533 N. J. 1
Johnny's UP & UNDER is available for Engagement Parties, Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible. 842-0377
140 Lost-Found
FOUND: KUID with bus pass. Call 842 6987 to claim
Found: Tennis Raquet after 3/26 halftime. West stadium lot. Call to identify, 855-0978.
HUGE REWARD! for any information given to loss camera. Camera in its grey case lost半夜 at johnbury. No questions asked. I just want it back. Call Jill. 865-3031
Large Reward for return of, or information leading to return of black mountain bike stolen from Cornelius Restaurant Tuesday evening 3:20 p.m. Call 811-646. Confidential.
Lost. Green suede jacket on second floor of Fraser Reward. Please return: 864.2676.
200s
Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grades to fill many positions.
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits.
303-441-255
Alvaram Country Club in now accepting applications for Spring and Summer wait staff. Prior experience must include applying to Apply in person 10 or 1-24 at 891 Brownsgate. American Scholarship is seeking a campus rep.
American Scholarship is seeking a campus rep.
No selling. No charge a week. Excellent pay. Call George at 800-547-5137
ATTN Psychology, Education, Sociology, and
ATTRition related majors. Summer program for
special needs youth (learning disability/emotional
teachers) and counselor/activity instructors.
Location on lake near EIY - MN and Boundary
Range of activities including Salary plus room and board. Internships available. Contact Ed at 843-507 or Tom Bauer
(412) 529-3181. 811 W. Bradford, Minneapolis.
CHILDCARE WORKER Residential facility for adolescent boys. Full time and summer position. Training in child care, transportation, data transportation, Training/experience in a place. We drug test. Send resume to RG-280.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, water skiing, gymnastics, kayaking, diving, campfire,营造, crafts, draining, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $100 or more. RIB & BAR, Magee 785, Mcleod NlT,
Convenient Store Clerk-$4.25/hr. Weekend shift,
cash register experience preferred. Apply in
at Phillips 66, Desoto Short Stopper -103-
3833.
CAMP COUNSELORS The YMCA is currently seeking counsel for its summer day camp YMCA, a non-profit organization of children. June 9 August 14 and 20 hours 40 minutes per week. For more information, visit Van Buren, TORAke, R, or call Sherry Wooden
Earn while you learn. Mampoon is looking for sales representative to help manage the mission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training and business experience, plus free use of a computer equipped with a sophisticated or above, with at least an B average or higher. Please apply to a College Rep to promote the sales of the product. Experience that pays, call Lay at 769-2000
Excellent pay processing hand-made items for national company Start immediately! Call 504-641-8003 Ext. 3844
Help Wanted: Daytime Bartender, Part-time time
summer. PRIVATE CLUB, experience pre-
ferred, must have references and be 21. Call for apt.
842 0083.
International company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,232-6829
Jayahawk Towers Assistant Manager
A 12-month hour, live-in position, the Assist
Manager to assist with programs and programs for residents in the Jayahawk
Tower student apartment complex. The Assist
Manager is also responsible to the Department of Student
Housing for coordination of activities; funds
are provided through a community through programs and training;
Share office activity and offer visitors services
to students within the community. Employees Enforce Department policies; Participate in orientation, training, supervision, and mentoring; and accept required residents for residents and guests. Make maintenance reports Qualifications: Current KU enrollment; experience in training, supervision, and mentoring required; required management experience or Jayahawk Tower residential experience preferential; have experience from other cultures. Position available through the University. Resumes should be submitted to Fred McLennan, KU Department of Student Housing, 422 West 11th, Suite DSH, Lawrence, MA 02765; or Fred McLennan, KU Department of Student
LEAWOOD SOUTH COUNTRY CLUB
S snackbar-Bear Cart Service for $4.50 per hour plus potential tips. If interested please contact Dan Hauger at 913-485-3887 or write stop by www.leawood.com.
Lake of the Oarsms Summer Employment
The Rafter Floating Restaurant is accepting applications for positions in hotels, businesses, excellent salary and tip. Great work environment with a 36-hour availability (incl all available contact) Frank housing (*all*).
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to in
interesting places. Earn good money for a year
Temple Nanny Agency 842-4440
Management Team for medium sized Apartment Complex. Duties include; showing/removing apartments, book keeping, maintenance. Call 749-6868 or man or woman to help with general housework. Dependable, honest, thorough and clean. Yard maintenance, thorough and cultivator, clean out flower beds. Call 749-6868
Need money fast! Make up to $125 00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary 1-800-695-7789
Looking for appt. dishwasher 13 days to call for a location in person at Adams Alumna Center. Ask for chef Looking for Responsible Female to babysit children under the age of 7. Willing to give up full time job sometimes. Saturdays night, and sometimes Monday during the day. April through the summer.
Radio Board Operator. Part-time. Experience required. Contact Brian Schiel, KLZR, 843-1320 F.O.E
RACING ENTHUSIASTS: We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday; Saturday Sunday projects at a major racing facility in Tupelo. Position includes ticket takers, ticket holders, gatekeepers, gatekeepers parking personnel. If interests apply at Man Power, 211 East 8th.
Summer..ATT. MALE ATILETES
Counselor training available at North Boys High
ball, ballroom Soccer, La-Crone, Windwurfing,
East Wood, Ear Wood, Photography, Upper Classmen
Ear Wood, Photography
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT 1 Deadline:
4/9.19. Salary $4.35 per hour Duties include typing, filing, and performing all assigned clerical duties within Office Services; performs receive calls; works with the photocopy repository from Computer Center Staff; takes phone messages, sets up meetings, etc. To apply, complete an application available at the EOA EMployer Centenure Reception desk E/OA EMPLOYER
Summer $$$. Train you to earn good money in your summer in your home area. Call Straight Arrow Enterprises, 842-9140, or write P. O. Box 42028 Lawrence, KS 66044
Temporary, part-time help wanted. Farm exp. assistance helpful. Apply at www.burls.com . 911 N. West 26th Street. The Department of Mathematics is accepting applications for the position of Student Assistant in Math Tutoring. Students must be tutoring. Requirement: MATH 123 or equivalent. Preference to students with strong mathematical background, but all encouraged to apply. Applicants should have a Bachelor's degree, 404, Snow Day, Deadline Friday, April 26, 1981.
Driver education offered to midWest Driving School, serving K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
225 Professional Services
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
FRENCH TUTOR. Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
865-5323
Government photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior training, modeling & arts port
folios/BAW, color. Call Tom Swells 749-1611
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offences
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Treasures of Occupations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street
843-6000
235 Typing Services
1 der woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct page of letter-quality type, 843-263, days or evenings.
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service.
$1.00 double-spaced page. Call Please: 841-6776.
Absolute cheapest sheet in Lawrence.
$1.00 double-spaced page. Rush back no problem.
Call R.J.'s Tying Services 841.5942. Term papers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after p. 98. Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing list. Laser printers. Fax machines. Fax 841.5942. Th. ma. fm. 8a. m. fm. F-5a. m. fm. 842.7244.
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, 94-6256
K's professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6245.
Professional resumes - Consultations, formatting typesetting and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927-734-8000.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 3, 1991
15
Research Project*. Save time and frustration.
Experienced professional will transfer your data file
from coding tables/questionnaires. Call Key Works, 842-8307.
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
18 inch Pyle woofer with custom-made box. Fits
Mustang GT 205 wall cosmetic amp. $450.00 obo
Call Peter at 749-5926
1974 Honda 620. Rebuild and restored. Good,
cheap, fun Guaranteed to pick up chicks (no
money back). Call Elvis, 842-8763
Bahamas cruise or Mexican vacation. Both include transportation and accommodations for two for 5 days. Each 1800. For info. @653430
excellent condition @$0.00 new; $45.00 @$0.66.
Apple II compact 128K with monitor, image writer I printer, modern 300 discs, games and processing, and many great conditions.
For sale: Honda Spree and Smith Corona Word
Processor. Phone 865-0679
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
teams, tentwear clothing, wet weather gear,
combat jacket, and Speedfield Boots Also
available. 147-2347 St. Mary's Marriages Sales. St. Mary's,
Lined, black leather skirt, size 18/20, $100.
GE'R tail, TY'r 150; $150 call (800) 639-2222
Moving, storing and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-ins welcome. Call 843-8111 Ask for sales/service department.
NRE RALEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GUAGE) $250.812-914.6
NRE RALEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GUAGE) $250.812-914.6
340 Auto Sales
1971, WV camperboys, rebuilt engine with 800 miles good, condition $100. Call 842-3423 MWFS. 1979 Black Trans Am 195, AC' New Paint, Great Condition, Beautiful Car, 861-3851, Pat.
1989 Red Honda Civic halteback, AC, stereo, 22K,
one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas mileage.
Call Me沼暹 1497-2575
For sale. Mercedes Benz 1902 E.3, 1985, black
pearl, full option. 16,000 TLP # 865-8516
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
BUY SELL LOAN CASH
On TVs, VCRs, jewelry, stereo, music in
cameras, cameras and more. We honor
Viva/MCAMEX. Disc Jayhawk Pawn &
Jewelry. 1904 W 8th 749 919
370 Want to Buy
Wanted-Used mountain bike. Men's large frame 829,700
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
会
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-897/843-1601
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.
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 an intention; to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
Bradford Square Apartments 601 Colorado
2 & 3 B-H-Available in May or August.
4 & 5 B-H-Available in October.
microwaves, patio or deck, laundry facility.
Onsite Management. KI is hub. use of street park,
building, your apartment for summer or fall 780-156
Check out Berkley Flats Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom
campus and downtown
800-415-8131 Call 841-292-6276
Excellent Location, 1 book to a campus, 2 bedroom
in 4 plex, dailwhater, WD hookup, CA, NO
nets, available June 1. $360 At 1341 Ohio OH.
842-4242
Extremely nice, spacious. 2 bmw townhouse w/garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning. August and/or summer business 8200 sq ft. August 453-652.
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apartment in May. Call 843 6315
Furnished living space; $25 plus itu, W/D;
microwave, fourstir, lg back yard with deck
Grad students or studios upper classman preferred.
843-4033.
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water费 $300; mail 841-2138. Hey KU Med students-move in June 1 and receive $2 off your rent for two months. *Studies, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Hotel and water paid* 931.831-683. Center, Harbours Towne 931.831-683. Center
Large 2 bedroom apt for summer sublease. Swimming pool and volleyball. Close to bus route. Call 855-760-1254 leave message.
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. rent $280.00.
841-9113. leave message.
LEASE NEW FOLE FOR FALL Boomy or 3+3 plank Duop on lap in Basement, basement, Carriage, GA W/D houpok. No pets. Lease & reef. req $440/mo and un. mo. 9453,773 mm 84/372 ft
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Extra large 2 BR duplex
inpt. a good location. Extra large MRG; garage;
laundry/storage. nice yard. No pets & Lea
rs, ree, couple or family family. $800 mn
$300 nt.
Lornar Townhouses, 3001 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, space, with all the amenities. Brand
new available. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until
May, July or for 12 months. 841-789-8433.
July, 4th for 12 months in the United States, and May leaving for August 11, age 15 years, weather dryer, microwave, cooling fan, 2 disks, 1 year lease, pet. 1135. Kentucky - K8471677 (vending).
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Special
S
Swan Management
- Gravstone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Now leasing for summer & fall
*studios* - 3 poors
1.4.2 BR spts - *tennis court*
2.8.3 BR townhomes - *KU bus route*
- gas heat & water paid
gas heat & water palco (on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE APTS
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Next to Benchwimmers
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
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
units. fumis
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)
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
apartments
Boardwalk
- Laundry room - 50¢
W&D
Showing Units Daily 9-6
842-4444
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- Unfurnished with appliances
- Water & trash paid
- Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
- Large closets & living space
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Clean & well maintained
Furished with
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Apple Lane Apartments
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Qulet studios
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
2 BR apt in dormer. Available in fall or summer in 12 month lease. DW, low utilities, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit $482.874. Ask for Tracy or have message.
Close to KU bus route
- overroom rooms and duplexes. Available June 1
* Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842-8971/843-1601
3 BRDM BINAGULO BUNALOG, electr. range, refriger, washer & dryer, garage, central air condition for non-smoker. Near campus (601 West Office, 801 North Office, 901 West Office, or call Bill at 842.7522)
Available Avail ail at 1037 Tennessee, 249-603-6181
bastem apt. 825 monthly plus insurance, 1 year
admission fee, 1 year weather waiver, 1 year
weather wather drier, 1 year airer apt., $30/month
insurance, 1 year lease, 1 month security, off-street
rent.
Available June 3 bedroom apartment in nice old home. Walk to KU Downtown, A/C dishwasher, off street parking, wood floors. $96. Water paid. No pets. bmi_414-1074
Available June. Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice old home. New bathroom. Wood doors, $440. Gas/water paid. No pets. 841-974
MASTERCRAFT OFFERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass.
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
749-0445·1310 Kentucky
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-5255 · 7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD
SUNDANCE
841-5255 • 7th & Florida
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
841-1429·1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
ORCHARD CORNERS
842-4455
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two-bedroom apartment with space for all kitchen appliances, including a refrigerator, oven, microwave and blinds. Low witties, pool and spaQuest. Rent cost $160.00 | SPANISH GREAT APEART compliant $160.00 | SPANISH GREAT APEART
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets.
Deposit and references required. Off street park:
749-2919
2-1 BR, 4-4 BR, Washers dryers in unit, each enclu-
tion fans, microwave, fireplaces, 2 full hats in
BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
Call today! 749-1566.
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom rooms at Southbridge Plaza Apts. 1 bed room; $275. 2 bedrooms start at $355. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1960.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable *aid*=$000.80 841-6862
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Apes. Apset West $305, for 3 bedrooms; $735
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, Walk to campus.
Call 841-1160 or 841-1839
SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bed apt, 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downstreet $295/mo., gas & water paid. 841-5605 for 4:30.
Spacious 3 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer or sooner. 1806 W 27, 842-4603 or 841-5797.
Spacious one bedroom apt for summer sublease.
Spool yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apt W/D/W microwave/disposal Sublease $95.00 Call 865-3877
Summer sublease, 2 bedroom, $1.5 bath, free water, laundering available. $225/month. Call Mark 841-7071
SUNRISE VILLEVAGE summer sublease. Can fit up to 5 people for $314/mo. dishwasher, microwave, pool, summer parties. First keg is on us for new tenants. Please call 821-7714.
Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Colony Woods, May
29-Aug w/ 3 weeks free. $215/month plus
utilities. 865-3328
lumner and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2
roomapts. nibk from KU with off street park-
ing, no pets. 841-5500
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms on
shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid 1.18 from KU with off-street parking. No. 841-5006.
Summer Sublease-1 Bt brant, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1740, afternoons.
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Affordable Living
We have our own
anytime, and great social events.
Better quality living
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route Naismith spells out a wise living move.
Convenient location
NAISMITH HALL
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dresser area upstairs
1800 Nalsmith Drive
Lawrence, KN 66044
(913) 835-8559
Subleases Available Immediately
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
2 Bdrm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1/2 baths, available May 1st
Enlarged to Show Texture
Some Summer Subleases too!
Newly remodeled apartments
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two with fireplaces
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
In & Custenstein Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8:5-30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
4200
Georgetown Apartments
meadowbrook
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MG1. / Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
10 or 12 Month Lenses
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Call about our Summer Special
- No pets
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS - BY APRT
630 Michigan 749-7279
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
JAKE, I'D LIKE FOR YOU TO MEET THE EDITOR!
TO SHOW TEXTURE
HEY THERE! ADDISON WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO THE ALL-NIGHT SEX PARTY WE WERE GONNA HAVE LAST WEEK2
Summer Sublease. Traitriped 3 bedroom
townhouse Furnished patio, pool, dwashave.
Sunday-Saturday. 7am-10pm.
Summer Sublease 12th & IIh 3 bedrooms 1
3 stories. Story low. 875 mm. 965-3532
Summer sublease 4 bedroom furnished Apt. Pool
at Complex, Sound, Call. Avg. 86/12
TO SHOW TEXTURE
HEY THERE, ADDISON WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO THE ALL-NIGHT SEX PARTY WE WERE GONNA HAVE LAST WEEKZ
JAKE, I'D LIKE FOR YOU TO MEET THE EDITOR!
NO!
NOT MY HORMONES!
Summer sub lease 1 bdm, furnished apt. Jan-
Aug. Call eveights 843-8419 for more info.
Summer sublease 19 bedrooms 2 and 29
Summer subbase with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call 865-293.
Summer sublease. Large studio, water paid, pool,
bus stop. 865-3519.
Summer sublease Spacious 2 br, 2 bath apartment
Quiet neighborhood West Lawrence
Dishwasher, W/D hookup, pool. 842.0828
Summer sublease: Furnished one bedroom apt,
pool at complex, water paid $325 Call Amy
864-3677
Large studio for summer sublease. Available mid May. May rent paid. $275/mo. 841-7084 after 6pm.
9th & Avalon
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit
842-3040 or 749-2681. Ask for Jennifer.
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 146 Tennessee.
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
842-3040
NO!
NOT MY
HORMONES!
...townhomes
...2,3 Bedrooms
...on KU bus route
...studios
...Free cable
...water paid ... Pool
...
South Pointe APARTMENTS
by Brian Gunning
for Summer & Fall
- mini-blinds
- plush carpets
- large rooms & closets
- water & trash paid
refreshing po
843-6446
2166 W.26th
- central air & gas heat
- refreshing pool
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
WOODWAY
AFFIAMENTS
each apartment feature:
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini-suite
- On KL bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $355, $450
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
offices
611 Michigan Street
(across Hardin's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
Sunrise Apts.
Garages (VIII.)
* Tennis Court. Pools
Tennis Court, Pools
Free Cable T.V. (Pl & Terr.)
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.) Lovelace Town Home
- Luxurious Town Home
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
THE FAR SIDE
& Apartment Living
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vil
9th & Michigan Sunrise T
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
841-1287 or 841-8400
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily 841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
---
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Basketball Court
- Basketball Court
- Volleyball Court
- Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
$355 - $425
- On Bus Route
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Pri 10-6 p.m.
at 10-4 p.m. Sun, 12-4 p.m.
1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
430 Roommate Wanted
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 812-3625.
Female roommate summer sublease. Share 3 BR apt with two other females: $175,843-6492, leave message
Female roommate needed from May to August to share a 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt. $105 and its utilities. Deposit: Call Monica, 843-4168.
Male student seeks roommate for summer job in K.C.-Lenexa, Olathe area. 5/15 thru 8/15. Call Scott at 894-806-8737.
One or two female roommates seeded for 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom, at orchard Corners starting Aug 91. Call Shannon at 748-4390.
*doemate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house.*
Two rooms for 1-2 people. Reasonable rem/tiles. Alison. 865-257.
Roommate wanted: 3rd person, 3 bedroom apt.
909 Indiana $150/month plus utilities. Call
749-5980 or 841-9121.
Samber Sublease. 1 or 2 people (male or female)
redeem to receive 3 bedroom 2 bath at ORCHARD
CORNERS Pool, A/C, cable on bus route
$600/month plus 1st charge. Call Nancy 844-217-611
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call 7493477, economical
Two female roommates needed for furnished 4 bedroom; 2 bathroom apt at Orchard Corners, starting Aug 19. Call Beth or Susan at 814-4278.
Bv GARY LARSON
© 1981 Universal Press Syndicate
Masher films
16
Wednesday, April 3, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
You've Got It All At Dillons!
Open 24 Hours
from Our Meat Dept...
Dillons Salutes Roy Williams The KU Basketball Team!
Supr Trim Pork Loin Assorted Chops
$109
Regular Or Thick Sliced
Or
iced
Double Coupons*
7 Days A Week!
*Details in Store
from our Deli...
from our Seafood Shoppe...
Pizza
Deli Fresh 12" Pizza Single Meat Topping. Thin Crust
2/$7
Shrimp and Cabbage with Sauce
New England Peel & Eat Shrimp 14 oz
$599
Super Savings At Dillons...
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24 oz. Small, Large or
Lowlat Small Curd
GLOBAL CHARTS
DESIGNER GUIDE
24
GLOBAL CHARTS
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24
99¢
Dillons
Individually Wrapped American
Cheese Food
16 oz. Singles
$199
MOUNTAIN DEW DIET PEPSI PEPSI DIET PEPSI
Pepsi-Cola Pepsi, Diet, Caffeine Free Diet or Mt. Dew Assorted Pepsi-Cola Products
WRAINT GRATUITS
FLUDGE STRIPES
12 Pack,
12 oz. Cans
$299
2 Pack,
oz. Cans
Keebler Cookies
11. 5 oz. Fudge Stripes or 12.5 oz. Deluxe Grahams
Dear Dj Norris & Titus for
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
99¢
Doritos Tortilla Chips
15 oz Salsa Rio. 14 oz Lite Nacho.
14 5 oz Lite Ranch. 15 oz Cool
Ranch. Jumpin Jack. Nacho or Plain
$179
from our Bakery...
Dillon's Fresh Baked
Danish
Rolls
4 for $1
Dillon
from our Produce Dept...
10.
Fancy Yellow
Sweet Corn
3/99¢
from our Flower Shop...
10
April
Showers
Arrangement
$1299
C
TRY DILLON'S AUTHENTIC
CHINESE KITCHEN!
HOT CHINESE FOOD TO GO
Located in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence.
Beef Chow Mein Quart Serving,Served With Fried Noodles $429
Hot & Sour Soup Pint Serving
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.)
$149
from our Video Dept...
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
Come in and reserve your copy today!
Coming April 30...
Charles Darwin's Jungle Book
"The Jungle Book"
"Till They're Home Again."
Dillons FOOD STORES
Ad Prices Effective April 3-9, 1991. Lawrence Dillon Stores Only. Limit Rights Reserved.
√
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 124
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA; KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1991
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Facts budget anges election officials
Impact budget surpasses suggested spending limit
By Michael Christie
Kenyan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate Elections Commission released the campaign budgets of the two election coalitions yesterday, and both groups have stated they will not follow the commission's recommended spending limits. 705-869.
Facts submitted a budget of $1,292,760.
Impact's budget is $2,200.
The Facts budget is the same as the Student Senate budget for next year. The coalition stated that it wanted to show students how much money Senate controlled and that a campaign spending limit was necessary
The budget received some criticism from
election officials.
"The whole point in allowing them either to abide or not to abide by the limit is that if they decide not to, we're giving them the chance to set their own limits," said Curt Winegarner, elections commission chairperson.
If a coalition does not submit a serious budget, it has no accountability to the public.
Both groups originally stated they would abide by the suggested limit when they announced their candidacy. The limit is a requirement to secure Senate candidate running on each coalition.
The coalitions are required to abide by
our budget. They can spend less than they state, but if they spend more, the elections commission can disqualify them from office and prevent them from. This year's election will be April 10 and 11.
The recommended limit for Impact, headed by Daren Fulcher and Alan Lowden, was $1,725. Fulcher attributed the $475 difference to some unexpected expenses.
"We had to order another 1,000 buttons because they were in demand," he said. "We had some things donated to us and we had to revert them."
Fulcher said the items donated were office supplies.
"We realized that $2,200 was as close as we could cut it and be honest." he said.
Winegarer said he saw the budget submitted by Impact as a good faith effort to submit an honest request and remain accountable for campaign costs.
He was not as complimentary to the budget that Kofi subscribed.
This looks to me like a blatant attempt to
circumvent any kind of accountability." he said.
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith, Facts presidential and vice president candidates, said their coalition was trying to prove a point.
"We feel that there should be one spending limit. We're not being irreverent." Mintosh's snout
McIntosh said that not everyone in the Facts coalition had been involved in the decision to submit the budget but that a few others in the coalition had decided to make the statement.
"It's to prove a point that this could get out of hand," he said
Winegarner said the action taken by Facts was frustrating.
"We had an official process at the beginning of the semester," he said. A forum was held.
"Even though Jason had mentioned that he was unhappy with the elimination of the limit, he never submitted, nor did any of his subordinates, which is what would have been necessary."
Winegarner said the elections commission this year decided to remove a spending limit on the Senate campaign in part because he had lied about their campaign expenditures.
McIntosh agreed that setting a limit on campaign expenses was conducive to coalitions fudging their budgets, but he said a limit still was needed.
"I keeps a ball on things," he said. McIntosh said he was "very well coached" in the latter part of the season in which the future
He said that he understood the importance of accountability in campaign expenditures but that the point his coalition was trying to make is important.
Page 3
See Senate story
PENNYS
Sidewalk completion
C&S Shepard Construction employees Terry Smith (bottom) and Ron Ash (middle) pour the last of the concrete needed to complete the sidewalk along Emery Road just south of Ninth Street. Foreman Vince L. Shockley said yesterday that his crew would need only two or three more days to finish the grading and general clean-up. In February, two KU student senators proposed to the city commission that the city build the sidewalk to make Emery Road safer for pedestrians.
Iraqi rebels received CIA aid, sources say
Bush criticized for abandoning uprising in midst of bloodbath
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush signed secret orders in January authorizing the CIA to aid rebel factions inside Iraq, about the time he was publicly exhorted the Iraq people to overthrow Saddam Hussein, intelligence sources said yesterday.
The orders, known as an intelligence "finding," were described as granting broad and general authority for clandestine activities to undermine the rule of President Saddam Hussein and to support a terrorist force in Iraq, said the sources, speaking only on condition of anonymity.
But be reiterated that the United States would not intervene militarily to protect Iraq's minority Kurds and to stop the rise of insurgents of their uprising against Saddam
"I do not want to see us get sucked into the internal struggle in Iraq," the president said.
It was not immediately clear to what extent the CIA authority might have been used. However, NBC News reported Tuesday that the Voice of Free Iraq, a clandestine anti-government radio station, operated during the Kuwait conflict with CIA financing.
Bush recently sidestepped reporters' questions about any contacts between the United States and Iraqi rebels. And, asked about such collaboration at a congressional hearing two weeks ago, Defense Secretary Cheney said only, "That's a subject - can't get into in open session."
If the authority has been used to aid the rebels, it would add concrete actions to the verbal encouragement Bush and other administration officials have given rebels to overthrow their president.
Critics have accused Bush of misleading resistance groups into believing the United States would come to take aid if they challenged Saddam's rule.
'I do not want to see us get sucked into the internal struggle in Iraq,'
President Bush
Feb. 15. Bush suggested that the Iraqi people and the Iraqi military should take measures to force Saddam out of power.
In January, while saying it was not U.S. policy to target Saddam, Bush declared, "No one will weep when he is gone."
As recently as March 19, Bush suggested that Iraq's continuing use of helicopter gunships to put down revolt would complicate a final cease-fire. However, he has retuled the forces to attack the helicopters.
Kurdish and other dissident groups have said they felt betrayed by the United States as Saddam's forces brutally re-established control over cities in rebel-controlled areas and created a flood of refugees fleeing what they feared an impending mass slaughter.
Yesterday, Sen. Al Gore, D-Tenn., joined those attacking U.S. inaction.
"I don't think it's right for us to stand by and do nothing while the Kurds and others who oppose Saddam Hussein are being slaughtered," he said at a news conference, adding that the refugees were simply responding to a U.S. call to rise up against Saddam.
Gore, who supported Bush's decision to go to war against Iraq and is regarded as a potential Democratic presidential contender for 1992, said Bush had made a cold calculation that it was in the best interests of the United States to hold Iraq together by allowing Saddam to remain in power.
"I understand the logic behind it, but I think it is a terribly wrong decision." he said.
Repeated administration statements have made it clear that U.S. military forces will not be used to interfere in the conflict, because such efforts are often a scene of the U.N. mandate that called for Iraq to drive from Kuwait.
► See related stories Page 1P
Government secrets may rise after war
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Gulf war probably will cause an increase in the number of secret documents produced annually by the government, although that figure has held steady in millions in recent years, according to a report to the president.
Garfinkel's office estimates that the government produced 6,797,720 secrets during the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. That's an increase of just 1,219 secrets over the previous year.
The government does not actually sit around counting its secrets, though. Those numbers are estimates derived statistically from samples examined by the military services
Overall, the number of times that the government uses the “confidential,” “secret” and “top secret” stamps has fallen since Reagan left office in 1985. The number of secrets was estimated at 15 million, according to the security oversight office report.
"Their impact . . . is likely to be significant," wrote Steven Garfinkel, director of the security oversight office, which annually the annual report on the government's level of secrecy
House may revive KU work study
When the statistics for 1991 are compiled next year, they likely will show a marked increase in the number of secrets, because of Operation Steel and the war that followed.
Men's basketball coach Roy Williams tries to fill the remaining scholarship available with a 6-foot-10 center from California. If Kansas signs him, he will round out the nation's second-best recruiting class.
The government's effectiveness at keeping secrets during the war brought a letter of praise from President Bush, a former CIA director who also said it was important that the government operate out in the open.
Subcommittee may recommend restoring money for program
See story Page 13
TOPEKA — The Career Work Study Program that was killed by a House subcommittee last month could be brought back to life.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R.-Lawrence, said that he and State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, would recommend that more than $450,000 be put back into the program. Winter and Gaines compose a subcommittee that reviewed Board of Regents fiscal 1992 requests.
Kansan staff writer
By Joe Gose
Although the amount still would reflect a 2.8 percent cut of program financing last year, Winter said that 97.4 percent was better than nothing.
"I tried to get 100 percent returned to the program, but Senator Gaines
would not go for that," he said. "So I suggested that we cut it the same percentage we're cutting general fund spending, 2.6 percent. It was totally wrong to be cutting that whole program."
The program pays half the salaries of students who work for companies off campus, and the employers pick up the other half.
Winter said the request would be made today before the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
Julie Cooper, who works at the office of student financial aid, said that 65 employers participated in the year and hired about 128 KU students.
Cooper said that everyone in the program was uncertain what would
'I tried to get 100 percent returned to the program, but Senator Gaines would not go for that. So I suggested that we cut it the same percentage we're cutting general fund spending, 2.6 percent. It was totally wrong to be cutting that whole program.'
happen when it was announced the program had been terminated.
- Wint Winter Jr.
State Sen., R-Lawrence
"We had several employers call and ask what they could do," she said. "We suggested they talk to theirators and express their concerns."
that program."
The Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets, employs four students through the program.
"We've had a lot of concerned students call as well. They depend on
Lisa Marie Rousseau, education program director for the center, said that without the program the center is understaffed. On the number of students it hired
David Lambertson, a diplomat-in-residence at the University of Kansas, rides to school every day on a black 600 cc Yamaha motorcycle. He may be the next U.S. ambassador to Thailand.
See story Page 10
2
Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
Sunny Day
TODAY
Partly Cloudy
HI:69°
LO:50°
56/45
62/49
64/43
66/39
77/57
76/56
77/71
Kansas Forecast
Clouds in the morning will give way to sunshine in the afternoon. This weekend should be unseasonally warm with a chance for thunderstorms Sunday.
Salina 70/45 KC
Dodge City 69/47
69/45 Wichita
71/47
3-day Forecast
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Friday - Sunny and mild. High 76/ Low 50.
Saturday- Sunny and warm again. High 82/ Low 53.
Sunday - Chance for thunderstorms. High 85/ Low 56.
forecast by Jeff Marion
Temperatures are today's nights and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-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 Kansas, 118
Stairster Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA6045
Dickinson
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23rd & IOWA 841-8600
$300 PRIME TIMER SHOW *
SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME
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5:00, 7:15, 9:35
IF LOOKS COULD KILL (P-13)
4:40. 7:05. 9:30
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4-45, 7-10, 9-20
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4:50 7:00 9:25
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SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
SAT, SUN 2:15
EVE 4:45, 7:15, 9:45
PYRAMID
Pyramid would like to thank all of our customers for making us #1. We appreciate your bizz!
The Etc. Shop
TM 723 Mass 843-0611
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By the way, we are open for lunch and we now serve Colombo Frozen Yogurt.
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This is our bold border ad. Did we catch your attention? Good! Are you hungry? Good. Today is "Thrify Thursday" at Pyramid Pizza. Yumm!
TEENAGE MUTANT
TEENAGE NURSING TIPS (NPG)
TIFE 5.1/5.20 3:15, 3:15, 3:15
REVERSAL OF FORTUNE (RF) FIE 7.1/5.20 7:15, 7:15
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SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
CINEMA TWIN
Solve your moving hassles!
- **Sturdy moving and storage boxes**
- **Boxes with handles for easier moving**
- **Large quantities at discount prices**
- **Small quantities - walk-ins welcome**
842-3232
MOVING?
Let
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"
Lawrence Paper Company
Ask for Sales/Service Dept.
642
Mass.
LIBERTY
HALL
748-
1912
LIBERTY HALL
642 Mass
749-1912
CYRANO
DE BERGERAC
TODAY 5:30, 8:30
FRIDAY 3:45, 6:45, 9:30
MR. & MRS. BRIDGE
A MERCHANT'S TOUR FUN!
LAST DAY 5:30, 8:30
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the nasty girl
TOMMORROW
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STUDENTS WORK ABROAD
Work up to 6 months in Britain, Ireland,
France, Germany, Japan, New Zealand,
and Costa Rica Council in World Affairs Pro-
gram. Apply online at www.costa-rica.org.
In the U.S., send resume to the U.S.
Call for FREE brochures on work programs, discount air fares, language courses, and more.
Racist act spurs jury to convict
Council on Int'l Educational Exchange
(II) SSCN with the Int'l Student (I) D. Candi
CouncilTravel
Chicago, IL 312-951-0585
Evanston, IL 708-475-5070
Kansan staff report
A Douglas County District Court jury convicted an Independence, Mo. man of conspiring to commit criminal damage to property.
Michael Bittle, a former Imperial Grand Cyclops of the Knights of the Klu Xuk Klan, was sentenced Monday to 30 days in jail for spraying liquid onto a museum art Museum. The penalty was the maximum for the misdemeanor.
District Court Judge Mike Malone said Bittle's act was designed to incense and to hurt people
Assistant District Attorney Frank Diehl said the community would not tolerate acts that promoted prejudice and fear in the community.
A witness, Cynthia M. Sallee of Kansas City, said that Bittle had targeted the museum after reading a book by African-American women.
Escapee from Kansas prison found in LA
KANASAN CITY, Mo — Los Angeles police officers have arrested a Kansas City man whose escape from the apartment building days, a U.S. marshal said yesterday.
Steven D. Baker, 24, remains in the custody of the Los Angeles Police Department, said Kent Pekarek, a U.S. marshal for Kansas.
Baker, who was awaiting sentencing on federal drug charges in the Dickinson County Jail in Abilene, saved his way out of the jail with a smuggled hacksaw blade Feb. 18. He didn't discover he was gone until Feb. 26.
Baker fled on foot to the eastern Utah desert, where he was arrested a week after his escape. But Utah authorities released him on bail before they realized he was an escapee.
Pekarek said that more than 40 officers sealed off a two-block area of downtown Hollywood, Calif., early Tuesday after the Los Angeles fugitive squad received a tip that Baker had been living in their jurisdiction for about a month. The officers searched with helicopters and police dogs for two hours before capturing Baker, he said.
Baker will be turned over to U.S. marshals and returned to Missouri to face sentencing on drug convictions, Pekarek said.
HAMBURGERS
Quickies
FRIES & DRINKS SM
KLZR/106 DAY
Thursday Only
10:30 a.m.-11 p.m.
¼ lb. Burger &
16 oz. Jello k $1.06
Lawrence St. only 701 W. 23rd
HAMBURGERS
Quickies
FRIES & DRINKS
Police report
A Lawrence woman reported at
2:33 a.m. yesterday that she was
harassed by a man by telephone,
Lawrence police reported.
Padlocks were broken and storage units were entered Monday or Tuesday at Edmonds Storage, 1710 Bluff Road. Supposed to be exported. The units entree were errupted.
■ A KU student was threatened by a man with a stun gun at 10:55 p.m. Monday in the 2400 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ An unidentified suspect poured parked car between us at 10:55 p.m. Monday
A man attempted to take a plastic Jayhawk cup, valued at $2. at 1:01 a.m. Tuesday from Dillons, 1015 W. St. Lawrence, Police reported
A patron and an employee were consuming liquor during prohibited hours at a bar in the 500 block of Third Street, Lawrence police
A resident assistant observed fireworks coming from a window at Ewells Hall at 4:45 a.m. Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
Announcement
and 5:30 a.m. Tuesday in the 300 block of Kansas Street, Lawrence police reported.
until 4 p.m. Monday at 200 Stauffer-
Flint Hall. Interviews will begin at
3:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Applications for both summer and fall business manager of the University Daily Kansan will be accepted
On campus
KU Democrats will meet at 8 tonight at Alceo D in the Kansas Union.
School of Education Student Organization will conduct officer elections at 9 a.m. at 117 Hallay Hall and meet at 6:30 p.m at 547 Foster Street
African Affairs Student Association will conduct a panel discussion on the Africans and the Diaspora at 7 tonight at Parlor A and B in the
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
■ Foreign Student Services will have an "Immigration Issues" workshop at 3:30 p.m. at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union
The department of political science will have an informational meeting on internships for Spring 1992 in Washington, D.C., and Topeka at 7 tonight at the Centennial Room in the Karsas Union.
Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union
KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at Alceve D in the Kansas Union.
Baptist Student Union will have bible study, worship and singing at 6:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center.
■ KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. at Alceve B in the Kansas University
Champions Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Kansas Union.
Nihon Club will meet at 1 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Triathletes will have a group bicycle ride at 4 p.m. Those interested should meet at 4 p.m. of Wescoe Hall.
Amnesty International will condeut a letter-writing session at 4 p.m. at Alcove in the Kansas Union.
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636 Massachusetts 843-4555
Open Mon.-Sat 11-midnight, Sun 12-11
■ KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alceve C in the Kansas Union
■ The Episcopal Canterbury House will celebrate the Holy Eucharist at noon at Danforth Chapel.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will conduct its weekly open meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 4, 1991
Campus/Area
3
Number of residency applications may double
Tuition increase may cause more to seek residency status
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
A proposed 28 percent increase in tuition for out-of-state students could cause a boost in Greg Frost's workload.
Frost, assistant to the University Registrar, reviews student applications for residency.
In Spring 1991, there were 508 applications for residency at the University of Kansas, he said.
"With the increase in tuition, there could be the possibility that it could double." Frost said.
Although the increase has only been proposed, he has received up to 16 calls a day on the University answering machine. J-Talk, with questions concerning residency status.
Tuition increases can cause concern among students and their parents, he said. Some parents will often to gain residence to cut costs.
Frost suggested that interested students should begin early in their college career because gaining residency was not simple.
One of the more difficult guidelines is establishing physical residency for one year.
"The year has to come before they start classes," Frost said.
"When they come back, the residency clock starts all over again," he said.
But many students do not realize that they must stay in Kansas for 12 months. Many go to their parents' the three-month summer vacation.
In cases of divorce, the situation varies slightly
"The parent here in Kansas will have to pay the preponderance of the child's support," he said.
If Frost refuses an application, the student may appeal the decision through an appeals committee appointed by the vice vice president for student affairs.
The student has 30 days to file the appeal. The last resort for students is
Frost said students paid out-of-state tuition if income sources were not from Kansas sources, including parents if they did not live in Kansas.
'When they come back, the residency clock starts all over again.'
assistant to the University Registrar
to take the issue to court. The University does not have any cases pending now, he said.
Frost said some students received in-state residency if they meet requirements such as graduating from a Kansas high school. But to qualify for in-state enrollment at KU, if not, they must reapply for residency status.
"After a year or so, we filed for residency," she said.
Gina Balandon, Lawrence junior,
gained residency when her father
moved to Kansas City, Kan., two
years ago.
Balandron said she had checked into the possibility before but had never bothered filing
Her mother, who lives in Colorado, claimed her as a dependant on her
"I'm his dependant now, so that made a difference," Balandron said.
taxes, but that was changed when her father moved to Kansas City.
Jeff Reib, Tulsa, Okla., freshman now is paying non-resident tuition. He said the boost in tuition would be rough.
"But I am looking into trying to get residency," he said.
Frost said interested students could pick up applications in the office of student records in Strong Hall.
Students interested in gaining residency status for Fall 1991 should apply before June or July. Students interested in gaining status for the summer should apply before April or May.
Primary Guidelines
Regents Requirements for Resident Status
1. continuous presence in Kansas when not enrolled as a student;
2. employment in Kansas;
3. payment of Kansas state income taxes;
4. reliance on Kansas sources for financial support;
5. commitments to an educational program which indicates an intent to remain permanently in Kansas;
6. acceptance of an offer of permanent employment in Kansas;
7. admission to a licensed practicing profession in Kansas; or
8 ownership of a home in Kansas.
Secondary Guidelines
1. voting or registration for voting in Kansas;
2. employment in any position normally filled by a student:
3. lease of living quarters in Kansas
4. a statement of intention to acquire residence in Kansas;
5. residence in Kansas of the student's spouse;
6. vehicle registration in Kansas
7. acquisition of a Kansas driver's license:
8. payment of Kansas personal property taxes; or 9. continuous enrollment in a post-secondary educational institution in Kansas.
8. payment of Kansas
Pulitzer-winning poet to read works at KU
Make a Interchange KANAGI
By Patricia Roias
Kansan staff writer
JACKSON COOK
Everyone is a poet, says Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks.
"Now, of course, severe critics will hop on for me saying that," she said, smiling. "But what I mean is that you all have ideas and can argue with each other as capable of being angry, of being exhilarated, of being anguished
"The difference is that I go to the trouble of putting my feelings and thoughts down on paper, and I work with that expression."
people's poet and a reporter.
Brooks, 73, was at the Oread Bookstore yesterday signing books. Her two-day visit to the University of Kansas will culminate with a poetry reading at 7:30 to night at Hoch Auditorium.
Brooks was born in Topeka but grew up in Chicago. She said growing up in Chicago played an important role in her development as a poet.
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Gwendolyn Brooks, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, signs a collection of poems for Andrea Lee, Kansas City, Mo., junior, during a book-signed session at the Oread Bookstore in the Kansas Union.
She said she observed everyday life, took notes and then reported her findings.
"I'm glad that I was raised in Chicago," Brooks said. "I've often wondered how I would have turned it over if I had grown up in Topeka."
These problems inspired Brooks, who describes herself as a
Growing up in a big city exposed her to community problems that she probably would not have encountered otherwise, she said.
She said that the Topeka she knew as a child was a clean town with neighborhoods where people were close to one another.
Besides poetry, rap music is a kind of expression Brooks enjoys.
"There is a lot of it, in all seriousness, that I think has life and is worthy of respect," she said.
Brooks said she planned to write rap this summer in Chicago.
Summer, however, is not the only time that Brooks spends on her writing.
"July and August, I'll be home," she said. "I'll hardly go out of the door. That's the way I live every summer."
"There isn't a day that I don't cover a lot of paper with notes and impressions of what's happened that day," she said.
The main project Brooks has planned for the summer is the continuation of her book "Children Coming Home."
"It's going to be about a class of elementary school children being dismissed from their class, going to their various homes, where they encounter different kinds of lives," she said.
Brooks said that while some children found joy at home, others found pain, drugs, illness and insanity, among other things.
"I'm very much interested in what's happening to children these days," she said.
awards for her poetry.
Brooks has earned more than 70
awards for her poetry.
"Awards are wonderful, but what is really important is your work," she said.
Commission approves juvenile-supervision program
Bv Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
In an effort to cope with an increasing number of local juvenile offenders, Douglas County Commissioners last night approved measures to obtain state financing for an expanded county attendant-care program.
The commission approved contracts with both Social and Rehabilitation Services and The Shelter Inc. services, including with juvenile intake services, with juvenile intake services.
According to the contracts, Douglas County would pay attendants from The Shelter Inc. to supervise juvenile offenders and other children in need of care. SRS would reimburse the county.
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said that the expanded service would begin as soon as SRS approved the arrangement.
room in the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement building, provides supervision for a maximum of six hours, McKenzie said.
Judy Culley, the executive director of The Shelter Inc., said that a surge in the number of children needing supervision made a larger service demand. The number were placed in attendant care monthly. The number has now
"You can hardly call it an attendant care service," he said. "It's very informal."
He said it would take about a month to process the contract.
The present attendant care service, which operates out of a break
increased to about 30 children, she said.
"Last fall there was a huge number of kids going through who would need attendant care," she said. "Douglas County has grown, and all of the crime statistics have shot up. We decided we really needed to develop attendant care on a full-blown basis."
Since 1986, The Shelter Inc. has assisted the county with juvenile intake services, in which juvenile offenders are screened to determine
where they should be placed. Alternatives to attendant care services are The Shelter Inc. or placement with relatives or a foster family.
Attendant care is the only service that provides one-to-one supervision, Culley said.
The new service will move to a room in the basement of the Judicial and Law Enforcement building and will provide recreational services and supervision for up to 24 hours, Culley said.
Senate uses last session to wrap up loose ends
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
In its final legislative meeting last night, Student Senate passed two resolutions, approved six bills totaling $12.976 and elected student representatives to University Council.
Two bills will provide financing for activities sponsored by Black Men of Today and the Native American Society Association during the weekend of April 20.
Senate allocated $4,698 for the Native American Student Association's powwow and $4,500 for a forum organized by Black Men of Today.
Senate also allocated $2,391 to provide free films for students during [08]
Art on the Boulevard, an annual event, is scheduled for April 24. Senate allotted $779 for the event - $300 less than it cost last year.
Alan Lowden, University Affairs Committee chairperson, said the service provided by Secure Cab needed to be advertised. Senate members that would provide $180 to pay for 10,000 sticker promoters Secure Cab.
The stickers are supposed to be placed on student identification cards during fall fee payment.
Culture Shock now has enough money to print a final issue. Senate allocated $10 so that the magazine's staff could produce an April/May issue.
Senate also set $300 aside to finance the mailing of registration forms to all student organizations on campus for next year.
In other action, Senate adopted a resolution charging next year's Senate to look at ways to solve the child-care issue at the University.
Senate also elected student members of next year's University Council. Undergraduate members include Roger Ross, Jason McIntosh, Leslie Hartwick, Greg Hughes, Korey Hartwick, Giles Smith and Troy Radakovic.
Graduate members include Alice Kuo and Kenny Kincaid.
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4
Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Final Four chaos
Administration's underestimating the situation student drunkenness contribute to the problem
Saturday night after KU's victory against North Carolina, a man was thrown six feet into the air and dropped head first on the pavement in front of Wescoe Hall.
These were just a few of the incidents that kept police and hospitals busy when thousands of people stormed Jayhawk Boulevard.
And Monday night, after KU's loss to Duke a woman's head was cut open by a flying beer bottle.
It only took a few drunken individuals to ignite a dangerous and destructive mob mentality.
They danced on cars until the roofs caved in. They climbed trees, swinging on the branches until they broke. They set off fireworks in the middle of crowds. They three cans of beer and urinated on the grass in front of Strong Hall.
In all, the two-night party left more than 100 people injured and caused several thousand dollars of damage to University property.
It is great to support the basketball team
and have a good time celebrating with friends. But the scenes that took place on campus were out of hand. Luckily, no one was killed.
In addition to the drunken, reckless and immature behavior of students, the University also is to blame. The administration did not provide adequate facilities to accommodate the crowds or adequate numbers of police to keep the situation under control.
When the Jayhawks won in 1988, the atmosphere was jubilant but also less dangerous. The center of the celebration was in the parking lot in front of the Burge Union, providing adequate space and ensuring that there were fewer problems.
The trip to the Final Four is an event many of us never will forget. But let's hope students and University officials will learn from this year's situation.
Next time, maybe students can find a more positive and non-destructive way to channel their enthusiasm and school pride.
Stacy Smith for the editorial board
Media concocts story
U. S. citizens were treated last week to a fine case study of how controversies are sometimes concocted ex nihilo by the media.
This one involved Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, the charismatic commander of allied forces in the Persian Gulf, and President George Bush. To hear the media tell it, .Schwarzkopf, in his PBS documentary, publicly took exception to the timing of the president's decision to stop the route of Iraqi troops and suspend offensive operations.
Other Voices
The problem with that news account, as anyone who carefully watched the Frost interview will know, is that the general did no such thing. The next thing you heard was the president and Defense Secretary Richard Chappell, who has supported obsession with . . . Schwarzkopf took place when our forces stopped in the Iran desert.
At the end of the week, by this time no doubt having seen the full text of the general's remarks, President Bush clearly recognized that what should have been a non-story was blown out of proportion by an excited media fishing for
more exciting new leads, aided by unwitting government representatives who did not cover themselves in glory.
Is anybody interested in what Schwarzkopf actually told David Frost? Here, then. "Frankly, my recommendation had been, you know, continue the march. I mean, we had them in a rout and we could have continued to sweak great destruction on them. We could have completely closed the door and made it a battle of annihilation. And the president made the decision that we should stop at a given time, at a given place that did leave some escape routes open for them to get back out, and I think it was a very humane decision and a very courageous decision."
Does that sound like Patton, MacArthur, Singlau, waging a titanic quarrel with the president? Was any sort of cardinal rule broken? Far from it. Schwarzkopf's comments were a perfectly appropriate answer, framed in that combination of frankness and for which he is now famous, to a. . . journalist's historical inquiry.
- From the Orange County (Calif.)
Register.
A chief concern of the working poor is health care.
Healthy Start helps
Those with jobs that offer little in the way of wages and benefits, and who do not qualify for Medicaid, do not get the kind of preventive care necessary to keep themselves and their children healthy.
Fortunately, help is available. A federal program called Healthy Start extends Medicaid benefits to the working poor. It provides pre-pregnancy care for birth and health care following birth and health care for children up to age 6.
Healthy Start can help make sure that babies are born healthy and that they stay healthy. By providing the care that can prevent future illnesses and health problems, parents also can save money down the road.
Some families may not know about the program; others may not want to apply because of the "well-organized" trauma associated with such programs.
But ignorance and pride won't help an underweight baby or cure a 4-year-old's measles. Only proper health care will.
From the Milwaukee Sentinel.
FLAXMAN University Daily Kansan
REESSIN
GEEZ PAT, YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE PRESIDENT TO KNOW THAT IT SAYS "RECOVERY".
REESSIN
Being a 'Black Woman Poet' is not a problem for Brooks
Gwendolyn Brooks is a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who has served as Poet-in-Residence at the Library of Congress and is Poet Laureate for Illinois.
What she is really excited about now, however, is her new Chicago co-op that she recently has finished signing papers on. With a list of achievements as long as hers, I expected some lofty literary figure who spoke with a fluttering Old English accent and used sweeping arm movements to emphasize her points.
The person I met, however, was a wide-eyed, 73-year-old woman who spoke with energy and clarity.
Brooks stated that both her skin color and sex had not caused any problems at all except in the minds of others.
"There is this group I call the Capital "" critics," Brooks said. "They believe that if you are Black
We sat in her hotel lobby discussing everything from African-American history in our schools to the various flavors of Celestial teas on the market. When asked what she thought about the complexities of being both a Black person and a woman poet she said, "I’m often asked ‘What’s more important to you: being a Black poet or just a poet?’ and answer it, “Is I was back when I was a poet and before I became aware of my womanhood. I don’t sit down at the table with a pen and paper and say to myself ‘I am a Black Woman Poet. Now, let’s begin to write!’”
Matt
Walsh
Staff columnist
you shouldn't make any note of it at all. I think that is ridiculous, that's what you ought to write about!"
Her racial pride and allegiance to truth were two predominant themes in our discussion. Brooks once called her "a preoccupation and a commitment."
She has said, "I see no point in picking up pen and paper unless you are going to tell the truth."
"Remember," she said, "poetry is life distilled."
Brooks supports her words with her actions.
She conducts workshops across the country, teaching and molding young writers. Some young writers have gained more than Brooks' wisdom. She has donated money to numerous schools for prizes in an effort to encourage young writers. All money comes from Brooks' own pocketbook.
Brooks has received only $2,500 as her highest cash award — for the Guggenheim fellowships.
"Now, they give $10,000!" Brooks screamed in feigned agony. Despite her fairly low income, she continues to be generous.
"I feel it's my responsibility to do what I can to help young people," Brooks said.
Brooks' livelihood now comes from her appearances across the country
She said, "It's not really a job, though. I put my whole heart into doing it. I love it. I feel as though I want to have conversation with the audience."
Sometimes her conversations are not nearly so one-sided.
"At times, the speech I'm giving is met with approval and they do this 'Rah, rah, rah' thing," she said.
That "Hah, rah, rah thing" is Arsenio Hall's trademark cheer. Seeing Gwendolyn Brooks mimic the name of her favorite worth next month's co-op payment.
The subjects of Brooks' poetry are as varied as the actions in the world around her.
"I don't think in terms of writing about what's big in the news. I care about what happens in South Africa and the Persian Gulf, but I also care about what's going on in the Senate this week," she said in the back of my house." she said.
In a poem about apartheid, Brooks omitted punctuation at the end. She said she left it out because there was no ending at the end of the final situation.
Today, Brooks is scheduled to meet with members of a delegation from the Legislature in her hometown, Topeka. At 7:30 p.m. she will read from her works at Hoch Auditorium. She will not but the experience will be priceless.
Matt Walsh is an Emporia freshman majoring in journalism.
Environmental consciousness declines as apathy reappears
W as anyone aware that this past week was Recycling Awareness Week?
Apathy has settled in, and the United States is losing a battle that it seemed on its way to win when Earth Day turned 20 years old last April. It seemed to be the height of Revolution in the United States.
Environmental consciousness seemed to be at its zenith, and people had recycling and saving the rain forests on their minds.
The emergence of the United States as an environmental hegemony seemed to be near, and other countries were apt to follow our lead in bringing the world back from the end of it all.
Fernando Collier de mello, president of Brazil, even seemed about ready to let "his" rain forest stand and allow the world to breathe clearly. He now is being straightfoward about his environmental policies.
PETER ROGERS
Jeff
Meesey
Guest columnist
Elsewhere, with so much pressure o save the environment at every inn, grocery stores were collecting food waste and it was quite an audacious step.
These seem to be only token gestures now. Because of the U.S. malaise against the very idea of automation, there is much more to be done.
Every day, recycling centers are closing. This occurs because of a lack of resources, in the financial sense and in the sense that they have no recyclable products coming in for conversion.
Until the government realizes that recycling centers are invaluable weapons against over-loaded land-fills, regardless of their profitability, recyclable garbage will continue to be recycled with the non-recyclable garbage.
Subsidizing an unprofitable agency is nothing new for the government so why should it not dabble in this area as well?
But all the money in the world will not make recycling happen, and that is where laws should come in. If the laws are implemented, it should be required to do so.
Certainly dissenters will argue that it is their God-given right to throw away newspapers and aluminum instead of recycling. It is an invasion of their privacy, they say. At the same time, they want their trash taken away twice a week so they never have to see it again. But what happens when the trash does not have anywhere to go?
'Even the most simple tasks seem too much for some people. They cannot bring themselves to recycle.'
Landfills are filling up Just like the garbage barge that sailed the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, these people will have smelly garbage trucks circling their neighborhoods because the driver will have nowhere to dump the unwanted cargo.
Incidentally, at the rate garbage is being dumped, the existing landfills will be full in five to 10 years. No one will want one in their backyards, so what will we do with all this garbage?
New landfills could be built, and we could just ignore the fact that they are so consummately putrid; however, nothing could be further from the obvious — certainly unavoidable — solution of recycling.
solution in recycling.
Even now there are recycling programs in cities that require only that participants place all their recyclables into the same bag. Nothing could be simpler. No longer does each recyclable need be separated from the other recyclables, but only separated from the "bad" trash.
Even the most simple tasks seem too much for some people. They cannot bring themselves to recycle. There is reluctance to recycle, partly because of a stigma, which encumbers people's actions; but chiefly because of utter laziness, which paralyzes people's action.
The more philosophical dissenters have a different argument. Because matter neither can be created nor destroyed, they say, garbage in any form, be it paper or glass and adobe in another form, the existing matter. What has changed is its basic form, not its constituent parts. For this reason, their misguided argument concludes, it is not bad for the environment to reclaim these types of products in a landfill.
These claimants ignore the fact that even the most sophisticated landfills do not degrade garbage as they theoretically are supposed to do. Oxygen, the main decomposing agent, is absent below the surface, so they have been found intact at the bottom of landfills, put there 40 years ago. Obviously this is not what the designers of the landfills intended.
It is not enough to be zealously enthralled by a fad such as environmental awareness. Malaisie in the United States occurs when the newness years off or when it seems that money will be needed for solutions. U.S. attention span, like that of a 2-year-old, is short. There are crises at hand that merit "rediscovery" and prolonged concern
Jeffrey Meesey is a St. Louis junior majoring in journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON Editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
TOM FRLEN
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
Editors
Editors
News. Melanie Matthes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wehbe
Editorial. Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Carmen Drexlton
Planning. Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus. Jennifer Reynolds Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Paint. John Salker Production mgrs. Rich Harbarger
Sports. Ann Sommermal Richarbagger
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Ebinbard
Graphics. Graphics Unterberg Creative director. Cehia Hahs
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Letters should be typed, double-sided 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-sided and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Staffier-Fin Hall.
LAST WEEK, I GOT HIT ON THE HEAD BY A FRISBEE!
THOSE FRISBEE TOSSEERS ARE A MENACE TO SOCIETY!
I THINK YOU'RE OVERREACTING!
Scientists say there's something soothing about watching a round object sail effectlessly through the air!
THOSE WHO TOSS FRISBEE ARE SIMPLE ENGAGED IN A PLEASANT LEISURE TIME ACTIVITY!
SO WHAT IF THEY'RE NOT ADDRESSING THE GREAT ISSUES OF THE DAY?
THEY'RE NOT HURTING ANYONE!
THEY'RE SAFE! THEY'RE HARMLESS!
THEY'RE...
WHIZ-Z-Z
THWACK!
THEY'RE A MENACE TO SOCIETY!
Business staff
Campus sales mgr...Sophie Wehbe
Regional sales mgr...Carmen Dresch
National sales mgr...Jennifer Claxton
Co-op sales mgr...Christine Musser
Production mgrs...Rich Harshbarger,
Kebi Stander
Marketing director...Gail Einbinder
Creative director...Christy Hahs
Classified manager...Kim Crowder
yo!
HEADS UP,
DUDE!
Sketch
THE AIR!
TWO DAYS
THOSE WHO TOSS FRISBEES ARE
SIMPLY ENGAGED IN A PLEASANT,
LEISURE TIME ACTIVITY!
SO WHAT IF THEY'RE NOT ADDRESSING
THE GREAT ISSUES OF THE DAY?
THEY'RE NOT HURTING ANYONE!
THEY'RE SAFE! THEY'RE HARMLESS!
THEY'RE...
yo!
HEADS UP,
DUDE!
by David Rosenfield
WHIZ-Z-Z
THWACK!
THEY'RE A MENACE
TO SOCIETY!
↓
THEY'RE A MENACE TO SOCIETY!
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 4, 1991
5
Minority recruit problem attributed to lack of funds
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
African-American students at KU attribute the minute increase in Black enrollment this year to inefficiency and retention of minority students.
This is the first year in five years that African-American enrollment has increased. There was an increase of two African-American students in Fall 1990 and an increase of one in Spring 1991.
Steve Byrd, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said that many African-American students who wanted to pursue a college education could not do so because of limited resources for tuition, aid at the University of Kansas.
"It makes me feel guilty that I'm in debt," Byrd said, referring to the loans he has had to take out to pay for his education.
He said that job opportunities on campus and in Lawrence were limi-
Cory Anderson, executive board member of Black Men of Today, said that KU's financial aid process be more accessible to students.
Moreover, African-American student organizations are not being notified to help recruit with African-American students are visiting KU, Anderson said.
African-American Enrollment at KU for the Last Four Years
1987 1988 1989 1990 1991
Spring Semesters: 745 679 627 607 608
Fall Semesters: 716 675 642 644 N/A
Edith Guffey, associate director of the office of admissions, said she did not know why Black Men of Today
Melissa Unterberg/KANSAN
had not been notified about efforts to bring minority students to KU.
"I have no doubt whatsoever that this office is committed to recruiting minority students," she said.
John Lewis, executive board member of Black Men of Today, was concerned that the office of minority affairs' programs did not have the money it needed to carry out its recruitment and retention programs.
"The office can't operate effectively without any money," said Lewis said. "How can Dr. Thompson progress without any money?"
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, agreed.
"The budget I have right now is grossly inadequate;" he said.
Thompson said the budget, however, was allotted before he took over as director this semester.
budget," he said. "I haven't had the opportunity to design my own budget."
Thompson said he would be working this month with the administration for a new budget that would allow the office to carry out its recruitment and retention programs for minority students.
"At the present time I inherited a
"The KU administration needs to expand their original definition of the office of minority affairs," he said. "I have been very pleased with the verbal commitment I have received from them."
W. Wes Williams, dean of educational services, said he was pleased with the effort being made for minority recruitment at KU. However, he said he recognized a need for improvement.
"The numbers are not as encouraging as we hoped they would be," Williams said.
Signs of spring bring allergies
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
By Amy Francis
But they are also signs that people will be heading to their medicine cabinets for relief from allergies.
Flowers are blooming. The sounds of lawn mowers are in the air. These are some of the signs of spring.
"The spring right now is a time when many people have allergies," said Marcia Ranson, office manager for the Topea Allergy and Asthma Clinic. "There are a lot of different types of symptoms."
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that some of the more common symptoms of an allergy to mold or grass were itchy, red eyes, a runny nose and sneezing.
A person can be born with an allergy or it can develop at any time, Yockey said.
"The main thing is not to contuse the common cold with allergies," he said. "It's an immunologic reaction in your body to a foreign protein."
"Usually, you grow out of the allergy." he said.
Ronald Weiner, Lawrence asthma and allergy specialist, said that the best way a person could relieve allergy symptoms was to stay away from whatever was causing the allergy but that if it was something as common as grass, that could be difficult.
If a person cannot avoid the allergen, over-the-counter medication is available. he said.
"It's totally reasonable to try over-the-counter antihistamines," Weiner said.
But he warms people to avoid the use of over-the counter allergy relief products.
Vockey said that the spray would give instant relief but that if used for more than two or three days, the spray could become addictive. A person's nasal passages become swollen to the point that a person cannot breathe unless the spray is used.
"The prescription nose sprays are very safe," he said.
A person also has the choice of having a physician prescribe medication. The medication usually lacks some of the side effects of over-the-counter medications such as drowsiness, Yockey said.
Allergy shots also are available, but they are for people who cannot get relief with medication or have severe allergic reactions.
It takes anywhere from six to 24 months for the shots to take effect, he
Weiner said people would have to go to their family doctor or an allergist to get a prescription for the shots.
“An allergy shot is building up a tolerance to what you're allergic to,” he said. “Allergy shots are a two-to four-year program.”
Watkins offers students allergy shots, but students must provide the medication. The allergy clinic is open Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Students should make a standing appointment for the semester for the shots to be administered.
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6
Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Kuwaiti officials say Iraqis took supplies
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY — Iraqi occupation forces commanded all of Kuwait's 120 amuclances and stole medical supplies ranging from children's milk to cadavers, senior medical officials said yesterday.
Hohmammed al-Jaralah, director of Kuwait City's Al-Sabah Hospital, said one Iraqi truck drove off with textbooks, computers and a driver.
He also said the Iraqis ordered that all the beds in the palace be sided for the soldier's soldiers.
Jaralah and five other health officials had a briefing to sum up the devastation inflicted on Kuwait during the seven-month occupation.
They expressed determination to restore the health system to its pre-invasion status, when it was considered among the best in the Middle East.
Mohammed Nukhaailan, national
director of medical supplies, said the Iraqis shipped virtually all stocks of medicine to Iraq, including antibiotics and milk formula for children. The company also从 private pharmacies and government storerooms, he said.
Homammed al-Shrhan, director of emergency medical services, said all his agencies' ambulances had been commandeered by Jan. 1.
Sulaiman al-Ali, director of Farwaniya Hospital, said officials of Iraq's medical schools in Baghdad and Basra at one point squabbled over who would get 25 cadavers from Kuwait.
The Kuwaiti doctors released a chart comparing the number of deaths in Kuwait facilities of the Gulf oil capped before and after the invasion.
There were 11 deaths in the seven months before the Aug. 2 invasion, and 87 from August through December, according to the chart.
Copy of 'Declaration hid behind $4 painting
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A pristine copy of the Declaration of Independence printed on July 4, 1776, was discovered tucked behind a paint-stained market and may fetch more than $1 million, an auction house says.
A Philadelphia financial analyst bought the old, torn painting of a country scene two summers ago in Adamstown, Pa., because he liked the wood frame, said David Redden, vice president of Sotheby's, which authenticated the document.
When the man removed the painting, the frame fell apart and he found a folded-up document, Redden said.
"When we discussed the value, he was completely stunned," Redden said.
Sotheby's estimated the copy to be worth anywhere from $800,000
to $1.2 million. The auction house will offer it for sale June 4. In January 1990, another copy of the book was sold for a record $1.2 million.
The owner wishes to remain anonymous and turned down an interview request relayed by Sothebys.
"Here was the most important single printed page in the world in the most spectacularly beautiful condition," said Redden. "It took one second to know it was right. But what really astonished us was the condition — so fresh, so clean."
Redden said the document was one of 24 known surviving copies of the Declaration of Independence made by a Philadelphia printer, John Dunlap, on the day the Continental Congress adopted the declaration.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 4, 1991
7
World briefs
Tokyo
Activists want reactor closed
With Japan's nuclear power industry and protest movement both on the rise, five activists yesterday filed the nation's first petition calling the shutdown of an operating reactor.
The suit comes less than two months after Japan's worst nuclear plant accident, which was followed by breakdowns and safety disclosures at five other plants.
Japan obtains 26.6 percent of its electricity from nuclear power, and the government expects that figure to reach about 35 percent by 1995.
The lawsuit in Tokyo District Court demands that Tokyo Electric Power Co. stop its No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima Nuclear Site in the northern Japan to protect the safety of residents.
Bangkok. Thailand
MIA inquiry begins in Laos
U. S. and Laotian officials yesterday began investigating the失踪 of U.S. citizens missing from the war in Indochina who were last reported alive in Laos, the U.S. Embassy
An embassy representative, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the inquiry was prompted by an incident.
The current investigation centers on so-called discrepancy cases, in which U.S. officials said the Laotians should have information. The cases include airmen who were known to have survived crashes but were never heard from again.
As of March 5, the Pentagon listed 2,282 U.S. citizens as missing in action from the war, which ended in 1975 with communist victories in Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia. The United States also missed in Vietnam, 528 in Laos, 83 in Cambodia and aix in China's coastal waters.
U. S. officials said they had no evidence that any of the missing U.S. citizens were dead. The high court decided to have been killed, in some cases by civilians enraged by the aerial bombardment.
From The Associated Press
Salvadoran rebels part of talks Guerrillas will participate in U.N.-mediated negotiations
The Associated Press
SANTA MARTA, El Salvador — For the first time, rebel commanders have come down from the mountains under international protection to take part in U.N.-mediated peace talks.
"We are at a crucial moment that could end the war," guerrilla commander Raul Hercules said, speaking of the potentially decisive round of combat. "It was a tense time, we're scheduled to begin news, in Mexico."
"Conditions exist for negotiations, and the people can't stand more war," he said.
The presence of Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, field commanders at the talks means that detailed negotiations on the mechanics of a cease-fire are on the agenda.
Hercules spoke to reporters late Tuesday after arriving at the isolated hamlet of Santa Marta, 56 miles northeast of the capital, San Salvador, in Cabanas province.
He and another commander, Jorge Mellez, who was picked up in Morazan province. He escaped to Cordoba, where he died.
representatives of the United Nations and the ambassadors of Venezuela, Colombia, Spain and Mexico.
Two other commanders taking part in the talks left the country earlier.
"We're going as FMLN military experts, but that doesn't mean we can't contribute to other aspects of the meeting." Hercules said.
Territorial control is a key issue in the cease-fire proposal now being negotiated. The proposal would confine the government and rebel armies to their respective zones of
"We aren't going to secede anything we contend with. He's not going to be without it." But neither is Johnny on his territory, control
Church, government, rebel and U.N. officials all have expressed optimism that the new talks could end a war that has claimed at least 75,000 lives.
"Both sides are eager to overcome road-
traffic and move on to Soto told The
Associated Press this week.
"I'm almost certain that this year will be the
year of peace." Col. Innocente Montano, vice minister of public security, said recently.
The negotiators face a deadline. Constitutional reforms would be a key part of any peace accord and two successive National Assemblies must approve any reforms.
The current assembly's three-year term expires at the end of May. If it does not act on reforms, the next two assemblies would have to and that could mean a three-year wait for real peace between the rebels and the U.S.-backed right-wing government.
The good showing by opposition parties in the March assembly elections — the first given legitimacy by the rebels — has given momentum to the peace effort.
Sources close to the talks said the new round could last weeks.
Meanwhile, some fighting continues. The Honduran government said Tuesday that an MILN attack on a Salvadran border post at El Poy, 60 miles north of San Salvador, left one Salvadron officer dead and forced nine others to flee into Honduras.
Soviet Union modifies exchange rate to combat black market conversions
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union yielded to black-market pressure yesterday, offering more than four times more rubles for a dollar on a key exchange rate and pushing the Soviet economy over the threshold.
The change in the foreign exchange rate for tourists was a tacit admission that many travelers and Soviets are bypassing the state bank in search of better deals, depriving Kremlin coffers of badly needed hard currency.
Foreign currency exchange offices in Moscow were closed yesterday and employees besieged the Gosbank state bank for details of the sudden announcement. But one Western journalist reported changing money at the new rate in Kiev, the Ukrainian capital.
Soviets said the higher cost of buying dollars would prevent many from traveling outside their country. The exchange rate is up from 5.8 rubles a dollar to 27.6 rubles a dollar.
The new rate, which comes the same week as stiff price increases and a new 5-percent sales tax, is roughly the rate available on the black market rate. Whether the Black market rate would change
"Closed for technical reasons," said the sign at the Belgrade Hotel's currency exchange office. But on the wall was a chart giving new ruble rates for 20 different foreign currencies.
The ruble is all but worthless outside Soviet borders. Its artificially set rates and lack of convertibility have hampered Soviet efforts to join the world economy.
The artificial rates also have prompted a flourishing black market at nearly every tourist spot in the Soviet capital. Foreigners are asked to change money by some taxi drivers, who are often arrested. Arbat pedestrian mall and even inside a shop that sells Communist party posters.
The new "auction" or "market" exchange rate will change twice a week following currency auctions at the state bank beginning Tuesday, said Alexander Polyakov, a manager at the Vneshekombank, the government's foreign affairs bank.
This rate replaces the 18-month-old "tourist rate" of 5.8 rubles to the dollar available to tourists, foreigners living in the Soviet Union and Soviets needing money to travel abroad.
The starting rate of 27.6 rubles to the dollar was fixed following an initial auction Monday.
Oleg Mozhaiskov, head of the currency department at Gosbank, said, "We hope that it (the black market) will start to fade.
"I don't see why Soviets and foreigners should go to dubious dealers, taking risks and sometimes even risking their lives, rather than buy it or sell it for money or currency. The rate is not too bad, after all."
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Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Headmasters 808 Vargent 843-8888
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KU on Wheels Pass
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- Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
- You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
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Student will have to visit each individual vendor.
Kansas legislature is short balancing current budget
Group blames smaller revenue from tax for oil and gas
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - The amount of money the Consensus Revenue Estimating Group projects the state general fund will take in during the next 15 months was reduced yesterday by nearly $24 million.
The new estimate of general fund receipts reduced by $23.85 million the amount of money the Legislature will have available in putting together the state budget for the coming fiscal year.
A severe dip in the amount of revenue projected from the oil and gas sewerage tax caused the reduction in the volume made by the group last November.
Lawmakers already faced a lean budget year; with revenues now forecast to fall some $80 million short of the same level as the current fiscal year.
The group, made up of about a dozen state financial experts and university economists, meets twice a year to set revenue projections. The governor uses the November estimate to propose a budget in January and the Legislature uses the April estimate to pass a budget.
The estimators reduced by $26.7 million the amount of money the state now expects to collect from the severance tax the rest of this fiscal year and next fiscal year. They also reduced by $17 million the expected take from individual income taxes over the two fiscal years.
Other taxes, most notably corporation income taxes and compensating use taxes paid by banks and savings and loans, held the overall reduction to $23.85 million for the two fiscal years.
The group lowered the amount of money the state expects to take in during the final three months of the current fiscal year — April, May and June — and reduced the amount it expects to collect in fiscal 1992 by $22.87 million.
The reduction amounts to 0.5 of the total state revenue for the two fiscal years.
An aide, Mark Schmeller, said yesterday that Gov. Joan Finney would have no reaction to the report.
Most legislative leaders said the report could have been worse.
"It obviously would have been much more pleasant if that had been
a positive $23 million rather than a negative, but that doesn't break the bank," said Sien Gus Bogma, a Republican from Senate Ways and Measures Committee.
"We are very, very close to balancing the budget, and this will require some fine tuning," added Bogima to this slide. This "is a manageable amount."
Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, ranking Republican on House Appropriations, said she was pleased that most of the reduction came in the severance tax.
"I think that's fairly positive," she said. "It means they are anticipating that income and sales taxes are going to be pretty positive. I think Kansas has weathered most of the recession pretty well."
The big reduction in expected severance tax revenue came because the estimators last November projected an average price for crude oil in fiscal 1992 of $35 a barrel, but lowered to that of 2012年。它 also projected an amount of oil production from 58.5 million barrels to 52 million barrels.
New plan for tax relief gets approval in House
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A proposal to increase income taxes to pay for what supporters claim will lower the overall House approval yesterday and was sent to a skeptical Senate.
The House voted 64-61 to approve the bill, which would raise $119.6 million annually by raising income taxes. The money thus raised would be distributed to local school districts, and supporters say that it would enable those districts to avoid increasing their property tax levies.
The bill had relatively little support from Republicans, many of whom saw it merely as a method of increasing taxes to support state spending. The House's Democratic leaders, on the other hand, pass a significant milestone in the debate over property-tax relief.
'91 Kansas
Legislature
"You have to look at it as a very important vote," said speaker Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg. "Now, the Senate is going to have to decide whether it wants to deal with property taxes and taxes in general. The game shifts to the Senate."
The Senate has yet to debate a plan to increase taxes to finance property-tax relief this year. Both houses have rejected proposals to change tax rules and determine the value of different types of property for tax purposes.
The Senate's Republican leaders have said that there is growing opposition among party members to the idea of raising taxes.
BSU selects new leaders for 1991-92
Kansan staff report
Black Student Union elected its officers for the 1991-92 academic year last night at the university. All members attended the election.
The results were:
■ President — Shona Smith,
St. Louis sophomore.
Vice president — Darrin Johnson, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
■ Recording secretary — Natara Johnson, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore.
■ Corresponding secretary — Cassandra Turner, Lawrence junior.
■ Parliamentarian - Terrence Crumpton, Kansas City, Kan., junior.
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Next stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST. 8 a.m. May 19 for graduates and their families.
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Watch for our brochure in the mail. We'll call you in mid-April about the bankcard-or call First Bank Card Center at 800-222-7458.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 4, 1991
9
Spanish films to be shown
Latin America movie festival will offer glimpse of life there
By Sarah Davis Kansan staff writer
Life in Latin America will be brought to life on the big screen.
- But not in Hollywood.
During the month of April, anyone at the University of Kansas can participate in the Latin America film festival].
Nancy Chaison, secretary for the Center of Latin American Studies, which is sponsoring the event, said that showing movies would provide an in-depth look at certain aspects of life in Latin America.
"These films portray an immediate vision and artistic expression of Latin America," Chaison said. "We want to provide the U.S. viewing public with film others than those normally distributed by Hollywood. It's another view of Latin America outside of schoolbooks."
The eight movies, such as "The Mission," "Alsino and the Condo" and "Macunaimá," were filmed in
different Latin American countries and will be shown every Monday and Wednesday during the month. How-
*The Mission* "will be shown tonight.*
Chaisson said the center tried to hang in the office of films from different countries.
"We tried to give more visibility to film producers, directors and actors in Latin America," she said.
Some of the movies are in English, and some are subtitled.
Professors teaching various Latin American courses at KU selected the movies, which will be used in conjunction with their classes.
Chaison said the movies provided an additional slice of education combined with art.
"We wanted to provide that format for classes, and we also wanted to provide it for the general public," she said. "They're feature films, not movies."
sor of Spanish and Portuguese, selected the movie "Macuaima" but was not requiring his Portuguese language class to see it. However, he taught students an important for his students to because it showed the culture of Brazil.
Antonio Simoes, assistant profes
"It reflects an idea about what you would find in Brazil," he said. "It combines a number of aspects of the same time avoids stereotyping."
He said that he planned to see the film and that his students could learn a lot.
"It will help them with language and it could help with the culture, depending on how they understand it," he said.
All films are free and will be shown at 5 p.m. in Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall. More information about the films is available at the Center of Latin American Studies, 107 Lippincott Hall, 864-4213.
Clothing chain classifies customers by race
The Associated Press
JOPPA, Md. — A national clothing chain routinely records the race of patrons on the backs of personal guards in some cities, and is anism, a lawyer for the company said.
The practice by Cignal, a Joppa-based subsidiary of Merry Go-Round Enterprises Inc., was reported in yesterday's editions of the Bosten Globe. The 700-store company has six stores in the Kansas City area.
The newspaper quoted Jacqueline Perezck, a native of Colombia, as saying she recently noticed the practices at a Cignal store in Boston.
"For some reason I was staring at the lady's hand filling in the back of the cheek, when she got to the market marker, marked blank," the newspaper quoted Per-
Perezck, who came to the United States four years ago to attend Brandeis University, said the race section canceled check in a statement later.
"It is a way to distinguish one John Jones from another John Jones." Stacy Allen, a collection lawyer for the company, told the Globe. She said it was also a quality control mechanism and an integral part in all 200 of its stores in 38 states.
Telephone calls to Allen from The Associated Press were directed to Leo Doran, a corporate representative in Danon said the company had no comment.
Kith Foxe, representative for the International Council of Shopping Centers in New York, said it was the first time he had heard of such a
practice in the retail industry.
Allen told the Globe the information about race was taken from the customer's drivers license, but Perczek said the Massachusetts driver's license did not mention race. Neither does Maryland's drivers license.
Perczek said that after finding the notation on one check, she went through some back checks and found she was variously classified as "H" and "W." Allen said H stood for Hispanic and W for white.
"It's a classification that bogs," he said. "Whether I have good work or not, whether not yet determined. But morally, it's wrong. What purpose does it serve?"
Perczek's attorney, Donald Brown, said he was investigating whether legal action could be taken.
I am very proud of this achievement. I have been the foremost master in the field of woodworking for over 60 years and have built some of the most beautiful wooden creations ever made. My work is always precise, meticulous and creative, and I am always eager to learn new techniques and techniques from my students. I am also very passionate about preserving traditional craftsmanship and using high-quality materials. I believe that my work has made a significant contribution to the world of woodworking and that it will continue to be an important part of our industry in the coming years.
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David Nelson, Lawrence resident, begins chiselling a piece of wood that will become a sitting bear cub. Nelson, a member of the Woodcarving Club, was carving yesterday at the Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. The club offers workshops for beginning carvers.
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Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Being nominated U.S. ambassador to Thailand does not keep David Lambertson, KU instructor of political science and diplomat-in-residence, from riding his motorcycle.
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Diplomat calls Kansas his home
h20x
KU's Lambertson may be named Thai ambassador
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
David Lambertson rode into Lawrence last summer wearing a leather jacket and a black helmet. He was riding the black 600 cc Yamaha motorcycle he got for his 50th birthday.
Probably, few on the road suspected that the man on the motorcycle would be President Bush's choice for ambassador to Thailand.
"It is funny because the picture that David portrays to the world is not exactly the picture that I know of him." said his wife, Sacie.
Lambertson, a diplomat-in-residence at the University of Kansas, was nominated by Bush in February as ambassador to Thailand.
because the Senate must approve the nomination, Lambertson will appear at a hearing before the Senate to vote on the license for a cease on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
Before coming to KU in August, Lambertson worked for the U.S. State Department in Washington as a special envoy for East Asian and Pacific Affairs.
His visit to KU is what he calls the State Department's version of a sabbatical.
Among those who have seen unpublicized facets of Lambertson's character is Charles Twining, the departant for Vietnam Laos and Cambodia.
"I must admit that he is a very quiet individual," Twining said. "You are mised by that quietness. Suddenly you are surprised when he brings out something that you would have never suspected."
Never did Twining suspect, for example, that Lambertson spoke three foreign languages.
"He surprised me a year ago when he came out with this beautiful, beautiful dialogue in Vietnamese," he said.
Lambertson also speaks Indonesian and French.
When he came to teach at KU,
Lambertson left behind a 1961 Ford
"When you work with paper, like one does in government, you don't always have something to show for it but the end of the day," Lambertson said.
"But if you drive a tractor, mowing grass for example, at the end of the day you can see what you've accomplished."
Lambertson's accomplishments include diplomatic assignments in Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Australia and Japan. But these do not take away the pride he feels for the work he has done with his tractor.
"One of my greatest accomplishments in life is building this beautiful, beautiful barn last summer," he said.
This two-story barn lies in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, where the Lambertsonts have their other home. Unlike the one in Washington, home is a primitive log cabin with wood stove for its heating system.
During the years he worked in Washington, Lambertson spent most weekends working with his wife at a garden and helping to move the lawn and chopping wood.
The manual skills he needed at his cabin differed from those he needed at the State Department. But the meaning of what Lambertson accompanied with his tractor and hands was not confined to the Blue Ridge Mountains.
In the eyes of his friend Twining,
Lambertson's barn-building and wood-chopping are among the things that make him a representative American.
"He knows his country from the soil," Twining said. "He has roots in America that give him the kind of power it is so important for an ambassador."
Lambertson was born in Sabetta and grew up on a farm in Fairview, about 40 miles north of Topeka. His parents still live in Fairview.
"In between my foreign assignments I have always come back to the Washington, D.C. area, so I have a lot of time to work." "But I really consider Kansas home."
"That's another reason why this year has been so nice for me. People here in Lawrence and KU have been really appreciated, hospitalized, and I appreciate that."
"That's about perfect with him," Sacie Lambertson said. "If they had offered him to teach one at 8 o'clock that would've been a catastrophe."
1 a year ago in Washington, work for Lambertson began at 7:30 a.m. the day, however started at 5:30 a.m. the next morning jogging. Now he logs in the evenings.
At the State Department, Lamberton combined hard work with
Twinning said Lambertson had a special kind of patience in dealing with Washington's bureaucratic barriers.
"He will also be very patient with people whose views are 180 degrees different." he said.
Vietnam War. Lambertson served as press representative for the U.S. delegation during the last two years of the talks.
Lambertson gave a news conference after every weekly session of the talks.
His patience was perhaps among qualities that worked for him at the same time.
"There were always a lot of pointed questions and a lot of skeptical newsmen out there," he said. "had a lot of sympathy for the press briefers in the Gulf war because know how difficult it can be."
But no matter how difficult it got,
Lambertson would not break, never lie.
"You always have questions that you can't answer," he said. "And the best way to handle them is to 'can't answer,' or 'No comment.' The worst thing is to 'lie.'
Lambertson's first diplomatic assignment was in Vietnam. He joined the foreign services after graduating from the University of
David Lambertson
Born: June 30,1940 in Sabetha, Kansas
Diplomatic
assignments include:
Deputy Chief of Mission
at the U.S. Embassy in
Seoul, Korea 1986-1987
Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Canberra, Australia, 1984- 1986.
Director of the Office of Korean Affairs at the U.S Department of State, 1984-1982.
Deputy Chief of the Political Section at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, Japan, 1977-1981.
Deputy Director in the Office of Japanese Affairs, 1975-1977.
Deputy Director in the Office of Regional Affairs for East Asian Bureau, 1973-1975.
Member of the U.S. Delegation to the Vietnam Peace Talks in Paris, 1971-1973.
Redlands in California with a bache lor's degree in political science.
His 28 years of experience in foreign affairs have earned him a reputation among his colleagues at the State Department.
"Those of us in the foreign services are extremely proud of the career officers," said Mary Yates, representative for the department's East Asian Bureau "Mr. Lambert is known, and he is highly thought of by his colleagues at the Department of State."
Lambertson's expertise in Southeast Asian affairs has made his teachings at KU both accurate and practical to students.
"He is able to combine theory with the actual situation," Beung-min Yi, South Korea sophomore, said. "He gives it reality."
Carl Lande, professor of political science, said everyone in the department enjoyed Lambertson's presence at KU.
"He is a very pleasant, low-key kind of person," Lande said. "He will get along well with the Thai people."
With Senate approval, Lambertson will leave for Thailand in August.
This time he will have to leave behind both his tractor and his black Yamaha motorcycle He plans to buy a barn in the mountains of Virginia.
Some of his colleagues at the State Department wonder what will happen to the red Triumph Spitfire he used to drive in Washington.
But that is not all that they are left wondering. As Yates said, "We're not sure he's going to be building a barn in Bangkok."
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Applications are available at the Kansan Business Office. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Informational Meeting: Monday, April 15 7:45 a.m. in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Application Deadline: Tuesday, April 16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 4, 1991
11
Swendolyn Brooks
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Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Parking board policy change allows summer ticket appeals
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
This summer, students who wish to appeal a parking ticket will not have to wait until the last semester to work with the allied by the KU Board of Parking Alarms.
Kelly Jernigan, chief justice of the board, said. "We are going to have five judges in the summer who will hear written appeals."
Jerrigan said the decision was made to prevent the backlog of anneals that builds up in the fall.
"We usually have from 206 to 250 appeals made in the summer," Jerrigan said. "1,200 to 1,500 ticket appeals are made through the year."
Michelle Donahue, a judge for the court, said that during the year, students could appeal their tickets to the traffic court in person or by written form.
"The judges are mainly second- and third-year law students who were attorneys (in the traffic court) last year," she said. "They spend one year being a prosecuting attorney and the other being a defense attorney."
Donahue said that three judges heard the cases in which students appeared in person, and one judge weighed the evidence and decided whether to grant or deny the written appeals.
She said the advantage of appearing in person was that a lawyer was appointed to the appellant's case. The advantage of a written appeal is that there is no cross-examination by the prosecuting attorney.
Kevin Klinkenburg, third-year
student at the University
received four or tickets a year.
"I hadn't gotten any this whole year until about two weeks before spring break," he said. "Then I got five tickets within two weeks.
"Most of them are around the architecture and art and design buildings where there is hardly any apppeared two tickets successfully."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 4, 1991
Sports
13
California center considers Kansas, Kentucky
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
One day after returning home from the NCAA championship game, Kansas coach Roy Williams was back at the grindstone.
The NCAA prevents Kansas basketball coaches from commenting on unsigned recruits, but Williams is apparently trying to fill the sixth and last KU scholarship available with 6-foot-10 center Eric Pauley of Cypress Community College in California.
"I think Coach Williams is here today," said Cypress sports information director Alan Lombardi yesterdays at ESPN's College Football Awards is coming on Saturday, and (Kansas
assistant coach) Kevin Stallings will be here Monday."
Last season, Pauley averaged 21.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.7 blocks a game.
In his two-year career at Cypress, Pauley shot 61.7 percent from the field and blocked 214 shots, six shy of the school record of 220 set by present Utah Jazz center Mark Eaton of the NBA.
Pauley, a Buena Park, Calif., native, redshirt his freshman year at Cypress. After two seasons of college, he chose to choose college with junior eligibility.
"He told me he's up in the air between Kansas and Kentucky," Lombardi said. "There will be a
news conference next Wednesday or Thursday when he'll announce his decision.
Lombardi said he expected Pauleu to know his college destination by Monday or Tuesday, however. The teacher signed a letter of intent is Wednesday.
"It's hard to rank him, though," he said. "California has their own junior college league and does not compete much against the rest of the coun-
Bob Gibbons, a recruiting analyst for All Star Publications in Lenoir, N.C., said that Pauley was the hottest junior college prospect in southern Illinois.
Gibbons said that Pauley had been
'He visited Lawrence last week during that tornado. Eric's terrified of tornadoes. If he still wants to go after that, KU knows it will have a dedicated player.'
- Bob Gibbons recruiting analyst for All Star Publications
telling everyone for months that his favorite school was Kansas.
But there could be one strike against Kansas, Gibbons said.
"If he was interested before, he certainly is now after the tournament," he said.
"He visited Lawrence last week during that tornado," he said. "Eric's terrified of tornadoes. If he was in the area, if the U.S. will have it will have a dedicated lawyer."
Gibbons ranked Kansas signees Ben Davis of Mouth of Wilson, Va; Greg Gurley of Overland Park; Greg Ostertag of Duncanville, Texas; Sean Pearson of La Grange Park, Ill; and Calvin Rayford of Milwaukee as the second-best recruiting class in the nation.
The Jayhawk prospects were ranked N. 1 before the NCAA tournament but dropped behind Michigan after the Wolmerines recently signed
two top-notch recruits from Detroit, Gibbons said.
The rankings could be deceiving, however.
"if you base recruiting on benchmark players, which is what I do, then that's what makes Michigan No. 1." Mr. Johnson added more beneficial to the program."
He said the Jayhawk recruits were more capable of an immediate impact on the floor than Michigan's recruits.
"Michigan has five top-notch athletes that all play the same position," Gibbs said. "Kansas has a class, with or without Pauley, that you could put on the floor and play with right away."
Kansas wins a wild one, 15-11
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
14
Kansas right-hander Eric Stoneciere threw the first pitch of last night's game against Southwest Missouri State at 7 p.m.
Three hours and five minutes, 26 runs, 34 hits and six errors later, the Jayhawks emerged with a wild 15-11 victory against the Bears.
"I thought it was a great game," Kansas coach Dave Dingham said. "Our kids did a great job of getting us out there, and we thanked we had out a whining on them."
After six innings, with the Jayhawks leading 12-2, the 150 fans at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium thought so, too.
However, the Bears outscored Kansas 9-3 in the last three innings and put a scare in the Big Eight Conference-leading Jawhayes.
"We just got a little sloppy at the end, that's all," Bingham said.
The first four innings of the game showed no sign of the offensive explosion that was to come in the last five.
Stonecipher and Bears' right hander Paul Crain stymied each other's offense as SWMS led 1-0 after 4% injures.
It was then that the Jayhawks put their offense on track, exploding for five runs off five hits in the fifth and seven runs off seven hits in the sixth.
The Jayhawks added one more run in the seventh and two more in the eighth to take a 15-3 advantage into the top of the ninth inning.
But, as their 21-8 record might indicate, SWMS did not give up.
The Bears pulled their bats out of bernation, raking up six runs off six hits in the final inning.
Kansas outfielder John Wuycheck is held on base as Southwest Missouri State first baseman Bob Fenskie is late with the tag. The Jahweyks defeated the Bears 14-11 last night at Hogle-Hurdium Stadium.
Kansas was clinging to a 15-11 lead with the bases loaded and two outs when Kansas right-hander Joel Bacon forced SWM's pinch hitter Sean Davolt to ground out and end the game.
stonecipher was credited with the victory, moving his season record to 5-4.
Kansas catcher Garry Schmidt said the Jayhawks took a positive message out of the late-inning Bear rally.
"It's not a bad thing to happen," he said. "It reminds us of our focus."
A pair of Jayhawks with a clear outlook at the plate late are shortstop David Soult and first baseman Jeff Niemeier.
Soult was 2-for-5 last night with 5 RBL. In his current hot streak, he is 7-for-14 with 11 RBL.
Niemeyer has hit safely in 11 straight games and as four RBI soften
of the school single-season record.
The Jayhawks have been on a streak lateally, also. Kansas has won seven straight games, the most consecutive wins under Bingham's four-
7 tomorrow night.
Kansas and Oklahoma State will play a double header at 2 p.m. Saturday and a single game at 1 p.m. Sunday.
vear leadershin.
White Sox sign injured Jackson
The Associated Press
SARASOTA. Fla. - In two weeks, medical opinion went from "No Be" to "Go Bo!"
That's what Dr. James Boscard of the Chicago White Sox told general manager Ron Schuler before the team signed Jackson to a one-year contract on Wednesday.
"We're not saying we're one hundred percent sure that Bo Jackson is going to gain his previous abilities back," Boscarani said. "We think there is a lot of organizational that needs to occur."
But the bottom line is that the White Sox were willing to take a chance after their four-man medical team examined the 28-year-old outfielder's medical records.
The Jayhawks, 21-12 overall and 6-1 in the Big Eight, begin a pivotal four-game series with Oklahoma State at Hoodland-Maupin Stadium at
When Kansas City announced March 18 that it was putting Jackson on waivers, Royals team doctor Steve Joyce said the outfielder's hip injury was career threatening. That is what Bocarcino said in an interview with Chicago general manager Ron Schuler told him to check it out.
"Initially, my information was limited to what I read in the papers, and that was a day or two after the story broke." Boscardin said. "I then began a process of discussing the case with Dr. James) Andrews, who was Bo's private arthrologic surgeon. I've been told by doctors we began to sense, after talking to Jim, that this injury may not be as severe as had originally been stated."
The White Sox weren't the only team looking at the medical records. Dr. Ron Taylor, Toronto's team physician, looked at them, and Braves physicians also are said to have examined them. In addition, Boscardin said more X-rays, Catscans, bone scans and Magnetic Resonance Imaging tests were taken.
On March 25, Boscardin went to Birmingham, Ala., and looked through Jackson's file.
"I had a chance to look at them, review them, formulate my own ideas, and work with unity to discuss the case in depth with the radiologist who had
reported the studies. I simply had an opportunity to have a free discussion back and forth about the things we saw in the scans, the location of the injury, the type of injury, the fact that this did not follow the typical picture of avascular necrosis."
Boscardin said that in the typical case, the injury was to the top, side and bottom of the leg or ankle. In the other case, the injury is to the back of the bone.
"Initially, when this injury was disposed, I think that Dr. Joyce diagnosed it correctly." Boscardin said. "I think, confronted with the information initially that Dr. Joyce had, I probably would have made the same conclusion he had seen in the latest studies, which was a week to ten days ago, we became more interested."
Boscardin said he was at ease with Andrews because the Alabama doctor was affiliated with Chicago's farm team at Birmingham. Boscardin said he went over the records with other White Sox doctors — orthopedists Scott Price and Bob Daley and internist Hugo Cuadros — and then informed Schuler.
"We sort of formulated an opinion," Boscardin said. "I think we gave him periodic updates."
Even now, Boscardin isn't sure exactly how long it will take for the injury to heal.
"As Bo stated in his news conference, this is sort of in the hands of lord, to some respect," Boscardin said. "We are optimistic that with appropriate care, time and some favorable actions by the lords, going to become a combining member of the White Sox in the future."
UNLV's Johnson finds little comfort in award
For now, Jackson will be on crutches and will perform a variety of exercises.
"This is an injury that's going to take some time," Boscardin said. "I think it's important to understand that Bo's not normal at this time and it is not going to be immediately able to engage in play." Bo needs to focus on a timetable, because this is something that's not predictable and (doesn't) follow a readily trackable course."
The Associated Press
Johnson, a 6-foot-7, 250-pound senior forward, was the Wooden
The loss to Duke broke UNLV's 45- game winning streak, covering 11 games last season and this season. The Rebels beat the Blue Devils 103- 73 in the championship game last year.
LOS ANGELES — Admitting it was not the prize he wanted most, UNLV's Larry Johnson nevertheless called it a great honor when he was presented yesterday with the John Haskins basketball basket-ball player of the year.
“It’s really a great honor. Just being here is a great honor.” Johnson said. “I’m just so happy to have been there. I’m now on beon for the last two years.
Johnson received the award, given by the Los Angeles Athletic Club, four days after the Runnin' Rebels lost to Duke 79-77 in the semifinals of the championship. Dukes went on to beat Kansas 72-65 and won the national championship.
"This might take the sting away for my family, but not for the university. Winning the national championship was basically what I set out to do. That was my goal. It's always a challenge, life goes on. You have to get over it.
"I'd just like to congratulate Duke. I'm not too happy we lost, but I've got to give them the credit."
Award winner in voting by 1,000 sports writers and broadcasters across the country. He finished with 1,646 points to 1,389 for Louisiana State sophomore center Shaquille O'Neal.
Wooden, the 80-year-old former coach who led UCLA to 10 NCAA championships in a 12-year span ending in 1975, presented the award
"He makes everybody play better," Tarkanian said of Johnson. "He brings everyone around him to a higher level. He'll be a great pro. Whatever team he's on is going to win. He'll make everybody happy. He's a great everybody play better. He's a great person, but he's even a better person."
Johnson's teammate, senior forward Stacey Augon, finished third with 1,156 points, followed by sophomore guard Kenny Anderson of Georgia Tech with 717 and junior forward Billy Owens of Syracuse with 621.
O'Neal, Augum and Owens also attended yesterday's award ceremony along with UNLV coach Jerry Cox. The girls were joined by Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim.
Johnson, who figures to be one of the top selections, if not the No. 1 pick, in this summer's NBA draft, said that if he had his choice, he probably would play with the Dallas Mavericks.
Washington's performance recognized
Award named after basketball coach's mentor represents courage and dedication
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
To Kansas basketball coach Marian Washington, Carol Eckman was a role model
Now, Washington has been recognized as a role model by the Women's Basketball Coaches Association.
"She had tremendous courage," Washington said of Eckman. "She was very ethical in everything she did. She was a teacher. I hope to reflect what she stood for. She was a fighter."
The award has been given to out-
standing coaches since 1986, the year
Eckman died of cancer. Eckman was
the first woman coach of a national
league team founder of the first
national collegiate basketball tournai-
ment for women.
She received the Carol Eckman Award on March 28 during the women's NCAA tournament in New Orleans for her performances and performance as a coach.
These are the qualities that Linda MacDonald, chairperson of the WBCA committee that chose her as captain, recipient, said Washington possessed
Washington played for Eckman at Westchester State College on the first women's basketball national team in 1969.
"Even through all of her awards and accolades she has never changed." MacDonald said. "That's
wnat makes her so genuine. Time doesn't change Marian except in the realm of experience."
MacDonald played with Washington at Westchester State on the 1969 team.
Coaches were nominated for the award on a ballot sent out by the WBCA. Then letters were sent to the WBCA in support of the nominees.
WBCA
CAROL SCHUMAN AWARD
To be awarded by the WBCA.
Presented to:
Mariam E. Washington
Diversity of Homes
For recommendation by the Board and Committee
of Cardinal Hill and Cardinal Hill Academy
of Homes and Cardinal Hill Academy of Homes
and Cardinal Hill Academy of Homes and Cardinal Hill Academy
of Homes and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy
of Homes and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy
and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Academy and Cardinal Hill Association
University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board member Renate MalDalton was one of the people who introduced the new committee on behalf of Washington.
She said she looked at the criteria and gave examples of Washington's courage, dedication and position as a role model.
Women's basketball coach Marian Washington displays her Carol Eckman Award. The award is given each year by the Women's Basketball Coaches Association to the coach who best demonstrates the values shown by Carol Eckman, originator of the first national collegiate women's basketball tournament in 1969.
Washington said the award recognized coaches who did not necessarily have a glamourous win-loss column, but who were dedicated to coaching. The coach had tried that Eckman always had tried to instil in her players.
"It is a consensus that she is a good representative of what Calpick Eckman stood for," Mal-Dulton said. It doesn't matter who he's with, it places her with the top coaches."
Alberta Lee Cox, another one of Washington's former coaches, said
"I're really proud." Washington said. "I knew how important this award was. This embodyed what our team did as a group, what we're supposed to be doing."
"She is simply one of the best role models in the world." Cox said.
Cox said that Washington was a diamond in the rough when she
she did not think any coach was more deserving of the award.
coached her
"She was just unique." Cox said. "She always delved deeper than most She always wanted to give back to the sport and to the players."
14
Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Sandwiches • Soups • Salads
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Evening Guy Special! $4.95
Precision Hair Cut
By a professionally trained stylist
Mon - Thru 6 pm - 8 pm
offer expires 4-25-91
You don't have to pay 23rd & Louisiana a lot to look good!" 749-1976
Basketball history in
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MAKING BASKETBALL, a special collector's
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Each copy signed, numbered and available
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GUARANTEED JAYHawk EXCITEMENT.
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TOLL FREE 1-800-562-5533
Operators Available Weekdays 8 AM - 4:30 PM
$36.00 plus $3.50 Postage and Handling
Walworth Publishing Company
2023 Main Rdway 150 Kaneau MN 64114
BASKETBALL
1991-1891
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99cVIDEOS
*Every Tape
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*Latest New Releases
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SAC'S SPECIALS & CLOSEOUTS
Video Department
25th and Iowa (Next to Food-4-Less)
842-7810 Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
10-6 p.m. Sun.
BAR & GRILL
HOT SHOTS
19 & UP ADMITTED
QUARTER NIGHT
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KAMI SHOTS 25¢
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623 VERMONT
Shawnee Mission Ford
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS
(317) 460-8990
Up to an additional
$1,000 cash for:
•college grads
•first time buyers
Contact Brad Shull
(913) 631-0000
Classified Directory
100's
TINPANALLEY
Male Female
**Announcements**
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Announcements
120 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
I
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
110 Bus. Personal
105 Personal
100s Announcements
Triangle man, I gladly accept your invitation for an evening with you and Andre. Lemon Drop
ANNOUNCING: Beauti Consult Look and feel your best every day. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices: Call 1 913-262-6829 for an appointment today!
EACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence, develop a positive attitude. Call 843-3513. Lawrence Hypnosis and Stress Management Center.
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop Classice to computerized, body shop classics. 519 N 618; *841-6955 M 8 F 8 VISA cisseries 519 N 618; *841-6955 M 8 F 8 VISA EXTRA MONY Money Making Business窝 from home. RUSH itself addressed stamped business card. ORDER FROM 106 Lakeside Lake RI 301 River AZ
BALLOONS AND MORE Hurry, Hurry. Send
Balloons today and check out our new parking lot.
749-0148. 602 Vermont.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below-Skirt, Retail
The Ete Shop
777 Mass. 843011
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales 732 Mass.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by headquarters
We're here because we care
841-2345 1419 Mass.
-
AVIREX LEATHER JACKETS
CAMIZ SHIRTS
CAMIZ PANTS
CAMIZ SWEATERS
CHRISTIAN DIOR SOCKS
CAMP SOCKS
LEATHER BELTS
TAUROS LEATHER BAQS
LYNTONE WALLETS
LORUS WATCHES
BULOVA WATCHES
RAY BAN SUNGLASSES
FOSSIL WATCHES
DUCK HEAD CLOTHES
CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN & COSTUMES
732 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE 68044
1-814-547-1011
ETC.
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
The Etc. Shop
GOODEVERY
THURSDAY
Only $3.49 for a small pizza.
Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
(add tops only.75)
400's
14th & Ohio "Under the Wheel"
CARRY OUT only except for orders of 2 or more.
Real Estate
403 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
Thrifty Thursday
PYRAMID
PIZZA
842-3232
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. B42-7504.
'New Analysis of Western Civilization' makes sense of 'Western Civ' makes sense to use it. Available at Jayhawk, Oread and Town Crier Booksstore.
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees a more attractive option for you summer. Call 1-800-879-9022
SKEPTICAL ABOUT THE NEW AGE? So is Andre Kole. See him Saturday, 8 pm, Heeh Audiorium.
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 723 Mass.
WHEN YOU CARE, ENOUGH TO SEND IN JEST. When the relationship has ended or feelings gone astray, send that certain someone a dose of makeover to make them. Will deliver now.
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fishermen
Earn $1,000 per week.
Job requires no experience. No experience necessary. Male or Female For on-pay employee position.
844-392-2670. Wautla WA 91243-Natification
844-392-2670. Wautla WA 91243-Natification
120 Announcements
Quitting business sale continues at the Book End, in Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire, weekdays. 04-5
$College Money. Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finsiest! Since 1801 COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP MUSEUM. 905-873-4625. BOGUS MUSEUM. 805-873-4625.
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP
10 46002 1881, 1 900 879 1483
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP
EARTH SHOPS Living Myth Through Virtual Workshops: Tuesdays April 9-18 May 2-28 introduce lecture April 2.7 to 30 pm, Lamplighter Books, 1 E Ninth
Community Bldg. 115 W. 11th
$30. To register, call 842-5772
Sunday, April 14, 1-5pm Community Blvd. 125 W. 11th
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns. call 841-2345. Headquarters
MWM, forty-something, walks on water, seeks companions for a magical evening Saturday April 6. Bck Auditorium, 8 pm
Gay & Lesbian Peer Access A friendly reference voice. Free, confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters for RU. In 484.366.000. Sponsored by GLSOX
Rainbows and LeMollies welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
DW
ALL NEED HOPE
"The first and last task of a leader is to keep hope alive," said John Gardner
AND SOMETIMES YOU WIN!
by students and for students
1204 Oread 843-4948
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
Request for Proposals. Grants writer board plane language for submission to private companies in the national campaign. Contract. For complete project description, contact Hee Jin-ho. Houlde Fountain.
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartsRestored,
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential
material/measure will follow.
TIME TO LOSE THE WINTER PUDGEN'S GOOD tasting, natural, naturally balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money-back your call. Call for information, 817-407-6728 or 817-407-6729.
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE! Receive from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage 843-628-0700; then on a bike it is.
Survival Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 911 2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, center oriented BBS.
841 7230 B N J
Johnny's UP & UNDER
140 Lost-Found
is available for Engagement Parties,
Birthday Parties,
Pinning Parties and any other party possible.
842-0377
Found: Tennis Raquet after 3/26 halftime. West stadium lot. Call to identify, 855-0978.
Large Beward for return of, or information leading to return of black mountain like stolen from Corrucino Restaurant Tuesday evening 3/28/91 Call 841-6466 Confidential
LOST. Beige pants with wallet, watch and keys
Monday evening 4/1/91 8:43 914-838 REWARD
Lost. Green suede jacket on second floor of Fraser
Reward. Please return! 864-2076
HIGHE REWARD! for any information given to lost camera. In its grey case lost Saturday night at Johnny's. No questions asked. I just want it back. Call Julie. 863-2813
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grades to fill many positions.
Airline will train Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-245
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for Spring and Summer wait staff. Prior experience a plus, great attitude on a mast, must apply in person 9-1 or 2-5 at 809 Crossgate.
ATTN, Psychology, Education, Sociology, and Religion-related majors. Summer program for special needs youth learning disabled emojo students with special needs teachers and counselor/activity instructors. Located on take near 12F, MN and Boundary Park. Salary plan room and board. Interviews available Contact Ed AT 843-5077 or Toman EB(612)359-811. 811 W. Brookings, Minneapolis.
CAMP COUNSELORS WOANT for private Michigan boys/girl summer camp. Teach swimming, sailing, waterskiing gymnastics, surf lessons, summer camps, campers, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $100 or more add Ildel Mare. Save 175% Maple Nild.
CAMP COUNSELORS The YMCA is currently sending campers for its summer day camp YMCA Camp from Children's Museum to children. June 3 August 9 per hour 40 hours Van hance, Tkse, PSA, or shaded W
CHILD ARE WORKER Residential facility for adolescent boys. Full-time and summer positions. Positions require training in data transportation (experience in field) plus We drug test. Send resume to P.O Box 2063, Minneapolis, MN 55419.
Conventure Store Clerk: $4.25 WEEKend, cash register experience. Apply in person at Phillips 66. Desert Short Airport: 3-1683 83. Earn while you learn. Manpower is looking for someone to help with your business mission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training and business experience, plus, free use of a personal computer. If you are a full-time student, you will receive a discount. And are computer familiar. Manpower needs you as a Collegiate Iep to promote the sales of the Personal System 2 on campus. For experience apply.
Excellent pay processing hand-made items for national company Start immediately! Call 644.610.800 Fax 3244
FAST FUND RASING PROGRAM $1000 in just
fast. Earn up to $1000 for your campus
organization. Plus a chance at $500 more.
program works! No investment needed. Call
(212) 678-9010.
**Help Wanted:** Daytime Bartender. Part time job
summer. PRIVATE, CLUB. experience prefered.
must have references and be 21. Call for appt.
842-0803
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,222-6829
Lake of the Tzars summer Employment The large Bashing Restaurant is accepting applications for positions of hostess, Excellent salary and tip. Great work environment. Available position. Contact Frank Houseman 314-275-6981. Available contact Frank
LEAWood SOUTH COUNTRY CLUB:
SnackbarBear Carrier Cart Service for $4.50 per hour plus potential tips. If interested please contact 17200 BAY Lakes Dr. Leawood KS 65209
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency 824-443
Management Team for medium-sized Apartment Complex. Duties include: showing/renewing apartments, book keeping, maintenance. Call 749-6563 or man or woman to help with general housework. Dependable, honest, thorough and clean. Yard cleaning. Assist in cultivating, clean flower bed. Call 843-6560
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary. 1.800.664.7798
PRESCHOOL_HELP_WANTED Substitute and after school now. Also summer part and full time job Child development or early childhood juniors and seniors. Sunshine only. 842-2232.
HELP WANTED Orientation Leaders
for Foreign Student Services.
Interested in assisting new foreign students adjust to life at KU?
Applications are now being taken for positions available in August.
For more information, stop by the Office of Foreign Student Services, room 18 Strong Hall.
Deadline. April 12.
RACING ENTHUSIASTS: We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday at Toptel. Topeltel positions include ticket takers, ticket agents, position clerk, parking personnel. If interested apply at Manpower.com.
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I. Deadline:
appropriate filing, and performing all assigned duties within Office Services; performs repsucces file management; photos requests from Computer Center Staff; takes phone messages, sets up meetings, etc. To be successful, students must have a Computer Center Reception desk EOAA 103
Summer $8$ Train now to earn good money this summer in your home area. Call Straight Money Enterprises, 842-910- or write P.O. Box 44208, Lawrence, KS 66044.
Temporary, part-time help wanted Farm experience helpful. Apply at Webster's 811 N. West. The Department of Mathematics is accepting applications for the position of Student Assistant in Computer Science tutoring. Requirement: MATH 123 or equivalent. Preference to student with strong mathematical background. Applicants must be enrolled in 405 Snow. Further information: Prof. Brown, 405 Snow. Deadline Friday, April 16, 1991. Wanted: Student to provide minimal structure and interpersonal skills. Home interested in approx. 3 hours after school and full-time during the summer months. Also apply to Webster's 811 N. West. References required: 842-8044 during evenings.
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered tri-midwinter Driving School, serving K-U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FRENCH TUTOR Native speaker with degree. Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call 805-5323
Government photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior portraits, modeling & arts portfolios/BAW, color. Call Tom Swells 749-611-01
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6087
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841.3716.
Thesis & Dissertations
Thesis & illustrations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E. 9th Street.
843-4609
1-der Word Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbed into accurately spelled letters. Letters are labeled by letter-quality type (majeor 84, 2006; days or evenings). Letters are available at 841. 0776-1000. $10.00 double space paper. Call Heather. 841. 0776-1000. Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence. $10.00 double space paper. Rush job no problem.
235 Typing Services
Call R.J. a Typing Services 8419-5942
tapes, legal letters, thesus, lectures or v p.m.
workshops, conference meetings or v p.m.
Term papers, thurses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Bait printer,
scanners, fax machines.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 9271 Mass. 841-1071.
1 will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce the best possible papers Ptl. 842 6255
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345.
Research Projects' Sage work and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call KeyWors. 842-8307
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Word Processing/Typing, Papers, Humes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.S. Degree. 8416254
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1974 Honda 650 Rebuild and restored Good cheap, fun. Guaranteed to pick up chicks on holiday. Call Elvis. 842-8763
1990 Trek 700 Mountain Bike, Alumina "2", Excellent condition 8405. $365.
1990 Trek 700 Mountain Bike, Alumina "2", Excellent condition 8405. $365.
1990 Trek 700 Mountain Bike, Alumina "2", Excellent condition 8405. $365.
writer I printer, modern, 200 discs, games and work processing, and many more. Great condition.
18 inch Pyle woofer with custom-made box. Fits
Mustang GT. 250 wall constic amp. $450.00 obo.
Call Peter at 749-9296
Bahamas cruise or Mexican vacation. Both include transportation and accommodations for two for 5 days. Each $800. For info. 865-5490.
1981 Mobile Home. Excellent condition, 2 bed, 2 bath, fireplace, wet garden, bar $13,000.00
Call for showing. 1-829-956
For sale. Tile of the ultra lime wheel roller blades, size 10% in, new condition. Cost $200, will sell for $125. Also, large ketele Toga III backpack in need conditions. Call 842 651 8253.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
baby clothes, toiletries, grooming kit,
grooming bag, and Appendix B.
CARRIETTE H. M. Mon-Sat
Carriette H. M. Mon-Sat
Harley-Davidson Mays Surplus 186
Harley-Davidson Mays Surplus 186
Dylan Beardman
Lined, black leather skirt, size 18/20; $100; GE
19" color T.V., $150; call 665-5042
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities Walks welcome. Call 843-8111 Ask for sales/service department.
NERELEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GUAGE) $250.84-924.16
340 Auto Sales
1971 VW campervans, rebuilt engine with
good condition, good mileage, $1000. Call 882-3422 MWFS
1975 Black Trans Aurora, AC, New Paint, Great
Condition, Beautiful Car. 861-8586, Pat.
MKC
1989 Red Honda Civic hatchback, AC stereo, 22K
one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas mileage. Call Me evenings 749-2575.
mileage. Call Me evenings 749-25-r0
For sale: Mercedes Benz 190E 2.3, 1985, black
earl gold full, 10.500, TLP # 865-8516
pearl, fun open... 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
On TVs, VCR's, jewelry, stereo, musical in cameras, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 180 W. 6th 749-1919.
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CD-5s to 60 and down. Records and tapes: 8-250 to 9,000. Top dollar for collections (713-240-3000). Wanted: Mountain bike. Men's large frame: 842-7900.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Bradford Square Apartmenis 501 Colorado
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
microwaves, pallet or deck, laundry facility.
Onsite Management. KIU has bus, off-street parking.
Calls to remember your apartment for summer
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300-415/ms. Call 843-2116.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-897/8143-1601
2-8 bedroom rooms and duplexes. Available June 1,
Sorry, no pick. Dick at 842-907-8431 or 843-1601.
2 BR apt in topper. Available in fall or summer on 12 month lease. DW, low utilities, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit. Call 842-6784 Ask for Tracy or have message.
University Dailv Kansan / Thursday, April 4: 1991
15
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
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, handicap, status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such pretext, 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.
3 BIRM BUNALOG. Unfurnished, elec. range refresh, wiser & dryer, garage, central air dispenser for non-smokers. Near campus or in West Windsor office or call at B42 1782
APARTMENTS: Small, large Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many extra $163-3928
Available Aug 10 107 Tennessee, 749-606-1
base ampt. $235 month plus utilities, 1 year
amortization. 1 year base ampt. $299 per
water/dryer, 1 hour ampt. $800 per month
amortization, 1 year home, 1 month security, off street
Available June. 3 bedroom apartment in nice older home. Walk to KU downtown, A/C dishwasher. off street parking. wood floors $96. Water paid. no water. 841-7047
Available June. Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice older home. New bathroom. Wood floors; $40 Gas/water. Nept. Pets: B41-7074
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
EDDINGHAM PLACE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Special
S
Swan Management
- Graystone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F. 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
AMAZEMENTS
each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini beds
- Oil-free route
- Carports available
1 bedroom $355, $380
2 bedroom $440, $460
3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across Harder's)
4:00-6:00 Tue - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
...on KU bus route
...studios
...townhomes
...2,3 Bedrooms
Water paid
...Free cable
---
Excellent Location, 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom room in 4 plax, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA, no pets, available 1 June $180 At 1341 Ohio Call 842-4242
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 birmingham townhouse w/
garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed,
year lease beginning August, and/or summer
lease. $120, 5 units. Kerr 843-0626.
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apartment in May. Call 843-8315.
Furnished living space. $25 plus 12m². W/D.
m microwave, fourteen', back yard with deck
Grad students or studious upper classman preferred.
843-4033
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water费 $300/mo. Call 841-216-821.
Hey KU Med students-move in 1 and receive $2 off your rent for two months. "Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments." Heat and water pay 10%. Med Center. Bed Center. Med Center. Apt 913-831-683.
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Renable
24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michan 749-7297
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $280.00.
91-911.1 leave message.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Broom or 3 or plus 1板 on bus lines on hia-ware, basement, garage CA, W/D hotelship. no pets. Lease & reef; req. $440 mo and im. Naptotable. #9347238 after 12am.
LEASE NEW FOR FALL Extra. nine 2 BR duplex
up in good location. Extra large MRJ; garage;
laundry/storage. nice yard No pets Lease &
lease $850. 873-796 for $160. 876-238 for $180.
Lorimar Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality spaces, with all the amenities. Brand
new, available now. & 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May July, or for 12 months. 8741-7843, 8748-7843.
Mackenzie Place Apt 5; 3 briar farm apt, new leasing for August 1; 12 years old, washer/dryer, microwave, fan 3, blocks 1, year lease, penns. 1131 Kentucky 8477 4773 and penns. 1131 Kentucky 8477 4773
My house is your house. Avail. May 15. 2+ BR, W/D, AC, cable, porch $50/month. Close to campus: 863-4508, 864-3044 (Kenny).
2-1 BR, 4-3 BR Washers/dryers in each unit, ceiling micromats, firewaves, 2 full baths in a BR, on bar route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call today. 749-1566.
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets.
Deposit and references required. Off street parking.
249-2919
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom suites with appliances, including laundry center, central air, and blinds. Low utilities, low bus. quiet rate. complex $110. SPANISH CREST APARTMENT $120.
New leasing and 1.2 bedroom aparta at Southbridge Plaza Apt. 15a, Rydesville, 725.2 rooms start at $350.10 month lease. Water and cable paid in remitted kits new carpet. Call 842-116-100
Summer Sublease Trailride 3 bedroom townhouse. Furnished. Pools, patio, dishwasher, contractor. $130 plus utilities. 841-9182.
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748 afternoons.
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
apes. Aspen West Beds $30 for beds; $275
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camas.
843-716-198 or 843-1839
Now leasing
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
for summer & fall 1991
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
TRAILRIDGEAPTS
MASTERCRAFT
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
1&2 BR apts -tennis courts
2&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
studios -3 pools
1.00 MB
Double Take
OFFERS
HANOVER PLACF
KENTUCKY PLACE
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
841-5235 7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD
SUNDANCE
841-5255 • 7th & Florida
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226·15th & Kasold
842-4455
CAMPUS PLACE
2 Bdmr townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May !st
3 Bldm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with dressing area upstairs
Subleases Available Immediately
GREETING LETTERS ON WATER
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
Some Summer Subleases too!
Newly remodeled apartments
842-4200
meadowbrook
Boardwalk
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6 842-4144
1 & 2 Bedrooms
15th & Cresline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri - 8:5-30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
- Water & trash paid
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
524 Frontier
- Garages (viii.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
1 & 2 Bedrooms for Summer & Fall
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1. 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- plush carpets
Sunrise Apts
- large rooms & closets
Close to Campus
BBAND NEW 2 Bdrm, at Vill
- refreshing pool
843-6446
2166 W.26th
2 on-site bus stops
Laundry room 50
- water & trash paid
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
- 1. 2. 3 & 4 Bedroom
appliances
- mini-blinds
& Apartment Living
Sunrise Place
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
- Garages (Vill.)
- Luxurious Town Home
6th & Gateway
- central air & gas heat
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
Open House Daily
- Close to Campus
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. '10-5
--the move now!
Spacious 3 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer or sooner. 1086 W. 27, 842-463 or 841-579.
Spacious, no hardcover for summer sublease.
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU 841-6254
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 1086 Mississippi Water, gas, cable post-$300.00 - 814.682
SUMMER SUBLET 1 bed ap, 2nd floor to KU and downtown $265 mo., gas & water paid. 841-966 after 4:30
SUNRISE VILLAAGE村裔 sublease. Can fit up to 1 person for $330. Dishwash, microwave, pool summer parties. First keg is on us for new tenants. Please call 842-7174.
Sublease 2 bedroom app in Colony Woods, May 30 Aug w/ 3 w/ weeks free. £215/month plus utilities. 863-328
Sublease one bedroom: Berkeley Flats. Across from football stadium. Water/cable paid. Make offer 749-2377
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts: 1 bit from KU with off street parking, no pets. 841-5900
Summer and Fall leave. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid 1 bk from KT with of street parking. No taxes. 94,500
ARE YOU PUTTING TOGETHER YOUR FALL SCHEDULE, JAMAL?
YEAH, I'M LOOKING FOR AN ENGLISH CLASS TO ROUND IT OFF.
If doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
- Computer Center
- Free utilities
- Computer Center
* Great social events
- "Dine Anytime"
Wise up and make
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044
913-835-8550
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Summer Sublease, 12th & Ohio, 8 bedrooms 3 apartments
Summer Sublease, 9th & Ohio, 7 bedrooms 3 apartments
Summer sublease, 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at complex, Sundance. Call Angie, 865-4392
Summer sub-labase 1 bdrm furnished apt. June 2015
Summer sub-labase 1 bdrm furnished apt. June 2015
...
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
Tonight I am with you.
Free cable
Water paid
- Volleyball Court
---
- Basketball Court
49
- Indoor/Outdoor
- Exercise Room
Close to KU bus route
WELL, I'M REALLY HAPPY
OUR BASKETBALL TEAM IS
DONING WELL, BUT OFFERING
A CLASS "THE FREE THROW IN
THE AMERICAN NOVEL" IS
GOING A LITTLE TOO FAR.
- 3 Hot Tubs
by Tom Avery
$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
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2
blocks from campus on Ohio. 865-08877
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 br, 2 bath apartment. Quiet neighborhood. West Lawrence Dishwasher. W/D hookup. pool. 842-9628
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/mo. 841-6784 after 6pm.
Summer sublease. Large studio, water paid, pool,
bus stop. 865-3519
Summer sublease: Furnished one bedroom apt,
pool at complex, water paid. $225. Call Amy
865-3837
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit
842-3040 or 749-2681. Ask for Jennifer.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer sublet Large BR, own bath in diplex near Meadowbrook $220/month, t$_3 utilities AC, WD, DW, 749-0754
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 1469 Tennessee.
Policy
Call now for summer sublease Pernate room
now at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at
1-800-567-3421.
Male student seeks roommate for summer job in K C - Lenexa, Olathe area. 5/15 bruil 8/15 Call Scott 844-804-897
Female. non-smoker roommate wanted to share condo. Summer and or fail. Very reasonable.
865-1644. Ask for Pari.
2 a bedroom, 2 bath apt. $205 and tq of utilities Deposit: Call Monica. 843-4108
Roommate wanted: 3rd person, 3 bedroom apt.
939 Indiana $150/month plus utilities. Call
749-3899 or 841-9131
Female roommate summer sublease. Share 3 BR apt with two other females. $175, 843-692, leave message
Roommate(s) spaces 1 bedroom, 2 bath house
Two rooms for 2 people. Reasonable rent utilities. Alison, 852-2578
One or two roommates needed for 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom, at orchard Corners starting Aug. 91. Call Shannon at 749-4397.
Summer Subside- 1.2 or 2 people (male or female)
Summer Cabana- 2 people
CONERS COOKS *A*, C/A cable on bus route
$10% month plus $1 + utilities Call Nancy B41 8217
Three Bedroom for summer subside. Please call
(212) 622-3900
Two female roommates needed for furnished 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom bp at or Orchard Corners, starting August 9. Call Beth or Susan at 814 4278.
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
1954 Universal Press Syndicate
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
"There he is, Stan! ... On that birch tree, second branch from the top, and chattering away like crazy! ... I tell you — first come the squirrels and then come the squirrel guns."
16
Thursday, April 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Kuwaitis demand reforms
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY — A group of Muslim fundamentalists supporting women's suffrage, a free press, modernization and Western influence has emerged as the leader of Kuwait's opposition.
The group is led by several men who at one time described themselves as anti-Western. Now they are called Westerners and act as the only future for Kipwail,
Gone from their speeches are the fire-and-brimstone fulminations against the decadent quality of Western life. They meet daily with U.S. and British diplomats and speak openly of the need for pressure from Washington and London to force Kuwait to reform.
Still, some Kuwaitis are encouraged at the emergence of a group that holds to religious principles but is willing to compromise.
The group now calls itself the Islamic Constitutionalist Movement, a name change that occurred Saturday. Before that it was known as the Society for Social Reform, a wing of the Muslim Brotherhood that has branches throughout the Arab world and was banned in Kuwait.
Led by a ledoy old writer, Sheik
Jasem al-Moahbel, the movement
emerged from the Iraq occupation
of Kuwait. Kowai's several opposition groups.
During Iraq's occupation, al-Mohailhel's movement built a grassroots organization that fed, clobed, and trained Kuwaitis in medical care to thousands of Kuwaitis
Diplomats and other observers think it is too early to tell whether the group might influence Islamic fundamentalists in other countries.
U.N. Security Council peace plan
Highlights of the U.N. Security Council resolution adopted yesterday. If Iraq accepts, a cease-fire in the Persian Gulf War automatically takes effect;
UNESCO
Iraq must destroy chemical weapons, biological
Iraq must destroy chemical weapons, biological weapons and ballistic missiles with a range of more than 93 miles under U.N. supervision; cannot develop or acquire such arms or nuclear arms; must destroy or remove nuclear materials for weapons
■ Iraq can import food, but trade ban would remain in effect until Iraq complies with disarmament provisions
Arms embargo on Iraq would remain in effect
■ Iraq liable for damage from invasion and occupation of Kuwait, including environmental havoc. A fund from Iraq's oil revenues would pay claims by Kuwait, other nations, citizens and corporations
U. N. would provide military observers for demilitarized zone six miles into Iraq, three miles into Kuwait. U.N. deployment would allow allied troops to withdraw
Iraq must declare not to commit or support international terrorism or allow terrorist groups to operate from its territory
Iraq and Kuwait are to respect boundary agreed upon in 1963 treaty
Iraq must cooperate with the International Red Cross in repatriating Kuwaitis and others detained during the war
SYMBOL UNITED NATIONS
They called themselves the Morabuton, or "those who remained." Through a network of neighborhood-based cooperative societies, they distributed more food and money than any other group.
"While the Iraqis were here, the Morabutonon ruw Kauwat," said Abdullah al-Nebari, a leftist opposition leader and al-Mohalbeh's ideological foe. "They were the strongest by far."
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/JUDY TREIBI
The harsh conditions of the Iraqi occupation softened the group's hard-line fundamentalist stance.
"Whenever a group increases its contact with society, as we did with the cooperatives and food distribution, it changes," al-Mohahal said.
Military fails its own junk-spotting muster
WASHINGTON — The military takes too long and spends too much to figure out whether the things it has stored away are useful items or just junk, the investigative arm of Congress said yesterday.
The Associated Press
In a report prepared for Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, the General Accounting Office said the government thunked its own requirements for determining which goods were usable.
The GAO said it found that a sample inventory of items shipped out but later returned remained in limbo for an average of 229 days before any decision was made about their usefulness.
According to Defense Department
standards, a decision on the status of these items should have been made in 10 days.
For items of "unknown condition" requiring testing, such as photographic paper that has passed its expiration date, the Defense Department allows 90 days. But the GAO found the average time in warehouse limbo was 284 days for these items.
Items received from suppliers in unacceptable condition or the wrong quantity spend 538 days in limbo, the report said.
Lumping all items together, the average time to make decisions is 458 seconds.
Altogether, about $9 million a year is spent to store items of unknown use
to the government, the report estimated.
Glenn, chairperson of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, said that warehouse limbo costs were unnecessarily steep and that the problem would be high on the committee's agenda.
The report said decisions could become more urgent as equipment and spare parts return from the Persian Gulf.
The Defense Department noted some improvement since the GAO first recommended changes in military stock management in 1884. The decision time was 21 days. The latest report states it is now 15 days.
THE NEW ABC SERIES
AMERICA'S FUNNIEST PEOPLE
Is coming
★ UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS AT LAWRENCE ★
FRIDAY • APRIL 5
• KANSAS UNION •
4TH FLOOR LOBBY
11:00 AM - 2:00 PM
IF YOU HAVE A FUNNY TALENT AND CAN MAKE PEOPLE LAUGH COME AND SHOW US WHAT YOU CAN DO.
Here's your chance to get on national television and you could win
$10,000
CALL (213) 662-5100
FOR INFORMATION BRING YOUR VIDEO TAPES
Enclose a $3.00 U.S. check or money order for handling if cassette is to be returned.
Employees and family members of Capital Cities / ABC and Vin Di Bona Productions
are not eligible for this contest. For full contest rules call the above number.
---
BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO
America's Family Video Store
BLOCKBUSTERVIDEO
Congratulates you on a fine season and an excellent effort in the Final Four!!
Free Movie Rental
When you rent two movies at the regular price. Offer good at any Blockbuster Video.Not valid with any other offer.
Offer expires April 30,1991
749-5133 1516 W.23rd
√
VOL.101.No.125
KANSAN
TANSAST STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA/ KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
New rules cut tournament money
NEWS: 864-4810
All Big Eight schools receive same amount
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas Jayhawks may have made it to the NCAA championship game, but their performance does not mean KU or the Big Eight Conference will receive more money from the NCAA this year.
Susan Wachter, KU assistant athletic director for business, said that KU would receive $299,578 from the NCAA this year but that that amount was decided upon before tournament play.
Before this year, the NCAA determined how much money each conference would receive after the tournament was finished. The further a team advanced, the more money it received.
In August, the NCAA Revenue Committee set up new rules for the distribution of money to all of the conferences
Instead of basing the allocation of the funds on just the performance of
the basketball team, the committee decided to divide the money based upon three additional areas as well — academic enhancement, number of sports sponsored and number of grants-in-aid.
"It was the opinion of the members of the NCAA) that we needed to reduce emphasis on winning," said director of the NCAA, executive director of the NCAA.
Spyr said the revenue committee, established in December 1989, invited suggestions from NCA4 members on how to divide the money among the conferences and who emphasize and bespoke while attending conference.
After the committee received more than 300 responses from coaches, athletic directors, university administrators and the general public, it began forming a plan.
Based on a six-year revolving
The plan
period, each university is evaluated and the NCAA determines how much money the governing conferences pay for research pools based on the four reportable metrics.
One aspect of a conference that the committee reviews and equates in units is the performance of individual universities in the conference
"For example, Kansas gives more grants in aid, so Kansas should benefit from the breadth of its program." Sory said.
Spyred say the maximum number of units each school could receive each year was five. This maximum number can be obtained by advancing to the semifinals of the Final Four each game won in the tournament.
Even if a conference does not fair well in tournament play, it may be rewarded if it offers more than 12 awards or gives numerous grants in aid.
However, how the revenue com
mittee will decide the amount each conference will receive based on the grants-in-aid pool has not yet been determined.
"If Kansas is giving more grants in aid than, say, Notre Dame, for example, that's one thing, but because of the cost of the tuition at Notre Dame, they may be giving more money," Syed said.
He said the committee would decide within 30 to 45 days whether to base the distribution of the money on the grant and to determine the grants or on the value of the grants
The amount of money the NCAA budgeted to distribute is more than what was available last year
This year, because of a more lucrative contract with CBS, the NCAA was able to allow $0 million to be divided between the four pools for
NCAA has more money
all the conferences
Some of the pools' money is fixed. For example, the basketball pool was placed at $250,000, and the sports sponsorship pool was placed at a given amount for every sport over the required 12. But each conference can divide the money among its schools as it chooses.
Big 8 gets equal shares
The Big Eight Conference will divide all of the money given to it by the NCAA event between its schools, Coach Frederick, KU athletic director
Frederick said that although KU was getting double the amount of money it received last year, the University probably could have generated more money if the old NCAA rules were still intact because the Jayhaws advanced to the championship game.
"In 1988 when two Big Eight teams made it to the championship game, our conference did really well — he played very well the long haul. It think it's equitable."
Parade seeks to prolong the Final 4 dream
Kansan staff report
A parade in 1990-91 Kansas Jayhawk men's basketball team will take place at 10 a.m. tomorrow.
The parade will begin at Seventh and Massachusetts streets and will end at the gazebo in South Park.
The players and coaches from the team will be in the parade, as well as the KU pep band, a dia-land band, the Olathe Marching Jaguars and local dignitaries.
Seniors Mark Randall, Kirk Wagner, Terry Brown, and Mike Maddox and coach Roy Williams will speak.
Anyone interested in entering the parade should call Peggy Johnson at 842-3299, or Laura Schulte at 842-3883. Entries will be accepted until 5 p.m. today.
P
Bright light
Elden Tefft, professor emeritus of sculpture, completes preliminary welding of a stainless steel base that will support a fountain. The fountain will have two tiers with decorative metal birds. Tefft, who taught sculpture at the University of Kansas for 40 years before he retired last spring, built the sculpture of Moses that is in front of Smith Hall. The sculpture was installed in 1982 and took 15 years to complete.
Report says unemployment claims have hit highest level in eight years
The Associated Press
The bleak jobless claims data from the Department of Labor, showing applications topping 500,000 for the third straight week, came after more favorable recent reports indicating rebounds in consumer spending.
WASHINGTON — The number of Americans filing new unemployment claims jumped to the highest level in eight years last month, the government said yesterday in a report that numbers of a quick end to the recession.
Meanwhile, a private study said a smaller percentage of jobless Americans received benefits in 1990 than their recession year since World War II.
"For those who might have been hoping for a quick end to recession, I think that notion should be shattered. And the chief economist at the Boston Co.
"It can be a long time between the first signs of life and when the economy actually starts to recover." Sinai said.
His legislation would force states to ease eligibility requirements so that more laid-off workers could qualify for assistance. The legislation also would reinstitute the extended bene- tuary provisions of the law, people could receive benefits for longer than the current 26-week limit.
The study, based on Labor Department figures, was compiled by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal research organization that studies government social programs.
The separate study, which showed that only 37 percent of the nation's jobsbelt received unemployment benefits, said it would call for Bush administration action
"President Bush needs to take a trip beyond the Bellway and discover the naked truth about unemployment in 1991," Rep. Tom Downey, D-N.Y., who has introduced legislation to shore up the unemployment insurance system, said as the report came out.
Because of the scarcity of jobs, Downey and others have complained, Americans who are laid off need employment tests to find another source of income.
In advance of today's report, many analysts estimated the unemployment rate had jumped from 6.5 percent to 6.7 percent and that businesses had cut as many as 200,000 more jobs. As of February, more than 1.6 million had lost their jobs since last June.
Yesterday's report on jobless claims was seen as a dismal prelude to the overall unemployment report released Tuesday, and the nation's jobless rate for March.
Two coalitions rack up 21 complaints before election
the jobless claims report, though it can be erratic, has continued to show persistently high levels of new claimants. Analysts take that as a sign that the recession continued in March despite other, more positive reports, such as one showing that the government's chief economic forecasting gauge reversed course in February and surged up by 1.1 percent.
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate Elections Commission has filed 21 official complaints about campaign activities, on Poor, elections commissioner.
The majority of the complaints involve poster violations. Peer said.
FACTS!; led by Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith, has had 17 complaints filed against it by the commission, and Impact, led by Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden, has had four.
Any person can claim a coalition has violated the elections rules. Poer,
as elections commissioner, investigates the complaints. If he sees reason to formally file a complaint, he does so.
Poer said FACTS! had filed one other complaint against Impact that he could not verify. The commission petitioned the commission to the other 21, after the election.
Curt Winegarner, elections comm mission chairperson, said complaints that Poor investigated and verified had validity.
The 22 complaints are the only ones that have been filed, Poer said.
Winegarner said none of the complaints involved serious charges but
could result in monetary fines. More serious violations, such as illegal attempts to sway votes, could result in the disqualification from Senate.
According to the Senate elections code, the elections commission is supposed to consider complaints which are Wednesday and Thursday.
The elections commission has the authority to levy fines against coalitions after the elections are over.
Weingartner said that monetary fines could range from $10 to $50 for each member of the coalition.
Coalitions debate issues Page 3
Turkish troops sent to border to stop flood of Iraqi refugees
The Associated Press
Military officials told reporters that at least 400 additional troops were sent to the border, adding to thousands already there.
ANKARA, Turkey — The government rushed hundreds of additional troops to its border with Iraq yesterday to block the flood of refugees and forces of the United Nations. Officials said about 100,000 Kurds had pushed in nevertheless.
President Turgut Ozal told Britain's Independent Television News in an interview last night that there are 10,000 Iraqi Kurdish refugees in Turkey.
The semi-official Anatolia news agency said Ozal was referring to groups of at least 30,000 and 70,000 refugees at different points inside the border, which was closed Wednesday.
They were among the hundreds of thousands of people trying to escape from Kurdish areas in Iraq, fearing that they would be for the short-lived Kurdish rebellion.
A kind of genocide is being carried out by Iraq, Ozal said.
Some 150,000 remained at the border, Ozal said, adding that the number could grow to 600,000 in the next 10 days, according to Anatolia.
The president said Turkey could not admit more Kurds because it lacked the means to care for them. But he offered to let them in if European countries agreed to accept half of the refuences.
"I asked to the European countries, you should take half, and I will give the other half." Ozal said in the interview with the British network. "If they agree, 400,000 people, you should half of it. Will you accept that?"
"Nobody helped us, and nobody is going to take some of those refugees." Ozal said.
He said Turkey had taken in 60,000 Kouries fleeing chemical assault on the Baghdad regime three years ago. About 27,000 of those Kouries remain.
Turkey, which has been fighting its own Kurdish guerrillas for seven years, has asked for an urgent session of the Council to discuss the Iraqi refugees.
State television said 40,000 Iraqis were massed at Isikren village, a few hundred yards inside the Turkish border. The discrepancy between that number and the 30,000 that Ozal could not immediately be resolved.
Details about the Iraqi's push into Turkey were difficult to obtain because the government has barred respondents from the border region
State television showed the Iraqi Kurds in Isikerven cooking and warming up around small fires. The television showed some tents raised by refugees, and several suburbs apparently were blocking their way farther into the country.
A doctor told television—that some refugees had wounds from gunfire and burns that could be the result of a terrorist attack. But many were suffering from malnutrition.
Turkish newspapers reported that hundreds of Iraqi Kurds who were shot and wounded by Iraqi troops on their way to the Turkish border.
According to the Cumhuriyet, an Istanbul newspaper, about 500 Iraqis died on the road.
The daily said an unknown number of people also has died when they stepped on mines.
1 million Kurdish refugees gather in Iranian border town
0 200 Miles
Turkey
Syria
Kirkuk
Nowsoud
Iraq
Baghdad
Iran
Jordan
Saudi Arabia
Basra
Kuwait
Persian Gulf
Riyadh
Map area
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
The news agency Anatolia said 200 children died from cold in the mountains as they traveled toward Turkey.
Turkish officials said Wednesday that Iraqi troops were attacking the fleeing Kursites with mortar fire and heavy machine guns to territory but did not cause damage.
A government official in the border area said Turkey was treating at least 1,000 sick or wounded refugees at the border.
Reporters saw about 200 Kurds who sneaked into Turkey on foot being carried by Turkish army trucks to Cukurca township near the border, where they would spend the night. Their fate was unclear.
"Please tell them not to send us back," Abdelisel Salil Muhammad told reporters. "It is better that they kill us."
Sunny Day
Daylight-Saving Time!!!
Date: Sunday, April 7,1991
Time: 2:00 a.m.
What to do: Set your clocks ahead one hour. Yes, it's time to lose an hour of sleep again!
6
2
Friday, April 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Mayoral candidate claims hit man past
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — Mayoral candidate John Johnson says he is a former Mafia hit man now living in New York for protection and an assumed name.
"Some of you may know me as John Johnson, a local businessman and candidate for mayor," he said at a news conference Wednesday. "My official name, and the name I will bow to is Johnson." My brother Pat Tully."
The U.S. Marshals Service, which hides the identities of those who enter its Witness Protection Program, would not confirm or deny whether Johnson, the owner of a hot dog and a business, was a protected witness.
L. Col. Jordan, retired head of intelligence for Austin police, and other unidentified police sources told the Austin American-Statesman that Johnson's claims were true. They said Johnson came to Austin seven
Police had no official comment on the newspaper's report.
Johnson displayed a photograph and numerous documents to bolster his claim that he is Tully.
He said he received federal protection after helping to convict members of a New Jersey crime family. But he said he decided to make public his shady past because he is more afraid of the local police than of the mob.
"I've come out in the open, and I joined this mayor's race because I was in fear of my life by the police department," said Johnson, who wore an American flag draped around his neck.
Johnson said that he had been beaten by police while he was in custody in 1987 and that he had been harassed since then. He has an unpublished number and could not be interviewed to elaborate on his harassment claims.
Police representative Gail Phillips said the department had no record of Johnson filing any harassment reports.
Records show that Tully pleaded guilty in 1975 to charges including four counts of murder, conspiring to commit the murders, armed robbery and drug trafficking.
Tully was sentenced to 12 years in prison after helping authorities convict nine members of the Campisi crime family.
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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3
Candidates discuss coalitions and issues
DONALD D. SMITH
Jason McIntosh (left) of the FACTSI coalfish and Darren Fulcher of the impact coalfish answer questions from mediator Sheri Rinehart, a Wooden school, during a debate last night at McCollum Hall.
Presidential candidates Fulcher and McIntosh explain diversity, University child care stances
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie
Although it was labeled as a debate, the Student Senate presidential candidates may as well have both sides of the ticket, neither candidate actually debated.
After the prepared questions, the audience was allowed to ask questions.
Sheri Rinehart, Leawood senior who moderated the debate, then asked seven questions. Each candidate was allowed two minutes to address each question and took turns answering first.
Darren Fulcher, Impact presidential candidate, and Jason McIntosh, Fact presidential candidate, spoke to about 50 people at Colmoll Hall last night. They were allotted five hours to demonstrate themselves and their coalition.
Steve Dixon, Wichita senior, what asked the candidates what separated their coalition.
McIntosh said Facts had made a commitment to international students at the University of Kansas and to increase students' awareness of
"That's what we seek to do — increase accessibility," he said.
Fulcher said his coalition was made up of diverse leaders.
"We have people who are knowledgeable and experienced in the issues we put out in our campaign," he said.
Samuel Hale. Hoxie sophomore, said he was disappointed that the catcher had been hit with an elbow.
Melintosh said Facts had two former residence hall presidents and a professor of history.
"I would have liked to have seen more of the candidates actually facing each other with questions;" he said.
In their introductions, both candidates attempted to address the differences in their coalitions.
tional students at the University.
"Facts is the only coalition that has international students." he said
Fulcher said Impact was the more diverse coalition, with student leaders and members of many student organizations, such as Women's Student Union, Hispanic American Leader Union, Oregon Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
In the prepared questions, the candidates did not really disagree, but some of their answers varied as the candidates emphasized different areas.
Students lack interest in elections of Senate
In the issue of child care, both candidates said they would attempt to get all interested parties together, but the committee's immediate answer to the problem.
"The problem is here today," he said.
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
McIntosh said he had been involved in the child care issue in Senate this semester.
Many say Student Senate campaign efforts don't offer enough information about candidates or issues for next week's vote.
Seventy-four of 100 students interviewed yesterday did not know when the elections were scheduled. How many of them, 39 did not and 21 were uneducated.
Student Senate elections are scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, but many students are not aware of them.
"The student elections?" I don't even know anything about them," said Angela Mayen, Overland Park senior.
Mayen is among the students who do not plan to vote. She said that although she thought Senate was an important organization, she does not
Student Senate Elections
have time to follow the campaign.
Allen Potter, Denver graduate student, also said he did not plan to vote and had not followed the campaign.
"I'm concerned with the power that they have, but I really don't think that one group will be any different from the other." Potter said.
He said he had no knowledge about Senate and its issues.
"They haven't made any effort to distinguish themselves other than with campaign posters, which really don't address any issues," he said.
Sara Bennett, Manhattan freshman, also said that she wished Senate would provide more information to students.
"There's no information at all, only names. It's like team colors."
"No one ever explained it to me," Bennett said. "It might be something I'd like to get involved in, but I don't know anything about it."
Bennett said she had seen the campaign posters and probably would vote because she had some friends in one of the coalitions.
However, she said she did not know what the issues were.
Irene Powch, New York City graduate student, said she had not yet looked into the issues and was not sure whether she would vote.
"I will if I have time before then to research the issues," Powch said. "I'll probably scramble on the issues the day before."
KU sociology department has centennial celebration
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
After 100 years, KU's department of sociology has a lot to celebrate.
But this year, the event has a special twist.
Today and tomorrow, the department is sponsoring its annual meeting of the Kansas Sociological Society.
- Carol Warren
'A centennial is a celebration of an institution. It's an event that celebrates the discipline, the University and the department.'
"A centennial is a celebration of an institution," said Carol Warren, chairperson of the department. "It's an event that celebrates the discipline, the University and the department."
Not only is the department celebrating its 100th year at the University of Kansas, but it also is celebrate the world's first department of sociology.
Carol Warren Chairperson of the department of sociology
The event is free and open to the public. It will feature speakers from around the country who will lecture on sociology and its sociology department - social
theory, gender, comparative historical sociology and social inequality
Laura Z. Barter, conference coordinator, said that many of the speakers were KU alumni.
"The speakers reflect those areas because those are our specialties," Warren said.
"I hope they can reflect on their past, when they were here," she said. "They were a part of history."
She said history was important in the field of sociology.
"It's important because when you have a centennial, it's the history that is involved in creating and bringing it to life," she said. "I'm hoping it will make people
more aware that sociology has a substantial base to it."
"I hope people see the value of sociology as an intellectual discipline," he said. "In a sense, we're talking about that sociology has been for 100 years."
Alan Sica, professor of sociology who helped organize the centennial, agreed.
Sica said his research had shown that KU's department, founded in 1889, was organized before any other sociology department in the world.
The centennial celebration will be in the Kansas Union from 2:30 to 10 p.m. tonight and from 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. tomorrow.
RHINNATION
FAMILY POLITICS
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Take your pick
KU students browse through stacks of bargain-priced books in front of the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road. The bookstore was selling a surplus of discontinued editions from its stock yesterday. The sale will continue until the books run out.
APRIL 1991
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Friday, April 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Children go hungry
Lawmakers, voters should remember the poor and focus on nation's domestic hunger problems
M more than 5 million hungry U.S. children are begging for someone to hear their pleas.
Under-represented and lacking political power, the children are yet another item to add to the list of what the nation has forgotten to tend to.
The wealthiest nation in the world has been left desensitized by the Reagan-era legacy and has chosen not to address the problem of domestic hunger.
The Food Research and Action Center conducted a survey that represents the most comprehensive and thorough study ever made on hunger in the United States.
The Reagan administration dictated that the poor chose to be poor.
For these families, particularly for the children in these families, their was no choice involved in their plight.
Poor families are spending a large portion of their incomes on housing. So little of their paychecks is left that when it comes time to
It seems that until it becomes socially correct to act in favor of the silent group, they will continue to suffer.
buy food there simply is not enough money left to feed their children adequately.
Even in Kansas, the breadbasket state, one out of 10 children does not get enough to eat.
She said that pumping more money to
Sen.ancy Kassenbaum said so much that the welfare delivery system was a failure.
"We simply are not coordinating our efforts" ,she said.
But what the senator and other lawmakers have forgotten to suggest is what would solve the problem
Attention has been focused on international issues long enough. Lawmakers, and more importantly, voters, must turn to what has been nected on the homefront.
We cannot afford to alienate yet another part of our society.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
Minimum wage
Increased pay provides fairer distribution
The increase in the minimum wage Monday from $3.80 to $4.25 marks the second stage of a long overdue effort
second stage of a long overdue effort the first in nearly a decade to mandate a decent standard of living for working Americans.
About 3 million U.S. citizens earn the minimum wage. To full-time minimum-wage employees, the increase means a raise of about $18 a week. However, their $8,500 annual income still will be about $1,400 less than the poverty level for a family of three.
The minimum wage was designed to help prevent exploitative employment. The current minimum wage does not go far enough toward that goal. Individuals who spend one-third of their adult lives at a job deserve to earn at least enough to survive without relying on handouts.
Labor organizations have called for a minimum wage of $7.75 an hour by April 1994, which would raise it to its historical level of about half the average hourly wage.
Textbook economics argue against the minimum wage. In theory, the minimum wage limits international competitiveness and employment opportunities for unskilled labor, which might be displaced by the cost of higher wages.
However, empirical evidence for these assertions is slim.
Traditionally, the U.S. economy has maintained enough elasticity to offset effects that
might be seen in a "model" system.
Even if a few businesses faced bankruptcy because of a higher minimum wage, companies that cannot provide a living wage for their workers are of dubious value.
While some of the costs may be passed on to consumers, which could fuel inflation, current economic conditions make it more likely that management will absorb some of the expense of the higher wages. This mild redistribution would help alleviate inequities inherent in the management-labor relationship.
Besides its fundamental fairness, the minimum wage has other benefits.
Wage-led growth has been the secret of the U.S. economy for more than 200 years.
Workers' ability to migrate to the frontier and limited supplies of labor kept U.S. wages unusually high. High wages led companies to improve productivity and technology. On the demand side, well-paid workers formed a stable domestic market.
Higher wages produce better living standards and less reliance on an unpredictable world market. The richer countries of Western Europe, such as Germany, also successfully have followed this model.
Chris Siron for the editorial board
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LETTERS to the EDITOR
Religion responsibility
Ed Killen's sermantic article in Tuesday's Kansan, in which he thinks he has proven the empirical factuality of the Resurrection, is only frighteningly clear evidence that some KU students are capable of living in the 20th century while at the same time feeling comfortable in merely repeating the same old irrational clap-trap and subjectively based nonsense that they've picked up from their local bibliolatrous, fundamentalist gurus.
The only evidence he presents is that he has a naive understanding of the breadth and rich complexity of human psychological and religious experience and a total ignorance of the nature of history and history writing.
pletes his formal education that he take a basic course in logic (such as Introduction to Logic) and that he would begin to take some personal responsibility by being courageous and human enough to think his own thoughts, rather than merely recycle those ideas that were jammed into your brain, for example in superstition. Such people are in danger of becoming robots for those who will use them for their own economic and political ends.
I would hope that before he com-
Paul Allen Mincolne Assistant professor religious studies
Paul Allen Mireck
People of not-so-average height find world isn't always friendly
Why is today's world designed to accommodate people who range in height from 5-foot-5 to 6-foot-27.
I am 5 feet tall with my shoes on and frankly, I am sick and tired of having to climb on cabinets to get a glass. If I did not have a roommate who is 9, the top row of my cabinets would have seen anything but dust.
But cabinets are a very minor part of the discrimination against people of unusual height.
Another example of this prejudice is found in the height of the peephole in my apartment. Now I know that a lot of basketball players live in my apartment complex, but give me a break! It's much easier for them to bend over a little than it is for me to somehow levitate in mid-air long enough to catch a glimpse of whoever's outside. But apparently that's too much to ask, so I will continue to just drag a chair over there, climb up and look out, and then drag it away. Or, if I'm feeling particularly adventurous and I have my tennis shoes on,
I can put one foot on the walls on either side of the door and attempt to balance long enough to see whoever is outside. So far, however, this has not worked. But it is rather fun to try.
Melissa Butler
Staff columnist
Probably the most irritating disadvantage of being short arises when I board a crowded bus. If the bus is so full that I have to stand in the front section of the aisle, myself and everyone around me is in for a long and bumpy ride. You see, I can't stand on my tiptoes, standing on my tiptoes, which isn't the easiest position to stand balanced. So each time the bus starts and stops I'm thrown back and forth. Needless to say, the other passengers
really appreciate this. Generally, I just try to catch an early bus.
Now I realize that there's another side to this coin. There are some great advantages to being very short. For one thing I always have plenty of leg room, no matter what size the car is. And with a nice seat in the aisle seat on an airplane. Not to mention the ability to get through a crowd quickly and easily.
I guess it would be nice if the people that designed things such as buses and peepholes would take height into consideration a little more. Maybe then I wouldn't have to the olderwoman to see who's at the door.
- Melissa Butler is a Humbolt freshman majoring in theater.
Emir likes using quick divorce to end day-old marriages
Despite my better instincts, I am becoming a big fan of the oir of Kuwait. The price
emir of Kuwait. The spice old fellow really knows how to live. He's sort of the Hugh Hefner of the Hugh Hefner except on a much grander scale.
The emir didn't return to his wartown country until the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had restored one of their major palaces to its former odorence.
PETER R. HALVARD
So now that he's back in his palace,
what is Kuwait's ruler doing? Is he
leading, ruling, using his wisdom to
Only when new furniture had arrived, gold-plated toilet fixtures were restored, the air conditioners were humming and the gigantic indoor waterfall bubbled the emir join his fellow Kuwaitis, most of whom are still enduring shortages of electricity, food and other essentials.
Mike
Royko
Syndicated
columnist
No, he's out of sight and probably looking to have a good time, according to a prominent Kuwaiti merchant quoted in The New York Times.
guide his war-weary people through their troubled times?
"All the emir does is get married," the merchant said.
As the story explains, under Islamic law the emir can have four wives.
By that, he meant that for many years the emir's main interest has been young maidens.
Ah, but he is a sly emir. He has only three wives who are his permanent
spouses. (It is said that they live splendidly. After all, the billionaire sheik is no cheapskate.)
So that leaves a vacancy for one wife. And that's the emir's loophole.
As the Times story says, "At regular intervals — sometimes weekly — Jaber is said to marry a young virgin night — only to divorce on Friday."
Obviously, the emir couldn't do that if every time he got married and divorced he had to hire a lawyer and a private detective and go to court to testify: "Your honor, she has been carrying on shamelessly with a rock musician, and I have the photographs to prove it."
But under Kuwait's law, all he has to do is get up on Friday morning, yawn, scratch, have a gulp of coffee and say, "I'll leave you, I divorce you." That's it he
says it three times, and the one-day marriage is kaput.
It's perfectly legal, although some Arabs say it really isn't sporting. "He's following the letter of the law in France," he said to a Chicago Arab-American told me.
The Chicago, who has studied the emir's exploits, said there was no shortage of young maidens for she to skefie to魔。他 said some come from the Bedouins, the nomadic tribes that wander the desert and don't have much property that they can't load on a camel. Others are from Kuwaiti families that want to improve their standard of living.
"The virgin brides get money, goods and gifts. I'm not sure if their families get in on the graft as well, but I suspect some do."
"Future marital prospects are not affected for these young women. A
legally divorced woman can marry again, so her reputation is not tarnished.
"Some of these girls and their families consider this a great honor. They might hope that they will be seated as the permanent fourteenth."
Fat chance. At 65, with years of experience at this sort of thing, it's unlikely that the emir would over-sleep or wake up with a hangover and forget to say those three magic words three times.
I'm sure that there are some prudes who are offended by the emir's lifestyle. But look at it from his perspective. If you've seen his picture, you know that he has a long honker, an unsightly machette and the general appearance of a basset hound.
Nature didn't make him a Warren
Beatty. So he makes do with what he has, which is all a guy can do. And what the emir has, even after the war, are all those billions of gallons of untapped oil under his many nails.
If most men were honest — especially those with droopy faces — they'd admit that if they happened to be born a billionaire she, they'd be terrified. So it is allusions to turn the pretty heads of some impressionable young things.
Who knows? It's possible that the emir has been influenced by U.S. culture. Back in the 1960s, he was a student of John R. Hume on a popular slogan, from those days.
Remember it? "Make love, not war." He's just an aging flower child.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
CHRIS SIRON Editor
KANSAN STAFF
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News Melanie Mathetr
Editorial Tiffany Harness
Planning Holly M. Neuman
Campus Jennifer Reynolds,
Pam Solner
Sports Ann Sommerman
Photography Keith Thorpe
Graphics Melissa Unterberg
Features Jill Harrington
Campus sales mgr . Sophia Wehbe
Regional sales mgr . Carmen Dresch
National sales mgr . Jennifer Claxton
Sales mgr. Richard Hargbarger
Production mgrs . Rich Harbarger,
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing advise
Business staff
Marketing director Gail Einbinder
Creative director Christy Haha
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 can also type their letters.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Krasan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Krasan newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 5, 1991
5
On campus
African Affairs Student Association will feature the movie "Cry Freedom" at 7 tonight at 3 Lippincott Hall.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor an organ concert by Meila Picchete, Wichita junior, at 7:45 tonight.
- Women's Resource Center will sponsor a workshop titled "Woman, Speech and Silence" at 8 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Police report
- Voice will meet at noon Sunday at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets
■ African Affairs Student Association will have "African Night" at 5 p.m. Saturday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1024 Oread Ave. A party will be at 9:30 p.m. at Four Rivers Restaurant, 2907 W Sixth St. ■ Campus Crusade will present Andre Kole, world famous illusionist, at 8 p.m. Saturday at Hoch Auditorium.
A KU student reported Wednesday that his rear passenger window was broken and that an AM/FM cassette player worth $200 was taken while the car was parked in front of Stoufler Place Apartments, KU police reported. Damage to the car was estimated at $150.
A suspect attempted to steal a KU student's moped at 3:23 a.m. yesterday in the 1700 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. The suspect gave a false name to the report and was arrested when he was told he was under arrest.
A KU student's locked car was broken into Wednesday morning in the 1700 block of 19th Street, Lawrence police reported. A stereo cassette player, binoculars and a valued together at $153 were taken
Two separate thefts were reported Wednesday at the Robinson Center raccquet courts. A backpack valueless bag and two keys were taken, KU police reported.
Another backpack was taken from a different court about the same time. It was valued at $30 and contained items worth $220.
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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 Paul Hough
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.
The PIRATES OF PENZANCE
or (The Slave of Duty)
or (The Slave of Duty)
Directed by Paul Hough
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.
ally funded by the
Student Senate
This production is an
associate entry in the
1992 American College
Theatre Festival XXIV.
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Friday, April 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Committee OKs $20 million cut to education
By Joe Gose Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The higher education financing bill is limping to the Senate floor.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee approved cuts of almost $20 million yesterday when it voted to send the bill to the Senate.
Senate cuts $4 million more in support to Kansas Board of Regents than did House
The bill had passed through the House with $16 million restored after a House committee had cut almost $40 million from Gov. Joan Finney's recommendation. The Senate committee's action would cut financing $4 million more than the House had originally proposed.
The cuts reflect a 2.6 percent decrease in State General Fund support for the Kansas Board of Regents.
More than $4.3 million would be cut from KU's requested fiscal 1992 budget. Those requests included financing for the Margin of Excellence, other operating expenditures and enrollment adjustments.
Before the final vote to send the bill to the Senate, the committee approved a recommendation that more than $450,000 be reinstated for
the Career Work Study program.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, recommended that the program, which had been killed by the House, be restored.
He also said he would fight to restore the $20 million next week when the bill hits the Senate floor.
Winter attempted to restore the money last week, the first day the committee discussed the bill, but his attempt failed.
'My present intention is to offer an amendment on the floor to add
money to this bill similar to the motion I made earlier," he told the committee after sounding the lone vote to oppose the bill's trip to the court. "I just wanted to let you people know that that was my intention."
But State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, asked, "How do you propose to spend more money when you don't have it?"
Winter responded that he thought it was time to start discussing tax in advance.
"I think that quality education is worth more money out of our pockets," he said. "And I wish to acknowledge that when I make this motion, it will mean more revenue to the state. I will make sure that it goes to education."
Other members of the committee, however, said they did not think the Regents should get additional support until they reviewed each of their institutions and found ways to spend money more efficiently.
State Sen. Paul Feleciano Jr., D-
Wichita, said the Regents were not living up to their responsibilities.
"Didn't we entrust them with the responsibility three or four years ago to begin the business of looking into the operation of their institutions"? he asked.
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents, said that programs at each institution would be reviewed and that if two or more programs would be consolidated into one program and offered at one institution only.
Kopik said that the review was scheduled to be completed in April 1992.
Student Senate wants to convert parking lot back into sports field
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
A temporary parking lot that was previously a sports field has been a subject of discussion lately for some students and administrators.
Student Senate passed a resolution Wednesday night calling for the removal of the lot between Robinson Center and the Computer Services Facility and the return of a recreational field for Fall 1991.
However, the parking department says the lot is needed to accommodate the additional people that use Dole Human Development Center.
Now the decision is in the hands of
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor.
Shankel said that he was aware of the two conflicting views and that he would make a decision on the status of the lot by the end of the semester.
the parking lot originally was tailed in 1988 with the intent of burning it to recreational status or the completion of the Dole
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said the lot was built to relieve the parking space shortage because of the construction of the Dole Center.
But the 82-space lot should be permanent because the addition of
the Dole Center has increased the number of people who part in that that activity.
Hultine said a survey conducted in the fall showed that all of the lots near the temporary iot frequently were filled to maximum capacity.
Aimee Hall, student body vice president, said. "The resolution is to encourage the University to stand by and help prevent the parking lot to a playing field."
The resolution states that groups have been turned down for field usage because of overcrowding and that considerable damage has been done to the remaining fields because of overuse.
This year's health fair stresses 'prevention,' offers the chance to see doctor, receive tests
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence Memorial Hospital will have a fair tomorrow, but instead of getting popcorn and cotton candy, they will offer water and information about their bodies.
The health fair is from 7:30 a.m. to noon in the same-day surgery building at the hospital at 325 Maine St. It is free to the public. Local health agencies also will have information tables set up in the building.
"Prevention, I guess, is the key here," said Brenda Haack, community education coordinator for the community.
Haack said she expected about 300 people, about 70 percent of them older than 50 years, to attend the hospital. The cost will cost the hospital $2,900 to $3,000.
Many of the people who attended the health fair make it an annual event, Haack said. Many do not have a regular doctor or cannot afford one.
"This is a once-a-year opportunity for them to see a doctor," she said.
The hospital has sponsored the health fair for almost a decade with many of the same health agencies coming back each year, she said.
County Health Department, said,
"It's something we've been involved in for many years. We essentially have information on everything we do. It basically informs the public about the range of services we have here at the department."
The hospital tries to offer basically the same tests each year because people begin to expect them, but Haack said she also tried to add new tests to the health fair. Cholesterol screening is new this year.
Douglas County Senior Services also will have an information table, said Jean Cowles, director of the services.
Shuttle to liftoff for 5-day trip
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The shuttle Atlantis was buttoned up and ready yesterday to carry a 17-ton satellite into space to study the powerful gamma rays that burst violently but unseen through the universe.
"Gamma Ray Observatory is a truly mission of discovery because we will be looking at regions of space that have not been studied before." said Lennard Fisk, NASA's chief scientist. "You have the real possibility of seeing phenomena that have not been observed before and perhaps have not been imagined before."
NASA scheduled the liftoff for 9:18 a.m. EST today but said it could delay the launch until nearly noon to wait out any weather problems.
The shuttle will be flying for the first time with new computers that are replacing the set that was used since the space fleet went into operation 10 years ago this month. The new general purpose computer will take times the memory and three times the speed of the earlier ones.
Air Force Col. Steven R. Nagel and his crew of three men and one woman who played the first Americans on space station. They are to return to Earth on
In search of gamma rays
A new space observatory, the heaviest satellite to be deployed the shuttle, will study the universe through observations of gamma rays
Shuttle Atlantis
- **Launch date:** Friday, April 5,
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
- **Landing date:** Wednesday, April
10, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
10, **Crew:** Five, including one female
About the observatory
Weight: 35,000 lbs.; that is about nine Cadillacs
Orbit: Low-earth orbit at 243 nautical miles
Motion: None
Mission: Look for clues and answers to origin and history of universe through
specialist of universe through study of gamma rays Solar panels Gamma ray detectors Low-gain antenna: Narrow field of view Solar panels H'high-gain antenna: Wide field of view What are gamma rays?
- Thought to originate with the "Big Bang" and subsequent expansion of the universe
A form of light that cannot penetrate earth's atmosphere; emitted by some of the most exotic structures in the universe — supernovae.
Study of gamma rays will help scientists better understand inner workings of these objects
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/MARTY WESTMAN
The astronauts' main mission is Sunday's release of the 35,000-pound Gamma Ray Observatory. The astronauts also carried an instrument ever carried in the shuttle A day later, mission specialists Jerry Ross and Jay Aplt will put on space
Wednesday morning at Edwards Air Force Base in California.
suits and move out into the open cargo bay to test techniques to be used in building a space station.
The Gamma Ray Observatory, or GRO, is the second in NASA's Great Observatory series. The GRO has a three-lens telescope, was launched last April.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 5, 1991
7
World briefs
Merion. Pa.
Senator dies in plane crash
Sen. John Heinz and six others, including two children, were killed yesterday when a helicopter collided with Heinz's plane over a schoolyard at midday, authorities said.
"Fifteen minutes later, there would have been two kids where the helicopter came down," Fiona said.
The collision occurred as the helicopter was checking the landing gear of the senator's plane, while the boat was moving.
The children killed were on the ground. Most children were in class at Merion Elementary and only a few were outside at the time of the fiery crash, said John Fowler, head custodian.
Heinz, a 52-year-old Republican, was an heir to the H.J. Heinz food empire. He was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, representing Pittsburgh, in a special election in 1971 and was re-elected twice. He was elected to the Senate in 1976 and was re-elected in 1982 and 1988.
Tokyo
Faulty pump shuts down plant
A nuclear power plant was shut down yesterday when its water cooling pump malfunctioned, in the sixth report of trouble at a Japanese nuclear reactor in two months.
The malfunctions have led to growing opposition to the expansion of the country's nuclear industry. The country plans to generate 35 MW of electricity power by 1995, up from the present 26.6 percent.
The No. 3 reactor of the Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant, 120 miles west of Tokyo, shut down automatically yesterday as the level of cooling water fell in the reactor's pressure vessel, said Tadao Ishibe, a representative for Chubu Electric Power Co. Inc.
No radiation escaped outside the reactor Ishibe said.
Palm Beach, Fla.
Kennedy nephew denies rape
"Any suggestion that I was involved in any offense is erroneous, the 30-year-old medical student."
The Palm Beach Post quoted an unidentified source as saying Smith was listed in a police document as the suspect in the alleged rape of a 29-year-old woman. The newspaper said Smith's photo would be among those shown to the woman.
The source's connection with the case was not disclosed.
Smith, 30, was with the senator and the senator's son Patrick at the club Au Bar on the night of the alleged incident.
From The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Russian leader Boris Yeltsin yesterday won sweeping powers to rule by decree in the biggest Soviet republic, greatly increasing his power, terms and stand up to his rival, Mikhail Gorbachev.
Russian Congress increases Yeltsin's power to reform
The Associated Press
The breakthrough on the eighth day of the stalemated Russian Congress of People's Deputies gives Yeltsin the means to try to override opposition and force Russia to join the Soviet president on a more equal footing.
"It will equalize their positions and will let them cooperate," said Alexander Ruskoy, leader of a newly formed group of Communist Party moderates, who broke with hard-liners on Tuesday.
But Yeltsin was given no enforcement powers, such as a long-discussed Russian army, and there was no assurance local officials would obey his decrees.
Yeltsin, who favors privatization of property and other radical reforms, has pushed through laws that conflict with the conservative steps taken by Gorbachev's national leadership. Yeltsin also has supported many of the 15 republics that are seeking greater rule or outright independence from the Kremlin.
The rivalry between Yeltsin and Gorbachev, one-time allies who split three years ago over the pace of reform, has hobbled any significant change in Russia. Yet Yeltsin ascended to the Russian leadership last year.
The power struggle was the background for the impasse at the Russian parliament, a 1,063-member body that was roughly split between reformers and conservatives. It followed from the hard-line bloc Communists of Russia.
"We hope to become a mediating group to find a way out of the Yellin-s-Gorbachev standoff," said Andre Dumayev, a co-leader of the 96-member group that calls itself Communists for Democracy.
Hard-liners at the parliament have been unable to gain a majority for a vote of no-confidence in Yeltsin, the initial reason for the session. And Yeltsin has been unable to persuade the Congress to amend the Russian constitution to provide for direct elections to a strengthened presidency.
Yeltsin offered the surprise a yesterday morning, and after orderly debate in the usually turbulent parliament, lawmakers voted 588-292, with 23 abstentions, to give it preliminary approval, for the process to debate minor matters, a tradition that had been expected to give final approval today.
The resolution gives Yeltsin and the Russian leadership the right to issue obligatory orders on the territory of the Russian Federation within the framework of existing laws.
It empowers it to take urgent measures for taking society out of crisis, defending the economic basis of Russia's sovereignty, providing for a transition to a market economy, reorganizing and financing the system of administration and law enforcement and averting, limiting and hating strikes.
The resolution transfers most of the parliament's legislative duties to its smaller working legislature, the Supreme Soviet, but keeps final authority in the Congress.
It also prohibits Yeltsin from dissolving the parliament and requires him to obtain agreement from local governments before imposing new rules upon them.
LA police chief will take leave at police commission's request
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Police Chief Daryl Gates was forced to take a 60-day paid leave of absence yesterday, pending completion of key investigative work. The officer is an African-American motorist by white policemen.
"I feel that I have been disgraced and defamed." Gates said. "I have no idea why this is happening with the White House."
The police commission, a civilian oversight agency investigating the incident, gave no reason for the shooting.
"We emphasize this action is not punitive in nature and results in no loss of pay or benefits for Chief Gates," the commission said. "More importantly, it should not be taken by the public as reflecting any conclusion as to whether the chief should be charged or disciplined in the future."
Mayor Tom Bradley asked on Tuesday for Galloway resignation, joining many critics of the police department.
Bradley, who lacks the authority to fire Gates, said the chief's response to the March 3 beating of Rodney King plunged the nation's second-largest city and its police department into a crisis.
"It is my hope that today's police commission action will give us all time to bridge the differences
that have grown between us since the Rodney King incident." Bradley said.
King was released from a hospital earlier this week and went into seclusion, his attorney, Steve Leavens said.
Lerman said King was still having trouble with his facial muscles and memory lapses.
Meanwhile, the president of the 8,100-member Los Angeles Police Protective League said officers were so angry that they might authorize some job action, such as a work slowdown or sickout.
The American Civil Liberties Union, leader in the campaign to oust Gates, said the furlough would help soothe wounds opened when the beating stopped. The humbling parts salesman trived out a new camera.
The commission appointed Assistant Chief David Dotson as interim chief.
Gates had said earlier he would not openly defy the commission if members tried to put him on leave.
"I would not dispute their authority," he said. "I understand that could be insubordination."
Also yesterday, two blue ribbon citizen's groups, paneled to conduct top-to-bottom reviews of the building's interior.
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Corsicans accepted as separate ethnic entity
The Associated Press
PARIS — French lawmakers agreed yesterday to give a separate identity to inhabitants of the French island of Corsica, where nationalists have long waged a guerrilla struggle for autonomy.
After months of debate, deputies voted 297-275 to adopt the first and most controversial article of a bill that reforms the status of natives of the Mediterranean island, part of France for 176 years.
Article 1 identifies Corsicans as the Corsican people, a component of the French people. The hill is sponsored by the government of Francois Mittertier
Alain Juppe, a leading conservative deputy, called the vote a significant error.
"It is to strike a blow at something I thought was untouchable in our Constitution, that is the unity and indivisibility of the French people." Juppe, secretary-general of the Rally for the Republic Party, said.
"Why not the Baique people or the Abatian people?" he said of other FF refugees.
The rocky island of Corsica, with a population of about 250,000, has changed hands countless times. It definitively ceded to France in 1817.
The Corsican National Liberation Front has carried on an independence struggle since the early 1970s.
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Your membership trip begins with the SENIOR COOKOUT. 5:30 p.m. April 24 in the Adams Center parking lot.
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Next stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST, 8 a.m. May 19 for graduates and their families.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday. April 5. 1991
9
Arts and Entertainment
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
Scott's in his Trans Am with his windows down
But he's in a jam with the girls around
A
Jay Davis and Dave Cummins of the band Brain Candy play to a frenzied crowd at the Bottleneck on open mike night
He yells hey! Get outta my way!
I shouldn't be so scared.
"Sex Drive" - The Embarrassment.
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampton St., is regarded as one of the few places in Lawrence to catch live alternative local and national bands.
It took almost nine years to build that reputation.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, small, struggling bands from across the country considered Lawrence a home away from home.
Bands such as R.E.M., The Cramps, Dead Kennedys and Buzzcocks used to ramble through these local clubs.
Clubs such as Off the Wall Hall and the Lawrence Opera House, as well as the student radio station, JKHK, were responsible for generating interest in bands that were labeled "culture workers," and how they are considered mainstream.
"The Opera House did Iggyp Pop, the Go Go's and the Police and things like that, while Off the Wall Hall did more of the alternative stuff like the Embrassment," said Brett Mosman, owner of the Bottleneck. "The moment we came close to putting together the kind of stuff we're doing now."
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
However, in 1983, on the Wall Hall closed and reopened as Cogburn's. The Opera House closed soon afterward. The outlets for live music became slim, and live alternative music in Lawrence almost died.
"Gammons and Cogburn's started up, and they were real dance-oriented," said Mosiman, a 1983 KU student. "We weren't any place to see live music."
In 1985, Mosiman and a woman named Mona Tipton, who left the club in 1989 to teach English in Japan, bought Cogburn's in an effort to change that situation. But the lack of original local bands and the demand for popular cover bands delayed the change.
"It was real evident when we first bought Cogburn's that cover bands were what people wanted to see, and that was making us money." he said.
Mosiman said that there were only one or two original bands in the
Lawrence area in 1985, compared to the Bottleneck for the increase.
"What comes first, the good clubs for bands to play in or the good bands to create a scene?" he said. "I really think that we gave bands a platform, and the music scene blossomed around us."
Travlin' Matt Kesler, bass player for the Pedal Jets, a band that started in Lawrence almost nine years ago, agreed.
"The Bottleneck opened up live
entertainment, he said. "There was no scene in Lawrence for a while, and there was no place for a scene. It's not just the music map as far as college music goes."
Lawrence is considered fertile ground for live alternative music, Mosiman said. One of the reasons for that is KJHK, which gives air time to many of the bands that perform at the Bottleneck.
Phil Wells, director of concert promotions for KJHK, said that the station and the Bottleneck had built a
good working relationship.
Other clubs, such as the Jazzhus,
926 1/4 Massachusetts st., and now
Benchwarmer Sports Bar & Grill,
1601 W. 23rd St., live music in
the bars mainly offer bands that already have an established audience.
And while the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St., offers unknown knacks a chance, it does not have the space to exhibit additional acts that the Bottleneck does.
Thus, because the Bottleneck can
take chances with unknown groups, a person who wanders in on any night may happen to see a future gold-record band.
But in the early days, it was a lot more risky taking those chances.
"Nobody knew who Trip Shakespeare was, and they would maybe pull 25 people for a weekend." A whole lot of money on these weekends.
"But now it's a scene. It has worked better than I had ever imagined."
Depardieu is at his best in 'Cyrano'
By David Small
Special to the Kansan
reviews
Gerard Depardieu loves Roxane. No, Cyr
ano loves Roxane.
But Depardieu, nominated for an Academy Award as best actor, is so believable as Edmund Rostand's swashbuckling and peteic soldier with an oversized proboscis ("My nose precedes me by 15 minutes") that it is difficult to separate actor from character.
Debardieu is Cvrano de Bergerac.
Rappeneau's Oscar-nominated film is an epic fairy tale rich with lush scenery and exciting heroes. It offers some interesting cinematic choices that succeed quite admirably, mostly because of the performance of who he made his U.S. film debut in "Green Card."
If you exclude Steve Martin's 1987 modern update of the Cyrano story in "Roxanne," four decades have passed since a faithful version of the novel was published, and sacrifice has appeared on U.S. screens.
Cyrano is introduced through the wide, innocent eyes of a young French boy attending a Parisian theater.
MOVIES
Cyrano makes a grandstand entrance into the Paris theater, ordering a pompous and inept actor off stage. In the film takes on the propelled by Depardieu's energetic preacher.
An audacious adventurer and soldier, Cyrano also offers a tender side. His greatest emotion is shown in his love for his young wife, the Anne Brochet, who is unaware of his passion.
"While I was alone in the shadows, others come up to kiss the sweet rose," Cyrano pines, revealing a surprisingly frightened and lonely man destined to love only through another — the handsome Christian, played by Vincent Perez.
And what of his famous nose?
In the first scenes of the film, Depardieu uses the size of his nose for comic and dramatic value. He uses it as a weapon, both literally in a comical but tragic duel, and as a verbal asset in a witty trail of self-deprecating nose jokes to fend off his enemies and his own
insecurities
Interestingly enough, the much-vaulted nose is only the pivotal point of Cyrano's character for the first 30 minutes of the film. As the cinematography brightens and adds color to the Paris streets, the importance of the nose jides for everyone but Cyrano as the film's characters and the audience become more by Cyrano's heart-tending love for his cousin.
Rappeneau uses the last half of the film as an epic video of war, with beautifully filmed scenes of Spanish soldiers battling famished and greatly outnumbered Gascons, who were more interested in stealing the Spanish Army's rations than in winning the battle.
Anne Brochet gives an effective performance as Roxane, a woman inspired by "embroidered" love. Fainting over the love poetry crafted by her character's sutor, Christian, allows Brochet to exhibit a somewhat campy quality. It worked.
The weak link in this film is Vincent Perez as the superficial suitor. Although Perez is handsome enough, he is not quite believably stupid enough.
'Flashpoint' fizzles as Stones fail to ignite
Special to the Kansan
Bv Kristine Curlev
Let me say that I like the Rolling Stones. The name itself is synonymous with rock 'n' roll. As for the group's new album, I have little praise.
"Flashpoint" is a live compilation of 17 of the band's biggest hits. Songs range from early Stones songs, such as "Huby Tuesday" and songs from their 1989 album, "Steel Wheels."
It's hard to criticize classic songs such as "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and
"Flashpoint" also includes two new songs, "Sex Drive" and "Highwire", the only two tracks not recorded live. The remaining 15 tracks are from the 90-Steel Wheels/Urban Jungle World Tour.
MUSIC
The music is rushed, and Mick Jagger's vocals sound like he still is reaching for that sense of youthful rebellion but that has obviously met advancing age. The band's ability most popular hit, "Satisfaction," is grossly dismembered by new instrumental accompaniment, and we somehow aren't convinced that Jagger "can't get no . . ."
"Satisfaction." These songs helped shape and define a generation of rock music. But it seems the fire that used to ignite these bad boys of rock is missing on this album.
Even more discouraging are the group's two new songs. They are pop-ish and seem more
I realize it's hard to come up with the same caliber of songs for a band that's been around for more than 25 years, but the Stones don't even come close to equaling previous work. If anything, it appears that the band members have fallen into the easy rut of writing pop hits that still get airplay because of who the Stones are rather than for the quality of the music.
like songs that today's pseudo-rock bands are likely to produce. Even the successful 1989 release "Rock and a Hard Place" doesn't match the songs this band has delivered over the years.
Exciting versions of "Paint it Black" and "Sympathy for the Devil" appear on the album, but other than these two songs, the remainder of the album is "Sad Sad Sad."
CALENDAR
Fridav
"The Business of Murder," 8 p.m., Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., call 843-7469 for ticket reservations.
University Chamber Orchestra, 8 d.p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, free.
*America's Funniest People*
videoated auditions, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
fourth-floor lobby, Kansas
Union, information at SUA Office.
Baghdad Jones, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St $3
■ The Homestead Grays, 9:30 p.m.
The Jazzhaus, $92½ Massachusetts
St. $3
■ "Heavy Metal," SUA Movie, midnight. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50.
Saturday
"Taxi Driver"; SUA Movie, 4 p.m.
Wooldrift Auditorium, Kansas Union,
"Dances With Wolves"; SUA Movie,
7 p.m. Wooldrift Auditorium,
Kansas Union, $2.50
Opera: "The Pirates of Penzance" b.
p.m. Crawford-Prey Theatre, Murphy Hailt Hall at Murphy Hall Box Office,
public $5 for student public All seats required
public
"The Business of Murder," 8 p.m., Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., call 843-7469 for ticket reservations.
Sin City Disciples and Zoom, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $4
■ The Homestead Grays 9:30 p.m., The Jazzhaus, 926 $1/2 Massachusetts St., $3
■ "Heavy Metal," SUA Movie, midnight Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union $2.50
Sundav
■ "Dances With Wolves," SUA Movie, 2 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
"The Business of Murder", 2:30 and 8 p.m., Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., call 843-7469 for ticket reservations.
**O** opera. "The Pirates of Penzance," 8
p.m., Craft-More-Prey Theatre, Murphy
Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office,
10 $ for public, 5$ for students, all seats
Monday
Open mike, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St. free.
Tuesday
"The Seven Year Itch," SUA
Movie, 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium,
Kansas Union, $2
■ KU Trumpet Ensemble and Tubal/Euphonium Consort, 8 p.m., Swanbath Rental Hall free
Red Kross, Eleventh Dream Day.
and Yo La Tengo, 9-30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
education $10.
Wednesday
*The Seven Year Itch*, SUA
Movie, 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium,
Kansas Union, $2.
Black Cat Bone, 9:30 p.m., The Bottlenock, 737 New Hampshire St.
Thursdav
■ "The Seven Year Itch," SUA Movie, 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas City $2
■ Farm Accident and Pastor Frogs,
9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New
Hamshire St. $3.
■ Mamou, 9:30 p.m. The Jazzhaus,
126½ Massachusetts St. $3.
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Friday, April 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Headmasters 408 Vernmont 843-8668
THE LYRIC OPERA OF KANSAS CITY PRESENTS
THE VALKYRIE
by Richard Wagner
TOM WILKINSON
If you are a father or a daughter:
Don't Miss It!
The gods are humbled by deep human emotion when law is challenged by the sacrament of true love.
At the Music Hall • April 6, 8, 10, 12
All performances in English and at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets: $6.00 - $35.00 Call (816) 471-7344
Russell Patterson, General Artistic Director
Commercial Sold Out
Student Rush $3.00 30 minutes prior to curtain
Underwritten by the End and Crosby Kemper Foundation
Financial assistance provided by the Missouri Amts Council and the National
Endowment for the Arts. **USAir** is the Lyncs official airline
Jayhawk Baseball
Kansas vs Oklahoma State
- Friday April 5, 7:00 p.m.
- Saturday April 6,2:00 p.m.
Doubleheader
- Sunday April 7, 1:00 p.m.
Hoglund - Maupin Stadium
I am a ball player. I love to play baseball and play with my friends. I enjoy playing catch and games. I love watching sports. I love to play with my friends. I enjoy playing catch and games. I love watching sports.
Admission: $2 for Adults, $1 for under 18 KU students FREE with ID.
Saturday - free KU Baseball Bat pens to the first 250 people
Council bans ROTC discrimination
By Eric Nelson
Before passing a resolution yesterday prohibiting discrimination in the ROTC, the University Council issued its wording and implications.
Kansan staff writer
The resolution will be use Wednesday as part of a nationally coordinated day protesting the Department of Defense policy prohibiting gays and lesbians in ROTC programs, said Siegried the Director of the Chancellor's Conference on Discrimination in the ROTC.
The committee will meet today to discuss exactly how the resolution will be used as a part of the coordination process. The committee is affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Dennis Lane, Council member,
was concerned about the use of the
word "deplore" in the resolution. The
resolution states that KU deplores
the action.
he said.
Lane said that usage was confrontational and aggressive.
"This is an interesting position for a university," Lane said.
He questioned the University's aggressive position and said he feared the University did not allow a student to engage with the Department of Defense.
"By using that word 'deplore', you're not even giving them that option."
In order for discussion to begin and a resolution to be reached, the stage may be completed.
set, he said.
Lane also mentioned that KU's political policies, still had forms of descrimination.
"We discriminate at several levels." he said.
Guidelines for acceptance into graduate school based on grade point average and scholarships based on race were two examples he gave.
Pat Warren, Student Executive Committee chairperson, said he was not concerned with the word 'dephore' and its aggressiveness. He explained that it is difficult enough to set up any dialogue with the Department of Defense.
"I think this has gone beyond the point of discussion and debate," he said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 5, 1991
11
Fired-up Kansas in winning spirit facing Cowboys
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Oklahoma State baseball team has won 10 consecutive Big Eight Conference championships and last year won runner-up in the College World Series.
That was then. this is now
"We're not scared of them anymore," Kansas catcher Garry Schmidt said. "We've got lots of ours out there, and we have to come in here." Bring 'em on".
In the past, nine baseball teams have served up victory after victory and home run after home run to the team, while accepting it without resistance.
The Jayhawks and the 15th-ranked Cowboys square off in the first game of their four-game series at 7 onight at Hogwnd Stadium. The two teams face a doubleheader at 2 p.m. tomorrow, and the series finale at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said, "This is a great time to be playing them. We've won seven in a row, and we're in first place."
The Cowboys' recent play also provides an opportune time for Kansas.
"They're going to be a good pitching team with a good middle infield I'm told," Bingham said. "But, they're not hitting like the Oklahoma Cardinals they're hitting. 280. Usually, they're up around .320 or aaron of ten with
Baseball
home runs."
After 27 games, the Cowboys are hitting 286 as a team with 43 home runs. The Jayhawks enter tonight with 28 home runs after 33 games.
The home run totals may be deceiving, as the Cowbys play on a field home with considerably shorter fences than Holland-Maupin.
Regardless of what happens offensively, the Cowboys' best player will never touch a bat.
He happens to be their coach.
"Their hardest gun to beat is Gary Ward." Bingham said. "He cannot become a dominant factor in the game for us to win."
Kansas right-hander Curtis Schmidt will start tonight's game, but Bingham said he was unsure of the weekend pitching rotation.
Bingham hesitated in describing the series as crucial to KU's Big Eight title hopes. Nevertheless, he said victories this weekend would make the rest of the season a bit easier.
"They are the measuring stick of the conference, but we're in first place right now." Bingham said. "They have to take it away from us."
This weekend's series is the first of the season for the Cowboys and the third for the Jayhawks.
'Hawks prepared for Big 8 tourney
Bv Lana Smith
Kansan snortwriter
Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack expects the Jayhaws to build their confidence through their games against Missouri and Iowa State in the Big Eight Conference Round Robin tournament.
Kansas will play tomorrow and Sunday in Norman, Okla.
Haack said that the Big Eight teams had reached their peak.
"It's a feather in their caps to get into the rankings, if not nationally then regionally, by beating us."
"When we get to Big Eight play, everybody's leveling out," Haack said. "Iowa State, which we play first, hasn't the best season so far." We'll need more than ready to get out and play us. Missouri is a little bit stronger.
Haack said Kansas, now ranked 13th in the nation, was focused and had practiced hard this week.
The team knows what they have to do to win, he said.
The Jayhawks practices have been geared for the game against Missouri because the Tigers like to run.
Softball
"We've been focusing on base runn-
ing," Haack said. "With the team's
speed we can really make a lot
happen."
Kansas junior pitcher Shelly Sack said the Jayhaws practiced against Missouri when they participated in the bat Light Invitational in San Diego.
"They're always tough, but we know how to do everything." Sack said.
Kansas junior third baseman Camille Spitaleri said two victories against Missouri would move Kansas up in the rankings.
"Their pitcher has a good rise ball," Spalatiera said. "Some games he hit really well, and some games we really scatter."
Spitaleri said the Jayhawks needed to concentrate on hitting to beat the Tigers.
Sack and Spitalieri agreed that Kansas should not have any problems defeating Iowa State, if the game played as they were capable of doing.
Bernice
Chris Bowers. of Englewood. Colo... practices for Sundav's Big Eight match against Colorado.
Team seeks revenge on Buffs
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams will play host to Big Eight Conference foe Colorado at the Field House tennis courts audition.
Matches begin at 9 a.m. for the women and at 2 p.m. for the men.
Kansas men's coach Scott Perelman said thoughts of the Buffalos brought revenge to the minds of the Javhaws.
"They beat us 5-4 last year at Colorado," he said. "That was kind of the beginning of our downfall, so there's some motivation there."
half of the conference," he said "They're much improved and very well coached"
The Jayhawks are currently ranked 14th in the country, the highest in the program's history. The Jayhawks' pass rush could not look past Colorado.
"They should finish in the upper
In Big Eight play, every match that is won counts as a point toward the overall conference championship. Players who were ready to accept the challenge.
"With such a veteran team, everyone has been through the conference before," he said. "Everyone is well aware what each match means. It will definitely be on our minds."
The Kansas women's team will enter Sunday's match with a 1-0 record in the Big Eight after its 7-2 defeat of Kansas State last week.
Kansas women's coach Michael Center said he was expecting a much tougher match from Colorado
stronger than they are in doubles, but they're definitely an improved team."
"They're very deep with six good players," he said. "I think we're
At yesterday's practice, Center said Kansas junior Eveline Hamers was questionable for Sunday's match.
Hamers, the KU women's record-holder for career singles victories, has been sidelined with an injured knee for about a month.
"Eveline's obviously a big part of our lineup." Center said. "She is looking better each day, so maybe she'll be ready for Sunday."
Center, mirroring Perelman's thoughts, said that he had also stressed to his players the importance of winning every Big Eight match.
"Every match counts as a point," he said. "It's extremely hard to recover from a bad weekend at the end of the year."
Jobless Bo finds work in Chicago
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Seventy years after Shoeless Joe Jackson, the White Sox on Wednesday gave Jobless Bo Jackson work.
Chicago baseball fans are skeptical about the deal.
"He a heck of a ballplayer if he's healthy," said Ted Kramer, 54, an accountant and White Sox fan from the Comiskey Park neighborhood.
Kramer hopes Bo will be healthy enough to play.
"It would be hard to see a 28-year old have his career end," he said.
The Kansas City Royals announced March 18 that they were putting Jackson on waivers after Royals team physician Steve Joyce said the outfielder's hip injury was career-threatening.
Jackson, promising to return from the injury that also threatens his football career, signed a free-agent contract Wednesday with the Chicago White Sox. Some doctors have speculated that Jackson, still on crutches, will never play football or baseball again.
Kramer likes Jackson.
"He seems like a nice guy. Some guys want too much." he said.
Ray Janisch, 35, said he didn't understand where Jackson would play.
"What is he going to do?" Janisch said. "Our outfield is set. But he should be good if they use him as a DH."
Dan O'Neill, another White Sox
fan-accountant, said Bad Judd mustlude-
d the other players.
"I was worried over the winter about (outfielders) Cory Snyder and Dan Pasqua getting playing time." "Now, we get another outfielder."
Yet, fans expect Jackson to help the White Sox if he can play.
That's the uncertainty — when Jackson will be ready to go to bat.
Realistically, we don't expect him to be the general manager Ron Schuler said.
The one-year contract with options for 1992 and 1993 pays Jackson eye if he returns.
Boe's signishing highlighted quite a day for the White Sox. A wrecking ball began tearing down the walls of old Camisey Park, where Sheoiless Joe played before the 1919 Black Six team to be banned him from baseball.
Also Wednesday, the Sox beat Toronto 7-1 in a Florida exhibition game, and a media open house was held at new Comiskey Park.
Terry Saravise, White Sox vice president for stadium operations, told reporters on the tour that he hoped the new exploding scoreboard, set off by homers from Chicago hitters, would get a lot of use.
"It depends when Bo is ready to play," he added.
Some Chicago sportswriters think that the White Sox landing Bo was a great public relations stroke.
"It's good public relations even if he never plays an inning," said Southtown Economist columnist Bill Gleason.
SENIOR
Although the swimming season is over, Krista Cordsen, Rome, N.Y., freshman, practices the breaststroke in Robinson Center. Brad Wells, assistant coach, said that the swimmers were forced to practice intensely during the off-season because of the competitive nature of collegiate swimming.
Spring training
Lacrosse club will play in Alabama tournament
The Kansas men's lacrosse club is traveling to Tuscaloosa, Ala., today where they will play in the 6th annual April Fool's Lacrosse tournament.
Other teams in the tournament include Mississippi State University, Rhodes College and the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
The team's first game will be tomorrow morning against Tulane. The tournament will conclude Sunday.
Two weeks ago Kansas lost to Tulsa 13-12. Last week it beat Wichita State 12-4
This weekend's tournament is the first of this semester for the team.
Chiefs grab former Browns LB, 3 others
KANAS CITY. Mo. — Former first-round draft choice Clifford Charlton was among four players when by the Kansas City Chiefs
Charlton, a linebacker, was a No. 1 pick of the Cleveland Browns in 1988 and played in 31 games before he was waived at the start of the 1909 season. He made five tackles on defense and 23 on special teams.
Sports briefs
Also signed by the Chiefs were Titus Dixon, Willie Fears and Michael Owens.
Dixon was a sixth-round pick of the New York Jets in 1989. A wide receiver, Dixon played in three games with the Jets, was waived and played in a game for the Indiana Pacers with the Atlanta Falcons last year but was
waived before the start of the season.
Fears played in the Canadian Football League before he was signed by the Green Bay Packers preseason last year. He was released in the preseason and played in two games for the Minnesota Vikings.
Owens was a ninth-round choice of the Chiefs last year. He was released before the start of the regular season.
Royals release player reach opening day limit
If he is not claimed on waivers, de los Santos, 24, will become a free agent as a six-year minor leager. The Royals offered to send him back to their Omaha farm club for a fifth year there, but he turned them down.
HAINES CITY, Fla. — The release of first baseman Luis de los Santos after seven years in the Kansas City team led to a recommendation to the opening day roster limit of 25.
"I've been here since I was 17," he said. "I did everything they asked me to do. I just couldn't work it out for them."
De los Santos, a Dominican Republic native who now lives in New York, was Kansas City's second-round pick in the 1844 June free-agent draft. He started out at Eugene, Ore. moving to Memphis and then to Temn., before coming to Omaha in 1987. In his seven minor-league seasons, he hit 289 and drove in 452 runs.
De los Santos spent the entire 1990 season at Omaha, where he was used mostly at third base. He hit .280 with five home runs and 74 RBIs. The year before he hit .297 at Omaha and .253 in 28 games with Kansas City. He appeared in 11 games for the Royals in 1988 and hit .091.
Kentucky assistant new Tulsa basketball coach
TULSA, Okla. — Kentucky assistant Orlando "Tubby" Smith was named head basketball coach yesterday at Tulsa and promised the uptempo style he learned under Rick Pitino.
Smith, 39, replaces J. D. Barnett, who was fired two weeks ago when university officials blamed him for unfair fan support, among other things.
Smith's appointment was announced about five hours after Nolan Richardson said the Tulsa job was not appealing enough for him to leave Arkansas, where he has coached since leaving Tulsa in 1985.
Athletic Director Rick Dickson said Smith was on the initial list of "need-to-pursue" candidates from the onset. Dickson admitted that the put on hold when talks with Richard increased over the past few days.
"We were able to move quickly" when Richardson indicated he would stay at Arkansas. Dickson said.
"Tulsa's presentation was very good, but in what I am looking for in coaching and administration, I'm convinced Arkansas is where I will be." Richardson said yesterday morning.
Smith said he was not discouraged to hear reports that Richardson was interested in returning to Tulsa.
"I felt honored that a guy of his stature was interested," he said. "That indicated to me the interest in commitment in Tulsa basketball."
From staff and wire reports
12
Friday, April 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Student athletes faring well academically; improvements also seen in revenue sports
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Yesterday's University Council meeting included a glowing report by the Athletic Committee on the University's progress with student athletics.
Renate Mai Dalton, chairperson of the committee, related the information to the Council. The report answered nine charges that the committee investigated. The charges focused on academics and the Athletic Department's compliance with NCAA standards and rules.
"We're making good progress in terms of student athlete academic progress," she said.
During the fall semester there were 410 student athletes at the U.S. Institute of Science, and 165 of these students received a grade point average of 3.0 or better.
Fourteen of the student-athletes had a GPA of 4.0.
Student athletes on academic probation numbered 27, with only one athlete ineligible, she said.
Mai-Dalian said the numbers reflected well on athletics and its relationship with academics at KU. Only 6.5 percent of student-athletes are on probation compared to its own rate of Liberal Arts and Sciences students.
The committee also researched athletes' curriculums, she said.
"There is no bunching up of majors which may be perceived as easy." Mai-Dalton said.
She also said the provision that students miss only eight class days was being enforced, although the men's and women's basketball teams were allotted extra days for post-season tournaments.
Frances Ingemann, chairperson of the University Senate Executive Committee, was concerned with the growing interest in some of the revenue sports.
"The figures look pretty good until you start to look at specific sports," she said.
Mai-Dalton said revenue sports were improving with help from Student Support Services.
She also lauded the work of football coach Glen Mason
"He seems to have a real understanding for student athletes who come from different backgrounds and circumstances." Mai Dalton said.
The basketball program also is improving, she said.
improvements can be made, Mai Dalton said.
Concerning NCAA rules, she said the past 17 months had included 14 minor infractions that were committed undoubtedly and reported to the NCAA
Warren said Frederick's ability to help student athletes maintain their academic integrity was valuable to KU.
Pat Warren, SenEx member, said much of the success and current integrity of the department should be held by Bob Frederick, athletic director.
He said that although much talk at KU centered on the maintaining of Roy Williams as basketball coach, he said he would make sure to hold on to Fredricksen.
"My concern is that we keep him here." Warren said.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FOUR FOR THE FU-TURE
ERNEST BOYER
YOLANDA KING
WEDNESDAY
APRIL 10, 1991
PAUL EHRLICH
SPONSORED BY SPENCER LECTURE SERIES
BILL KURTIS
THURSDAY
APRIL 11, 1991
"LOOKING FORWARD: KU AND THE CHALLENGES OF THE FUTURE"
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
KANSAS UNION
7:30 p.m.
HYPNOTHERAPY • R.W. McClure 842-7504
HAIL DAMAGE?
COME SEE US!
We may pay up to $250*
toward your deductible.
- Fast accurate estimates
- No long waiting period
- Experience on all makes and models
- State of the art European paint system
JOHNSON COUNTY
VOLO maxza
6300 Johnson Drive
Mission, KS 66202
(913) 348-3880
- Repair cost determines our contribution toward your deductible. Call for details.
GET A JOB
at
KJHX
X
Your connection into broadcasting and the music business is now hiring for all summer and fall positions!
Application Deadline
Wednesday, April 10
5:00pm
Applications are available at 2051-A Dole Center (Radio & TV Dept.) or K IHK
or KJHK
Classified Directory
100's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
130 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Services
235 Typing Services
200's
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personal
Triangle man, I gladly accept your invitation for an evening with you and Andre. Lemon Drop.
105 Personal
400's
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall,
enhance concentration, creativity and study
skills, boost self confidence using hi tech audio
tools. Enhance stress management Center
Hosnix and Stress Management Center
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
B. A. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and accessory sales. Auto body shops accredited. Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
ANNOUNCING: Beauty Control, look and feel your very best. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call 1 913-222-6292 for an appointment today!
BEFORE signing a lease, talk to Consumer Affairs and get the facts about renting. In the Union Mon/Tues, Wescoe Wed/Tues 11:2.
BALLOONS AND MORE Hurry, Hurry, Send Balloons today and check out our new park lot.
749-0148. 602 Vermont.
-
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sug, Retail
The Etc. Shop
723 W. 104th St.
A
300's
EXTRA MONEY- Mailing Business Brochures from home. RUSH self-addressed business envelope. Dept. MCJB Domestic Invoice 1650 Lakeville Dc, 30, Rivera, NJ 86424
AIREXI LEATHER JACKETS
CAMIZ SHIRTS
CAMIZ PANTS
CAMIZ SWEATERS
CHRISTIAN DIOR SOCKS
CAMP SOCKS
LEATHER BELTSL
TAURUS LEATHER BAGS
LYNTONE WALLETS
LORUS WATCHES
BULOVA WATCHES
RAY BAN SUNGLASSES
FOSSIL WATCHES
DUCK HEAD CLOTHES
ETC.
The Etc. Shop
ITM
CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN * COSTUMES
732 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE * 6044
178-9340311
78-9340311
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Civ (W) makes sense to it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Booksstore.
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
tental and Sales 732 Mass
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 8427594
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store: 735 Mass
SKEPTICALL ABOUT THE NEW AGE? So is Andre Kole. See him Saturday, 8 pm, Hoch Audiolorium.
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees a more attractive offer for summer. Call 1-800-672-9022.
WHO YOU CAME ENOUGH TO SEND IN JEST. When the relationship has ended or feeles gone astray, send that certain someone to make their day. Will deliver now. 841-567.
120 Announcements
ALASKA STATE EMPLOYMENT-Futures
Employee Management Board and Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or Female For 64 page emp application. Email job@alaskatee.org. 800-259-1338. Seattle, WA 98124-Satisfaction
Quitting business sale continues at the Book End,
in Quantrill's Flies Market. 811 New Hampshire.
weekends 10-5.
College Money, Private Scholarships You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Finest! Since 1901, COLLEGE LABOR LEAGU LOSTOMS. Box 1801. (342) 579-6911. www.collegemoney.com
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP
Sunday, April 14, 1:5pm
Community Ridg Rldg. 115. W ifh
$30. To register, e-mail 842-5772
HOT SHOTS
All You Can Eat Tacos
$3.00
EARTH SPIRITS Living My Thought With Retail Workshops Tuesday, August 14, 9:30 M. 28 Free introductory lecture April 2, 7:30 p.m. Lamplighter Books, 10 E. North
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 414-2434. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice. Free confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters or RU Info 844-3066 sponsored by GLOSK
MWM. forty-something, walks on water, seeks companions for a magical evening Saturday April 6. Hoe Auditorium. 8 am.
countows and DeMollays welcome any members
Fall Wednesdays 9:45AM
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
Request for Proposals. Grants writer develop barrier plate language for admission to private school through a marketing campaign Contract. For complete project contact, Helen Gee. Haskell Founda
SPRING INTO HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-602-668 go fly a kite.
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartsRestored, Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67338. Confidential response/material will follow.
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 812-245 or visit 1499 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
TIME TO LUSE THE WINTER PUDGES!" GUNK tasting, natural nutrition balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money back guarantees for you. Call for information,
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content oriented BBS.
841-7373, R. 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 in Wescoh Hall during the Academic Year of 1909-1911, prescription glasses, keys, and a few miscellaneous items. Please come to Wescoh 4098 to identify.
Found: Tennis Raquet after 3/26 hailstorm. West stadium lot. Call to identify. 865-0978.
HUEGE REWARD? for any information given to lost camera footage in its grey case last Saturday night at Johnny's. No questions asked. I just want it back. Call Julie, 86-3813
Please call:
Lost: Green suede jacket on second floor of Prasier. Reward! Please return! 864-2676.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$4.25/hr. Convenient store clerk, Phillips 66 in DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 385-3033
**Psychology, Education, Sociology, and**
*Recreation related majors. Summer program for*
*special needs youth (harming disabled-em-
bracing) teachers and counselor/activity instructors*
*Located on lake near MN, MN and Boundary*
*Salinity plus room and board. Internships*
available. Contact Ed at 843-5037 or Tom Ba-
tzer(812-6291) 811 W. Broadway, Minneapolis,
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTed for private
Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach
summer swimming, tautsuring, gymnastics,
paddling, canoeing, water skiing, pool
patients, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding.
Also kitchen, office maintenance (salary $4000 or less).
Bathroom, recreation room, 7644, Mildon, N.J.
808-736-5044
Burky's Drive In Is now taking applications for part-time work, *u*, $3 price; on meals, uniforms provided, flexible hours. Apply in person between 1-9, Burky's Drive In Mt. & Rd. 8/14
CAMP COUNSELOURS. The YMCA is currently seeking camps for its summer day camp. YMCA campers will spend 4 hours in children, June 3-August 9 per hour, 40 hours in adults, June 21-September 5 per hour, Van Bureen, Toskane, KS, or sherry Woolton.
CILDLA CAREWORKER Residential facility for adolescent boys. Full-time and summer positions. Travel with transportation. Data management. Transportation. Training/experience in ffea plus. We drug test. Send resume to P.O. Box 4812, New York, NY 10019.
Conventure Store Clerk-$4.25 hr. Weekend shift, cash register experience. Apply in person at Phillips 66. Desert Short Storpe. 1-883-3053-Full-time summer training. National firm looking for motivated students. Receive excellent F.R. salary and benefits. Apply to eastern U.S. earn $4,990 week. Call 811-4244.
Help Wanted. Daytime Bartender. Part-time tihur
smile. PRIVATE CLUB. experience pre-
ferred. must have references and be 21. Call for appt.
842-0083
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview. 1,323 6829
HELP WANTED: Orientation leaders for Foreign Students. Interested in assisting new foreign students are now being taken for positions available in the Department of Foreign Student Services, Room 18 Strong Hall
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency 842 4434
Lake of the zarks Summer Employment. The Barge Floating Restaurant is accepted applicants with a Bachelor's degree or hostess' excellent salary and tips. Great work environment. Staff are available. Housing is still available. Contact Frank
Looking for Responsible Female to babysel children under the age of five to give birth, go out for a walk, or sometimes Saturday nights, and sometimes Monday during the day, April through the summer.
Need handman to work as partner. Truck, tools,
etc. provided. If interested call me. 841-4206
Management Team for medium-sized Apartment buildings. Ensure staff are knowledgeable, book keeping, maintenance. Call 49-6565. Man or woman to help with general housework and cleaning. Assist a person to take care of wederwater, cleanant, cultivate. Call 49-6565.
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day
mimographs No experience necessary
1-800-695-2729
PRESCHOOL HELP WANTED Substitute and after school now. Also summer part and full-time positions. Req. Bachelors in nursing, juniors and seniors only. Sunshine Acres 842-2232 RENTHACING ENTERTAINMENT We need outgoing individuals interested in work Friday, Saturday, Sunday from 10am to 6pm. Topkpa Posiitions include ticket takers, ticket sellers, hostesses, goto attendants and staff. Position allows application at Man-Power, 211 East 8th.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Beginning May 1 to June
July 31. 41 bedroom townhouse in Sunrise
Village 865-0106. No deposit necessary.
Temporary, part-time help wanted. Farm experience helpful. Apply at Webster's N. 801 and W. 209. The Department of Mathematics is accepting applications to provide assistance as Dates include assisting lecture class, grading, tutoring. Requirement: MATH 123 or equivalent. Preference to students with strong mathematical background. Req. Math 101, 405, 406, 408, 409. Snow Further information: Prof. Brown, 406, Snow Deadline Friday, April 26, 1991. Wanted: Student to provide minimal structure for the course. Resumes should be home Interested in approx. 3 hours after school and full time during the summer months. Also provide some transpiration practice and during evenings.
Summer $$$. Train them to earn good money this summer in your home area. Cairn Straight Enterprises, 842.9140, or write P. O. Box 44208, Lawrence, KS 60044
225 Professional Services
FRENCH TUTOR. Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
865-5323
School Education offered mid-Themiel Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, drivers license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Government photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior portraits, modeling & arts port-
folios. BAW, color. Call Tom Swells 749-161.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(Private Park)
(903) 491-6878
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
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
LIBERTY & CROWN CENTRAL
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street.
843-6000
235 Typing Services
*d-der Woman Word Processing.* Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 842-263, days or evenings.
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service
$10.00 double-sided paper. Call Therease. 841-9776
Absolute cheapest types in Lawrence.
299-4964. Real Rush no problem.
799-4964.
A+ Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. # 824-7383.
R. J.'s TYing Services 841-5942. Term papers, legal, thesis. No calls on e-mail. m.Dena's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters. print and aped cleaning. 2012 G.W.113 print and aped cleaning. 2012 G.W.113
Mt. 8a, 4m - m; F. 8a, 5m - m; 8g, 9224-74
FAST. ACCURATE TYPING - 41-50 per page. In PUE and DUE are located in any city limits. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Mae Mt: 843-3821.
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, B42 6558.
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927% Mass. 841-1071.
Research Projects! Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call
KeyWorks. 842-8007
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8586.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. HAVE M.
S. Degree. 841-6254
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 5, 1991
13
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Merchandise
1974 Honda 650 Rebuild and restored Good, cheap, fun. Guaranteed to pick up chicks on money back! Cali Elvis, 802-4763
1981 Mobile Home. Excellent condition, 2 bed, 2床,
bath, fireplace, wet jar, garden tub-$13,000.00.
Call for showing. 1-825-9356
Apple II compact 128K with monitor, image writer I printer, modern 300 discs, games and word processing, and many more. Great condition. $50. Call 844-509-509
Bahamas cruise or Mexican vacation. Both include transportation and accommodations for two for 5 days. Each 800. For info. 865-6430.
For sale: Top of the line ultra wheel ruler rollers, size 19%, in new condition. Cost $280, will sell for $12. Also extra large Keta Tungi III backpack in good condition, $75, Call 843 1655.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
combat helmet and Speedelite Boats. Also
437-147247 St. Mary's Marquesses Sales. St. Mary's,
Harleyidge Hound Rebel. 86 Silver Anniversary.
Beautiful Turtle. HH 351/49
Lined. black leather skirt, size 18/20, $100. GE
19" color T. V., $150; 616-954-3024
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walks welcome. Call 863-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
NW RALEIGH BIRE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (UNCLUDES GUARD) $250.892-9146
340 Auto Sales
195 W camperboard, rebuilt engine with 800 miles good condition, $100. Call 682-3423 MWFs 195 Black Trans Am V8, AC New Paint, Great Condition, Beautifully 95-891-3541. Prl.
1980 Honda Accord, Auto, stereo, A/C 102 K miles,
Call Ravir A 864121, Asking $1.50 000
189 Red Honda Civic hatchback, AC, stereo, 22K
one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas mileage. Call Me 849-2575 125
For sale. Mercedes benz 190E.2.3. 1855. black
pall full option, 10.500, TLP 851-856
Seniors and grad students: Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill Lec 843-9500
360 Miscellaneous
On TV, TV's,珠宝, stereo, musical in
struments, cameras and more. We honor
Visa/MC/AMEN Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1004.8 W. 679 1919
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CD $6.00 and down Records and tapes $2.00 and down Top dollar for collections Alf Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts, 965-022
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, national origin, a 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 dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
824 0871 843-1601
2.8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry, no. dog. Dick at 842-897/834-1601.
2 BR airlift in apartments. Available in fall or summer on 12 month lease. DW, low utilities, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Despell Co 828734 Akt for Tracy to leave message.
APARTMENTS: Small, large. Walk to KU Medical Center. Large newly decorated, furnished on unfurnished Quire, quiet, furnished, many rooms 806-361-3928
3 DBMH BUNALOW FLEA, elere lsc. range, refis, washer & dryer, garmel, air discion for non-smoker. Nair camps in HI West Office or call Bill at 843-2702 in GOAL office and call Bill at 843-2702.
Available Avail a 1st 1637 Tennessee. 749-083-1 BR base plafn . a52 plus month塑肥 ml. a49
Available June 3 bedroom apartment in nice older home. Walk to KU downtown, A/C dishwasher, of street parking, wood floors $95 Water waived. No pails. 841-7074
Available June. Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice old bedroom. New bathroom. Wood floors. $44. Gas/water paid. No pets. #81-1074
Bradford Square Apartments 520-743-6022
2 & 3 R-BA Available in May or August, or on weekdays. Mow carpets, patio or deck, laundry facility, management. KU bus route, off-street parkway. Keep your apartment for summer or fall. 749-1566
Check out Berkeley Flats Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$205-8415 / mo. Call 8413-2116.
Extremely nice. npc萨司. 3 bbm townhouse/w
garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed,
year lease beginning August and/or summer
business. $12. *u*ilities. Kerr 843-6062
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apartment in May. Call 843-8315
Fully furnished. air conditioned spacious bedroom, two bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, dining area, den, bedroom, 2 baths, kitchen, dining area, den, bedroom. Closet to campus-111 Louisiana. Full credit. Applicants must be 21 years old and can you move in and store your mail after March 31st. Please contact us at (415) 928-2620.
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water费 $300. Call 641-259-121.
Hey KU Med. students-move in June. "Study and receive" off your rent for 2 months. And a bedroom apartments: Heat and water paid.
Med. Center, Med. Center, Tower Towers Apt. 813-681-8381
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
• On Site MGT./Reliable
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Local Service Domicile
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
...on KU bus route
...studios
townhomes
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
...2,3 Bedrooms
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1 & 2 Bedrooms
for Summer & Fall
...Free cable
...Water paid .
Pool
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- large rooms & closets
- central air & gas heat
- fashing pool
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12n m-5p m
843-6446
2166 W.26th
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
--apartments
S
Mackenzie Place Apts: 3 bdrm hgt apt, new leasing for August, 19 years old, washer/dryer, microwave fan, 2 decks, 1 year lease, no laundry, wi-fi, 6773 eaves days, weeks. 841-8213 dime
2-1 BR, 4-3 BR. Washers dryers in each unit, fans, microwave, fireplaces, 2 full baths in a BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 year old call 749-1056.
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Lorinar Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new. Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru May. or for 12 months at 874.813. 7483-8435
Furnished living space. $22 plus its utilities. W/D,
microveal, central air, ligh' back yard with deck.
Grad students or studious upper classman preferred.
Brian. 843-4203.
My house is your house. Avail. May 15. 2 + BR,
W/D, AC, cable, porch. $350/month. Close to campus.
865-1300. 964-3644 (Kenny).
Special
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
- Gazebo
Pool
Swan Management
Water pald
Gazebo
- Graystone
Close to KU bus route
1-23-4 beard
Open House M/F 1.5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749 1288
749. 1288
Boardwalk
Showing Units Daily 9-6
- Clean & well maintained
842-4444
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50$ \phi $
W&D
524 Frontier
- Unfurnished with
- Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and receive key $2 off your rent for 3 months. *Stations 1 and 2 bedrooms* $1 heat and water paid. *Access Center, Rainbow Tower Aps* 918-851-9601.
- Walk to grocery
Large 2 bedroom apt for summer release. Swimming pool and volleyball. Close to bus route. Call 855 0760 - leave message
Large studio apartment at Traitridge for sublease. Read on June 1st. Rent $280.00.
841-9113. Leave message
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Extra nice 28 BR duplex
apt in good location. Extra large MRG. mbrage.
laundry/storage. rice yard. No pets. Lease. Kit
rep, coup. or small family pref. Bkts/mo.
lease.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Boomy * 3 or 5 plaS duop尼 on bass line. Basement, Garage. CA W/D hookup. No pets. Lease & reqs. $400 mo and up. Negotiate 8472736 then
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
Tree of Life
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
Now leasing
for summer & fall 1001
Each apartment features:
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
-gas heat & water pal
*1 & 2 BR apartments*
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
ENRATED TO SHOW TEXTURE
-3 Pools
HOURS:
TRAILRIDGE
Please call Kristy for appt.
spacious & comfortable
611 Michigan Street
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
Enlarged to Show Texture
(on apartments)
(on apartments) Call for appointment
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
2500 W.6th
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
9th & Avalon
---
842-3040
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
-2 bedroom $410, $78
-3 bedroom $560
office
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubes
- On Bus Route
- 3 Hot Tubs
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
842-5111
Models Open Daily
Mon - Fri 10-6 p.m.
$355 - $425
1301 W.24th
No leasing. Extra space, spacious two bedroom apartments in four kitchen appliances, including gas stove and refrigerator, and blinds. Low utilities, low bus route. pool complex $150.00. SPANISH PRESH APARTMENT $249.00.
New leasing and 2 bedroom apts at Southbright Plaza Apt. 15a; rented $72, 2bedrooms start at $35, 10 month lease. Water and cable paid. New kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1160.
New leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
apts. Aspen West $305. beds for $375
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camps.
Call 844-960 or 848-189
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU 841-6254
841-6254
Sparacious 1 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer
or sooner. 1806 W. 27, 84-463 or 841-579.
Spacious one bedroom apt for summer sublease.
SUMMER SUBLET : 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downstairs! $295/mo., gas & water paid. 841-5095 after 4:30
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid $300.00; 814 662.00
SUMMER SURLEASE with option for fall 1
bedroom, furnished, private water, pool paid,
all electric LST Lynch Court, Sundance w42-325 or
841-634.
Sublease 2 bedroom api in Colony Woods, May
30-Aug 10 w/ 3 weeks free. $215/month plus
utilities. 855-3528
Sublease one bedroom. Berkeley Flats. Across from football stadium. Water/cable paid. Make offer 795-2377.
SUNRENE VILLAGE SUMMER sublease. Can fit up to 1 people for 134/mi. Dishwasher, microwave, pool summer parties. First keg is on us for new jennas. Call 842-717-311.
JAKE, WHERE ARE YOU FROM?
CHICAGO...
Really?
HO, JUST A SUBORB I LAY CHICAGO SO EVERYONE DON'T GET CONFUSER.
THEN WHAT SUBORB?
Sublease June and July. Furnished 1 bedroom,
*tres in Rome* K410, plus utilities. $42-300.
Subleases Available Immediately
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious $4,10 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs. Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedrooms apk. 1kb from KD with off-street parking, no pets. 841-5060.
by Brian Gunning
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- 2 Bdrm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two with fireplaces
Some Summer Subleases too!
Newly remodeled apartments
842-4200
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
MILWAUKEE...
Sunrise Apts
Studios
1,2,3 & 4 Bedroom
- Luxurious Town Home
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- On Bus Route
• Close to Campus
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Place
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
Sunrise Terrac
6th & Gateway
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
MASTERCRAFT
--one or two female roommates needed for 4
bedroom. 2 Bathroom, at apt on Orchard Carsons
starting Aug 91. Call Shannon at 749-4757
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
OPEN DAILY
1-5 P.M.
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass.
KENTUCKY PLACE
749-0445·1310 Kentucky
841-5255 7th & Florida
749-2415·10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 * 15th & Kasold
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
NAISMITH HALL. Living anywhere else doesn't make
The cost of living has
- Free utilities
- "Dino Anatime!"
- The cost of living has gone down at Naismith! • NEW LOWER COSTS
- Convenient location
- Great social events
R
C
R. C. SMITH
NAISMITH HALL
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
.
Summer and Fall fallen. Furished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. l/b from KU with off-street parking. No pets. 841-3600
THE FAR SIDE
Summer Sublease, 15th & Ohio 1 bedrooms (34 people)
Summer subleases. Low usl. $75/mo. 865-3623
Summer sub-lease 1bdm. hdrm. ant june.
Summer Sublease- 1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841/144; afternoons
Aug. Citi evenings 843-8094 for more info
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2
blocks from campus on Ohio 805-4907
Summer Sublease Trapidite 3 bedroom
Housedown Furnished Ridge pot dishwasher
compactor. $100 plus utilities. 941-9028
Summer sublease with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call 865-2900.
Summer sublease. Large studio, water paid, pool bus stop. 865-319
Summer sublease: Spacious 2 br. 2 hath apart
quaint. Quite neighborhood. West Lawrence
Dishwashers. W. 1 bookup. pool #824-8288
Summer sublease: Spacious 2 br. 2 hath apart
quaint. Quite neighborhood. West Lawrence
Dishwashers. W. 1 bookup. pool #824-8288
Summer sublease: Furnished one bedroom apt,
pool at complex, water paid. $325. Call Any
963-507
Summer sublease: 1 Bedroom apartment for 1 to
2 people at Sunrise Terrace Apartments. Call Carr
434.782.783
Summer sublet Large BR, own bath in duplex near Meadowbrook 282/month, v₂ utilities AC, DW, DW 749-674
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer sublease. Nce 1 BR apartment with dishwasher, microwave, washer/fryer, AC Call 951-1655.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or dap by 1486 Tennessee
Call now for summer sublease. Pernille roommate at Ooredham Corners. Call anytime at 842-3628.
Female, non-smoker roommate wanted to share condo. Summer and/or fail. Very, reasonable. 863-164. Ask for Part.
Female roommate needed from May to August to share a 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt. $26 and $1 of utilities. Deposit. Call Monica, 843-4088
Female roommate summer subcase. Share 1 BR apt with two other females. $175, $43-692, leave message
Roommate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house
Two rooms for 1:2 people. Reasonable
rent utilities. Alison 863-2578
Roommate wanted: 3rd person, 3 bedroom apt.
929 Indiana. $150/month plus utilities. Call
749-3889 or 841-9131.
Summer Sublease. 1 bed, 2 people (male or female) needed to share a bedroom 1 bed/2 room at ORCHARD IVC, A.C., cabs on bus road 10K month plus the Bank of Canada 694-2831. Summer Sublease.
Summer Sublease: Female wanted to share 4 bedroom townhome. Option for fall. 180/ma, $19 deposit. Call Gina. 790-1500.
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call
749-3477; economical
Two female roommates needed for furnished 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom apt at orchid Cornerers, starting August 19. Call Beth B. Susan at 814-4728.
By GARY LARSON
4.3
"Remember this guy, Zelda? Stumbled into the den one day and just plain went nuts! ... Count those fang marks, everyone!"
14
Friday. April 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
The Etc. Shop
738 Main 843-0411
Ray Ban
PROFESSIONAL IN
BAUCH LORNE
To search their organisations
SAVE A , PLEASE
RECYCLE!
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.)
HOT SHOTS
SATURDAY
$1.25
Burgers
FISH BOWLS
WELLS
623 VERMONT
LOVE
GARDEN
SOUNDS
936 1/2 MASS
(UPSTAIRS)
843-1551
OPEN 7 DAYS
The Etc. Shop
735 Mass 643-9811
SAVE A PLEASE RECYCLE!
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.
HOT SHOTS
SATURDAY
$1.25
Burgers
FISHER BOWLS
WELLS
623 VERMONT
LOVE GARDEN SOUNDS
936 1/2 MASS (UPSTAIRS)
843-1551 OPEN 7 DAYS
ALL YOU CAN CARRY BOOK SALE!!
$14.95
(DISCONTINUED, OUT OF PRINT, OLD EDITIONS)
OR $2.49 EACH
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!
NOW THROUGH APRIL 9th
Jayhawk Bookstore
"at the top of Naismith Hill"
Mon-Thur 8-5:30 Fri 8-5:00
Sat 9-5:00 Sun 12-4:00
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
MASTERCRAFT
PATCH CRACKED PLASTER
CHANCE ?
MASTERCRAFT
OPEN HOUSE
April 6, 1991, 1-5 P.M.
Don't Take A Chance!
Choose a COMPLETELY FURNISHED Mastercraft apartment for your home this year!
Many great locations & floor plans!
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
• Custom Furnishings
• Designed For Privacy
• Energy Efficient
• Many Built-ins
• Affordable Rentals
• Private Parking
• Locally Owned
• Laundry Facilities*
• Close To Campus
• Locally Managed
• Close To Shopping
• Central A/C
• On Site Managers*
• Pool*
• Microwaves *
*available some locations
Kentucky Place
1310 Kentucky
749-0445
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
Reserve Your Home TODAY!
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company
842-4455
ALL YOU CAN
CARRY
BOOK SALE!!
$14.95
(DISCONTINUED, OUT OF PRINT, OLD EDITIONS)
OR
$2.49 EACH
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!
NOW THROUGH APRIL 9th
Jayhawk Bookstore
"at the top of Naismith Hill"
Mon-Thur 8-5:30 Fri 8-5:00
Sat 9-5:00 Sun 12-4:00
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
MASTERCRAFT
PATCH CRACKED PLASTER
CHANCE?
MASTERCRAFT
OPEN HOUSE
April 6, 1991, 1-5 P.M.
Don't Take A Chance!
Choose a COMPLETELY FURNISHED Mastercraft apartment for your home this year!
Many great locations & floor plans!
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
• Custom Furnishings
• Designed For Privacy
• Energy Efficient
• Many Built-ins
• Affordable Rentals
• Private Parking
• Locally Owned
• Laundry Facilities*
• Close To Campus
• Locally Managed
• Close To Shopping
• Central A/C
• On Site Managers*
• Pool*
• Microwaves *
*available some locations
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Hanover Place
14th & Mass.
841-1212
Kentucky Place
1310 Kentucky
749-0445
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
Reserve Your Home TODAY!
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company
842-4455
PLANT SHRUBS
CHANCE
CLEAN WARD
CHANCE
CHANCE
MASTERCRAFT
PRUNE TREES
REPAIR LEAKY FAUCETS
CHANCE?
4 men take 30 hostages in California store holdup
The Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Lawmen stormed an electronics store yesterday in a burst of gunfire to end an 8½-hour standoff with four hostage-taking gunmen. Three of the gunmen and at least two hostages were killed, an official said.
Several hostages were wounded,
one seriously, and the fourth gunman
was seriously wounded in the seige
County Sheriff Glen Craig said.
About 30 hostages were taken in the incident.
One witness said he saw a gunman shooting randomly at hostages shortly before the officers stormed the store.
A television station reported that the gunmen demanded $4 million in cash, in addition to guns, bullet-proof vests and a helicopter. There was no immediate confirmation of the cash demand.
Nine of 30 hostages taken — two men, two women and five children — were freed earlier from the south Sacramento store in Florin Mall, the tree in a mother and her two children in exchange for one bullet-proof vest
The last hostage to be freed, Sean McIntyre, was shot in the leg and sent hobbling to safety through the Good Guys store's glass front doors.
An explosion from a sheriff deputy's concussion grenade blew out glass in the front door. As the glass shattered, a young girl, her hands behind her back, covered near the core front. She survived the ordeal.
Loftv work
Cliff Hadi, facilities operations employee, scrapes old and ineffective caulk from a fifth-floor window wills at Hambleton Hall on West Campus. With the aid of a cherry-picker. Hadi spent about an hour yesterday scraping the caulk from two of the building's windows before applying new caulk in an effort to stop persistent leaking.
6.1 earthquake in northern Peru injures one
The Associated Press
obama.
LIMA, Peru. A strong earthquake struck northern Peru yesterday in the same jungle region where a slightly stronger tremor a year ago officials said. Radio reports said at least one person was injured
The tremor caused roofs to collapse in one northern town, said the Peruvian Geophysics Institute.
The U.S. Geological Survey, however, said the earthquake registered a preliminary magnitude of 6.1 on the Richter scale
The institute officials said the quake measured 5.5 on the Richter scale and was centered 30 miles south of Moyobamba, in a highland jungle 400 miles north of Lima. The institute said roots collapsed in the town of Rioja. 15 miles east of Moy-
Yesterday's quake was felt as far away as Piura, on Peru's Pacific coast 250 miles northwest of Moyobamba, the Peruvian institute said. A house painter in Moyobamba was injured when his scaffolding collapsed, radio reports said.
The epicenter was in a mountain- area north of the Peruvian capital of Lima, the same area where a 6.5 magnitude earthquake on May 30, 1900, killed 67 people. Initial figures, later revised by officials, had put the toll in the 1990 quake at 135 dead.
1900, killed or people. Initial figures, later revised by officials, had put the toll in the 1990 quake at 135 dead.
Both Rioja and Moyobamba were hard hit by the 1990 quake.
Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey national earthquake information center in Golden, Colo., said the 1990 earthquake released about four times more energy than yesterday's make.
The Richter scale is a measure of the strength of an earthquake as recorded by ground motion. Each increase of one whole number on the scale indicates a tenfold increase in the strength of the quake. An earthquake with a magnitude between 6 and 7 can cause severe damage.
Attention Students-
Are you interested in saving time during Fall fee-payment?!?
Then fill out your 91-92
Options Card during enrollment.
KU on Wheels Pass
Jayhawker Yearbook
Sports Combo Package
All-Arts Card
Board of Class Officers
KU on Wheels Pass Jayhawker Yearbook Sports Combo Package All-Arts Card Board of Class Officers
- Fill out an Options Card to reserve any of the above options.
- Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
- You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
- Must be enrolled to fill out Options Card; Please present enrollment card and KU ID.
- No options card will be available in the Fall; Student will have to visit each individual vendor.
---
You
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA; KS. 6612
VOL.101,No.126
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Astronauts fix observatory antenna
Mission is the first unscheduled emergency repair made in space
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - A shuttle astronaut took a walk outside, shook a balky antenna and freed it yesterday in the first unscheduled emergency repair ever made in space.
'it's free, it's free, I can see it move, it's free!' shouted Jerry Ross as the antenna swung out from a giant scientific observatory.
"Far out, good work," said Jay Ant, his fellow space, walker
It was the first time in more than five years that any U.S. citizens have taken a space walk. Ross and Sherwon Spring last made that venture
from the shuttle Atlantis on Dec. 1, 1985.
The repair job made it possible to release the $617 million Gamma Ray Observatory into orbit at 6:37 p.m. EDT. $40 hours late, from Atlantas for the release was not critical to the mission, but when a planetary probe is involved.
The observatory will record the high-energy radiations coming from some of the most violent processes in the universe for the next two years and perhaps longer. Gamma rays do not penetrate the Earth, and cannot be detected on Earth.
Their time in open space was about
3 $ _{1/2} $ hours.
The repair had been estimated to last more than an hour. Instead, the astronauts had been in open space for only 17 minutes when Ross worked on a satellite.
It was then that the EVA - space jargon for a space walk - was ordered
The antenna, one of three on the observatory, is used to transmit high volumes of data at extremely high rates of speed to Earth.
After Ross freed the boom, it swung outward about 5 feet. The
The antenna, at the end of a 16" foot boom, had refused to swing outward from the position in which it had been stowed for the ride into space. Mission Control made six signals with electronic signals but failed.
astronauts then loosened a few bolts on the boom hinge, and it moved into its proper position.
Yesterday's problem proved to be exactly what Mission Control thought it was. The locking pin had retracted fully as telemetry showed. The antenna boom needed only a little shake to work it loose.
All this time, the 35,000-pound observatory was held high over the cargo bay at the end of the ship's 50-foot mechanical arm.
Release of the observatory was the main focus of the five-day mission. Atlantis' five astronauts have been in space since arriving in spaceships last Friday.
The astronauts will return to Earth on Wednesday. They are scheduled to land at Edwards Air Force Base in California at 10:35 a.m. EDT.
Observatory may give clues to life, universe
The Associated Press
SPACE CENTER, Houston — NASA's Gamma Ray Observatory was designed to scan the cosmos for high-voltage radiation that may prove the existence of black holes and provide clues about creation itself.
"Gamma rays are really an unexplored territory." NASA program scientist Alan Burner said. "They are perhaps the least understood (radiation) and the hardest to study."
Gamma rays, the most energetic form of radiation known, come from the hottest, most violent objects in the universe such as
quasars, pulsars and supernova remnants.
Gamma radiation cannot be studied from the ground because it is absorbed by the Earth's atmosphere.
From 280 miles high, the Gamma Ray Observatory, or GRO, will be free to observe gamma rays. The observatory is the largest and most sensitive gamma ray spacecraft ever built.
Further study of gamma rays may yield enough information to determine the nature of black holes, thought to be collapsed remnants of dead stars.
Fans line street and applaud the'Hawks
Local parade honors team
SA
By Jonathan Plummer Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Michael Gaddis, 11, proudly showed the autographs he collected Saturday morning.
"I got Maddox and Woodberry, and I got a high-five from Maddox," he said. "I got Rockall's high-five, but I didn't get his autograph."
Gaddis was one of the children who lined Massachusetts Street on Saturday morning for a parade in honor of the Kansas men's basketball team.
Although there were KU students along the parade route, Saturday's tribute seemed to be attended mostly by younger students.
Gaddis, who came from Topeka with his parents and his older brother, said he did not sleep well the night before.
"Yeah, well, I'm a Jayhawk fan," he said, regaining his cool.
"We left at 8 in the morning, and we got up here at about 9, but I got up about 3," he said, the pitch of his voice rising.
The players slowly rode down the street waving to the crowd from the tops of the back seats of vintage convertibles. Bands, cheerleaders and Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith also participated in the parade.
David Johanning looked to the tops of buildings along Massachusetts Street as fans who stood on the roofs and homemade ticker-tape off the sides.
Coach Roy Williams rode in a car with his wife and two children. While other parade participants responded to the events, Williams used words of thanks.
Enthusiastic Jayhawk fans vie for KU forward Mark Randall's autograph during a downtown parade Saturday honoring this year's men's basketball team.
Obviously enjoying himself, Williams joked with the crowd and slapped the hand of a fan as the car he was in turned the corner.
Other players grinned as their cars inched down the street. Mark Randall awarded a kiss to a woman who gave him a tulip, and Adonis Jordan laughed as he caught a roll of toilet paper tossed to him from the crowd.
When Mike Maddox came down the road on the back of a Corvette, 9-year-old Orion Kinka inched out into the street.
"All right," he said, "my favorite guv, he's coming up."
As a clown came by giving away balloons, both Orion and his brother
out their hands out to get one.
pat him hand out to get one.
"I'm giving mine to Adonis," Orion said, looking down the street for the next car.
Evan Keller, 9, said that he and his friends watched a lot of the games and loved the team but did not think the team would do as well as it did in
the NCAA tournament.
Evan said that he thought about getting the autographs of the players but that he forgot to bring a piece of paper.
"But I am glad they did because all the announcers said we weren't going to win." he said
Instead, he and his friend Bryan Hickey, 11, watched Jessica Corkill, 9, and Erin Hincky, 8, shake the wing of the Baby Jay mascot. They also waved to friends from their school who were in the parade.
When the parade was finished, Tyler Hartpence, 4, and his grandmother Pat Laws stopped to rest on a park bench.
Tyler was decked out in Jayhawks regalia, wearing a large Jayhawk baseball cap, buckled as tightly as
"Tyler went to the stadium to see the team," Laws said. "He's quite a KU fan."
possible in the back, and a Final Four T-shirt, which was given to him by the Easter Bunny.
"The tyler got to wave to his favorite player, Mark Randall," Laws said as Tyler nodded in agreement. "He got to walk out of the house. We like to come out to a parade."
KU plans ROTC protest day University to join in nationwide protest of ROTC's policies
Kansan staff writer
Plans have been made for KU's participation in Wednesday's nationally coordinated day against discernibility and university ROTC programs.
The Department of Defense policies in ROTC programs discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation and detriment KU's anti-discrimination policy.
Interim executive vice chancellor
The coordinated day of action was requested by officials at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Last week, University Council passed a law that requires all counselors' Committee on Discrimination in the TOC to be used for the event.
At the recommendation of Frances Ingemann, Senate Executive Committee chairperson, the committee decided to send a letter to Kansas' congressional delegation in Washington, D.C., the organizations of higher
By Eric Nelson
The committee met Friday and made plans for KU's involvement.
'I think the chancellor really feels this is not something he should endorse or not endorse.'
The resolution will be forwarded to Chancellor Gene A. Budig but not for his endorsement.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said, "I think the chancellor really feels this is not something he should endorse or not
Donald McCoy, distinguished professor of history, also suggested that a letter be sent to the Speaker of the House and the President of the
education that KU officials met with during their Washington trip in March, the Department of Defense and President Bush.
The letter also will be sent to the University of Wisconsin-Madison to notify them of KU's participation.
At a past meeting of SenEx, there was some concern that other events planned for Wednesday, including Student Senate elections and a lection committee commemorating KU's 125th anniversary would make it difficult to participate.
The committee made no other plans for the day of action.
Ingemann said, "I think we're probably too late to do something now."
But the committee intends to use media coverage for publicity.
Siegfried Lindenbaum, chairperson of the committee, said he would contact University Relations and ask for its help with publicity.
Georgia threatens to join strike unless Soviets withdraw troops
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The president of Georgia threatened yesterday to call a general strike in his southern republic unless Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev all troops from the disputed region of South Osetia
The republic's leader warned that Georgians would adopt demands of the country's striking coal miners,
In addition to calling for Gorbachev's resignation, the miners want the dissolution of the national Congress of People's Deputies and greater autonomy for the 15 Soviet republics.
The Georgian leader, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, sent a telegram to Gorbachev, threatening that Georgians would join striking Soviets unless the central government withdrew its troops.
A copy of the telegram was provided to the Associated Press by a Georgian government represent-
The number of Soviet soldiers and Interior Ministry troops in Georgia is not known, but it is thought to be in the thousands. Gamsakhurdia did not set a deadline for withdrawal.
Coal miners have remained on strike despite pay raises and other economic concessions offered by the Soviet government last week. As of yesterday, 184 of the country's 600 mines were idle, and 11 were mining owned by Sergel Schvets, a reporter for Postisia, a union newspaper in the Donetsk coal region of the Ukraine.
Lack of coal already has forced some steel plants to shut down. It is also cutting into production at many steel mills.
Nearly 99 percent of Georgian voters cast their ballots in favor of independence from the Soviet Union and the rise of a predominant ethnic minority in South Ossetia, a predominantly Muslim country of the republic, wants to remain in the union.
The rivalry between Georgians and Ossetians dates back more than 200 years. It is rooted in conflicting claims to land, as well as religious differences. Most Georgians are Christian.
Hours after the March 31 referendum, the Soviet legislature authorized a state of emergency and called for deployment of Soviet troops to hail bloodied in Kosovo. More than 50 have died there in ethnic feuding.
2
Monday, April 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Biography contends Reagans smoked pot
Book recounts life of Nancy Reagan
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Nancy Reagan smoked marijuana with her husband when he was governor of California and had a long affair with Frank Sternberg, the White House, according to an unauthorized biography due out today.
The steamy and often shocking details of the former first lady's life were splashed across the front pages of major newspapers yesterday in *Nancy Reagan, the Unauthorized Biograph* by *Kitty Kelley*.
The newspapers included The New York Times and the Daily News.
The book, based on more than 1,000 interviews with estranged family members, alienated former staff members, lost business assets and loyalists, is due in stores today.
It paints a portrait of a scheming, ambitious woman who invented a family background that hid her early years of poverty, weight problems
When she failed to become a successful actress, the book contends, the former first lady set out to marry Reagan, who was then a movie star.
Kelley, the author of controversial unauthorized biographies on Sinatra and former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy on the Reagan book for four years.
But the Reagans professed little concern about the book and said they did not plan to read it.
"No friend of Nancy Reagan's is going to read that scummy book," Sheila Tate, Nancy Reagan's former house press secretary1, said Saturday.
According to the book, Nancy Reagan, who launched a nationwide crusade against drug use while in the White House, once used marijuana with her husband at a party thrown by Alfred Bloomingdale.
Sheldon Davis, Bloomingdale's former executive executive, recalls in the book that his boss gave the Reagans the marijuana and they tried it, giggled and said they could not see what the big deal was.
According to the book, Nancy Reagan's affair with Sinatra began when her husband was governor of California and continued for years.
The University Daily Kisanus (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuaffer-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.
A boy leans down to catch a splash of water. In the background, several boys are playing in the grass.
---
Shawn McCall, Overland Park senior, takes his turn sliding down the Slip-and-Slide while Russell Meens, l'opera sophomore, runs the water hose to ensure a slippery ride. Members of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity took advantage of Saturday's 80-degree temperatures by keeping cool in front of their fraternity house, 1645 Tennessee St.
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Measles immunizations prove costly, unneeded
The Associated Press
MORGANTOWN, W. Va., — A West Virginia University student whose measles symptoms prompted the immunization of about 2,000 people probably did not have the disease, a doctor said Friday.
Ronald Cleavenger of the University Health Service said results from tests performed on the student did not confirm measles.
Students, faculty and staff members at the school were immunized in March after the unidentified male student sought treatment at the cam-
up infirmary. He had returned from spring break in Clearwater, FlA... with measles symptoms after an outbreak occurred there.
The immunizations were ordered after a meeting between university officials and the Monongalia County Health Department. The state Health department gave the university 2,000 doses of measles vaccination.
The cost of the immunizations was estimated at several hundreds of thousands of dollars, said Edwin J. Morgan, director of University Health Services. An exact cost was not available.
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- Someone took three paintings valued together at $50 between 10:30 p.m. Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday from a store in the 800 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 8, 1991
3
New health plan may benefit more students
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
An insurance company will offer a new medical insurance policy to KU students next fall when they pay their tuition and required fees. New requirements will make more students eligible for the policy.
G-M Underwriters Inc., will offer the new policy with Fidelity Security Life Insurance Co., said Jose Alpers, vice chairperson of the Student Health Advisory Board. Blue Cross/ Oldfield is the current policy provider.
The new policy covers everything the current policy does, but it allows for undergraduate students enrolled in at least nine hours of classes to buy the policy, she said. The current policy students to be enrolled in 12 hours.
The requirement of three hours for graduate students and one hour for post-doorbal students will remain the same. Alpers said.
"One of the major things we wanted was for the minimum number of hours for an undergraduate to be nine hours," she said. "The Student Health Advisory Board is not required to accept the lowest bid. We take the bid that we feel will best serve the students."
Mike Lambert, chairperson for the advisory board, said, "We thought that would make the plan available to you. We thought it was the best company."
Alpers said that each year the board received bids from insurance companies and then decided which company to recommend to Student Senate for approval. Senate then votes to choose the company.
Student Senate approved the recommendation Wednesday.
Jim Strobil, director of Watkins Memorial Health Center, said the waiting period a student already had accumulated while waiting for a policy to take effect would be transferred to the new policy.
Alpers said another reason the board recommended G-M Underwriters was that it accepted the bid policy
exactly as the board had proposed it and raised the cost only 7 percent Blue Cross/Blue Shield proposed several changes in the policy and raised the premiums by 38 percent.
The general cost of health care has risen about 10 percent since last
The annual cost for the most widely used policy, the single-member policy, is $252.36. The new policy will cost $565. Alpers said.
Besides the new company and policy, the board will use a new method to verify that all the policies are checked in the required number of hours.
Strobli said that an audit would be conducted each month to affirm that the policy-holders were enrolled in the required number of hours. The board may try to work with the Computer Center to audit enrollment by computers. Now, it is done manually by checking lists.
Lambert said, "We want to be very certain we don't get people applying that aren't really students."
FORT WORTH, CO. -- A teenager in a white shirt tries to stay still as the director of photography takes his picture.
Funny for monev
With a chance to win up to $10,000, Carie Chapman, Shawnee freshman, tells a dead-cat joke to the camera crew of the TV show "America's Funniest People." The crew was on campus from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday outside the Kansas Union. About 50 people signed up and performed tricks, impressions and jokes as auditions for the show. Those selected for broadcast will be notified by telephone.
Summer subleasers can be hard to find
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Since spring break, Angie Oades had been trying to find someone interested in subleasing her apartment for the summer.
But even after putting up signs on campus and taking out ads in newspapers, Oades, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, still had to offer to pay some of the rent to attract a subleaser.
Oades' difficulty in finding a subleaser was not unique.
For this reason, tenants may have to offer some compromises or incentives, such as paying part of the subleaser's rent.
Vivian Bliss, Legal Services for Students attorney, said that because many landlords required 12-month leases, there might be many students who wanted to rent their apartments this summer.
But before subleasing their apartments this summer, Bliss said, students should remember that their rental agreements
might place restrictions on them.
She said an apartment rental contract might not allow tenants to sublet their apartment or could damage a home in responsible for the apartment.
Because damage or unpaid rent becomes the responsibility of the person whose name is on the contract, Bliss suggested that ten years of Friends or reliable acquaintances to take over their apartments.
Bliss recommended that the tenants and subleasers put their agreement down on paper. The tenant has the power to issue complex legal terms, she said.
"You could pattern it after your original rental agreement or contact the Consumer Affairs Association," she said.
Legal Services for Students can help students who want to sublease their apartment to people who are not students, but it is often taken from handling legal affairs between students, she said.
Commission introduces members to city issues and legal restraints
New commissioners influence will further develop city goals
By Vanessa Fu Kansan staff writer
With little time to spare before the first meeting of the new Lawrence City Commission, newly elected commissioners got a crash course in local issues and the legal restraints of public service.
Bob Schulte and John Nalandband, who will be sworn in office tomorrow night, received their introduction to city affairs Friday City Manager Willden and incumbent commissioners conducted the orientation session.
Although the new commission will tackle issues discussed previously by former commissions, commissioners agreed that the input of new members would influence the further development of city affairs
"If you change as little as one person, you've got a new commi-
sion," said Bob Schumm, who was re-elected Tuesday to a two-year term. "The chemistry and the inter-commissioners are totally different."
Some of the long-term goals that the commission has begun working toward are the construction of a highway system encircling Lawrence, a long-term, comprehensive land-use plan and an economic model that would include a revision of the city's current tax-adjustment policy.
Nalbandian said he did not want to disrupt the consensus already established by the commission on some of the goals.
"What I’m concerned about is that Bob (Schulte) and I don’t force you to reinvent the wheel." Nalbandian told me, "I have a plan to down the line on some of the issues."
But Mayor Shirley Martin Smith said that the commission would be faced soon with several new issues. One of those is a final report from the Community Task Force on Racism, Discrimination and Human Diversity.
The report, expected in May, possibly will recommend that the city establish resolutions or ordinances to combat discrimination.
"It's something that the task force wants to be a workable document," Martin-Smith said.
Other issues that Martin-Smith said the new commission would deal with include drafting an ordinance to protect the rights of tenants of mobile home parks and an ordinance to tighten restrictions on private clubs.
"We're not so far into those that all of us will be looking at those for the first time."
The new commissioners also received an introduction to the legal powers and restrictions that come
with their positions. Schulte and Nalbandian each received copies of the city's new ethics policy and state statutes concerning home rule, conflicts of interest and other legal aspects of public service.
Wildgen said, "Certainly one of the most important parts about it is being cognizant of not putting your position that you don't want to be in."
Dave Corliss, city management analyst, discussed the open meetings act. The commission is being investigated for an alleged violation of the open meetings act because of a March 5 executive session during which the commission approved a city policy.
Corliss said that the open meetings act benefited commission members because it prohibited decision-making among only two commission members.
"It serves as your protection," he told the commission. "You're not going to have decisions made without your knowledge."
Michelle L. Mvers/KANSAN
The University of Oklahoma's Naval ROTC drill team competes in the Naval ROTC Big Eight rifle, pistol, and drill meet at Memorial Stadium. Iowa State was the overall winner of the competition Saturday.
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An awards ceremony was conducted after the all-day competition in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
The Big Eight schools with Naval ROTC programs are Kansas, Missouri, Iowa State, Nebraska, Colorado, and Texas, all compete in Memorial Stadium.
KU played host to the Naval ROTC Big Eight rifle, pistol and drill meet Saturday.
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ROTC member John Sullivan, Schaumberg, III, junior, said it was the first time KU had been the host of the annual tournament. It rotates to a different Big Fight school each year.
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Iowa State finished as the overall
Naval ROTC drill team captain, Armen Kurmand, Wichita junior, said the Kansas drill队 did not do as well as he had expected.
- Robert Tidball
Naval ROTC member
champion, he said Kansas placed second in the rifle competition and fourth in the pistol competition.
'It was matched nerves during the competition. Your hands start shaking when you have to pull the triever.'
Kurdian said the Kansas Naval ROTC program only had 91 members, whereas the other schools had much larger programs.
"It was matched nerves during the competition," Tidball said. "Your hands start shaking when you have to pull the trigger."
The Kansas drill team came in last in all categories, Kurdian said.
Naval ROTC member Robert Tidball, Beach, N.D., sophomore, said the meet was nerve-racking
"We'll be practicing for next year," he said. "Maybe we can come back with a vengeance."
"It was a shock when we got the scores," he said. "It was like a brick wall fell on me."
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4
Monday, April 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Gun control bill
Brady Bill gives solid protection against danger of selling guns to those who should not buy one
A decade ago a bullet from a would be assassin's gun pierced James Brady's temple. Brady, then press secretary to President Ronald Reagan, survived. The damage done by the .22 caliber bullet confined him to a wheelchair but did not take away any of his energy.
A decade after he was wounded by a bullet from the same gun, Ronald Reagan announced his support for the Brady Bill.
For the past 10 years, Brady and his wife Sarah Brady have fought an uphill battle with Congress to enact gun control legislation. Success, at last, appears to be within reach.
The Brady Bill would impose a waiting period of up to seven days before a handgun would be delivered to a prospective buyer. The waiting period would allow state law enforcement officials to perform background checks on would-be buyers.
Jim Sweeney, legislative aid to Rep. Edward Feighan, primary sponsor of the bill in the U.S. House of Representatives, said the type of checks performed and the length of the waiting period would be determined by state and local law enforcement agencies.
The goal of the waiting period, Sweeney said, was to prevent those who are prohibited from owning a handgun, primarily convicted felons and the mentally ill, from purchasing them. The waiting period also would act as a "cool down" time for people wanting to purchase a weapon in anger.
The National Rifle Association has vehemently opposed the legislation, claiming that it infringes on the right to keep and bear
arms guaranteed by the Second Amendment
However, the bill would not prohibit the right to own weapons. Rather, it would help ensure that the owners would be responsible with them.
The attempted assassination of President Reagan and James Brady may have been avoided if the Brady Bill had been in effect. The waiting period would have given law enforcement officers the chance to check the background of John Hinkley Jr. Given that opportunity, they would have found that he had a long record of mental illness.
But legislators have knuckled under to the NRA, frightened by screams of unconstitutionality. However, a number of states and cities already impose a waiting period. Lawrence is among them.
An ordinance requiring a 72-hour waiting period was enacted by the Lawrence City Commission after a woman purchased a handgun and immediately killed herself.
Sgt. Kevin Harmon, of the Lawrence Police Department, said a thorough background check of a potential handgun buyer's criminal record could be performed in three days.
If the purpose for owning a handgun is a legitimate one, waiting three days to take possession should be little more than a minor inconvenience, much like waiting to take delivery of a new car.
It is time for our government to take action to ensure that people such as John Hinkley Jr. cannot repeat what he did to James Brady.
Bod Griffin for the editorial board
'Survey says . . .?'
Watkins asks 500 KU students to evaluate clinic
U students once again have a chance to evaluate an aspect of the University. Student Senate and the Student Health Advisory Board are surveying 500 students at random to collect their opinions about Watkins Memorial Health Center.
The survey will determine several things such as whether students are satisfied with the services at Watkins, and if not, what services are lacking. Students will be contacted by telephone, and their comments will be available for study by April 12.
Students should take the opportunity to let this important part of the University know how it is doing. For the 1990-91 school year, more than 17,500 students have used Watkins's services at least once. Many have visited Watkins several times.
By studying survey results, the staff at Watkins will be better able to help these
students and the thousands of others who will visit the health center in the future.
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins, said the staff would take the results seriously and would consider starting new services or programs if the students voiced a need. He said, for example, that if enough students wanted an extra service such as a dental clinic, he would begin looking into the idea right away.
"We will plug the changes in any way we can," he said.
Student Senate and the health advisory board should be commended for taking the time to plan and conduct the surveys. Further, Watkins deserves praise for encouraging students to evaluate its services and for offering to use the results constructively.
Melanie Botts for the editorial board
MOVNEYChicago Tribune
A WAITING PERIOD FOR HANDGUNS:
The Reagan Experience.
BLAM
1981
BLAM
1981
OUCH.
DRAG BILL
1991
OUCH.
BRADY
FILL
1991
Roy's Boys deserve better behavior
In a sardonic response to the Legislature's preoccupation with Oklahoma football, President Emeritus George Cross once remarked that he "... would like to build a university of which the football team could be proud." Last Monday night's behavior of some of the students in a basketball game suggests to reason that we need to develop a student body of which Coach Roy Williams and the basketball team could be proud.
There were many good reasons for being on campus that evening: a celebration of an outstanding basketball team and season, a demonstration of pleasure with our unexpected victory in the AA tournament, solidarity in defeat or for display of an old-fashioned loyalty to one's alma mater.
(1)
Unfortunately, a significant number of students and other persons elected to use the conclusion of the tournament as an excuse for barbaric and juvenile behavior resulting in injury to others, destruction of property and a black eye for the University.
Four years ago when Bob Frederick was appointed director of intercollegiate athletics, he inherited a $78 million award to violations of NCAA regulations that
Let's be honest: It was not just good, clean fun or a legitimate release of frustration and disappointment over the outcome of the tournament. It was a travesty to all that Coach Williams and the basketball team represented this year. It was an insult to the values of the University of Michigan, and most majority of KU students. Although the team warrants its frequent title as a class act, these students were clearly in the bush league.
David
Ambler
Guest columnist
Guest columnist
occurred before the arrival of Coach Williams. The performance of many student athletes in the classroom was marginal at best and resulted in frequent ineligibilities. In his short tenure, Frederick has built a program based on high standards of personal and professional conduct and a commitment to the academic values and purposes of the University. Additionally, he has revived the student support programs within the department to enhance the academic success and the personal development of every student athlete. Most importantly, he has selected coaches who believe and reflect those same values.
The fruits of his efforts are already visible: improved performances of student athletes on and off of their playing fields, coaches who bring credit to their sport and the University they represent, and a competent staff that manages the program with integrity and grace. In short, the members of the Department of Intercollege Athletics have provided us with an athletic program "of which the University can be proud." Do they not warrant the same high standards of performances from us, their fans and supporters? Monday night's debacle in front of Wescoe surely was a big disappointment for them, particularly the basketball team. It has tarnished its remarkable performance this year and did nothing to ease its understandable agony following the championship
'Although the team warrants its frequent title as a class act, these students were clearly in the bush league.'
game.
In its usual pous and simplistic fashion, the Kanas has pointed the finger of blame at the administration for underestimating the situation. If having more than 200 staff members from the division of staff affairs, the KU police department, facilities operations and the Lawrence police department working that night is underestimating then we are guilty. If "underestimating the situation" means that I thought most KU students would govern themselves with restraint and a sense of decorum, then I accept their reprobation. In the end, however, each of us must be accountable for our behavior and there are some among us — you know who you are — who we owe Coach Williams and the team an apology and the University community some restitution.
Regardless of where you place the blame, the end results are the same: a dent in the good reputation of the University of Kansas and a blemish on the accolades that 13 young men and their staff mentors so rightly deserve. The foolish, dangerous and disastrous effect of this result in restrictions for the many as we celebrate our institution's achievements in the future.
In the meantime, I call upon all good student citizens and student leaders to help us build "a student body of which we all may be proud." ■ David Ambler is vice chancellor for student affairs.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
The right to bear arms
"A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." That is the full text of the Second Amendment to the Constitution. It is the only amendment that wraps qualifiers around a right it mentions. The qualifiers premise the existence of a well-regulated militia and the security of a free state. Lacking those two conditions, the right to keep and bear arms probably or diminishes to a very small size. Where is the so-called well-regulated militia? How secure is this free state given the enormous access to guns that currently plagues
this society?
The framers of the Constitution did not wish us to interpret the document in the 1996 as though we lived in 1787 or 1791. The journals of the convention, which met in secret, were not released until decades after the Constitution was written. Still, we should note that they did set up guidelines about what rights they wished us to have in this republic and what limitations on those rights they thought were proper. Even in 1791 they thought that arms were dangerous enough that the right to keep and bear them should be judged by how secure the state was and how well-regulated those arm bears might be.
Interestingly enough, three of the founders mentioned by Mark Taylor in his column, "Handgun-control advocates should face the Constitution," probably don't quality as founders at all. Lee opposed the Constitution, and Jefferson was in France when it was written. Iredell was not in Philadelphia either; and he opposed including a bill of rights
in the Constitution.
For these reasons, and also because of the thousands of innocent men, women and children who killed each year by hardhands, I think they are just a problem. John oby against regulating firearms have made the founders sick
Phillip Paludar
Phillip Paludan Professor of American Constitutional History
Students sadden striker
I would venture to assume that the issues regarding the Food Barn strike concern very few students, but the callous attitude displayed by some students toward the might of troops compelled me to speak up.
During the early days of the strike, many students exited the local Food Barn store with applications in their hands and waved them at the striking demonstrators. "Get your jobs!" Consequently, the majority of the "replacement" workers at
Food Barn was composed of KU students. One of them proudly told me his mother was happy that he was paying for part of his rent with his new job. He also said that the attempts by the management to cut Food Barn employees' wages and health benefits did not concern him, since in two or three years, he would out "getting a real job."
Maybe his employment is not a "real" one, but to me and to my fellow strikers, we depend on these unreal jobs to pay for the necessities of our lives. But the luxury of asking our parents for money whenever the need arises.
To students who expressed their support for our cause by boycoting the Food Barn store, the strikers and I convey our deep appreciation. As to these 'replacement workers' and others we have agreed to meet that they enroll in courses that will introduce the fundamentals of humanity and humility to them.
Sheila Ward Lawrence resident
Other Voices
Help drug casualties
"Characterizing our No.1 public health problem as a 'war on drugs' has allowed a return to the stricly punitive approach to dealing with people who are, in fact, sick." Ford said.
Former first lady Betty Ford appeared before Congress recently urging a new sensitivity in the drug debate. There is an old war still being fought.
If the federal government is going to wage a "war" on drugs, it must provide for its casualties and警员 as well. More public money should be used to fill empty beds in treatment hospitals to make sure people who need help can get it.
From the Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, Miss.
Gorbachev warned
For someone who has gotten a lot of political mileage lately out of playing to Soviets' ancient fears of civil unrest, Mikhail Gorbachev seems determined to invite a potentially cataclysmic confrontation with Russian federation President Boris Yeltsin.
The huge, illegal demonstration March 28 that closed down the center of Moscow should be warning enough to Gorbachev that he is flirting with the disaster he so earnestly wishes to avoid.
It was a warning, if any were needed, that any attempt by Gorbachev to engineer a no-contidence vote against Yeltsin in the congress would be handily defeated.
*From the News*
From the News and Courier, Charleston, S.C.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELI
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TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
Business staff
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Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Editors Business
News. Melissa Mathews Campus mgrs. Sophie Whabe
Editorial. Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Carnes Drench
Planning Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus Jennifer Reynolds. Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Sports. Pam Sollier Production mgrs. Rich Harshbarger, Kate Siler
Photography. Ann O'Neill Marketing director. Gai Inbinder
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chrity Haisle
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 8, 1991
5
CALENDAR
Monday
■ Consumer Affairs Association of Law will have a table set up at 10 a.m. in front of Wescoe Hall and at 11 a.m. at the Kansas Union.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a stress management workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
Recycling Task Force will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center
KU Accounting and the 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 Triathletes will meet at 7:30 at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
- Consumer Affairs Association of Law will have a table set up at 10 a.m. in front of Wescoe Hall and at 11 a.m. at the Kansas Union.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
Tuesday
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For more information call Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
■ KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
The Facts Senate coalition will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
Voice will meet at 7 p.m. at 1204 Oread Ave.
KU Ad Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Wednesday
KU Accounting and the IRS will conduct a volunteer income tax assistance workshop at 9 a.m. and at 6
p. m. on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
KU KWellness Center will have a 'Contraception and Safe Sex' lecture at 2:30 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
KU Wellness Center will conduct a stress-management workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
KU Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting for Fulbright Scholarships, Graduate Direct Exchange and other grants for graduate study abroad at $ p.m. Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
The University Placement Center will sponsor a resume-review workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union. Enviros will meet at 6 p.m. at the Centennial Room in the Kansas University
■ KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at the Party Room in the Burge Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
- Women's Resource Center will sponsor an "Auto Mechanics for Beginners" workshop at 7 p.m. in Bvon's Automotive, 640 N. 2nd St.
Center for East Asian Studies will have a lecture at 7:30 p.m. at the auditorium in Dyche Hall.
Thursday
KU KWellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
■ KU Study Abroad will have an informational session at 2 p.m. at 203 Lippincott Hall
An entomology seminar will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. at 1005 Haworth Hall.
KU Student Bioethics will have a discussion at 7 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Sunday
Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice will have a peace vigil at noon at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
- KU Triathletes will meet for a group run at 1 p.m. in front of Wescoe Hall.
Insects threaten hemlock trees
BOSTON — Insects barely visible to the human eye threaten to destroy thousands of majestic bird species. New England, entomologists say.
The Associated Press
The hemlock woolly adelgid is moving north from Connecticut, and scientists are scrambling to find something that will stop it.
The pest "has the potential to kill tens of thousands of hemlock trees over time," said Robert Childs, an entomologist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
'There are stands in Connecticut now where you can pick out the hemlocks in the picture, because they're all standing dead. It's pretty dramatic.'
- Robert Childs
Robert Childs Robert Childs, an entomologist
"There are stands in Connecticut now where you can pick out the hemlocks in the picture, and you'll find the landing dead. It's pretty dramatic."
The adelgid blew into New England from the mid-Atlantic states on the winds of Hurricane Gloria in 1965. Since then it has destroyed thousands of hemlock evergreens in Connecticut.
Insecticides can kill the bug, but only if hemlocks are saturated with chemicals – not an easy feat and covers of acres of trees. Childs said.
Infestations have been found in Massachusetts as far north as Springfield and Waltham, Childs said.
Researchers are experimenting with insecticides that can be injected into trees.
The minuscule aphid, believed to originate in Asia, fells the mighty evergreens by sucking them dry of their sap.
They secrete a cottony white substance, in which they lay their eggs. The substance, found on the fine, lacy branches of the hemlocks, is a sure sign a tree has been infested.
"It looks like someone took thousands of Q-tips, cut the ends off and glued them to the small branches," said Robert Moore, an entomologist at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station in Windsor.
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Douglas county AIDS Project AIDS Awareness Week April 6-13,1991
Schedule of Events
- Saturday, April 6 - Dance - 8 p.m.
a fundraiser at the Lawrence School of Ballet, 8th & Vermont, $3 at the door ($2.50 in advance).
- Monday, April 8. Remembrance Service - 7 p.m.
music and readings to honor those who have died and those who are
living with AIDS, Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
- Monday, April 8, Forum: "AIDS and the College Student" - 7-9 p.m.
Speakers Mary Lona (Exec. Dir., Cabot Clinic, K.C., MO) and Calvin Neil (AIDS Educator)
will lead the discussion, Walnut Room, Kansas Union.
Sponsored by KU Student Senate Minority Affairs Committee.
- Tuesday, April 9 - Restaurant Night
Several local restaurants will donate 10% of their revenues and waitpersons 50%
of tips to DCAP. Call 864-9570 for details.
- Wednesday, April 10 - Film Screening and Speaker - 7 p.m.
Film: "Andre's Mother" & discussion facilitated by Beverly Barbo (author, The Walking Wounded) and Jamie Sites (KU grad & person with AIDS).
Place: 3140 Wescoe Hall. Co-sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
- Saturday, April 13 - Stamp Out AIDS! Walk for Health
South Park, 9 a.m., 10 (6.3 mi.) course; $30 bodge request
- Sunday, April 14 - Women and AIDS Program - 7 p.m.
A multi-media, all women performance produced by Marcia Paludan (Lawrence choreographer).
Sharon Poindethera Minister & facilitator of Good Sumatran Project's Women's HIV +
Sunday School will lead a discussion about women and AIDS.
Lawrence School of Balllet. Tickets: $3 at the door.
Paid for by Student Senate AIDS Task Force
SALES WARRIORS
We're looking for a few good people who want to battle it out in the local business community selling advertising for one of the top college newspapers in the nation.
You'll easily outgun the competition because the University Daily Kansan reaches 95% of all KU students. And with the Kansan's Belden Market Survey, you'll be armed with the most complete information available about local buying and shopping trends.
The Kansan is now hiring Account Executives for the summer/fall Business Staff.
Applications are available at the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Application Deadline: Tuesday, April 16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Douglas County AIDS Project AIDS Awareness Week April 8-13,1991
Schedule of Events
- Monday, April 8. Remembrance Service - 7 p.m.
Music and readings to honor those who have died and those who are living with AIDS. Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
- Monday, April 8. Forum: "AIDS and the College Student" - 7-9 p.m.
Speakers Mary Lona (Exec. Dir., Cabot Clinic, K.C.MO) and Calvin Neil (AIDS Educator) will lead the discussion. Walnut Room, Kansas Union.
Sponsored by KU Student Senate Minority Affairs Committee.
- Tuesday, April 9 - Restaurant Night Two local restaurants (American Bistro, Paradise Cafe) will donate portions of their evening's proceeds to DCAP.Call 843-2096 for details.
- Wednesday, April 10 - Film Screening and Spraker - 7 p.m.
Film: "André's Mother" & discussion facilitated by Beverly Barbo (author,
The Walking Wounded) and Jamie Stiles (KU grad & person with AIDS).
3140 Wescoe Hall. Co-sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
- Saturday, April 13 - Stamp Out AIDS for Health - 9 a.m.
South Park, 10k (16.3 m.) course; $30 pledge requested.
Sunday, April 14 - Women and AIDS Program - 7 p.m.
A multi-media, all women performance produced by Marcia Paludan (Lawrence choreographer). Sharon Poindexter (PATH Ministries & facilita tor, Good Samaritan Project's Women's HIV+ Support Group) will lead a discussion on women and AIDS. Lawrence School of Ballet. $3.
KNOW AIDS.
For more information about HIV infection call 1-800-342-AIDS
The University of Kansas
HIV/STD
EDUCATION COMMITTEE
6
Monday, April 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Gulf questions and answers
Much is yet to be resolved with Saddam and the gulf
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY — The Persian Gulf War has left behind many unanswered questions. Here is a look at some of the unresolved issues.
Q: What happened to the oil spill off the coasts of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia?
A: Saudi Arabian officials have estimated that the giant spill fouling the Persian Gulf from southern Kuwait to Abu Al Island just north of the Saudi port of Al-Jauhaj contains 5 million barrels of oil.
Clean-up haws have collected about 425,000 barrels of oil and have laid booms in strategic areas, especially around the world's largest oceans, which processes 230 million gallons of water a day during the summer.
A: Fleeing Iraqi troops set ablaze
about 600 oil wells in Kuwait and
damaged hundreds of others, causing
pollution in the air and on the
ground.
The spill already has killed thousands of birds and fouled miles of beaches. Experts say it could take years to clean.
Experts say they have no way to determine the long-term health effects, but doctors already report an increased severity and number of lung disorders.
Q: When will the oil fires be extinguished and what is the extent of the pollution?
Experts estimate that it will take up to two years to extinguish all the fires. In Kuwait, the smoke turns day into night, as well over large swathes of the country.
U. S. Army doctors have said that at least five U.S. service members have been sent home from Kuwait with pneumonia. The doctors think the conditions were complicated by the smoke.
Q: When will life in Kuwait return to normal?
A: Electricity has been restored,
banks have re-opened, most people
have running water and staple foods
are generally available in stores. The
return of these essential services has provided some sense of normalcy for the first time since the Iraqi invasion.
But the government resigned March 19, and new leadership has yet to be named. Businesses have been burned and looted and many will be forced to re-enter schools. No are expected to re-open until the latter half of the year.
Kuwait's population has fallen from about 2 million before the Iraqi invasion to as little as 700,000. Some parts of Kuwait City are largely deserted and likely to remain so for months, if not longer. Reconstruction of buildings and other facilities will take years.
Q: When are all the Kuwaiti prisoners likely to be freed?
A: The Kuwaiti government says 11,000 to 12,000 kuwaitis, both soldiers and civilians, were taken to Iraq during the occupation. Roughly half have returned and more are living almost daily through Saudi Arabia.
No one knows how many Kuwaitis died during occupation. Initial government estimates put the number of dead and missing at more than 20,000. But interviews with hospital records suggest that most who stayed in Kuwait during occupation suggest that the number killed is probably around 2,000 to 4,000.
Q: Have all the Iraqi minefields in Kuwait been found?
A: No, and it could take years to find and remove most of them. French mine-sweepers needed three years of training, a yard-strip of beach in Kuwait City.
Military officials estimate that the Iraqis planted hundreds of thousands of mines. The French said that as of Friday they had removed 9,300.
Unexploded ordnance, mainly from U.S. cluster bombs, is also a serious problem. Three or four people a day are being injured in blasts, and many of them are children playing with the explosives.
Q: Why did Iraq not use chemical weapons?
A: Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, the U.S. commander, said he doubted he ever would know why.
He speculated that intensive bombing during the air war destroyed artillery and aircraft used to launch chemical shells.
Gen. Sir Peter de la Biliere, the British commander, speculated on several other possibilities: the speed of the ground war, bad weather and a breakdown of battlefield communications.
Other possibilities include Iraq's fear of nuclear retaliation and the physical degradation of Iraq's chemical weapons, which could not be removed without damage to their chemical facilities by allied bombs, Schwarzkopf said.
Q: What has happened to the Iraqi airplanes flown to Iran?
A: Lt. Gen. Charles Horner, the allied air commander, said there were conflicting reports from Iran on the report of the 137 Iraqi aircraft flown there.
One said Teheran planned to keep them as reparation for the Iran-Iraq War. Another said they would be restored to Saddam Hussein.
Q: What is the U.S. role in Iraq?
Q: What is the U.S. Foe in Iraq?
A: About 100,000 U.S. troops from the VII Corps are occupying parts of southern Iraq, keeping the peace along a demarcation line until a permanent cease-fire is signed. While the U.S. is giving food and medical aid to refugees fleeing the civil war in Iraq, the Bush administration has refused to intervene to help the rebels fighting Saddam Hussein.
Q: When will U.S. forces leave Iraq?
A: They will depart as soon as the cease-fire is approved in the United Nations, according to U.S. military officials. Combat troops then will begin returning home and supply troops will remain longer, possibly as long as 8 to 10 months, to get equipment ready to ship back.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 8, 1991
7
World briefs
Johannesburg, S. Africa
Mandela: Trial shouldn't matter
Nelson Mandela said in an interview broadcast yesterday that his wife's trial on kidnapping and assault charges would not affect the political situation in South Africa.
The trial of Winnie Mandela is scheduled to resume today in Johannesburg, South Africa.
"This is not my first experience, nor that of my wife, to undergo harassment," Mandela said on CBS-TV's "Face the Nation." The leader of the African National Congress was videotaped Saturday speaking by telephone from his home in South Africa's Soweto township.
"I don't think personally it's going to have any effect on the political situation in the country," he said.
Winnie Mandela and two others face charges related to the abduction and beating of four young men in December 1988. She has pleaded pot guilty.
The trial has been in an Easter recess since March 28, when the prosecution rested its case.
Tirana, Albania
Democrats may win in election
Albanians voted yesterday in runoff elections that either will grant Communists unchecked power in parliament or give the opposition an important say in running this poor Balkan
The Party of Labor, the formal name of the Communist Party, won 162 of parliament's 250 seats in the initial stage. Its main rival, the Democratic Party, won 65 seats, although its candidates upset President Ramiz Alia and other senior Communist leaders.
A team of Communists, Democrats and a member of the small Republican Party who were in charge of the runoff election agreed that voting had progressed without irregularities.
From The Associated Press
Planes airdrop supplies to aid Kurdish refugees
NICOSIA, Cyprus — U.S. military yesterday begin aairbinding supplies to Kurdish refugees in northern Iraq, and Saddam Hussein's forces have unblocked an opened a new offensive against the Kurdish rebels.
The Associated Press
The refugees, facing starvation and exposure in the snow-covered mountains, where they fled to escape Saddam's army, were growing more desperate.
Turkey's government-sponsored Anatolia news agency reported that Turkish soldiers opened fire yesterday on a group of refugees who forced their way into the country in search of food. One of the refugees was wounded.
The United States warned Iraq not to interfere with the refugee-reliief effort.
At the same time, President Bush repeated the U.S. intention to stay out of Iraq's civil war.
Iraqi troops, who badly outgun the Kurdish rebels, pushed deeper into rebel-held territory and
attacked the northern city of Salahedin, rebel leaders said yesterday.
The guerrillas said that 60 government troops were killed and three tanks destroyed in the battles that continued after nightfall. The claim could not be confirmed independently.
But he did not mention the cease-fire terms, which will strip Iraq of much of its military might.
Saddam, in a speech a day after Iraq accepted stringent U.N. terms for a permanent cease-fire in the Persian Gulf War, praised his people's steadfastness in the war against the allies.
Insurgencies broke out in northern and southern Iraq after Saddam's armies were routed by the allies in late February. The flood of refugees was Saddam's troops movement to crush the rebellions.
Hundreds of thousands of refugees have fled their homes and are seeking shelter in Iran and Turkey.
Moscow celebrates Easter
Thousands gather for services at Red Square cathedral
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — More than 3,000 people gathered yesterday at St. Basil's Cathedral for Orthodox Easter services, the first such services in decades on Red Square, Soviet media reported.
They were among millions of worshipers worldwide celebrate Orthodox Easter.
Although political discussions are strictly forbidden on Red Square, greetings of "Christ is risen!" quickly turned to political discussions, the Russian Information Agency said. Red Square is the site of military parades on Revolution Day. Several rows of police stood by.
onion domes is the symbol of the Soviet Union for much of the world. However, the cathedral is an architectural museum owned by the government, not a working church.
In another sign of expanding religious tolerance, the state television news program Vremya began yesterday with an Easter message from the patriarch.
The ornate cathedral with colorful, fanciful
"In these uneasy times, many of us lack a peaceful, creative spirit — the spirit of gentleness and love. Let Easter joy be the source of peace, mutual understanding, tolerance, brotherhood, creation and unity desired by everyone," the patriarch said.
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Students work to help others
Competition stiff for admission to social welfare grad program
By Benjamin W. Allen
'I won't be able to help everyone, but I might be able to help them harness the strength they have within them.'
The graduate program in the School of Social Welfare may not lead to the highest-paying jobs available for graduate students, but competition for getting into the school is steep.
Kansan staff writer
Luke McQuade Lawrence graduate student
One reason for the competition may be the fact that the University of Kansas is the only institution in the country where the degree graduate in social welfare.
Luke McQuade
But often what it comes down to is the desire of the applicants not to gain monetarily but to help others.
The School of Law has a comparable application rate, with 1.070 applications for 180 positions, about 5.9 applicants for every position.
"You could speculate why, but we have no real explanation," Black said. "Perhaps it is because the economy is in difficulty, or because people are recognizing the problems of drugs and homelessness, for example. You name it, social workers have a role."
Edith Black, assistant dean of social welfare, said applications at social welfare programs were up across the country.
Black said the school had received ab 700 applications for the 125 positions in the graduate program, or about 5.5 applications for each spot.
Luke McQuade, Lawrence graduate student, said he was in the Social Welfare graduate program solely because of his idealism.
"By becoming a social worker, I can try to make the world a better place than it is," he said. "I have a vision of change and equality. It's disturbing to see that one in four children live below the poverty line, that women earn 68 cents for every dollar a man earns, that 50 percent of all single Black mothers live in poverty."
"I won't be able to help everyone, but I might be able to help them harness the strength they have within them."
Mequnde said that because he was relatively young for the program, he didn't want to take on his job.
"It surely isn't money, it a vision that society can be a better place."
he said.
Joni Brophy, another graduate student in the program, said she knew she needed a master's degree to learn more about social work and to have a better chance to choose where she worked.
"I could see I really enjoyed and had the capabilities to work in social service," she said. "I wanted to learn about social policy and the intricacies of it, being involved like being involved in the helping profession or service to people."
Brophy said her current internship at a Lawrence elementary school was particularly rewarding because she is able to deal with problems rather than intervention.
"In the school, I deal with all types of children from every background because everybody has to go to school," she said. "There's a lot of preventive work that can be done, from how to prevent them from dropping out, or from getting pregnant, or from being involved with drugs and crime."
Brophy said social work positions in schools were some of the betterpaid positions in the social-work field.
"Starting salary is roughly $25,000, but there is little chance once you get into it," she said. "We aren't going to get that much, but we love what we do."
Black said the job market was good for graduates of the program. A survey of May 1990 graduates found jobs within two months.
"More people are changing careers in mid-life," she said. "Many people are changing their degrees. Lawyers, people with master's in business, even a few Ph.Ds. are earning graduate degrees in social welfare."
MeQuade said that he was unsure about the job market in social work because of the recession and budget cuts. "I was optimistic about finding a job."
"It depends on what the government is committed to," he said. "The war and the savings and loan bailout didn't help. Social work programs are just not high on our government's priority list."
Fire leaves U.S. embassy short on space
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Eleven days after fire badly damaged the U.S. embassy in the Soviet capital, U.S. diplomats are working in makehift quarters so cramped that some may be forced to move into a bowling alley.
Some embassy employees are blaming U.S. officials for ignoring their warnings that the building was a fire hazard, and the embassy is investigating what happened to some diplomatic papers and hundreds of cash reported to have disappeared during the March 28 blaze.
The fire also adds fuel to the controversy over the eight-story, red-brick office tower that was built
to house the new embassy — but was never occupied because it is riddled with Soviet listening devices.
No one was seriously hurt in the fire, which was traced to a welding soak in an elevator shaft.
Although the embassy is hard up for space because of the fire damage, it will not use the unoccupied new minister's counselor for management.
That is because under reciprocity rules, Soviet diplomats could then use their new compound in Washington, which they were barred from occupying after the bugging problem was solved at the new U.S. building in Moscow.
For now, dozens of U.S. diplomats
are packed into an auditorium down the hill from the building that burned. Others are working in a converted lounge.
"Crammed is not the word," one diplomat said. Like others interviewed, he spoke on condition of anonymity.
One embassy worker said a small bowling alley on the new compound would be converted into an office. Embassy representative Jim Bullock declined to confirm that, but said, "Nothing is sacred. Everything is up for examination."
Other embassy employees worry that security was breached when dozens of Soviet firefighters entered
the old building.
One embassy worker called it "the worst scenario: dozens of Soviets running around with open safes containing classified documents in the most sensitive areas of the embassy."
Hulings said that U.S. Marine guards confiscated Rolodex files from some of the firefighters and that papers were missing from his own desk.
Adding to the pressure on the diplomats, President Bush is due in Moscow for a long-delayed meeting with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev sometime before the end of June.
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The University of Kansas COMMENCEMENT
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Caps, Gowns & Hoods STARTING NOW
All participants, including faculty, doctorate, law, master's and bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns, and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26. To ensure proper fit and availability of regalia, participants are asked to visit the order center IN PERSON.
Out of town commencement participants unable to visit the campus order center may reserve regalia by following the instructions in the graduation mailing.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 8, 1991
9
Number of war protesters who won't pay taxes grows
War-tax resisters won't help U.S. pay costs of war
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Glenda Rae Hernandez has not paid federal income tax for more than 20 years. Peter D. Smith has withheld about 60 percent of his taxes each year since 1969
The two South Bend, Ind., residents do not keep their delinquency a secret. They are part of a war-tax resisters movement that organizers say is 100,000 strong and more deterred ever in the gulf war's aftermath.
"There's no question about it, we're growing," said Carolyn Stevens of the Seattle-based War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee, which represents about 100 national organizations have been flooded with inquiries on how to go about it. Who knows what will happen on April 15?"
Despite the nation's swell of patriotism with the success of Operation Desert Storm, U.S. citizens opposed to military build-up say the conflict underscores one of their points: War is expensive.
Government officials say that the war cost from $40 billion to more than $54 billion.
"That money takes away from the other needs of society, like school and community services," said Vicki Rovere of the New York-based War League. The league was founded in 1923 and has about 15,000 members, she said.
"If I was mugged and killed on the street, that is symptomatic. . . . I would consider myself a war casu-
mant in an indirect way." Rovere said
Many of today's war-tax resisters got their start during the anti-Vietnam War movement of the 1960s.
Now, organizers hope for a new generation of younger resisters who opposed the U.S.-led campaign against Iraq. They say the numerous nationwide protests during the gulf war tell them there is the potential that many more U.S. citizens will not be paying their taxes this year.
"It can be said that all Americans were thrilled by the so-called victory," said John Lelone, a co-ordinator of the Seattle-based Concord Military Tax Campaign, which has about 2,000 members nationwide.
"People who had a rough time with the war are asking. 'What can we do so this won't happen again?' And we say, 'Don't pay taxes.' "
Hernandez said she and her husband always filed a return and stated they would not be paying any income taxes.
"I think you do see more resisters in times of actual conflict. It hits home more," Hernandez said, adding that Internal Revenue Service officials steal money from the federal government each year to cover their tax and penalties.
With an estimated 100,000 participants, the war-tax resistance movement does not compare to the millions of U.S. citizens who, without political motivation, either cheat on their tax forms or don't pay at all.
IRS officials say that $55 billion to $100 billion in tax money is owed to
the U.S. government.
Carolyn Stumpf of the IRS office in Indianapolis said the agency did not treat war-tax resisters any differ- ent from anyone else who failed to pay taxes.
The War Resisters League is helping to organize a national campaign dubbed the "Alternative Revenue Service," aimed at galvanizing the movement.
"Tax cheating, whether it's a protest or out-and-out cheating, only cheats your taxpaying neighbor," she said. "The programs that get cut are not war programs but human services."
More than 70,000 forms showing exactly howto withhold the tax have been sent nationwide, said league representative Lisa Harper. Nationwide rallies also are planned by the IRS on April 15, the deadline for filing taxes.
Smith and his wife, Elllyn Stecker,
have been withholding about 60 percent of
the income tax for 23 years. The
percentage is the amount estimated to go to the military and
the national debt, which has been incurred in part through past military expenses.
Smith said he and his wife ultimately paid more than double for what they believe in. They redirect the withheld money to peace groups, and the IRS seizes their assets to recover the amounts the owe, in turn, to pay them back at the end of each year they owe the IRS $8,000 to $9,000.
"It a matter of conscience," said Smith, who served four years in the Army from 1960s. "It empowers the person you feel I can have to say. 'There's nothing I can do.'"
Dangers hound mail carriers
Sexual advances, nudism and animals hamper delivery efforts
The Associated Press
A recent incident in Syracuse, N.Y., attracted attention when a woman demanded her mailman also deliver as a male-man.
WASHINGTON — Rain, sleet and gloom of night may not discourage a mail carrier, but aggressive women, bees, hawks and dogs sure can.
He resisted.
Delivery desisted.
However, West said that it was the first incident he had heard of where there was a cutoff of the mail.
Having people make sexual advances toward letter carriers is not unheard of, said Robert West of the U.S. Postal Service.
Asked if it might be that not all carriers would complain about sexual advances, West responded, 'There's no time allowance.' for that.
Having the postal service decline to deliver can result from something as mundane as a missing mailbox.
or something as exotic as indism.
A carrier once declined to deliver to a mulist colony near Tampa. Fla. to build a built a wall to screen their ideality.
West said that for the most part mail was stopped for safety reasons. These problems are usually resolved quickly. However, no national statistics are kept.
"These decisions are made at the local level," said Richard McKillop, also of the delivery management team when the case gets appealed up.
The World Series earthquake, the eruption of Mount St. Helens — those were ample reasons for mail not to get through for a few days, said postal representative Bil Paul of San Jose, Calif.
"Fraud is another reason," McKillip said. "If a company is found to be committing mail fraud, delivery can be blocked by the Postal Inspection Service."
Beees sometimes nest in or near rural mailboxes, causing carriers to stay away. McKillip said. Other hazards are presented by porches or driveways under repair and rural roads that become muddy or unsafe.
Drew VerBen, a representative for the National Association of Letter Carriers, said that there had been a couple of cases when delivery was stopped for a period in crime-rate reports. It has been considered too dangerous to enter.
Occasionally, a carrier will be threatened if a check or other item does not arrive as expected, he said.
Paul, who says he cut his teeth as a carrier in housing projects in San Francisco, said he developed a kind of 360-degree vision in high-crime
But both agreed that halting the mail because of crime was unusual.
areas.
Dangerous animals were mentioned again and again as the problem most likely to cause a cutoff. The animals are not always pets.
Mississippi kite hawks began attacking a mail carrier in Snyder, Texas.
Although the birds have a 2-foot wingspan, carrier Patt Wittie said that when they dive-bombed, you would swear the span was closer to 8 feet.
She contacted state officials after the birds knocked mail out of her hand and knocked off her helmet, but she found that nothing could be done because the hawks were an endangered species.
A temporary cluster of mailboxes was set up away from the birds until they finished nesting.
Brown dropped an item, reached into some weeds to retrieve it and was bitten. He continued his appointed rounds for about 20 minutes before the pain and swelling convinced him the bite was serious.
Carrier Ed Brown of Brady, Texas,
spent four days in hospital after his
seizure. He is 8 and 1/2 years old.
Despite the occasional encounter with snakes, tigers, alligators and other exotic animals, dogs get the most attention.
The twisting trail of tax returns
INCOME TAX
1990
Internal Revenue
Service
this year, 113 million taxpayers are expected to file federal income tax returns. Here is what happens to your return once it is filed.
How paper returns are processed
1040 1
Complete your return and mail it to the processing center.
1
1940
2
Returns are opened, and payments are credited to taxpayers' accounts and deposited in the U.S. Treasury
Returns are sorted, checked for accuracy, edited and coded for computer entry.
1
3
CCC
Tax data is placed on magnetic tape.
4
OK
5 Data is checked by IRS computers for accuracy.
D D D
Tapes are sent to the "master file at the computing center in Martinsburg, W.Va.
6
Refunds are mailed from regional disbursing centers or collection notices are sent to taxpayers.
7
Percent who prepare their own tax returns
Percent of 1040 returns with itemized deductions
Do own
Electronic returns - refund only
Do own 52% 48%
Hire accountant
63% 59% 59% 51% 46% 42%
'84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '89
Number of 1989 returns audited: 985,000
Number of IRS workers at peak: 120,000
Research: PAT CARR and WENDY GOVIER
SOURCES: Internal Revenue Service, HBR Block
A desk with writing materials
Roof
Bring Form 1040 to a qualified tax preparer. Either complete the form yourself or have the preparer do it.
Sign Form 8453, authorizing transmission of the tax data. This form and your W-2 are mailed to the IRS.
3
3 enter
3 Preparer enters data into computer and sends it directly to IRS computer.
Are the same steps as paper returns 5 and 6
6 Refunds are sent
4,5
6
Choices for obtaining refund
■ "Refund anticipation loan" - Within six days, tax preparer gives taxpayer an advance refund check of $300 to $3,000.
The IRS sends refund to the tax preparer's bank
Direct deposit to your bank account, within three or four weeks
- Refund check sent directly to you from IRS,
within three or four weeks
*Master file on the central computer
1. The computer
2. Processes data for notices and refunds
This confidential file contains all data about taxpayers' accounts. The computer compares this data with the taped information from your return.
The caregivers.
- Checks on late filings and failures to file returns
- Determines whether you owe other taxes
- Classifies returns for auditing
- Tips for filling
• File early. Refund checks for returns filed in.
- Use IRS's bar-coded envelope and address label
Tips for filing
■ File early. Refund checks for returns filed in January are sent within four weeks; for returns filed April 15, they are mailed within eight weeks
■ Round off cents to dollars.
Round off cents to dollars
Make sure you signed the return
Toll-free number for information 1-800-829-1040
Knight Ridder-Tribune News MARTY WESTMAN
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
Have an opinion? Write a "letter to the editor"!
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KU STUDENT BIOETHICS CLUB
"THE ELDERLY: WHO CARES?" Thursday, April 11th Kansas Union--Jayhawk Room, 7:00 p.m. For more information call: Vance 843-1122
...
Rock Chalk Revue Rock Chalk Revue is now accepting applications for 1991-92 board positions:
Producer
Executive Director
Assistant Executive Director
Business Managers (2)
Promotions Coordinator
Community Service Coordinator
In-Between Acts Director
Applications are available in Organizations & Activities.
400 KS Union.
Completed applications are due by
5:00 p.m. April 12 in the OAG
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10
Monday, April 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
STOP & Recycle!
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Application Deadline Wednesday, April 10 5:00pm
Application Deadline
Wednesday, April 10
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Applications are available at
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or KJHK
Michelle L. Myers/KANSAN
THE YOUNGSTER
Synchronized
Jon Hays, Topeka sophomore, and Chad Gardner, Lee's Summit,
Mo., freshman practice for the steeplechase at Memorial
Stadium. Hays and Gardner practiced yesterday in preparation for the 66th Annual Kansas Relays, April 17-20 at Memorial Stadium.
U.S troops are psyched to come home
Cease-fire agreement Saturday with Iraq makes waiting in the desert even harder
The Associated Press
SAFWAN, Iraq — With a cease-fire approved, impatient U.S. troops asked yesterday that the desert felt hotter, more dusty and less scenic than the day before as they awaited word on their withdrawal from Iraq.
“It's time to go, like a good actor who leaves the stage while people are still applauding,” said L. Kevin Petitt, of Thousand Oaks, Calif. “If we stay any longer, nothing good will come of it.”
Slightly fewer than 100,000 U.S. soldiers remain based in the desert of
Soldiers with the 3rd 'Armored Division in the devastated border town of Safaan said that despite Iraq's acceptance Saturday of U.N. cause-fire terms, they still had no information on when they would pull out.
southern Iraq and are likely to leave quickly now that Iraq's Parliament has agreed to cease-fire terms set by the U.N. Security Council.
Gen. Colin Powell, chairperson of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said last week that it could be more than a million soldiers were withdrawn from Iraq.
However, a complete withdrawal is unlikely until a U.N. monitoring force is in place to watch over the Iraq-Kuwait border. No date has been announced for the arrival of U.N. forces.
U. S. forces have been occupying the southeastern corner of Iraq since the allied forces chased the Iraqi fortress of Kuwait at the end of February.
For most U.S. soldiers, it has been dull, tedious duty in a setting only a
camel could love. The temperature hit 90 degrees yesterday, and the strong seasonal winds sent hot sand blowing like swirling snow.
Sgt. Keith Williams of Lafayette, Tenn., said, "My wife keeps writing, It's over. When are you coming home? Since the fighting stopped, it gets a little tougher to stay every day."
— we give them water, they give us tomatoes," said Browne, 23 of Chicago. "They ask for whiskey, but we don't have any of that."
"We've developed a camaraderie
Spec. James Browne, a military police officer, has encountered so many Iraqi refugees at his checkpoint north of Safat that he has been called in by the Iraqi taxi drivers who pass to and from the town daily.
He said some Iraqi soldiers captured during the war and repatriated were turning themselves in a second time. The volunteer prisoners have
memorized the numbers assigned to the pre-packaged army ration meals and ask for their favorites.
The U.S. Army is caring for some 7,000 Iraqi refugees on the abandoned grounds of a construction company in Safawan. Many of the refugees and their families in the country monitors will not be able to protect them once the U.S. citizens leave.
Adnan al-Salahy, 19, of Safan,
said, "The American soldiers have
been very generous. But if they
really want that the Iraq army
will attack it,"
Sgt. Michael Massey, of Marietta, Ga., predicted that the U.S. military would pull out at night to eat them and not fright out when they see us going."
"I wouldn't mind staying here longer if we could make a difference," said Massley, who drives fuel truck minibuses to stick. But we can't be here forever."
Attention Students-
Are you interested in saving time during Fall fee-payment?!?
Then fill out your 91-92
Options Card during enrollment.
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- Fill out an Options Card to reserve any of the above options.
- You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
- Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 8, 1991
11
Kansas corralled by Cowboys
RUSC440
PINGS 29 RUEX40
9
Second baseman Jeff Berblinger avoids Cowboy catcher Michael Daniel and finishes a double play.
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma State right fielder John Swanson's three-run double in the seventh innited provided the winning margin in the Cowboys' 5-4 victory against Kansas at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium yesterday afternoon.
The Cowboys swept four games from the Jayhawks during the weekend and improved their Big Eight Conference record to 4.0. Kansas dropped to 6-6 in conference play and out of first place.
"We should be glad we're not 0-12 because that's when you have some real problems." Kansas coach Dave Bingham said about the conference title race. "I caution the kids to not rush much on the results of this series.
"We're 6-6 and right in the middle of the pack," he said. "It's not over yet."
In yesterday's game, the Jay-
hawks strung together five singles and a sacrifice bunt to take a 4-0 lead in the bottom of the second inning.
Kansas first baseman Jie Niemier started the flurry with a single that darted past diving Cowboy first baseman Neil Szerkv
Kansas batters Gerry Camara,
Denard Stewart and Mike Bard
followed with singles of their own
and gave Kansas a 2-1 lead.
The Jayhawks' third and fourth runs came off a single to right field by left fielder Darryl Monroe.
Meanwhile, Kansas right hander Eric Stonecipher defiled the explosive Cowboy batters, allowing only two hits in the first six innings.
Oklahoma State assistant coach Tom Holliday said a couple of factors affected the Cowboy batters.
The Cowboys' temporary blindness wore off in the seventh inning, however.
"Stonepiper threw hard for three innings," he said. "There was a bright sky and the glare was bad. Our kids said they couldn't see the ball."
Oklahoma State's Michael Daniel and Lou Lucca scored off singles by Ritchie Moody and Manny Gagliano.
A walk to Cowboy pinch hitter Scott Watkins loaded the bases and forced Stonecipher to the showers with Kansas clinging to a 4-2 lead.
Kansas right hander Jim Walker retired Cowboy center field Brad Dolejsi for the second out of the innings, bringing Swanson to the
left-center field power alley. The bases cleared and Oklahoma State led for good, 5-4.
The Jayhawks had a chance to tie the game in the ninth, but it did not happen.
The Jayhawks, 21-16 overall and 6-1 in the conference, travel to Northern Iowa for single games tomorrow and Wednesday.
double to left field, but he was erased one batter later when Oklahoma State's Daniel picked him off second
Monroe led off the inning with a
The Associated Press
Senate to debate NCAA rules bill
TOPEKA — Amid growing NCAA concern over its relationship with legislators, the Kansas Senate will debate a bill today requiring the National College Athletic Association, the nation's most powerful athletic governing body, to observe rules of due process in enforcing its regulations.
"I think it's important that an organization that affects as many people as the NCAA does plays by
Kansas, the 1988 NCAA men's basketball champion, was placed on probation and not allowed to defend its title in 1989. Many Kansans were infuriated when the CAA rejected in previousuling and permitted them to play Nevada-Las Vegas to defend its 1990 championship this year.
However, Winter insisted that had nothing to do with him pushing the legislation.
Nebraska passed a similar law in 1990, and the legislatures of Kansas, California, Illinois, Florida, and Louisiana are considering bills this year.
They did not discuss details of the bill, Burke said, but Schultz offered to discuss the issue with any interested lawmaker.
The Kansas effort, led by State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, a former Kansas football player, has attracted the attention of NCAA executive director Richard Schultz and director Steve Morgan, who have come to Topeka to talk about it.
Schultz met with Senate president Bud Burke, R-Overland Park. last week.
"He wanted to open the lines of communication, to provide the groundwork for future expansion of relations between the NCAA and the Kansas Senate," Burke said.
the same rules that all governments do," said Winter, chairperson of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which endorsed the bill. "Nobody, including the NCAA, is above the Constitution."
Kansas may have the clout to make its legislation stick, if enacted, because the NCAA has headquarters in Overland Park.
The bill would apply nationally,
not just to the seven Kansas
members of the NCAA - Kansas,
Kansas State, Wichita State,
Emory State, Pittsburg State,
Indiana State and Washburn
University.
The bill, set for debate today, would require the NCAA to grant all due process rights accorded by the U.S. and state constitutions to people and institutions investigating the NCAA for suspected rules violations.
Those include the right to confront accusers, the right of the accused to be present at hearings and the right to public hearings.
If the Senate passes the bill, it would go to the House where it might not be considered this session because the Legislature will adjourn its regular 90-day session Saturday. It returns April 24 for a wrapup session expected to last no more than four or five days.
Kansas trounces Colorado players Men's and women's teams win 8-1
With time so short, it is doubtful that the House Judiciary Committee would have hearings and take the bill to the floor for debate.
However, Winter will urge the Senate to pass the bill, send it to the House and let it rest until the 1992 session as an incentive for the NCA to revise its procedures. It is expected to pass in the Senate.
Morgan, former chief enforcement officer of the NCAA, testified at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the bill March 19.
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
One Kansas tennis team took the first step toward a Big Eight Conference championship yesterday and the other one continued its journey
Both the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams clobbered the Colorado Buffaloes by identical 8 scores at the Allen Field House tennis
The two victories moved the women's conference record to 2-0 and the men's to 1-0.
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers, Renee Raychaudhier and Page Goins, and freshmen Abby Woods victorious in their singles matches.
"We're in good position to compete for the Big Eight, but we still have a couple more weekends to go," said Michael Center, Kansas women's tennis coach. "We can't get too excited vet."
Leading 5-1 heading into doubles, the Jayhawks turned up the intensity and swept all three matches in straight sets.
"It was good to see her back on the court." Center said. "It was a big boost to everyone's game just to see her out there."
Kansas senior Stacy Stots, batting a stiff back and her opponent, lost a hard-fought three-set match against Sonia Panajotovic.
Hamers was competing for the first time since injuring her knee a month ago.
The 14th-ranked Kansas men's team swept all singles matches and dropped a rare doubles match in its victory.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey, Chris Walker and Jeff Gross, juniors
Rafael Rangel and Patrick Han and freshman Rhain Buth notched singles victories.
Kansas man's tennis coach Scott Perelman said he was pleased with but surprised by the Jayhawks' success in singles.
"I think we played better singles than I expected to," he said. "Our doubles wasn't what I thought it would be."
After winning the first set 6-1 and losing the second 6-7, Kansas' No. 1 doubles team of Walker and Widley smoked past Colorado's Marc Leclair and Jeff Spiers in the third set 6-1.
"I'll give Colorado credit," Perelman said. "After being down 6 on2 singles, they came out more prepared than we did for doubles."
The Jayhawks struggled in doubles. All three matches were forced into a third set.
Kansas junior Paul Gavin and Rangel teamed in the 2. doubles spot and defeated Colorado's Scott and Haken Olanick 4. 6, 4. 6. 3.
Kansas 'No. 3 doubles pair of Buth
and Han made a furious comeback
attempt in the third set, but lost 6-4,
4-6-7, 7-6
SUNDAY JULY 31, 1986
Renee Raychaudhuri returns a serve during yesterday's match.
Women's team gets second in Alabama
Men's team fares worse, places fourth
Kansan sportswriter
By Rick C. Honish
The women's team reached a new level of success, placing second overall and winning many events with personal best marks.
The Kansas men's and women's track teams were in Tuscaloosa, Ala., this weekend for their second outdoor meet of the season.
Sophomore Amy Hadley, a third place finisher in the 100-meter hurdles, said that overcast skies and cool weather have helped have added to the team's success.
"It was also the second meet, so we had already had a meet to get out the jitters," she said. "We went in not far from our beat, beat, but thinking we could win."
Many of the women Jayhawks did win and many were freshmen
Freshman Heather Bonin won the javelin by throwing a meet record of 160.8. It was her second consecutive with a throw of 160 feet or better
Freshmen Tracie Driver and Cassandra Bryant finished the long jump and tied for first with jumps of 18-8 for the two women, personal bests for the two women.
In the triple jump, Bryant claimed first place with a jump of 38-2⁄₄, and Driver took with second with 37-1⁄₄.
The high jumpers finished first and second in their event. Junior Marybeld Labosky cleared 5'9-4" in the middle and Harding placed second, jumping 5-6.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said
the men's team did not look as good as the women's.
"We had some good things, though." he said.
One was sophomore Chris Walters. Walters had a personal best in the pole vault, clearing 16·1-3⁻¹ in a third place effort.
Walters also placed fourth in the long jump with a jump of 22-1.
The winner of that event was freshman Harun Hazim, with a jump of 23.9%.
Freshman Brian Hollands won the discus and senior Sean Jacobson won the lavelin.
The men's team finished the meet in fourth place.
Down the road in Austin, Texas,
senior All-American Patt Manson and
freshman Jayson Lavender were
competing in the Texas Relays.
Manson cleared 17.7. It was the best height, but it was matched by five other vaulters.
Manson had three misses before that, and he missed twice before clearing the 17-7 height. Because the scoring in pole vaulting also figures in missed attempts, his place in the meet was 6th.
Lavender failed to clear the initial height of 16-7
Manson said Lavender looked good for someone who had not competed in the Olympics.
"He looked great and got a lot of things done," Manson said. "It was a good start."
Lavender missed the indoor season because of a sore hamstring.
Jayhawk Zo selected for Pan Am tryouts
Kansas junior forward Alonzo Jamison is one of 66 college players that have been invited to the Pan American trials April 25 at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. Colo.
Sports briefs
Jamison is one of five Big Eight Conference players invited to the trials, joining Oklahoma State's Bryon Houston, Mississippi's Anthony Peele, and Oklahoma's Jeff Webster and Brent Price.
Jamison averaged 10.4 points and 6.4 rebounds a game this season and led the team in steals with 80. He was on the team in field goal
with Ohio State's Randy Ayers and Oregon's Don Monson as assistant coaches.
This year's U.S. team will be coached by Purdue's Gene Keady,
Kansas signs the year's first volleyball recruit
The Pan American Games will be August 3-15 in Havana. Cuba
Kansas volleyball coach Frankie Albizit began the recruiting season last week by signing Janel Uber, a 5-0 leader for the Northwestern Guild High School in Wobble, Neb.
Uher lettered in volleyball, basketball and track and earned all-state honors in volleyball in 1980 and 1991. She was named academic all-state in all three sports and is a member of the National Honor Society.
Uher is also a member of the Nebraska Juniors volleyball team.
Albitz said that Uber had played enough volleyball that she might be able to step into the program as early as next year.
"She can play almost any position and she is a polished player," Albitz said.
Universities seek share of firm's floor profits
INDIANAPOLIS — The Final Four universities in the NCAA basketball championship say their rights are being violated by an Iowa company selling the hardwood maple floor in the Hoosier Dome.
Iowa Sports Marketing Inc., of Arnold Park, Iowa, is selling the basketball floor in 22,000 pieces to a group of Indianapolis news Reported Saturday.
The floor was to be cut in 5-inch by 6-inch pieces, then engraved with the name of participating teams and game scores.
The Iowa firm bought the 7,200 square-foot floor on which the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, Duke, Kansas and North Carolina played for the National Collegiate Athletic Association men's division I.
"The four universities were willing to offer their names provided they were compensated," said Ken Topper, marketing director for Collegiate Licensing Co. Atlanta and Carpenteria, Calif.
"Those schools are coming out of
Collegiate Licensing, Topper said, has a contract with colleges and universities including the Final Four, to honor their names from commercialization.
the woodwork for a piece of the action, but we're not violating anything” said James C. Gardner, of Iowa Sports Marketing.
Tigers' Jamal Coleman suspended indefinitely
Coleman and two other students.
He said the proposal from Collegiate Licensing would grant authorization to Iowa Sports Marketing in exchange for a royalty of $4 apiece, which he said would cut severely into his profit margin.
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri basketball player Jamal Coleman has been suspended indefinitely from the Missouri basketball team for his involvement in an alleged refund scheme. Tigers coach Norm Stewart said.
both employees of the bookstore,
were arrested Friday and held in the
Boone County Jail Bail was set at
$5,000 each for Coleman and Traynette Jenkins and $10,000 for Terri Cain, who also was charged with one count of forgery.
Coleman, who was released from jail Saturday after posting $500 bond, was booked on one charge of felony misdemeanor. The assignment will be today at 1:30 p.m.
Coleman allegedly was involved in a refund scam in which refund slips were improperly used to collect at least $2,000 in cash.
The incident is Coleman's third run-in with police in the last two years.
From staff and wire reports
12
Monday, April 8. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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The Presidential Candidates' Debate for Student Senate Elections
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90.7 FM
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the Sound Alternative 90.7
The Etc. 723 Mass Shop
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Classified Directory
100's
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Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Training Services
脚本
Hey Big 'NE-Wanna play hall? How 'bout a doubleheader this weekend? You let you be king for a night. Love-the Curb Tripper
Jennifer !!!!!? the girl from Wichita who was on Southeast Airlines Flight 565 from Chicago to CA (10:34 a.m.) told me that the conversation was barren and I would love to keep in touch. Feeling mutual! Either way, the suspicion is killing me. What is your last name? Mia? Amy? Hanna? Hall 600, North 11th, Lincoln NE, N6506
100s Announcements
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105 Personal
110 Bus. Personal
ACE EXAMS: Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence using hi tech audio devices. Support the development of Ivonnis and Stress Management Center.
ANNOUNCING: Beauti Control. Look and feel your very best. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call 1-913-232-8288 for an appointment today!
BALLOONS AND MORE Hurry, Hurry, Send
Balloons today and check out our new parking lot.
749-6188 620 Vermont
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sug. Retail
The Erc. Shop
712 Main St.
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle and repair & accessory shops. VISA Mastercard & Disney cards accepted
BEFORE signing a lease, talk to Consumer Affairs and get the facts about renting. In the Union Mon/Tues, Wesley Wed, Thurs 11:2
EXTRA HOME. Mailing Business Brochures from HONEY. RUSH self addressed stamped business envelope. Dept. MCUJ Domestic Enterprise 1660 Lakeide DL St. Browns 91-821 Review
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking,
weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy
Center, 842 7504
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales 732 Mass.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western City! "Makes sense to use it!" Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
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CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN • COSTUMES
732 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE KANSAS 66044
913-843/6211
842-3232
14th & Ohio
(under The Wheel)
Pizza
BUY ONE PIZZA
& GET THE SECOND
ONE FREE!
Monday Mania
(limited lunch delivery area) Also, our Colomba Frozen Youurt
Honey available at request for additional cost.
PYRAMID
STEAKS
Those crazy people at Pyramid Pizza are letting you buy any Pyramid Pizza & get the second Pizza (of equal value) FREE!
Those crazy people at
X
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400's
Merchandise
300's
Volunteer for Omega 91. Tuesday, Love Garden
90% Mass., 7:30 Tell your friends
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees a more attractive option for you summer. Call 1-800-8792 9022
WHEN YOU ENOUGH TO SEND IN JEST. When the relationship has ended or feelings gone astray, send that certain someone a message to make them day. Will deliver now. 814-5477
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
300's
ALASKA MEMBER EMPLYMENT-F fisheries EARN $1,000 / MONTH Free transportation Room RENT $395 per week necessary Male or Female For 64 page employment. AMAZING FACTS. 800-842-8808 #800 Seattle WA 98124 Satisfaction
120 Announcements
*College Money. Private Scholarships.* You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finest! Since 1811. COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS. Located, BORN IN NEW YORK.
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP
Sunday, April 14, 1-5pm
Community Bldg. 115 W 11th
$30. Tn.registr.cat #97-5277
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called return to counselors). Headquarters 841-2345 or KU Info 840-3306. Sponsored by
EARTH SPIRITS Living Myth Through Ritual
Mythology lecture at lecture 2.4 7 p.m., Lampingher
Museum讲座 at lecture 2.5 7 p.m., Lampingher
Hillel
Events of the Week
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 814-2345. Headquarters
Holocaust Remembrance Program
7:30 p.m. Smith Hall Aud.
Tues., April 9 Holocaust Remembrance
Service and Speaker
7:30 p.m. Smith Hall Aud.
Faculty Forum "The Trauma of War"
Dr. Motti Mark, Freiburg
Scholar, Meinenger Foundation
State Holocaust Commemorator
2 p.m. Capitol Rotunda, Topeka
Friday, April 12
Shabbat Dinner & Service
6 p.m. Hillel House
R.S.V.P. by April 11
Festival of Nations
All day, Wescoe Beach
For rides and more information. call 664 2018
Rainbows and DeMolays welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Receive from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Brice at Lawrence Massage Theravai for 814-662-1062 or fly a kite
TIME TO LOCK THE WINTER PUDGIES? Good tasting, natural, nutritionally balanced Pathway means more energy no hunger, money back! Call for information. Call for information. 1-800-479-9921
Suffering from abortion! Write HeartsRestored,
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential
response/material will follow
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 8412 2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
130 Entertainment
Found in Wescott Hall during the Academic Year of 1999; 91% prescription glasses, keys, and a few miscellaneous items. Please come to Wescott 4060 to identify.
140 Lost-Found
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS
214.078.3200
LOST: 3:30 at Wescoe after KU vs UNC, gold KU keychain, letter "J" on ring. 1 car key and 2 apt keys. Call 864.4188
LOST: Beige pants with wallet, watch and keys
Monday evening 4/19.11 | Call 841-948-19. REWARD.
Set-Let of套衫Sat. night : 3/30/91. If found,
please call 841-208-196.
Found: Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and Ver-
torn. Call 883-6592 to alpine.
205 Help Wanted
$4.25/hr. Convenient store clerk. Phillips 66 in DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 885-3033
200s Employment
ATTN: Psychology, Education, Sociology, and
Attention related majors. Summer program for
teachers and counselor (behavioral difficulties) has posites for
teachers and counselor/activity instructors.
Located on lake nake rlm, NW and Borderway
plus room. Salary plus room and board. Internship
available. Contact Ed at 843-507 or Tom Bauer
MN 5042. W. Browd, Minneapolis, MN 5042
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for dishwasher/prep cook. Apply in person, 1809 Crosszade Dr.
Bucky's Drive in IOW is now taking applications for part-time employment with the University of Iowa, two full hours. Apply in person between 11-6. Bucky's Drive in IOW & NifA CAMPUS OUNSEEORS WANTed for private summer camp; archery, tennis, water skiing, swimming, canoeing, water skiing, gymnastics, rilley, archery, tennis, golf, sports center, volleyball, swimming, a Butler Kitchen, office, maintenance $1200 or more; plus Mileage Steiger, 1768, Milead, NIFA.
Need handman to work as partner. Truck, tools,
etc. provided. If interested call me. 814-4205.
CAMP COUNSELORS. The YMCA is currently running camps for its summer day care YMCA from June 3 to August 8, by per hour, 40 hours children June 3-August 8, by per hour, 40 hours Van Buren, TORA, RS, or Sharp Woolley VAN Buren, TORA, RS, or Sharp Woolley
CILLICARE WORKER Residential facility for adolescent boys Full-time and summer positions in an effort to enhance student disability transport Training/experience in computer and drug testing to P.O. Box 223, Bellevue MN, 68043-9020
EARN $45,000-$100,000 Now hiring-managers and
laborers, limited opportunity. Part-time now.
Full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
Call: 308-400-LLEGGE, Mr. Garcon
Full-time summer work. National firm looking for motivated students. Experience excellent P.R. and Communication experience, travel to eastern U.S. earn $450/week. Call 811-1224.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT in office of Foreign Student Services. Half-time monthly appointment in foreign language programs, students, program planning, train and supervise orientation teacher. Applications available in its website.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-Career position for appraiser with degree in business administration. Demonstrate excellent starting salary, company car at location, and ability to perform a job position in most Call collect. Mr. Schwartz,
Help Wanted: Daytime Bartender, Part-time hour
summer: PRIVATE CLUB, experience pre-
fered, must have references and be 21. Call for app.
842-0083
Help wasted-Hiring afternoon aids for toddlers and preschool classes. Classroom experience and study in early childhood. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 311 Main Lawrence, KS 60049. International company seeks career minded individuals to join the glamour industry. For interview. 1-232-6280
Lake of the Oarsums Summer Employment The Barge Floating Restaurant is accepting applications for hostess, Excellent salary and tip. Great work environment. Excellent job security. Housing is still available. Contact Frank
Need money fast? Make up to $125 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary 1-400-695-7289
M or woman to help with general housework. Dependable, honest, thorough and clean. Yard person to rake, use weedeater, cultivator, cut out flower beds. Call 843 6850
PRESCHOOL, HELP WANTED. Substitute and after school now. Also summer part and full-time jobs. Child development or early childhood juniors and seniors. Sunshine Ave. 842-2233
Local Restaurant 20 Openings
Cashiers
- We need Cooks, and Cookies
- $4.50 Starting Wage
Apply Tuesday or Thursday from 3-5p.m.
at 901 Kentucky 204A
RACING ENTHILS SASTA! We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, or Sunday at the Tampa Towers. Positions include ticket takers, ticket parking personages, if interested apply at Manatee Parking.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Beginning May 1 or June
July 31. Four bedroom townhome in Sunrise
Village 854-0106. No deposit required.
Summer $35 Train now to earn good money in your summer home area. Call Straight Arrow Enterprises, 842,9140, or write P. O. Box 442,008, Lawrence, KS 66044
Temporary, part-time help wanted Farm experience helpful Apply at Webster's, 901 N 2nd Two reliable assistant needed for part-time sum work at a kid's daycare. Interested call 822-546-7931.
Wanted: Student to provide minimal structure babysitting for early adolescent made in the school setting and full time during the summer months. Also provide same transportation for activities.
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
FRENCH TUTOR. Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
865-5323
Government photos, passports, immigration, visas, senior portrait, modeling & arts port folios /B&W, color Call Tom Swells 749-1611
vitas, Meitu paternal. Calling "in a pitié" in
b/w/BW, color. Call Tom Sullom 19-611.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob Gvn and Abortion Service
PRIVATE OF PFC
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping Lawrence Printing Service 512 E. 9th Street 833-400
235 Typing Services
1- der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evenings.
Ks professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, $921/$ Mass. 841-1071.
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call Key Works. 842-8077
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
A better price for Word Processing *Fast service*
1.00$ double-spaced page. Call Theresa. 841-87076
Absolute cheapest技術 in Lawrence
1.00$ double-spaced page. Hush Jane no problem
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call 10 a.m -6 p.m.
Mrs. Mattia M. 841-1219
A+ Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. @ 842-7383
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
DWI-TRAFFIC
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 8419-592. Term papers, legal calls, ects. No calls on Dona'na's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers,辞卷, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser printers, M4, m-5p, f-5m, m-5p, 842, 724
FAST.ACUGRATE TYPING 41:50 per page. In册, IDEN and DEL may be in cities within Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Mae at: 843.3828
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. 842.6255
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1974 Honda 650 Rebuild and restored Good, cheap, fun. Guaranteed to pick up chicks (no money back). Call Elvis, 842-3763.
1983 Honda 750 Interceptor Must sell $1200. New starter Call Jim. 749-5247.
1981 Mobile Home. Excellent condition, 2 bed, 2 bath, fireplace, wet bar, garden-bat-$13,000.00 Call for showing, 1-829-9350
NEW RALEIGH Bike WITH SWICHIN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GAUGE) #476 872494
Bahamas cruise or Mexican vacation. Both include transatlantic and accommodations for two for 5 days. Each 800. For info: 865 5430.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping hags, backpacks,
claustrophyte clothing, wet weather gear,
combat helmet, and Speedite Boots. Also
Mars Surplus. A-Mon Sat 9:47
- 10:27 AM. Mars Surplus. A-Mon Sat
10:27 AM. Harleyesque Hondray Rebel. 86 Silver Anniversary.
Beautiful, Yeller, 841:587.
PUMP (INCLUDES GAGGE) B52 891-9166
Puglegee bicycle. his "25" 12'5es, 3 yrs old with approx. 200 miles. Road/touring bike. Excellent condition. Call B51 4655
Moving, Storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-ins welcome. Call 850-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
340 Auto Sales
Twinbapt ihub laptop and portable printer Japanese Twinbapt ihub laptop and portable printer Japanese Lutetia 123. WordPerfect 1.0. sidechk. Tornado and others in English and Japanese Retail for tote bags, laptops, and computers 30, retail $490 for $50, Call 864-327, George Gage
1989 Red Honda Civic hatchback. AC, stereo, 22K, one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas mileage. Call Mo evenings 749-2575.
1971 VW camperwagen, rebuilt engine with 80m³ good condition, $1000. Call 842-3242 MWPs
1972 PortaMile LeMans, original mile, 51,000.
1973 842-3331, 2016 Learned Ave.
1800 Honda Accord. Auto, stereo, A/C 102K miles
Call Reservr 664-6121. Askking $1,500 obo.
mobility Call no evenings 49-203-
For sale: Mercedes Benz 180E 2.3, 1985, black
pail full torlion 10 300 TLP # 865-816
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 TVs, VCRs, jewelry, stereo, musical instrument, cameras and more. We honor Wlcs/MC/AMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1084 W. 68 749-1919
USED HONDA MOPEDS now in stock All have been reconditioned Starting at $150 DAVIS CYL, CLEAR, 3 Topeka T. 804-818-3881
Wanted: 'CD's-$6.00 and down. Records and tapes-$2.00 and up. Top dollar for collections Alley Cat Records. 717 Massachusetts. 865-0122
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
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, 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.
SouthPointe Apartments
1 or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-8971/843-1601
2-8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry. no pets. Dick at 842-8971/843-1601.
Available June 3 bedroom apartment in near old home. Walk to KU downtown, A/C dishwasher, off street parking, wood floors. $96. Water paid. No fees. 841-1074
Available June. Extra large one room, could be used as 2 bedrooms in nice old home. New bathroom. Wood floors. A/C, $40. Gas/water paid. No beds. 814-1074.
Available August. Efficiency 1 bedroom apts in nice older houses. Walk to KU or downtown. $285 and no pets. pau1-841-1074.
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August.
Room is furnished with daycare,
microwaves, park door, lunch facility,
site Management, KU bus route, of streetparking.
Cal to reserve your apartment for summer
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$304-815/ms. Call 845-2116.
Excellent Location, 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom in 4+plex, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA, no pets, available I June 1. $980 At 1314 Ohio. Call 842-4242
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 bdrm townhouse /w garage. 2 female non-smoking roommates need, year base beginning August and/or summer lease. $230 s. utilities. Kerr A15-6062
Female for summer sublease. Close to campus
Pully furnished. Own room and. No security
deposit. $'s utilities, rent negotiated. 843-2498
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 8, 1991
13
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apartment in May. Call 843 8315.
Fully furnished, air conditioned apartment with large windows, large glass doors, bedroom, 2 bath, kitchen, dining area, den and bedroom. 2 bath, kitchen, dining area, den and bedroom. 114 Louisiana. Full rent, not waiting list. 114 Louisiana. You can move in and store your mail after May 31. You can move in and store your mail after May 31.
Pursured living space, $22 plus tuitures, W/D microwave, central air, ligh backyard with deck Grad students or students upper classman prefered Brian, 843-4033
Great location for KU and downtown Studio apt with gas and water paid $300 (mo; Call 641-281-6902)
bedroom apartment with sunporch, CA. Wood bedroom apartment with sunporch, CA. Wood beds, no pets. Available June 1, 2000; at 1801 Michigan Ave.
Hey KU Med students-move in 1 and receive $t_2$ off your rent for 2 months. *Studies.* 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. *Heat and water* and *Medium." The Med. Center. Rainbow Tower Apts. 931-836-3831.
Hey) KU Med. students. Move in June and I receive $2 off your rent for 2 months. *Studies, 1 and 2 bedmats* *a heat* and water paid *Across the Room*. Center Rain Tower Appt. 931-893-601
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $280.00
841-9113. leave message.
2 brp in lift隋. Available in fall or summer on 12 month lease. DW, low utilities, off street parking. close to campus. No pets. Deposit: Call 842-6948 for Tracy or have message.
$3 BBMR $BUMALOW. Elic range, elec. reamer, winker & dryer/guard, central air Dispenser. Near campas on old West Lawn. No water. Office or call at 842 2726 office or call on bill at 842 2726
APARTMENTS: Small, large Walk to KU Medical Center: Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many areas. 816-361-3928
APARTMENTS
*Chambier Suite Apartments*, 10th oak new construction; 1 and BR-1 (Formerly Villa Capit) at 37th floor, new construction (new construction); 2 BR-1 bath; 2 BR-2 bath; all waders dryers from Memorial Hospital.
- 541 Michigan 8plex, 1 yr old-3 BRL-8 bhra-
bal 1 with washer/dryer 2
BRL-8 bhra-bal 1 with washer/dryer 2
BRL-8 bhra-bal 1 with washer/dryer 2
Call today! First Management 105, 106 Open.
house every Saturday from 12 a.m. to adbread-
house every Saturday from 12 a.m.
Colorado 4 Colorado • 6.Office hours Mon-Fri
8:45
Available Aug 1 at 10T 1025meet. 74960168 F
base apartment a $300 plus monthly rent, 1 year
of landlord ownership. (See above)
waver dyer 1. BR attic apt. $300 plus
unitage, 1 year. lease 1 month, off street
Sunrise Village Luxurious Townhomes 3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartment(s)
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
5040
EVERYTHING IS HAPPY
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
IA apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- 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 Mountain Street
(across from Hardy's)
HOURS:
4:00 to 6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00 to 12:00 Sat
843-1971
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Quiet studios
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
ios
New leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including a refrigerator, microwave and blinds. Low utilities, pool and basal rent. Quest complex 810 to SPANISH CREAT APARTMENTS.
New leasing and 2 bedroom apartments at Southbridge Plaza Apt. 15a, rented $725, 2 bedroom starts at $335, 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen new carpentry. Call 821-188-106
Professor's house for rent June 1991-Aug 1992. 2 BR, East Lawrence. $850.84-844.84
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
Appears West Apartment: $895 for bedroom, $837
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid Walk to campas.
Call 842 1840 or 842 1839
YOUNG WATER LANDSCAPE
Sunrise Apts.
1. 2,3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Viii.)
• Tennis Court, Pools
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- & Apartment Living
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
- Close to Campus BR AND NEW2B
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
041.1387 041.940
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
--on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid
Lorimar Twinhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
New. Available now. May-July, or for 12 months
Mackenzie Place III: 3 bdrm luxury unit
new leasing for August. 19 years old, weather-dry,
bright, spacious. Includes 112 kennedy
113 kentucky 147/672 evenings and
150 nights.
New Apartments
2.1 BR, 4.8 BR Washable dryer in each and unit,
3.0 BR, washable dryers, fireplaces, 2 full baths in
a BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
Call today: 749 1566
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT /Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
* Life Sequential Decline
- Low Security Deposit
- Wacker/Dealers on back
- Washer/Dryers on hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid $300.00, 841-6602
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU.
841-0254
SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downsit '285/mo., gas & water paid.
841-5695 after 3:30.
Starting May 1, large bedroom, pool, DW, W/D,
microwave, TV, VCR, fully furnished, $150
842.758. Mellissa
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 BH, 11¹. Rent and furnish college. Close campus. Built 86-7570. Fees include: $35 per person to 3 people for $134 mo. Daubwater, microwave, summer pool parties. First key is us for new guests. Minimum deposit required.
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall 1
bedroom, furnished, private water, paid wa-
all electric. 157 Llynn Court, Sundance. 842-3035 or
843-6614
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location at a superior proximal 2 bedroom apartment, please call (310) 645-1789.
Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Colton Woods, May 20 Aug. weekends free $25/month plus room tax.
Check online at www.summersubleases.com
Will negotiate price. Call Sara, 843-9129
Starting May 1, bedroom furniture, cool DW, WCQ
Pool
Spacious one bedroom app for summer sublease
Will not host guests. 'call Sava, arrive'
Sublease one bedroom. Berkeley Flats. Across from football stadium. Water/cable paid. Make offer 749 2377.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 BR. apartments at an
EDDINGHAM PLACE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
No Appt. Necessary
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
10:6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
Affordable Price!!
841-5444
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Apple Lane Apartments
...
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Free cable
...
Water paid
Quiet studios
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
Close to KU bus route
OPEN DAILY
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212·14th & Mass.
KENTUCKY PLACE
1 - 5 P.M.
749-0445·1310 Kentucky
841-5255·7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD
749-2415 10th & Arkansas
SUNDANCE
841-5255 * 7th & Florida
ORCHARD CORNERS
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
CAMPUS PLACE
749-4226 15th & Kasold
842-4455
3 Bibm Townhouse.
Spacious, 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with dressing area upstairs
Subleases Available Immediately
Furnished Studios 435 sq.feet
SWAN
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Newly remodeled apartments
2 Bdm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
- Two bedroom apartmer
- Two with fireplaces
842-4200 meadowbrook
Swan Management
- One bedroom apartments
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1.5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
Boardwalk
15th & Crestline Dr.
- Graystone
1 & 2 Bdrm. apartments
749-1288
Summer Sublease & 2 Bdrm apartments
apartments
1st & Crestine Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
842-4444
- Clean & well maintained
842-4144
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- Large closets & living space
- space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
appliances
* Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
- Walk to grocery
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
$355 - $425
Models Open Daily Mon.- Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
1301 W.24th
Sublease June J and July. Furnished 1 bedroom.
AC, close to KU $18 plus utilities. 824-3018
Sublease to apt. Great location. Available
across the street. Negotiable. Call 823-6713
Leave message.
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice nousehold. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and more much? May Call Ann (evenings) 814-4548.
Summer and Fall leaving. Furnished rooms on shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bib from KU with off-street parking. No pets. 841-5600
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedrooms apt. 1 bik from KU with off-street parking. no pets. 841-5500.
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748, afternoons.
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus on Ohio. 855-6807.
Summer sunsease winnie opn oran ian. Very nice apartment next to campus. Haslas 658.2893
Summer subsease : *Squeezies 2 br.* 2 bath apart.
Summer sublease. Furnished one bedroom apt,
pool at complex, water paid. $225. Call Amy
865-3837.
Summer sublet: Large BR, own bath in duplex near Meadowbrook 8220/month, 1 t. utilities. AC, DW, DW 749-0764
Summer sublet: Large, very nice 2 BR duplex
holding Holdome, patio, dishwasher, W/D, AC
$475/month. Call 794-4823
HAVE YOU SEEN
JAKE TODAY?
Summer subbase: 1 bedroom apartment for 1 to 2 people at Sunrise Terrace Apartments. Call Carrie, 843-2762.
Affordable Living
Summer sublease. Nice 3 BR apartment with dishwasher, microwave, washer/dryer, AC Call 865-1655
"HE WOKE UP ON THE
WRONG SIDE OF
HIS HEAD..." I'M LUCKY
THAT I DON'T
WEAR GLASSES
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
LEARN THE A B C's of NAISMITH.
Better quality living
by Brian Gunning
We have our own computer center, Dining anytime, and great social events.
Convenient location
Naismith spells out a wise living move.
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route
1800 Nalsmith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Enlarged to Show Texture
NAISMITHHALL
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 bedroom apt at Northwinds. 5 blocks north of 6th on Michigan W/D. bookups. Brand new. $75/month plus utilities. Call 841-6655.
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt close to campus. Two to four people. 841-2288
Now leasing for summer & fall 1901
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 146 Tennessee.
studios -3 pools
& 2.8 aps homes -tennis courts
& 2.8 bR townhouses -KUB bus route
-gas heat A water paid
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
TRAILRIDGEAPTS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
- Policy
Female roommate summer sublease. Share 3 BH apt with two other females. $175, 843-692, leave message.
Roommate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house.
Two rooms for 1-2 people. Reasonable rent facilities. Alison, 953-2578
Call now for summer sublease Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626
April Rent Free-Female roommate needed im-
mediately. Share 3 bedroom duplex-WL/D-microphone, dishwasher, air conditioned, garage, laundry. Call Lisa 842-5978 or www.842-458-1358
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Two female roommates needed for furnished 4-bedroom, 2-bathroom apt at Orchard Corners, starting August 19. Call Besh At Callen at 814-4278.
Roommate needed in 3 house w/ WD, IW, FP
$84 plus 1' utilities. 8492-ask, 192
Roommate wanted, 2 bib app 60 Kentucky
utilities, included. No lease 8494-
evenings
Summer Suitcase 1: or 2 people (male or female) needed to share 3 bedroom/2 bath at ORCHARD CORNERS Pool. A.C. cable on bus line $160/month plus utilities. Call Gina 841-227-2119. Summer Suitcase option wanted to share 2 rooms. Call Gina 841-227-2119. $140 deposit. Call Gina, 749-1590
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
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THE FAR SIDE
KANSAN JOIICE
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence, KS 69045
Lawrence, KS 69045
Bv GARY LARSON
Quinn
A man in a mask and scarf is carrying a gun and standing behind a row of wooden partitions. In the background, there are two people peeking from behind the partitions.
His riffle poised, Gus burst through the door, stopped, and listened. Nothing but the gentle sound
stopped, and listened. Nothing but the gentle sound of running water and the rustling of magazines could be heard. The trail, apparently, had been false.
14
Mooday, April 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
HAIL DAMAGE?
COME SEE US!
We will pay up to $250*
- Fast accurate estimates
* Immediate service currently available
* Expert body repair
* Foreign and domestic
* State of the art European paint system
JOHNSON COUNTY
VOL.VO MAZDA
6300 Johnson Drive
Mission, KS 66202
(913) 384-3880
- Renair cost determines our contribution toward your deductible. Call for details
NIKE
AIR
STOCK VALUE
Ultimate Cushioning for Men and Women Jayhawks!
842-2442
MTW 9:30-8:00
THU 9:30-8:30
FRI 9:30-6:00
SAT 9:30-6:00
SUN 12:00-5:00
DOCK'S
JN
ITCH 3
Sporting Goods
840 Massachusetts
Lawrence KS 66044
Protesters condemn decision to reinstate LA police chief
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The Rev. Jesse Jackson led a march on police headquarters Saturday to protest the City Council's decision to reinstate Chief Daryl F. Gates, who was suspended in the wake of the beating of a man by police.
About 2,000 protesters marched to chants of "Daryl Gates Must Go!" Daryl Gates Must Go! to condemn the City Council's vote Friday to allow Gates to return to work, possibly as early as today.
Thursday the Police Commission suspended Gates for 60 days while investigations into the March 3 beatbatteristor Rodney King were conducted.
King was repeatedly kicked, clubbed and shocked with an electronic gun shot by officers in an apartment by a resident of a nearby apartment.
'Why is the whole world looking at Los Angeles? Because what they saw on March 3 was the Oscars of police brutality.'
Jesse Jackson
Four Los Angeles police officers
have pled not guilty to felony assault charges and 21 other officers from three police agencies are under investigation.
"Why is the whole world looking at Los Angeles?" Because what they saw on March 3 was the Oscars of police and Jackson told the demonstrators.
The beating, which has led to charges of police brutality and racism, is being investigated by the department, the FBI and local officials.
The Police Commission had suspended Gates with pay during the investigation, but the City Council did not confirm. Mr. Friday. The deal was that the chief
would file a lawsuit today demanding reinstement and the council would agree to settle it out of court by returning him to work.
"It looks as if the City Council is attempting to strip the Police Commission of its powers, leaving the city with no effective oversight body of the police," said Joe Hicks of the American Civil Liberties Union.
The decision to reinstate Gates has created a political battle pitting the Police Commission, appointed by Governor Bill Clinton, against the elected City Council.
In the wake of the battle, the head of the Los Angeles Police Department's buno forgery division said Friday that he was resigning to
protest what he said was a threat to the Police Department's independence.
Also Friday, the Los Angeles chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, protested Gates' recent decision to require that television interviews of Police Department employees who discuss the King beating be broadcast either live or unmedited.
Capt. Douglas Watson, who is close to retirement, said he would not come back even if Gates was reinstated.
"The whole thing is clearly a violation of the First Amendment rights," said Karen Magnuson Richards, the group's president.
Gates was unhappy with a recent interview of a Police Department employee.
L4. Fred Nixon, a Police Department representative, said the interview was edited in such a way that it was presented as if that it was expressed in the interview.
Police to install cameras in patrol cars
Officials: Device will reduce brutality
The Associated Press
DETROIT — Dozens of police departments are installing video cameras in patrol cars that resemble the black-box recording devices in airplane cockpits, the camera's manufacturer says.
About 50 U.S. police departments, including several in Michigan, have bought the $7,300 video units, and mall security and armored car companies are interested, according to Tech Corp. of Auburn Hills, Mich.
"We're looking at every police car having it within four years," company president John Squocciarini said. The bus market in the United States alone
Among those looking at the system is the Los Angeles Police Department, which will test a unit for 90 days. Squiarieraini said.
Los Angeles police have been
under fire since the March 3 police beating of an unarmed motorist, Rodney King.
King was repeatedly kicked, clubbed and shocked with an electronic stun gun by officers in an apartment building by a resident of a nearby apartment.
Los Angeles Police Lie. Paul Enox said the decision to test the system was approved on Thursday.
Another department representative, Larry Fetters, said the equipment was likely to be popular with civil liberties groups.
"Clearly it would document the behavior of the officer," he said.
Paul Domenefel, legal director of Michigan's American Civil Liberties Union chapter, welcomed the tech leaders in the cameras we kept on at all times.
"One of the potential benefits of having video cameras is exactly to
prevent what happened in L.A. from happening anywhere else," Denen-feld said.
Filming citizens without their knowledge can make privacy rights an issue, but no one has raised it yet, Denefeld said.
The system has a 2-inch-square camera mounted between a patrol car's mirror and windshield, linked to a recorder in the trunk. Like an earpiece, it is installed in to the officers' body microphones. The car's radar and other systems.
The video picture indicates the date, time, police department, car number, officers' numbers, speed of the patrol car, speed of other cars tracked by the radar unit, and whether lights or siren are in use.
"It allows the officer to stop, rewind and review," Succairni said. He can show the violator what he has done, as was weaving in traffic or whatever."
Lt. Bill Tullock of the Troy Police
Department said his department was testing a unit in hopes that tapes of weaving vehicles and drivers faltering in field sobriety tests would cut down contested drunken driving cases and keep police out of court.
Squacirimi said the system was tamper-proof because a new recording began where the tape was stoned
The tapes could be offered as evidence in a court of law to counter false damage suits against police. Squieciarii said.
If would be litigation see that the tapes do not back their accounts, Squicciarini sard, they may drop their cases.
CrimTech has four former law enforcement officers among its 15 employees.
Squarcium would not reveal the sales of the 2-year-old privately held company, and expect annual revenues to reach $10 million to $10 million within 12 months.
SELL IT FAST IN THE DAILY KANSAN
ALL ROADS LEAD HOME TO THE HILL
JOBS
NEW CITIES
GRADUATE SCHOOL
Attention, graduating seniors
.
Get ready for a SIX-MONTH FREE RIDE as a new ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEMBER.
.
Your membership trip begins with the SENIOR COOKOUT. 5:30 p.m.April 24 in the Adams Center parking lot.
-
Next stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST, 8 a.m. May 19 for graduates and their families.
-
As you leave town, remember to take along your JAYHAWK BANKCARD. It's the only VISA or MasterCard that lets you carry the KU mascot wherever you go.
FIRST
BANK CARD
CENTER
512 0120 1234 5678
1008 TANIA BB/91
JAY BLUE
.
Remember, wherever your new life takes you all roads lead home to the Hill. As an Alumni Association member you'll never be far away!
Watch for our brochure in the mail. We'll call you in mid-April about the bankcard-or call First Bank Card Center at 800-222-7458.
V
VOL. 101, No. 127
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WASAB STATE HISTORICAL
DIETY
DEEKAK KS 86412
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1991.
NEWS:864-4810
Student coalition presidents debate
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Last night, the two coalitions for Student Senate debated in front of about 100 students at the Kansas Union.
Alan Pickert, of Associated Students of Kansas, asked both presidential candidates how they would ensure that they played an important role in student issues at the state level
Jason McIntosh, Facts presidential candidate, said he would use the Student Advisory Committee, which comprises student body presidents from each of the seven Board of Regents institutions.
McIntosh said the KU student body president historically was more powerful than other schools' presidents. He added that the school should motivate their students, he said.
INFACT
Darren Fulcher, impact presidential candidate, said he would work to
Louis Leopre, president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organi-
ans asked how many Hispanic Americans serve on each coalition.
Student Senate presidential and vice-presidential candidates field questions during a pre-election debate.
Alumni also must get involved because they have influence at the state level, he said.
involve leaders of student organizations in issues by communicating more with them.
Fulcher said that Impact had two candidates who were Hispanic-American but that that was not sufficient representation.
McIntosh said that Facts had one Colombian student and was committed to representing other international students but that his coalition did not have any Hispanic-American students.
"We want to put our hands out to all student organizations," he said.
"We're not going to involve ourselves in tokenism." he said.
JURASSK
Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden of Impact.
Impact aims for diversity
Giles Smith and Jason McIntosh of Facts.
Bv Michael Christie
BENNETT HUNTLEY
Kansan staff writer
Julie Jacobson/KANS^*
Daren Fulcher and Alan Lowen, Impact presidential and vice president candidates for next year's student body, said that issues were important in campaigns but that the campaign itself was the campaign were important too.
Impact's leaders can handle issues that may come up in next year's Student Senate. Lowden said.
"We have proven leadership," he said.
'We have to work with the administration.'
Impact's coalition includes nine presidents or vice presidents of living organizations, the president of the student alumni association, three Student Union Activities board members, one of the founders of Women's Student Union, two members of Black Men of Today, the founder of the Organization of Adult Knowledge Seekers, a resident assistant, two members of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, two Senate committee chairpersons and current senators.
Pulcher said Impact had been committed to the issues in its platform before the campaign.
"Commitment begins before the campaign starts." he said.
Impact has proposed a program to recruit and retain minority students at the University of Kansas.
Darren Fulcher Impact presidential candidate
According to the plan, KU minority students would return to their high schools or hometowns to recruit other minority students.
Freshman minority students at KU would be assigned to junior and senior minority students, who would advise and act as mentors, Fulcher
"We have to work with the administration." Fulcher said.
If salaries were not financed by the administration, Fulcher said Impact would work to find alternate sources of income, such as alumni support.
The mentors would be paid for their work, either through work-study programs or as student employees.
Impact also has addressed environmental issues.
The coalition has arranged for barrels to be placed on campus during the few days so filters that are used out can be recycled, Lowden said.
Impact will continue to promote Secure Cab, Lowden said. He recently sponsored legislation in the Senate that would advertising Secure Cab on KUIDs.
Impact already has plans to continue to promote paper conservation and recycling, Lowden said.
Impact wants campus lighting to be a priority, but Lowden said that more police and security personnel were needed.
Impact plans to work with the
Associated Students of Kansas and the assembly can combine their efforts at the state level to benefit the University, he said.
restructured Graduate Representative Assembly and address graduate concerns. Fulcher said.
Impact proposes the formation of a new presidents' round table that would be made up of all student organization presidents and all living group presidents. The Presidents' student representation. Fulcher said.
Fulcher also said that child care was an issue with immediate needs and that it was important for Senate to lobby legislators, because the issue could not be solved at the university level.
"This is just our way of reaching out to the campus," Fulcher said.
Other issues Impact would like to put on the state-level include campus safety, graduate teaching and research-assistant fee waivers and accessibility for students with disabilities, Fulcher said.
Facts nails down platform
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith, Facts' presidential and vice-presidential candidates for Student Senate, said that the principle of their decision was that any interest students had was that any interest student government.
If tuition increases reach a certain level, Facts advocates a lower percentage of increase for juniors and seniors.
"We are afraid that the increase will be something that a student who has spent three years here will not be able to perform well," he added it trained for K." McMahon said.
Another plank of Facts' platform is greater attention to graduate student interests, including lobbying for 100 university programs and champions for graduate teaching assistants.
"Freshman and sophomore students basically rely on TAS," McIntosh said. "We need quality graduate students."
To intensify the lobbying pressure, the group proposes establishing a Graduate Professional Association, which has engaged citizenized Students of Kansas, he said.
To increase student power. McIntosh said, students must be aware of what is happening in student government.
To strengthen ties between students and government, the coalition advocates placing bulletin boards in living areas and professional schools. Although he has not contacted housing officials, McIntosh said he thought the cost of the program would not be prohibitive.
Just as students need to be aware of state government, he said, so does the Board of Regents need to know what is happening with students.
To increase student input, the coalition would like to place a student on the Regents as a novoking member.
'When the engineering fee was being discussed, once it got to the Regents, student comment stopped, and students wanted to say more.'
Jason McIntosh Facts presidential candidate
a task McIntosh said he knew would be tough to complete.
"When the engineering fee was being discussed, once it got to the Regents, student comment stopped, and students wanted to say more."
Smith said that as Senate sought to increase its power with the Regents, it should cultivate the resources at KU and in the Lawrence community.
Facts proposes the creation of a multicultural coordinating committee that would present cultural groups' agendas to Senate.
could solve the problem.
"In any group, there will be people who are willing to work with other groups, and you have to seek those people out," he said.
Although other programs trying to bring these groups together have been stymied by animosities and infighting, Smith said leadership
Smith also said that KU should make more attempts to reach out to Haskell Indian Junior College and enlarge the American Indian studies program.
Although Smith acknowledged that the ties between the Lawrence American Indian community and KU were strained, leaders of the two schools and American Indian groups at KU could be the key to better relations.
Smith said that the increase in knowledge that would come from such a union was one of the coalition's strongest planks.
"The there is animosity between groups. Look at some of the stuff that has happened between African-Americans and European-Americans, he said. "The people have to step heeled and heeled and cut this out. That takes leadership."
Senate approves bill compelling NCAA to change its conduct of investigations
Bv Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
A bill that would force the NCAA to change its investigation and hearing procedures passed quickly and easily before the Senate yesterday with no debate.
If the bill becomes law, the NCAA would have to conduct open hearings, allow the cross-examination of witnesses by the counsel of the accused and subject findings to review in the district court.
"It if we a sporting match, it would have been a rout, 36-0," said State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, author and main proponent of the legislation. "I was a little surprised, but I think it's consistent with what I've seen and heard around here."
The bill would require the NCAA to abide by the due process and equal protection guarantees of the U.S. Constitution, guidelines that it does
Other states with colleges and universities in the NCAA have adopted or proposed similar legislation to protect the schools within
"The bill would regulate the activities of the NCAA all over the country with respect to every single member institution," Winter said. "The bill proposed it, which the NCAA proposed it, what it can create an uneven playing field."
However, because the NCAA headquarters is in Kansas, this bill would remove the need for further legislation in other states.
those state boundaries.
"Under principles of constitutional law, the state does have a right to regulate fairly and evenly the conduct of its citizens, including corporate or organizational citizens who are located here, as is the NCAA.
Winter said there were two reasons why the bill would affect every member of the NCAA
"More fundamentally, the NCAA enjoys tax-exemption privileges in the state of Kansas which are thought to be less costly than only educational institutions," he said.
"This bill is all or nothing. The field will be even and it will be fair."
Winter said that the Kansas Suurre Court had sided with the
NCAA when it claimed it was an educational institution and thus exempt from taxes, contrary to the Department of Revenue's claim.
"This bill seeks to be consistent with that by recognizing that it does have that special tax-exempt status, that special status by its own argument, that it's a school," he said. "And the bill simply says, 'Fine, since you have tax-exempt status you have to comply with the other requirements afforded government organizations. And one of those requirements is to abide by the Constitution.'"
Winter said that if the NCAA failed to abide by the bill, it would lose its tax-exempt status.
David Berst, assistant executive director of enforcement for the NCAA, said the association would fight the bill.
"What happened was not unexpected, but we'll be working for the bill's defeat," he said. "We're taking the position to change our enforcement practices, and that alone would defeat the bill."
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams topped off his 1991 basketball recruiting class yesterday when Eric Pauley, a 6-foot 10 center from Cypress Point Community College in California verbally committed to sign with the Jayhawks. The signing of Pauley fills Kansas' basketball scholarship limit.
See story on Page 9
Kurdish refugees flee brutal Iraq crackdown
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iraqi helicopter gunships have been firing on Kurdish refugees as they try to flee, a Kurdish rebel group said. A Kurdish militant leader said a whole village had been wiped out by Iraqi forces
The Associated Press
Foreign governments and aid groups have mounted a huge relief operation to save the hundreds of thousands of refugees, many of whom are sick, hungry and suffering from exposure in the cold of the mountainous border region.
"These people must be free from the threats, persecution and harassment that they had been subjected to under the regiment in Baghdad," he said.
In northern Iraq, Kurdish rebel leader Masoud Barzani charged
Secretary of State James Baker, who toured refugee camps near the Iraqi border yesterday, praised relief efforts but said that hope must be given to the refugees for a return to home.
The report could not be confirmed independently.
that Iraqi troops had ramaged through Kara Henjir, a village near the northern oil center of Iraq. The population of 2,000 to 3,000 people
However, Associated Press reporter Alex Etty said thousands of Kurds, fearful of government reprisals, were joining in the flight even from traditional rebel strongholds.
In Rawandiz, Efty reported,
terrified residents fled in the
middle of the night toward the
Iranian border, spurred by
reports that Iraqi forces were
pushing northward.
Both Iran and Turkey said they could not handle the huge influx of refugees, who fleed their homeland after failed rebellions by Kurds and Shia al-Maliks against President Saddam Hussein. Both continued to allow the Kurds to camp inside their borders.
0
2
Tuesday, April 9, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Partly Cloudy
HI:59'
LO:35'
43/37
67/51
65/32
51/29
73/55
75/51
83/71
Kansas Forecast
Rain ending and skies clearing by afternoon. Turning cooler through the remainder of the week. High 59/ Low 35.
Salina 49/37 KC
Dodge City 58/36
50/37 Wichita 60/40
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
3-day Forecast
Wednesday - Sunny and cool. High 56/Low 38.
Thursday- Partly cloudy and warmer. High 61/ Low 41.
Friday - Partly cloudy and warmer. High 68/ Low 43.
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. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
forecast by Mike Schmal
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Lawrence, Kan. 60045.
The Consumer Affairs Association will hand out pamphlets about renting apartments from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in front of the Kansas Union.
On campus
- KU WELLness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
- KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at the Southwest Lobby in the Burge Union.
Golden Key National Honor Society will meet at 6 p.m. at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
Facts will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Ad Club will meet at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
- Voice will meet at 7 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
KU Chess Club will meet at 7 tonight at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
Hillel will have a Holocaust Remembrance Service at 7:30 tonight at 100 Smith Hall.
There will be a confidential meeting for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For details call Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. 864-3091.
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will have an eating disorder support session at 7:30 tonight at 20 Watkins Memorial Health Center. KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center.
Have an opinion?
Write a letter to the editor!
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
A camera valued at $184.95 was taken sometime Sunday night from a KU student's car parked in the 800 block of Mississippi Street, Lawrence police reported.
Police report
A four-person tent, a two-person tent and a cooler were taken between 5:30 p.m. and midnight Saturday from the trunk of a KU student's car at Lawrence Drive. Lawrence police reported The items were valued at $210.
A full, 20-pound propane tank, a comforter and a sleeping bag were taken between 7 p.m. and 12:30 a.m. Sunday from a KU student's back porch, Lawrence police reported. The items were valued at $145.
- Someone forced the window down on a delivery car parked in front of Joseph R. Pearson residence hall between 1:27 and 1:37 a.m. Saturday and took a pizza valued at $6, KU police reported.
Announcement
Applications for the summer and fall editors' positions on the University Daily Kansas are available in 200 Staffer-Flint Hall. For more information, contact Chris Siron at 864-4810.
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That's who we're looking for - people on the move. People who are motivated, enthusiastic and professional. People willing to tap the Kansas City and Lawrence markets for new business.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 9. 1991
Campus/Area
3
Social services bill gets approval from House
Bv Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The House passed a social services bill 71-44 yesterday, after a committee added almost $20 million to the Senate's recommended spending package.
The bill would provide almost $1.2 billion for social rehabilitation services and seven state hospitals in Kansas for fiscal 1982, $350 million of Gov. Joan Finney's recommendation.
Taxpayers would pick up about $500 million of the cost of the bill.
State Rep. Henry Helgerson Jr., D-Wichita, the bill must minimum
levels of financing for social services.
"I think we've maintained the level of financing the House and Senate passed last year," he said. "It's a step forward for children suffering from abuse and neglect."
"I think it's a reasonable budget because it addresses the tremendous problem of more and more people who are looking toward SRS for the kind of help that they need."
Helgerson also said he expected resistance to changes from Senate conservatives, who would send the bill to a conference committee today or tomorrow.
State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland
Park, was the only legislator who vocally opposed the bill.
"We're $100 million over our current resources budget, and the only major tax increase we passed last week was spent before the ink was dry. he said. "You're seeing these bills come in for the veto session, and we'll have to go back to cutting budgets."
"I don't know where the $100 million is going to come from unless we have a tax levy on it," he said.
Before final action on the bill, legislators debated 15 amendments for more than five hours.
Republicans proposed nine of the amendments, most of which were designed to cut spending. Only four out of the 15 were passed. The Republican's radical rather than financial aspects of the bill
State Rep Kerry Patrick, R-Leawood, was one conservative who wanted to increase the number of teachers.
Patrick reintroduced his controversial Norlant contraventive bill.
The bill, which was killed by the House Public Health and Welfare Committee earlier this year, would have paid women on Medicare for contraceptive implant in their arm voluntarily.
"Social welfare in this country hasn't worked," he said. "This is a chance for Kansas to become the first state to conduct a great social experiment. If it doesn't work, we don't have to reappropriate the money next year."
But State Rep. Donna Whitenman, D-Hutchinson, said that it was not voluntary and would make the state practitioners of sexism.
"It's bad public policy," she said. "Why
n't there incentives to make men sterile."
Freeway II offers low-cost, environmental transportation
The amendment failed 86-23 after more than 90 minutes of debate.
Jenny Curtis driving the tiny car she designed.
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
"This is called basic transportation — no folks." said Prieper, laughing.
Jane Priesen pushed her three-wheeled, four-foot high, canary yellow car out of its
The car, called Freeway II, weighs only 750 pounds and has no reverse gear.
"As soon as you turn the key, it's on and it will go forward," said Priesner, who is assistant editor for illustrations at the Paleontological Institute in Lindley Hall.
The car is one of 750 in the United States. It was made by H.M. Vehicles in Minnesota. H.M. stands for high mileage, which is one of the reasons Priersee and her husband bought
Priresser and her husband, Dennis, who is an electronics technician for the KU School of Pharmacy, were living in California during a crisis, when long lines formed at gas pumps.
Jane Priesner, assistant editor for illustrations at the Paleontological Institute, sits in her three-wheel, gas-powered Freeway II outside of Lindley Hall.
Dennis had seen a picture of the yet-to-be-completed car in a magazine and sent away for information. They ordered their car for 600. It was the 32rd model off the assembly line.
"It's a high-mileage car, and it was more affordable than other cars." Jane said, mentioning that the car could use any kind of gas. "We got yellow because it's the brightest, most noticeable color, and we figured being small, we needed to be seen."
And by 1862, they had bought a second
bellow car for $300.
Dennis agreed and said they were happy with their selection.
"it's biggest advantage is mileage - it's
reduces absolutely lightweight - you can't
beat 7.5 mileage."
Jane drives this car to KU each day from Williamstown, which is 13 miles northwest of Lawrence, and 6-foot Demens manages to ride around the front seat, with his legs wrapped around the front seat.
The front of the car comes to a point dotted with a single headlight and is flanked by two wheels, with one wheel balancing it in the rear, said potholes in the road could be a problem.
The two-foot-wide panel inside the car provides only the essentials — a steering wheel, windshield wipers, lights. The back windows provide the rearview mirror, the motor window, and heat in the cabin and a Plexiglas window pops out to provide instant air conditioning.
But there have been a few problems, Jane said.
The car has trouble in big puddles, bursts of strong wind, gravel and loosely packed snow. She remembers a time when the windshield wiper flew off because of a sudden crack.
Response to the car has ranged from
people doing double takes, snapping pictures and truck drivers giving thumbs-up, to a time when someone pulled Jane over one day and offered her $4,000 on the spot for the car.
"It's a matter of curiosity for people who don't know about it," Dennis said. "We get a number of questions and comments from people."
Liz Brosius, assistant editor for text at the Paleontological Institute, rode in the car with Jane one day and said they received a lot of attention.
The car, which reaches 60 mph, is relatively safe as long as the person driving is a
defensive driver," she said. "One of the things that makes me feel safer is that there's this heavy frame that goes all the way around it."
"You really can't drive in it if you're not a
Dennis said the car was easy and fun to drive.
"I like it very much," he said. "We wouldn't have two of them if we didn't."
Survey on rape sent to 1,500 KU students
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan staff writer
A survey on sexual violence was mailed to 1,500 randomly selected KU students yesterday as part of an effort to answer questions about rape and gather data that will be used to change and improve rape prevention programs at KU and other schools.
The survey was compiled by the Division of Student Affairs Research Committee with aid from the Office of Institutional Research and funding for the Sexual Violence Education Project.
Jeff Weinberg, a member of the committee and assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, said the survey was based loosely on studies study done in 1988 at Stanford University.
Weinberg said the committee spent six months studying the Stanford survey, reading literature about sexual violence and developing the survey into one that would produce results that could be used as an educational tool.
"If we can quantify the extent of the problem, we can then move to develop programs that can meet the problem head-on." he said.
Weinberg said valuable efforts had been made to create a safer campus with staff and students.
"But that does not get to the root of the problem," he said. "This is an effort to get to the roots of the attitudes surrounding sexual violence."
Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student
life, said she hoped the results of the survey would help demonstrate the severity of the sexual-violence problem, particularly date and acquaintance rape.
"This issue is a great concern to all of us," she said.
Ballard said that there were no easy answers to the problem because of all the variables but that the survey should help more vivid picture of what is really going on.
"I think there will be a large number of people that will say it has happened to
Weinberg stressed that the survey was confidential.
"The mailing list has already been destroyed." he said.
Cost to clean up after celebrants and replace trees will top $9,000
Kansan staff report
"The cost of replacing those will be from $600 to $600 per tree, depending on what they need."
KU officials say that by the time all the damages caused by Final Four celebrations have been repaired, the cost will have exceeded $9,000.
Steve Green, assistant director of facilities operations in administration, said that the University of Kansas would have to replace four trees in front of Wesco Hall.
Green said that so far, not including the cost of the trees, $6,000 had been spent to
repair damages inflicted by crowds on campus after the mans basketball team played Arkansas, North Carolina and Duke.
He said that most of the cost was caused by the extra labor that was needed to clean the house.
"We've had to pay employees about 400 hours of overtime," he said.
Jim Mathes, assistant director of facilities operations in landscape, said that the landscaping crews were re-evaluating the work to show that similar damages might be avoided.
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Tuesday, April 9, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
In its traditional effort to endorse a Student Senate coalition, the Kansean editorial board was faced with an unusual situation. Of the members present and voting, the board was split on which co胁迫 to endorse. The final vote was 60 votes in favor of co胁迫, 23 votes against co胁迫, and none for neither.
Instead of developing a group stance, the board decided to run three editorials that accurately represented the tone of the meeting and the final vote.
Impact
No-frills coalition understands issues
onesty. Realism.
H Although the issues behind this year's Student Senate race are similar, it is honesty and realism that make the Impact coalition stand out.
The coalition's presidential candidate, Darren Fulcher, and vice presidential candidate, Alan Lowden, cut through political rhetoric when answering questions and express their views with honesty. In speech that isn't deceptively polished or politically advantageous, these two candidates represent their coalition with an emphasis on feasible methods to achieve their goals.
The candidates' honesty makes them seem more approachable because they don't hide behind a facade of political jargon. They are down-to-earth people who seem easy to trust.
An example of Impact's realism is a comment Lowden made about Impact's approach to the campus lighting problem: "Lighting doesn't stop crime. It just moves it."
Lowden was correct to recognize the reality of the lighting problem. Because past Student Senates have been unsuccessful at
getting full financing for adequate campus lighting, it makes sense for Impact to focus on other ways to deter crime on campus.
The candidates' straightforward communication style will translate into their goal for creating a university environment that is more conducive to learning.
Such an atmosphere will help prevent race-related incidents, such as the one that occurred at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house last spring, from interfering with academic pursuits.
Communication also is the key to getting campus groups together to solve problems, which is another of Impact's goals. Impact already has a jump on achieving its goals by talking to administrators about ways to make its plans work.
The care Impact took in building its coalition reflects its dedication to making things happen. The coalition includes students who have demonstrated their ability to get things done in other campus leadership roles.
Impact will make a difference. Vote.
Debbie Myers for five members of the editorial board
Facts
Duo's idealism offers creative solutions
Student Senate will have control of $1.3 million next year.
The Facts coalition knows that it is not their money, but students' at the University of Kansas. Facts' platform is based on getting more student input on issues so it knows what the students want to support.
Political jargon? Maybe. But voters who want to have an influence in Senate spending past marking the ballot would have a chance with Facts.
The Facts coalition, led by presidential candidate Jason McIntosh and vice president candidate Giles Smith, has strong and innovative plans to improve the University.
Both the Facts and the Impact coaltions said they would create a network for campus organization leaders to communicate through.
But the Facts candidates also said they would try to make sure every student knew what was happening in student government.
Impact coalition candidates proposed a trickle-down theory of sorts. They would work only with the "popular" members of each group and then depend on them to relay information to the unpopular masses.
The Facts candidates' campaign platform has a well-outlined environmental plan for the University. Facts proposed to take campus recycling a step further by implementing a trash-separation program in addition to newspaper and aluminum recycling.
The Impact coalition has no innovative
ideas in this area. Rather, they simply would add more recycling containers on campus.
To promote cultural diversity at the University, Facts candidates said that although it was important to recruit minorities, KU's diversity still would be weak and the recruitment efforts wasted without having a retention program to keep them at the University. Facts proposes a system of peer advising to encourage retention.
Facts candidates said they were working with Hilltop and Helping Hands day-care centers to come up with a comprehensive child-care plan for campus. When the Impact candidates were asked about their child-care plan, they said they did not have one, even though if elected, it would be a first priority.
Students this semester were able to see how higher education often is placed on the back burner when the Legislature needs to make budget cuts. Facts candidates offer a clear understanding of the functions of state government, a quality that is vital in these lean financial times.
The Facts candidates want to know how KU students want their money spent. The Facts candidates may be idealistic with ways to combat some problems, but Impact is realistic to the point of pessimism and uses it as a defense for not coming up with innovative solutions for some problems facing the University.
Amy Zamierowski for five members of editional board
Neither
Coalitions' platforms lack originality, usefulness
T too few Facts. Not enough Impact. Voters tomorrow and Thursday will choose between two adequate but unremarkable coalitions.
Both Facts and Impact offer a few sound ideas, as detailed in the two above editorials. Both coalitions have canvable leaders.
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith of Facts are polished speakers but seem to have a limited grasp of Senate's role. The Facts platform includes, for example, a plan to install low-flow shower heads in the residence halls. Senate has no authority to implement campus building policies.
Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden of Impact offer a more realistic view of Senate's place on campus, repeating the words "feasibility" and "workability" throughout their campaign mantra. Their realism, however, is stripped to cynicism
Impact has proposed a peer-minority recruitment and retention program that appears to duplicate something now coordinated by the office of minority affairs. Facts supports a campuswide service that would escort students to their cars and living areas safely, logistics and liability be damned.
Devoid of innovation, the two coalitions pad their platforms with tired ideas.
when they explain that members of their coalition were chosen on the basis of popularity.
Vote tomorrow or Thursday, but know that one coalition does not have many Facts and the other does not make much Impact.
Either coalition would serve the student body adequately; neither would live up to its name.
Rich Cornell for the editorial board
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LETTERS to the EDITOR
When I picked up the April 4 issue of the Kansan, I was embarrassed to be a pre-journalism major. The Kansan's coverage of the Student Senate election coilitions has been completely unprofessional.
Most newspapers run news stories on the front page. Unfortunately, it appears that the University Daily Kansai runs to editorials in the front page.
The headline "Facts budget angers election officials," in the April 4 issue of the Kansan, was misleading. The Facts coalition has a valid point that a limit should be placed on campaign spending as it has done something wrong.
Coverage opinionated
After being appalled by Page 1, I turned to Page 3 to read about the Senate's final session. Here, I read how the Impact coalition's vice president had passed a bill in the Senate. John McDonnell, the Facts coalition's presidential candidate, passed three bills in this same session.
'This was not the first time I was disappointed in the Kansan's campaign coverage. According to the March 28 issue of the Kansan, we don't need to waste our voteoting because both coalitions' platforms have to go any further than the campaign tables in front of Wescoe Hall to discover that the coalitions have differing plans.
The Student Senate has a great deal of influence at the University. The Kansan has a responsibility to the students to cover the elections in a fair and thorough manner. By neglecting to fully present all angles of the campaign, the Kansan is not fulfilling its role as a newspaper.
Jane Henderson Shawnee sophomore
Facts plan insufficient
As a woman at KU, I seriously contemplate any program designed with the intent of increasing campus safety. So when the Facts condition meets its plans for addressing the issue of campus safety, I perked up my ears.
Unfortunately, what I heard disappointed me. In proposing a University-wide escoff service, the coalition's intentions are good, but the committee has to better spent on campus safety projects other than this approach.
Initially, the proposed escort service benefits only a small percentage of the campus population. The escort service could not provide transporta-
to students traveling to an off campus destination. Most of the students attending the University live off campus.
Moreover, many of the students who are on campus at night drive. Although having a car on campus at night decreases the danger of walking home in the dark, the routes to the parking lots are poorly lighted and the landscaping makes these paths dangerous. An escort service would not help people who are just walking to their cars or who live beyond the boundaries of the campus.
Even if the proposed escort service assisted a larger population, it is the least efficient and least cost-effective option available.
For the escort service to decrease the University's liability, teams of either two women or a man and a woman would retrieve and escort the students. This automatically doubles the cost of an escort necessary to implement such a program
These teams would have to be trained to deal with both confrontational events and with other contingencies, such as if they are called by a woman who already has been raped. Special organizations such as Headquarters, Rape Victim Support Services or Women's Transitional Care Services would be needed to train the excelses.
Each escort would need to be equipped with some sort of easily identifiable jacket, vest, shirt and name tag. Because of the training provided by the staff, the escort service probably would not be operational for at least a year.
The need for increased campus safety is an immediate one, not one that can wait for another year. Ellsworth Hall already offers a smaller-scale escort service, so there is reason to believe that the Facts escort service would be a duplication of services.
The need is a bigger one, however — one that can be better addressed through improved lighting and an expanded transportation system developed to run at night and cover both on- and off campus routes. Transportation systems provide efficient, dependable solutions to campus safety problems.
I laud the Facts recognition of campus safety issues, but it provides only a Band-Aid solution where we need stitches.
Ami Hyten
Topeka sophomore
Accusations deter logic
I am troubled by Professor Paul Mirecki's response to Ed Killeen's column on the Resurrection. In calling for a more logical approach to the subject, she should a professor accuse a student of repeating "irrational claptrap" and "subjectively based nonsense" as the result of "fear and backwoods superstition"? Is this the best way to demonstrate the need for
logic in argumentative discourse?
My own failings in the classroom tell me that it is not.
I trust that only Killeen's arguments and not his beliefs were under attack. Any argument can be faulty and ill-informed; argument alone probably never convinced anyone of the Resurrection. But in acknowledging that, this belief may be supported by reason and experience.
Something happened to give rise to the early church. Since then, generations of witnesses have spoken of Christ's continuing presence. To ignore their testimony, whether in scripture or in a weekly prayer event, can a certain mystery of human experience. To listen is more reasonable.
Max Keith Sutton department of English
Bible says Jesus rose
I am writing in response to Paul Allen Mirecki's letter in Friday's Kansan.
Mirec熙们 ed Killeen to take a course in logic, yet the only argument or logic that Mirec熙 used to teach is Jesus' rose from the dead is ridicule.
I hope that everyone who is open-minded honestly will examine Christianity's claim that Jesus rose from the dead. The Bible states clearly that he did, and the existence of constantly rests on the fact that he did.
If Jesus did not come back to life, Christianity is a false religion. If he did, then Jesus' claim to be the only one who can endure and eternal life becomes convincing.
Christianity does not expect followers to believe blindly. In fact, it is just the opposite. Christians are encouraged to check out the facts
Paul, in the New Testament,
appeals to the fact that these events
were witnessed by many people and
that these witnesses were among
them who wrote. He even
praised those who checked out the
facts (Acts 17:11).
For those who desire to check out the facts, I recommend "Evidence that Demands a Verdict." vols. 1 and 2, by Josh McDowell.
McDowell was agonistic at the time he set out to disprove the resurrection of Jesus. After sitting through considerable evidence, he became convinced that Jesus did come back as a result, McDowell became a Christian.
These books contain references to all the documents quoted, so do not take McDowell's word for evidence, look it up for yourself.
For those who are not up to the challenge of reading through those two books, I recommend "More than a Carpenter." also by McDowell. Blindly believing or disbelieving a book you vulnerable to those
Blindly believing or disbelieving can leave you vulnerable to those who would deceive you
Mark Nachtigall Lawrence graduate student
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
News...Melanie Matthes
Editorial...Tiffany Harness
Planning...Holly M. Neumann
Campus...Jennifer Reynolds
Plam Solher
Sports...Ann Sommerhalter
Photography...Keith Thorpe
Graphics...Melissa Unterberg
Features...Jill Harrington
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
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Cristy Hahs
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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. Productions affiliated with the University of Kansas must include a faculty or staff position.
Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, goats columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staunfer Flint Hall.
by David Rosenfield
Sketch
HOW COME YOU DIDN'T GO TO CLASS TODAY?
BECAUSE THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END!
WHAT MAKES YOU THINK THAT THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END?
ARE YOU KIDDING ME? HAVEN'T YOU BEEN
PAYING ATTENTION THESE PAST FEW WEEKS?
THERE WAS A MAJOR
HAILSTORM THAT DID
ALL KIDS OF DAMAGE!
A PIPE BOMB
EXPLODED
NEXT TO A
DOMITORY!
FIGHTS BROKE
OUT ON CAMPUS!
PEOPLE GOT HIT
ON THE HEAD BY
BEER BOTTLES!
A RELIGIOUS GROUP
TRIED TO TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF
LOWLY STUDENTS!
GUSTS OF WIND
KNOCKED OVER
GIANT TREES!
HOW COME YOU DIDN'T GO TO CLASS TODAY?
BECAUSE THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END!
WHAT MAKES YOU THINK THAT THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END?
ARE YOU KIDDING ME? HAVEN't YOU BEEN PAYING ATTENTION THESE PAST Few Weeks?
THERE WAS A MAJOR HAILSTORM THAT DID ALL KINDS OF DAMAGE!
A PIPE BOMB EXPLoded NEXT TO A DORMITORY!
FIGHTS BROKE OUT ON CAMPUS!
PEOPLE GOT HIT ON THE HEAD BY BEER BOTTLES!
A RELIGIOUS GROUP TRIED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF LOWLY STUDENTS!
OH! FOR GOODNESS SAKE!
IT'S JUST COINCIDENCE THAT THESE THINGS HAPPENED ALL AT ONCE!
THE WORLD ISN'T COMING TO AN END!
IT'S NOT?
WELL,
DARN...
GUSTS OF WIND
KNOCKED OVER
GIANT TREES!
I WAS HOPING TO USE THIS AS AN EXCUSE TO GET OUT OF TAKING FINALS...
OH! FOR GOODNESS SAKE!
IT'S JUST COINCIDENCE
THAT THESE THINGS
HAPPENED ALL AT ONCE!
THE WORLD ISN'T
COMING TO AN END!
IT'S NOT?
WELL,
DARN...
I WAS HOPING TO USE THIS AS AN EXCUSE TO GET OUT OF TAKING FINALS...
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 9, 1991
5
Forum emphasizes awareness and prevention of AIDS virus
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Straight talk about AIDS, ways to prevent the disease and answers to students' questions made up the format of a forum last night at the Kansas Union.
The forum, "AIDS and the College Student," was sponsored by Student Senate's minority affairs committee. Mary Lona, executive director of the Richmond Caleb Clinic, and her brother Joe Gamez, HI-VIAIDS educator at the Guadalupe Center Inc., were the speakers. Both the clinic and the center are in Kansas City, Mo.
"College students need to be aware that it's a affecting our age," said Liz Mendez, chairperson of the committee.
Lona said, "The message we want to give is that AIDS can kill you. It's not time to be prim and proper. It's time to get down and tell what can cause it.
"I think it's our responsibility to tell it straight to you. It's bad, really bad. We know for a fact that a lot of you aren't going to be reached until someone you know or someone in your family dies."
Gamez said that 10,000 people had tested HIV positive in the Kansas City area. In the country, the largest growing group of people infected with AIDS is the 20- to 39-year-old areal group. The second largest group is the 25- to 29-year-old areal group.
Joyce Kwon
Lona told the students about AIDS victims she had seen.
"It's like nothing I've ever seen before," she said. Most of the people Ive seen look like Nazi concentration camps. "They're all so scary."
Mary Lona, executive director of the Richard Cabot Clinic in Kansas City, Mo., explains the correct way to use a condom.
Trying to keep more people from becoming victims was a major theme of the forum.
If people choose to have sex, they should be careful who they have sex with. Lona said.
"AIDS is out there You can be infected by the most gorgeous hunk or the most beautiful woman," she said. "They won't have 'AIDS' stamped across their foreheads.
The forum was part of AIDS Awareness Week, which is sponsored by the Douglas County AIDS Project. Events to heighten awareness of AIDS and to raise money will be conducted until Sunday.
Tonight, participating restaurants will donate 10 per cent of their revenue and 50 percent of tips to the project. For more information, call 864-9570.
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HOLOCAUST REMEMBRANCE PROGRAM
Prices subject to availability. Offer open to students enrolled in six 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.
for the dead and the living
want to winners
witness
IN COMMEMORATION OF THE VICTIMS OF THE HOLOCAUST
TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1991
7:30 pm, SMITH HALL AUDITORIUM
B41-0100
MEMORIAL SERVICE
FOLLOWED BY SPECIAL REFLECTIONS BY
HOLOGAUST SURVIVOR, LOUIIS FRYDMAN
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* Daily Drink Specials
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Hours: Sun. 10; Mon. 11-9; Tue. Sat. 11-10
Attention Water Skiers
8:00 p.m.
for beginners to competitive skiers Wednesday, April 10th
KU Waterski Team & Club Meeting
Skiing
Daisy Hill Room
Burge Union
Any Questions? Call:
Please call after 6:00 p.m.
President Matt Corbett 749-0659
Treasurer Tim Schellenberger 749-0659
KU Cricket
Cricketing Again!
KU Cricket Club invites all cricket enthusiasts for the first practice of the session at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday April 10 at Shenk Field (23rd & Iowa). Watch for ads regarding future sessions.
For further info—
Rauf 749-3679
Bishakha 864-8182
Rajan 864-8015
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Attention Students-
Are you interested in saving time during Fall fee-payment?!? Then fill out your 91-92 Options Card during enrollment.
KU on Wheels Pass
Jayhawker Yearbook
All-Arts Card
Sports Combo Package
Board of Class Officers
- Fill out an Options Card to reserve any of the above options.
- Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
- You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
- Must be enrolled to fill out Options Card; Please present enrollment card and KU ID.
- No options card will be available in the Fall;
Student will have to visit each individual vendor.
Tuesday, April 9, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Group donates proceeds to help build playground
The warm spring air brought out colorful shorts and wide smiles to the jungle-gyms, slides and swings at Hillcrest Elementary School yesterday morning.
Inside the school, past the crayon-and-paste posters and chatty classrooms, there were adults with smiles as fresh and exuberant as the smiles on the playground.
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan staff writer
Gene Shaughnessy, chairperson of the Lawrence St.
Patrick's Day Committee, had one of the biggest smiles in the school's library as he handed a check for $12,000 to Margo Grav.
Surrounded by committee members, students and Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith, Margo, a sixth grader at Hillerstreet, accepted the check on behalf of her family and
her brother, Ryan. It was a huge step toward making the Ryan gay Playground for All Children a reality.
Ryan Gray attended Hillcrest during grade school. He had befriended former Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown and the 1988 NCAA championship team. He died from an inoperable brain tumor last year at age 17
The playground, which will be built at Hillecrest, 1045
hilltop Drive has been designed to accommodate
children of all ages.
The $12,000 had been collected from donations to the St. Patrick's Day parade. Shaughnessy said last year's parade had collected about $5,000, so the $12,000 collected this year was surprising.
"I am very proud and happy, more than happy, elated," he said.
Study will assess KU's ability to achieve its academic goals
Bv Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
A study recently completed at KU will help analyze how well the University is setting and meeting academic goals.
Dave Shulenburger, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the goal-attainment survey, which began in February, was completed in March. The survey included seniors, sophomores, faculty and alumni.
The assessment includes two parts: what goals are important to KU and how well they are being met, Shulenburger said.
The survey focused on goals of general education at KU, including increasing students' appreciation of human diversity, capacity for critical thinking and appreciation of the arts.
"The whole assessment activity focuses on undergraduate programs." he said.
Shulenburger said the survey was not a part of a program or series of studies.
Information obtained from the survey will be submitted to various departments and schools to relate how well they are meeting their
The study was done by telephone and supervised by the office of institutional research and planning. It was done through the survey conducted by the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, he said.
missions, Shulenburger said.
Steven Maynard-Moody, director of public policy research at the institute, said the survey was conducted in the lab at Fraser Hall. The lab, which contains five microcomputers and five telephones, allows information to be compiled immediately.
New KU water line to be installed
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Construction on a new water line that will improve water pressure for the KK campus will begin this fall.
Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said that there was a problem with water pressure in some of the taller buildings, such as Fraser and Haworth halls, and that the new system would solve the problem.
Although the construction will be done during the summer semester, classes will not be affected. Wiechert
"More than likely they'll connect buildings one at a time as they go through the campus," he said. "It won't take too long."
"Most of the disruption will be caused by the tearing up of the campus because the contractors will have to go under the streets, sidewalks and maybe even a few trees."
The project, which will cost almost $2 million, is state-
financed and will take two summers to complete.
Part of the cost will be generated by studies of the gas and electric utilities, storm sewers and sanitation service utilities on campus.
"The studies primarily look at the condition of the utilities, their capacity and how well they'll meet our needs in the next 25 years or so. As we continue to build on campus, we need to expand our utilities." he said.
Wiechert said the new system would give the campus water from two sources.
"If there's a problem and one gets turned off, then we can rely on the other source," he said.
Currently, the University's water supply comes from the city water plant. This summer, the campus will get water from Clinton Lake as well.
Workers in campus buildings have noticed the poor water quality at the University.
"The water in the fountain is absolutely horrid," said Christopher Zuckerman, a worker on the sixth floor of Fraser. "The water pressure is very weak up here also."
Zuckerman said he had noticed that the lower floors in the building had colder water in the fountains.
Agency job to support the homeless
In response to the shutdown of Lawrence's Salvation Army safe house, the United Way of Douglas County is financing a new farm to help solve Lawrence's growing homeless problem
By Lara Gold
Blankenship said United Way's decision to help the homeless allowed the community to respond to the crisis of poverty.
Blankenship also will be helping the community organize a long-term plan to solve Lawrence's homeless problem.
Kansan staff writer
Jeannie Blankenship, currently the director for home-less services for the Salvation Army, has been hired for the New York City Smith executive director for Douglas County's United Way.
"I feel like there is a commitment from the community," she said.
"United Way has invited Jeanne to provide the expertise she has gained while work at the lowest population." Smith said.
She said she would advise other agencies on how to find ways to help the homeless.
The Salvation Army safe house, which offered job and housing opportunities to its residents, closed April 1 because it had incurred a $70,000 debt and had failed to find a stable form of support since it opened in January 1990.
Blankenship said she was optimistic about the community's involvement with the homeless.
"It doesn't feel like I'm starting my job from scratch," she said.
Blankenship will work out of the Ballard Community Center. 708 Elm St.
The center has provided administrative support for the Emergency Services Council, Warm Hearts, the holiday bureau and Community Department of Appreciation Program, Smith said.
"They are a neutral agency, not directly in the business of providing shelter," she said. "They have already proven they have the capability to handle the administrative coordination of diverse programs."
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 9, 1991
7
World briefs
Kuwait City, Kuwait
Emirate wants forces to stay
A government minister said yesterday the United States would be asked to keep forces in Kuwait to deter any Iraq aggression, which could escalate. The country still posed a threat to the emirate's security.
Kuwait's ruler, Sheik Jaber al-Alhmed al-Sabah, said Sunday the emirate still needed military assistance from its allies as it faced an attack from the devastation of the Persian Gulf War.
Abdulrahman al-Awadi, the minister of Cabinet affairs, made clear yesterday that the emir had been referring to the United States, which has more than 300,000 troops in the region but is withdrawing them rapidly now that Iraq has agreed to cease fire terms.
Jerusalem
Israel will free Palestinians
Israel will free more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, the government announced yesterday, just hours before the arrival of Israeli President James Baker for talks on Middle East peace.
The statement by the Defense Ministry also pledged tax concessions for new business.
During a visit one month ago, Baker urged that steps we taken by Israel to coax Arab疆国 into accepting the new terms.
But the Defense Ministry said in the statement that the prisoner release and tax concessions were not gestures made in connection with Baker's visit, but rather were measures that had been under consideration to the defense establishment in recent weeks.
Tirana, Albania
Tirana, Albania Communists keep majority
Preliminary results indicated yesterday that Albania's Communists had picked up six more parliamentary seats in run-offs and were able to secure two-thirds majority in the legislature.
But the opposition Democratic Party also said it was satisfied with the results of Sunday's repeat balloting. With counting still going on in some districts, unofficial results released by the Democrats showed them winning or leading in 10 races.
From The Associated Press
Student-aid program will be restructured
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — With 17 percent of the $55 billion in student loans in default, the administration announced plans yesterday to restructure and refocus the Education Department's Guaranteed Student Loan program.
Ted Sanders, deputy secretary at the Education Department, said efforts would be made to monitor schools and educational programs that use federal student loans, as well as to strengthen oversight of banks, lenders and agencies that administer the loan program.
Also, all student aid operations will be consolidated under one responsible official — New Hampshire businessman Michael J. Farrell. The Pooria, Ill., native, who served on the White House staffs of presidents Nixon and Bush, is now leading the Secretary Lamar Alexander on financial aid issues as well as serve as deputy assistant secretary for student financial aid.
Farrell, an administrator at Wheelabler Technologies Inc., will have overall responsibility for implementing the administration's new management reform plan, which is based on recommendations made by a joint Education-Office of Management and Budget
"This department will return accountability and professional management to the financial management."
review team.
The student financial aid programs are the largest single component in the department, employing about 1,000 people who oversee $10 billion in annoiorations.
By the end of 1991, there will be more than 22 million GSL loans totaling more than $55 billion. The gross cumulative default rate has increased from 13.7 percent to the net default rate approaching 12 percent.
Key findings of the review team were:
* Too many shoddy schools participate in student aid programs. The default rate for proprietary schools averages 27 percent. The cost of loan defaults grew from $151 million in 1981 to an estimated $2.7 billion in 1991.
- The department failed to react early and take effective steps to prevent the collapse last year of one of the nation's largest student loan guarantee agencies, the Higher Education Assistance Foundation. This failure threatened millions of students and cost the government at least $100 million.
- Accounting records of the GSL program are poorly maintained.
U.S. education spending ranked 10th by report
Teachers' union survey says investment not top
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The United States spends a smaller share of its wealth on schools than two-thirds of the world's most advanced countries, and it buys a teachers' union study released yesterday.
Government spending on U.S. public and private education — from kindergarten through post-secondary education — equaled 5.1 percent of the gross domestic product. That ranked 10th of 15 advanced nations in 1987, the latest year for which comparable data are available, according to the study by the American Federation of Teachers.
Trailing the United States: Japan, Britain and Switzerland each devoted 5 percent of GDP to schools, while Italy spent 4.7 percent, and West Germany spent 4.5 percent.
Denmark spent 7.6 percent of its gross domestic product, followed by Sweden. 7.2 percent; Canada. 7.1 percent; the Netherlands, 6.8 percent; Norway, 6.7 percent; France, 6 percent; Austria, 5.9 percent; Belgium, 5.3 percent; and Australia, 5.2 percent.
"This study lays to rest the myth that the U.S. spends more than other nations," said Albert Shanker, president of the 750-member U.S. military coalition, "you measure it, our investment falls short."
Among factors contributing to lower U.S. spending, the APT study said the United States is not at risk of rising oil prices.
Survey reveals free trade with Mexico favored
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The heads of mid-sized U.S. companies overwhelmingly favor a freetrade agreement with Mexico, according to the findings of a survey released yesterday.
The American Business Conference, in a survey of its 100 members, found that 92 percent supported a free-trade agreement with the United States. Eight percent had no opinion on the matter.
"None were against it," said Barry Rogstad, president of the ABC, which is made up of chief executives of fast-growing companies with annual revenues of at least $25 million or income growth at least double the rate of the economy's real growth.
President Bush, who is vigorously pushing for a free-trade pact with Mexico, said a continent-wide free trade zone would make the U.S. more competitive against Japan and Europe.
But the AFL-CIO and some in Congress fear
will lead to a loss of U.S. jobs to Mexico's chalcidians.
ABC officials, however, said at a news briefing in Washington that their survey showed overseas expansion ultimately led to more jobs in this country.
Of the 67 firms that supplied employment data for the survey, 17 replied that they had no foreign-based employees. Those without work experience came from the country by 6.6 percent during that 10-year period.
The survey compared business practices in 1981,1991 and the year 2000. It did not specify individual responses to the questions.
Among the survey's other findings:
■ Only 34 percent of those responding to the survey said they thought U.S. workers' competence had improved in the past decade. Forty-one percent think worker competence has declined.
Of those who thought there had been a decline, 71 percent said their companies were becoming less dependent on workers and more dependent on mechanization.
"We're taking significant interest in education and re-training," said Rogstad.
He said the trade group, which thinks a capable domestic workforce will help U.S. companies expand overseas, had created a project, known as Vital Link, between companies and schools to improve the school-to-work transition.
The 10-year-old group favors making it easier for growing companies to raise capital
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14
SPRING
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April 8-12
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8
Tuesday, April 9, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Features
T. W.
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
ABOVE: Jill Armstrong, Derby senior, rides Chocolate Chip Sundae during the Triple J Spring Horse Show on Sunday in the western horsemanship competition. Armstrong was competing for the first time.
RIGHT: Sheri Reed, Wichita senior, cleans mud from the hoof of Chocolate Chip Sundae before a ride during her horsemanship class. Students who attend lab at the Triple J Arabian Stable are required to groom and feed the horses every session.
Mike Turner/KANSAN
Horsin'around
Opportunities abound for students to saddle up
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
As the weather continues to get warmer and students want to take a break from studying, an alternative option would be considered — horseback riding.
There are several stables in the Lawrence area that offer horseback riding lessons or hourly rentals for those who just would like to take an
Spencer Ralph Riding Stables in Lecompton rents horses for $15 an hour to ride on their 100-acre farm.
Rockafire Farms, Rt. 3, provides services for people who have their own horses.
The horse owners may transport their horses to the facility to use the outdoor riding arena or the indoor facility for $5.
Joy Underberg gives lessons to people of all ages at the Triple J Arabian stable in Baldwin City during most of the year.
The KU Equestrian Club purchased a horse this semester for club members to use for riding practice.
Nancy Andervich, treasurer, said that having the horse, which they named Jack, would give some of the money to their friends the chance to get some experience.
She said that during the summer, the club would board the horse at a nearby stable but that the members would try to do the majority of the work that is involved with caring for a horse.
Andervich said the club met every two weeks to hear speakers or watch instructional videos.
"We have people in the club who haven't had much experience," she said. "And we have members who have been riding since they were 4 or 5 years old."
For KU students wanting to know more about horses and riding, the department of health, physical education and recreation at the University of Kansas offers a horsemanship class every semester.
The class meets once a week on campus for a lecture covering the basic fundamental concepts of calculus students go to the stables for hands-on training.
Joy Underberg, instructor of the class, said 30 to 40 students enrolled in the class every semester.
She said that any level of student could enroll in the class.
"I have a lot of students who have never been on a horse," she said. "They don't have to know anything to take the class."
"The intermediate class can be advanced as the students want to so." she said.
She said that one of the activities the students were graded on was their participation in a horse show.
The students in the class participated in the Triple J Spring Horse Show on Sunday.
The horsemanship class offers Western and English-style riding for all levels of riders. The main differences between the two styles are in the saddles used and activities that each is associated with.
The English saddle is smaller than the Western and is traditionally associated with hunting and polo. The Western style is for more vigorous riding activities such as barrel racing.
The class requires that students pay a fee of $150 that is used for the tuition. The student must provide their name.
Vicki Kubota, Lawrence senior,
drives 12 miles twice a week to go to
her afternoon horsemanship classes,
but she said it was worth it.
Every Tuesday and Thursday, Kubota drives to the Triple J Arabians stable in Baldwin City for her horsemanship lab.
Kubota said she had little experience with horses before enrolling in the class.
"Really, I did only ride trails on vacations," she said "The lab I'm in is beginning English riding."
Kubota said that being in the class did not mean students could just come out and ride but that they had to be prepared for horsears as part of the class criteria.
Shelly Puckett, Lawrence freshman, said, "It's a good class because you can have no experience and go out and ride.
"You can be an experienced rider and be challenged," she said.
17 77 KU 2 7 93
Missing the Kansas Spring Football Game Could Be Hazardous to Your Health.
Saturday, April 13 • 1:00 p.m. Memorial Stadium • FREE Admission
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 9, 1991
9
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kirk Gibson revived up the Royals with a triumph in his first at-bat and Bret Sahbergen bounced back yesterdays at Carolina and Indianies 4-2 for its first opening-day victory in six years.
Saberhagen, 5-9 and injured last season, pitched seven innings and gave up one earned run on six hits. He struck out five and walked two, and Jeff Montgomery pitched two innings for a save.
Gibson, signed as a free agent this year after four seasons in Los Angeles, hit his first triple since 1989 and had an RBI single. In the second inning, he hit a liner into the right-field corner, slid into third just ahead of the relay and came up clenched his fists.
Albert Belle, who led all major
Mike MacFarlane followed with an RBI single, and Kurt Stillwell's double gave the Royals a 21 lead. The Rangers hit four hits and four runs in six innings.
leaguers in home runs and RBI, hit a bases-empty home run and a run-scoring grounder for Cleveland.
George Brett, defending his third American League batting title, reached base four times on two singles, an error and a fielder's choice. He singled with one pitch and scored on the strength of a single by Danny Tartabul. Gibson's single made it 31.
Belle, who had 26 RBI and 11 home runs this spring, drove in an unearned run with an infield out in the bottom half of home run at the top of the fourth.
Basketball scholarship claimed
The mystery is over
Recruit meets requirements, will be eligible to play next season
By Mark Spence
Bv Mark Spencer
The sixth and last Kansas basketball scholarship has been claimed by 6-foot-10 center Eric Pauley of Cypress Community College in Cali
"When I came on my visit, you guys had that hail storm, and the campus was kind of dead." Paulie said "I didn't get a real good feel for the school, but the tradition is there, and the fan support is the best."
Pauley said he chose Kansas instead of Kentucky last night about 6 d.m. Lawrence time.
"Ipicked Kansas because of Coach (Roy) Williams and his style of play." Pauley said last night in a telephone interview. "It is similar to the way I've played all my life. Coming from a junior college with only two years left, I feel it will be a good transition."
Cypress assistant coach Bruce Randall said the entire Cypress
"We're real happy because he'll be able to adapt well," he said. "We really liked Roy Williams and Kevinley they stayed with him for a long time."
coaching staff approved of Pauley's decision.
Pauley has met all academic requirements and will be eligible to play next season for the Jayhawks. He is a national letter of invitation to a national letter of invitation tomorrow.
Last season, Pauley averaged 21.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.7 blocks a game.
Pauley had been the front runner for the last scholarship slot since the end of the NCAA tournament.
In his two-year career at Cypress, he shot 61.7 percent from the field and blocked 24 shots.
However, the NCAA restricts coaches from commenting on unsigned players, and the Kansas State team should not confirm its interest in Pauluelle.
Cypress sports information direc
tor Alan Lombardi said Williams visited Pauley on Friday and Stallings did the same Sunday.
The Kansas-Kentucky tug of war for Pauley intensified when Ken Kendrick coach Rick Pitton visited Saturday between Williams and Stallings.
Pauley joins a list of five high school seniors who signed with the Jahwarks last fall.
They are 6-8-foot power forward Ben Davis of Mouth of Wilson, Va.; 6-foot-5 guard-forward Greg Gurley of Overland Park; 7-foot-1 center Greg Ostertag of Duncanville, Va.; and 5-foot-3 guard-forward Son of La Grange Park, Ill.; and 5-foot-7 point guard Calvin Rayford of Milwaukee.
Rayford and Pearson are the only recruits who have not met the NCAA's minimum academic eligibility requirements yet.
Bob Gibbons, a recruiting analyst for All Star publications in Lonor.
N. C., ranked Kansas' recruiting class as the second best in the nation behind Michigan.
However, Gibbons has said Michigan recruited better athletes, not a better all-around team.
"If you base recruiting on benchmark players, which is what I do, then that's what makes Michigan No. 1," Gibbons said Thursday. "KU's class will be more beneficial to the program."
"Michigan has five top-notch athletes that all play the same position," he said. "Kansas has a class, with or without Pauley, that you could put on the floor and play with right away."
Because Pauley did accept the Jahyahs' offer, Kansas has reached its scholarship limit for the 1991-92 season.
Had Pauley turned the Jayhawks down, Gibbons said Kansas likely would have gone after 6-foot 4-forward Sam Bradley in a Senior Junior in Levelland, Texas.
Gulf vets toss first pitches at opening baseball games
The Associated Press
The United States celebrated the start of the baseball season yesterday with a star-spangled salute to the players returning from the Persian Gulf War.
First-ball ceremonies at several ballparks were turned over to veterans of Operation Desert Storm in a patriotic triumph that triggered stand-
At Kansas City, Air Force Lt. John Marks, a KU graduate, who with his partner in an A-10 Warthog attack jet knocked out 33 Iraqi tanks in one day, threw out the first ball before the Indians-Royals game. Capt. John Marks served in Infantry Division from Fort Riley, KY, sang the national anthem.
“This is fantastic, a real privilege,” said Army Reserve Sgt. Stg. Edward Figueroa, one of four gulf pitches at New York's Shea Stadium.
Figureo, who won the Bronze Star in Iraq, squared at the sold-out ballparks and recalled how he and his team had learned during the war of missing open day.
"We thought we'd be there longer," he said. "This is my first opening day and I am special for me to share this privilege with all the people I ever lived if I ever享该 privilege.
This is an All-American opportunity and I'm really proud."
Next to Figueroa stood U.S. Navy Lt. Robert Wetzel, whose A6-4E aircraft was shot down during a night strike over southwestern Iraq, forcing him to spend 45 days as a POW, much of the time in solitary confinement before his imprisonment. Wetzel said he thought of his future and good times.
"I dreamed of good things," he said, "things that I would experience when I got home, things like going to a ball game with my brothers.
"I knew there others were being held where I was, but I was kept alone. The treatment was adequate but sometimes I was kept on a phone for an hour or two (finger time)."
"There was a lot of fear and I prayed a lot, I could hear the bombing of Baghdad, and I knew they couldn't take that for long.
"That kept me going."
"I thought of the happy times of enjoying my family and doing things with my brothers and sisters.
Joining Figueroa and Wetzel for the ceremonies at Shea were Air National Guard Capt. Richard Good. The Marine Staff Sgt. Jose M. Gonzalez.
Goodwin, who is a pilot for American Airlines, flew 38 combat missions
Gonzalez is a member of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, the first unit to go into Kuwait when the ground war began.
in F-16 fighters during Operation Desert Storm.
Similar scenes were played out in other ballbarks yesterday.
At Detroit, Air Force Capt. Steve Tate of Waterset, Mich., made the first pitch to a loud ovation. He was surrounded by cheers as an Iraqian fighter in the Gulf War.
At Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Stadium, Army Sgt.s. 1st Class Patterson and Jennifer Syniau, both injured in the February Iraqi Scud missile attack on a barracks in Dhahran, Saud Arabia, were to meet the Montreal Expos last night.
In Atlanta, Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney was set for the first-pitch assignment tonight before the Braves-Dodgers game.
In Texas, first-ball ceremonies were reserved for the commander in chief, where President Bush was joined by commissioner Fay Vincent.
"How appropriate," Atlanta general manager John Schuerholz said, "to have the secretary of defense in, we are stressing defense this year."
After news conference, boxer brawls with former opponent
Holmes fights outside of ring
The Associated Press
"Sometimes you say, I don't give a damn," Holmes said yesterday. "I'll kill to protect my family."
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — Larry Holmes said he wanted to concentrate on body punching to avoid a hand injury that would end his come-
Then, after dispatching Tim "Doc" Anderson with body blows in 123 seconds Sunday night, the 41-year-old Holmes risked serious injury by getting into a street fight with former gooner Trevor Berbick.
After Holmes left a post-fight news conference, Berbick, who was present for the session, said that a woman friend of Holmes had broken up Berbick's marriage. Berbick and his wife are separated.
Holmes' wife, Diane, was in the room when Bertick spoke. So were her children — Larry Jr., 8, and Kandy, 11.
When Holmes heard what Berbick had said, he and some of his aides sought Berbick and found him in the dandelel, where the light was conducted
"I usually walk around crap." Holmes said. "I don't step in it."
The two boxers returned to the front door of the hotel and were standing in the driveway, separated by two cars, when Berbick screamed. "Everybody was Larry Holmes punch me and kick me."
Holmes chased Berbick down the driveway and the two exchanged punches. The fight spilled onto the street before police broke it up.
Holmes became enraged, jumped on the hood of a car, onto its roof, then onto the hood and roof of another car before landing on Berbick.
Holmes returned to his suite, dressed and went to a post-fight party, where he raped with his musical group. Marmelade.
he was pulled on by ooohokers:
"Michael Jordan ain't got nothing on me, except about five inches," Holmes said.
"I'm a normal human being."
Holmes said. "I don't bother nobody.
I don't disrespect nobody's family.
nobody's going to direspect mine."
Berbick was escorted to his Miramar, Fla., home by police.
The incident apparently started when someone asked Holmes at the news conference if he would consider fighting Berick again. Holmes, looking at Berick, said he would not attack Berick because of his attitude and bad no respect for him.
When Holmes was the World Boxing Council heavyweight champion, he scored a 15-round decision over Berbick on April 11, 1981. Berbick later won the WBC title after it was relinquished by Holmes.
Arkansas coach rejects swift action
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Coach Nolan Richardson made the decision to reject the chancellor's advice of swift and strong action against Arkansas players for a violent incident, Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyles said yesterday.
The Associated Press
The February incident, which has put academic and athletic officials at odds, is the subject of a report issued yesterday by a university judicial board. The report was given to the players involved yesterday but was not released to the public. The board has authority to discipline students.
"He made the decision about what to do, but we discussed things together, and I was in complete agreement with what he did because he wanted and I wanted due process to take place." Brovlies said.
Richardson declined to comment through representatives, who said Richardson had not received Richardson, who was in Texas recruiting during the
The woman did not press charges, and prosecutor Andrew Ziser said there was not enough evidence to file charges.
A 34-year-old woman told police she was sexually assaulted in the athletic dormitory. Four basketball players were also with her but that she consented.
Doug Norwood, an attorney for the woman, said he was told by a representative for the All-University Judicial Board that the report was issued to the players, in person, by the faculty-student board.
weekend, returned to campus yesterday.
Jim Treadway, a university representative, said the woman likely would get a letter describing in her notes the results of the board's hearing.
He still expects to be issued a copy of the report.
"I was told I couldn't attend," Norwood said.
Richardson has said he disciplined
Chancellor Dan Ferritor and Broyles have declined to talk about the specifics of the chancellor's recommendation. Ferritor, during a Saturday news conference conducted by administrators and Broyles, appeared to hint at Richardson's actions against the plaver.
one player, Darrell Hawkins,
because the incident occurred in his
dormitory room. Hawkins, who
missed the 1990-91 season because of
an injury, will be suspended for the first three games of next season.
"I recommended team discipline," Ferritor said. "I'm not sure I go to things like running up and down stairs and things like that which didn't seem to me to be particularly appropriate."
Ferritor said later, "There is no doubt that my recommendation was for more immediate action and stronger action than was taken."
Ferritor said it was Broyles' responsibility to pass the recommendation on to Richardson.
Preparing for rain
Ron Klein/KANSAN
Kansas first baseman Shelly Sack helps pull a tarpaulin over the infield of the softball field. With rain showers in the forecast, the team spent yesterday's practice repairing holes in the tarp. The Lady Jayhawks will play their next game tomorrow at home against Washburn.
Softball team wins one of four
Kansan sportswriter
By Lana Smith
them.
The Kansas softball team finished 1-3 in the Round Robin tournament against Iowa State and Missouri during the weekend in Norman, Oka
Saturday, the Jayhawks beat Iowa State 7-2, but lost to Missouri 1-0. They were defeated by Missouri 2-1 and by Iowa State 4-3 Sunday.
Freshman catcher Monica Gormey said that neither Iowa State nor Missouri threw any surprises at the Jayhawks but that Kansas was shocked when they lost three of the four games.
"We had really good practices the week before." Gormley said. "We just didn't play defense high. We had not been up the game and we didn't, I did it."
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said that the Jahayhs had more than enough opportunities to win the games but that they just did not seize
He said that there were times when Kansas had runners on second and third base but that still the Jayhawks could not score.
"It wasn't one thing or one person that caused us to lose," Haack said. "It was just a collection of everybody not doing their jobs."
Kansas pitcher Shelly Sack was credited with the victory against Iowa State in the Jayhawks' first game.
("Stephani) Williams, Sack and (Jill) Bailey had excellent pitching." Haack said. "If they go out and pitch that every game, we should win."
Although Haack and the players said they were expecting a tough game against Missouri, they were not worried about Iowa State.
"We felt good about our playing after the first win against Iowa State." Gormley said. "After losing
Sophomore pitcher Jill Bailey said all of the Kansas players were stunned after the losses.
to Iowa State the second day, it was all downhill."
Haack his players did not realize how many chances they had to finish ahead until he showed them the statistics from the game.
"We played really poor defense, but we made up for it by hitting horrendously." Haack said tokingly.
Haack said Kansas' losses would give Iowa State and Missouri confidence for when the teams meet later in the season.
He also said Kansas probably would lose its national ranking after be swept by Missouri twice and by Kentucky three times, which are ranked 13th before the weekend.
"We were sitting right where we wanted to be, and we let it slip right through our hands." Haack said.
Kansas baseball team travels to Iowa games
n the Kansas baseball team will play
playernow Iowa today at 2 p.m. in
Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Sports briefs
The Jayhawks play Northern Iowa in games today and tomorrow and return home to Hoglund-Maupin Stadium on Thursday for a 7 p.m. non-conference game against Wichita State.
After dropping four Big Eight Conference games to Oklahoma State during the weekend, Kansas is in place with a 6-4 conference record.
The Jayhawks, 21-16 overall, will not play another Big Eight game until April 19, when they play the Oklahoma Sooners in Norman.
"This is a good time to get a little break from the Big Eight." Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "We've been sharper before than we were this weekend, but I think the schedule turns in our favor now."
Golf team places sixth at men's invitational
The Jayhawks finished with a
The Kansas men's golf team Kansas finished sixth during the weekend at the Augusta/Forest Hills Invitations or Forest Hills Golf Club in Augusta, Ga.
three-round total of 893. Florida State won the meet, shooting 871. There were 18 teams in the tournament.
Sophomore Brad Bruno had the low score for the Jayhawks, finishing the tournament at 221 and tying for 17th place.
Senior Len Johnsen and sophomore Matt Gogle each shot 223, tying for 21st
Kansas has next weekend off before playing in the Firestone Intercollegiate tournament in Akron, Ohio, April 20-21.
Lady Jayhawks place eighth at tournament
The Kansas women's golf team finished eighth during the weekend in the Earl Stewart Lady Mustang tournament in Dallas.
Texas won the three-round tournament with a total of 893. Texas' Michiko Hattori was the individual medalist with a score of 216.
Junior Shelly Triplett tied for 29th with 238.
Kansas' team total was 949.
Twelve schools participated in the tournament.
Jayahawk freshman Holly Reynolds tied for 47th place with 244, and sophomore Cathy Reinbeck finished in 61st place with 260.
Kansas junior Laura Myers tied for 11th place with a score of 229.
Kansas lacrosse club will plav Kansas City
The Kansas men's lacrosse club competed in the sixth annual April Fool's lacrosse tournament in Tuscaloosa, Ala., during the weekend.
Kansas defeated Ft. Tuckner, Ala.
8-1 in the opening round but was defeated in the semifinals 15-6 by the Birmingham Lacrosse Club.
In the third place game, the Huntsville lacrosse club defeated Kansas 8-6.
Kansas will play the Kansas City Lacrosse Club at 1 p.m. Saturday at Shenk Complex.
Tennis team to play Southwest Missouri
The Kansas men's tennis team will play host to the Southwest Missouri State Bears at 2 p.m. at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The Jayhawks are coming off an 8-1 Big Eight Conference victory over the Colorado Buffaloes on Sunday.
In their last two duals, the Jayhawks have dropped only one match.
Kansas is ranked 14th in the country. It is the highest ranking in the program's history.
From staff and wire reports
10
Tuesday, April 9, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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BULOVA WATCHES
RAY BAN SUNGLASSES
FOSSIL WATCHES
DUCK HEAD CLOTHES
The Etc.
Shop
CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN & COSTUMES
732 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE KANSAS 66044
PYRAMID
PIZZA
BUY A LARGE 2
TOPPING PIZZA AND
A LITER OF SODA
FOR ONLY $8.95
PLUS TAX.
TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
$$SAVE BIG BUCKS$$
Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
PYRAMID PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
Open 11a.m. to LATE (Limited Delivery Area)
842-3232
Frozen Yogurt!
400's
14th & Ohio
(Under The Wheel
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
300's
EXTRA MONEY Mailing, Business Brochures from home. RUSH self-stamped stamped business envelope. Dept. MCJB Domestic Incense. 1660 Lakedrie Dr Seidenbüro. 801威安
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 842.7504
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales. 732 Mass
Not just for Biker Babes anymore!
Temporary Tattoos
The Etc. Shop
771 Mills, 45000
Volunteer for Omega 91. Tuesday, Love Garden.
98% Mass. 7:30 Tell your friends.
New Analysis of Western Civilization 'makes sense of Western Civ' Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Booksstore.
WHEN YOU CARE ENOUGH TO SEND IN JEST. When the relationship has ended or feelings gone astray, send that certain someone a message to make their day. Will deliver now 816-5477.
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to keep weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees a more attractive option for summer. Call 1-800-872-9012
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fisheries
Engineering 800.410.2300
& Board! Over 8.000 openings. No experience required. Must be a graduate degree or manual,签订 $50 to M L I. Research. B4800, Seattle WA 98124-Satisfaction.
www.alaassemploymnt.com
120 Announcements
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources or your money refounded American Fidelity. Since 1893 COL, MUNY, NY. 212-745-2600. Jm Cooley 4607-1881 1:000-2787-7681
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP
Sunday, April 14, 1:50p
Community Bldg. 115 W. 11th
$30 To register: 849-627-5727
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT--Fisheries
EARTH SPIRITS Living Myths Through Ritual
Workshops Tuesdays 9 April-9 May 20. Free
inductors lecture April 2.7 30 pm, Lamplighter
books 10 E Nith
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115.
& Leishan Peer *Counseling* A friendly individual with confidential voice returns, called by counselors. Headquarters 812-250-4900 or ARU. Into 844-3600, sponsored by GOVERNOR
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can re enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy 841-662-762 to fly a dog.
Suffering from abortion* Writes Hearts Restored,
Box 94, Grünnel, KS 67738. Confidential res
material will follow
TIME TO LOCK THE WINTER PUDGES" GOOD tasting, natural, nutritionally balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money back or you can call for information. 1-800-472-3651 1-800-472-3651
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 812-245 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
Hillel לולא
Events of the Wool
Tues., April 9
Holocaust Remembrance
Holocaust Remembrance Program
7:30 p.m. Shin Hoe
State Holocaust Commemoration
2 p.m. Capitol Rotunda, Topeka
7:30 p.m. Smith Hall Aud.
Service and Speaker Open to all
Faculty Forum "The Traina of War"
Dr. Motti Mark, Freiburg
Scholarship Foundation
Noon, E.C.M.
Wed., April 10
Fridav. April 12
130 Entertainment
Shabbat Dinner & Service
6 p.m. Hillel House
R.S.V.P. by April 11
Festival of Nations
All day, Wescoe Beach
Found in Wescosh Hall during the Academic Year of 1991/99; prescription glasses, keys, and a few miscellaneous items. Please come to Wescosh 4609 to identify.
For rides and more information call 864-3948
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
847.600.& N. J.
140 Lost-Found
Found: Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and Vermont. Call 842-6577 to claim.
LOST: 3:30 at Wescoe after KU vs UNC, gold KU keychain, letter "J" on ring; 1 car key and 2 apt keys. Call 864-8198
LOST-Set of keys Sat. night 3/30/91. If found,
please call 841-2800. REWARD
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$4.25/hr. Convenient store clerk. Phillips 66 in DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 885-3033
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for dishwasher prep cook. Apply in person, 1809 Crosswater Dr.
ATPN, Psychology, Education, Sociology, and
Recreation related majors. Summer program for
special needs youth who are interested in
positions for teachers and counselor/activities instructors.
Located on lake near EIJ. MN and Boundary
Waters Canoe Area in Newfoundland, Canada.
Call or email board. Interdisciplinary
available. Contact Ed 845-307 or Tom Bauer
(812)569-2500. W.B. Wheatland, Minneapolis
Burky's Drive In is now taking applications for part-time employment in price or on meals, from Monday through Saturday and between 10-8. Burky's Drive-In 9th & IWA CAMP (COUNSELORS WANTED for private training) swimming, sailoring, TPC fishing, nautical, archery, tennis, golf sport, competitions, horseback riding. Also kitchen, maintenance, Salary $100 or more; plus R&D, office space, NIdle, MNd.
CHILDCARE WORKER: Residential facility for adolescent boys. Full-time and summer positions. Must have a bachelor's degree in transportation, training/experience in field a plus. We drug test, send resume to P.O. Box 5128, Chelsea, MA 02464.
EARN $4,000-$10,000. Now hiring-managers and
laborers, limited opportunity. Part-time now,
Full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
'c' Call 800-401-COLEGE; M. Gannon
FAST FUND RASING RUN $100 in just one week. Earn up to $100 for your campus organization. Plus a chance at $600 more. This program works! No investment needed. Call (800) 275-4993.
Full-time summer work. National firm looking for motivated students. Receive excellent P.R. and Communication experience, travel to eastern U.S. earn $460/week. Call 841-1224
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-CAREER position for aggressive candidate with degree in business management. Evaluate excellent startling salary, company Car At Work experience in a hospitality industry, provide a portfolio of call collect. Mr. Schwartz,
GRADUATE ASSISTANT in office of Foreign Trade Department monthly appointed to 10.92 year. Assist new foreign students, program planning, train and supervise orientation leaders. Applications available in 18 languages.
HELP WANTED-Orientation leaders for Foreign Services. Interested in assisting new foreign students are now being positioned for positions available in the FSO of Foreign Student Services, Room 805 Stall Hall.
Hey Wanted: Daytime Bartender. Part time thru
summer. PRIVATE CLUB, experience pre-
ferred. must have references and be 21. Call for app.
842-6083
Lake of the Gorries Summer Employment *nee* Lake Floating Restaurant is accepting applicants for many professions. Excellent salary and tips. Great work environment. Salary is still available. Contact Frank Houssain is still available.
Help wanted-Hiring afternoon aids for toddlers and preadolescent classes. Classroom experience and training in art, music, and language Learning Center. 311 Marine, Lawrence, KS 60044. Apply online at www.harrington.edu or call (855) 278-2750 to train in the fashion and lingerie industry.
Mini we can help with general housework.
Dependable, home through and clean. Yard person to take, use weeder, cultivator, clean out flower beds. Flock 843-6600.
Need handman to work as partner. Truck, tools,
etc. provided. If interested call me. 841-4205
PRESTIGE HELP WANTED Substitute and after school enrol in a summer part and full time job. Req. Bachelor's degree in junior or seniors only. Sunshine Acres #842, 2223 RACING ENTERTAINERS We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday at Sunshine Acres Topka. Positions include ticket takers, ticket sellers,佣生, businesses, gate attendants, and interns interested at Man-Power. 211东艾th.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beginning May 1 or June
July 31. Four bedroom townhouse in Sunrise
Village B65.4016 No needx necessary
Summer $$$* Train to earn good money this summer in your home area. Cal straight Arrow Enterprises, 842-910, or write P.0: Box 44208, Lawrence, KS 66044
Two reliable assistants needed for part-time summer work at a kid's daycare Interested, call 236-909-1500
225 Professional Services
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
School Education offered by Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
FRENCH TUTOR. Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
865-5323
TRAFFIC - DUI's
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLF
16 East 13th 842-1133
government philos. passports, immigration,
vice senior, patronage & arts portals,
portability, Call to Son Staff 789-6111
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn - Medical
Overland Park
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-3716
Thesis & Dissertations
Thinking Aesthetics
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street
843-600
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of text for a magazine or book. A host of great Word Programs. Fast access.
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service.
$10.00 double-spaced page. Call Thethera, 843-6776.
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawwrite
page. Rush job no problem. 792-6488.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call 10 a.m. -6 p.m.
Mrs. Mattila, 841-1219.
A - Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens.
Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. ★ 842-7833
Typeing typed information. No calls after 8 p.m. paper, legal books, computers. No calls after 8 p.m. Dona's Quality Typing and Word Processing. Typing papers, dissertations, letter, and reports. Typing word processing. Spelling and typing correction. 220 B W 9th St. Sdn. Bhd. 107850 Kuala Lumpur.
FAST ACCURATE TYPNING 41-50 per page. Includes PI and DEL anywhere in city limits. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Cfa Mae at: 843-3828.
K's professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927% Mass, 641-107)
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your word of wisdom and, in general, help you produce the best possible papers. Phil. 982-6055
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call KeyWorks, 842-8307.
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
1981 Mobile Home. Excellent condition, 2 bed, 2 bath, fireplace, wet bar, garden box-$13,000.00.
Call for showing. 1-858-9250
1983 Honda 750 Interceptor. Must sell $1200. New starter. Call Jim, 749-5247.
PG STORE; distribution typhimur, drilling站形;
Verno drilling machine. Good condition.
orign. $890, 8000 also. Call M-P-8. 841-7644.
For sale to a hotel-Cocky mixer pump
NEW REALEIGH BRICE WITH SWISNIN 1094
PUMP (INCLUDES BACK) $258, 891-916.
Nikisha Road Bike, excellent condition! $200 Call
Catia at 865-294 if interested.
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-in welcome. Call 843 8111. Ask for sales/service department.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
mattress clothing, camouflage, wet weather,
combat, armor and Speedbelt Boots. Also
along with the original 14-372743. Marry's Surplus Sales, Marry's KS,
Honda CM460E, 1982, new in 85, 7, 300 miles, worth
$700.00 or 83.415k.
340 Auto Sales
Thiesta laptop and portable printer. Japanese
thiesta laptop and portable printer. Japanese
Lotus 123, WordPerfect 3.0 aseek, Tortella and
others in English and Japanese Retail for
$2,699 up to $1,500. Expresswrite 30, retail
for $499.
Peugeot bicycle: men's 25" 12-speed, 3 yrs old with approx. 200 miles. Road/touring bike. Excellent condition. Call 841-5655.
1982 Blue Buck LeSabre, AC new brakes, good condition, $1200 or best offer. Call 842-7115.
1984 Toyota Camry, black with gold leather.
new clutch soon, $530, excellent engine. 841-4153
1982 Blue Buck LaSeck, AC, new brakes, good condition, $1290 or best offer. Call 842-7151
1800 Honda Accord Auto, stereo, A/C 102 K miles Call Ravira 844-6121. Asking $1,500 obo
1971 VW camperwagon, rebuilt engine with
good condition, good mileage, $1000. Call 842-3423 MWFS.
1972 Pontiac LeMans, original miles, 51,000,
51,000 843-316 2016 Learned Air
1986; Toyota Supra, black with gray leather,
sunroof, 5 spd, sports pkg w/ 4 mounted
lifters. 500-239-4177. FIRE
181 Silver Suhara 2 door, AC am-fill will need new clutch soon. $690, excellent engine. 441-4133 Blue Buck Le�赛 A, ac brakes, good
Yokohama snow. 61K miles $1,000.841 4777
1998 Ppmythom Laser RS automatic A/C factory
CD player. Blue. 15K miles, perfect condition.
$1,021.841 4777
For sale: Mercedes Benz 190E 2.3, 1985, black pearl, full option. 10,500 TLP # 865-4516
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
360 Miscellaneous
USED HONDA MOPEDS now in stock. All have been reconditioned. Starting at $150. DAVIS CLEC, 4803 S Topeka Bldg. 4:800-388-1186
370 Want to Buy
On TV, VCS. vcl's, jewelry, stereo, musical in-
vstruments, cameras and more. We honor Wis-
core/MCAMEZ. Disc Jayahkaw Pawn &
worship, 1084 W. 6th 749-1919
400s
Wanted: CP-8-5-00 and down Records and tapes-2.90 and top. Top dollar for collections. Alley Cat Records, 71 Massachusetts. 955-022-128.
405 For Rent
1 bedroom app available now through July 31. Sunny and newly painted. Off street parking. 2 blocks from campus. $75/month. Option for next year. 842-9011. Leave message.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-8971/843-1601
2-8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842 8971/843 1601.
1 BEDROOM APT Available June 1 w/ option to continue in fall 5 min walk from Union. Big bedrooms, off street parking, clean W/D. STATELINES INCL. Call 684-2932, leave message.
3-DRIM BUNALOG. Wear elec. range, refere. washer & dryer, garage, central air. Count for non-smokers. Near campus in old West Orange. Call 812-4752 office or call B at Bill at 842-7528.
APARTMENTS: Large, small Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many exits. 816-391-3928.
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 7th Ohio House construction 1 and 2 (Formerly Villa Capri construction 1) 2-BR-bath, 3-BR-bath new construction 2-BR-bath, 3-BR-bath with washers/dryers | Access from Memorial
- 541 Michigan. 8px, 10 yelp. B-3R, B-3R, bath All with washer/dryer. Bridgerton Square Apartments. 600, colorado. 249, call 718-526-5058. Call today! First Management 749,1568. house every Saturday from 12:55 at Bradford Square, 300,Colorado C-1 Office hours Mon-Fri
Available Aug 1 at 10:07 Tennessee, 79-693-584
base apartment aesp. $250/month plus 1 year
basement aesp. $250/month plus 1 year
dishwasher dyer. 1 BR att aesp. $300/month plus
1 year base, 1 year base, security off, street
view
Available June 3, bedroom apartment in nice old home Walk to KU/Downtown A/C dishwasher, off street parking, wood floors. $86 Wateraid, no waters. BK1-0704.
Available June. Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice older room. New bathroom. Wood floors. A/C; B44. Gas/water paid. No pets. B41-1074
Available August. Efficiency 1. bedroom apts in nice older houses. Walk to KU or downtown. $285 and up. No pets. 841-1074
Bradford Square Apartments 503 Colorado
2 & 3 B-RAvailable in May or August,
microwaves, patio or deck, laundry facility.
Onsite Management, KU bus route, off-street parking.
Call to memorize the apartment for summer
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location at a superior price, 2 bedrooms. 2 baths. Call 843-3546 (4 HOURS) Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Copenhagen Woods, May with free weekends free. less $125 plus month use. 985-3280
Sublease one bedroom. Berkeley Flats. Across from football stadium. Water/cable paid. Make offer 749-2377.
Sublease 1 br apt. Great location. Avail. May through July. Rent negotiable. Call 832-0713. Leave message.
Summer and Fall leasing. Pursued 1 and 2 bedroom baths. tlbK from KU with off street parking. no pets. 841-5900
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms on shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bk from KU with off-street parking. No pets. 841-5000
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748, afternoons.
11
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 9, 1991
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300/415/mo. Call 844-2116.
Excellent Location, 1 block to a campus, 2 bedroom
in 4 places, dishwasher, WD hookup. Can,
no pets, available 1: $80. At 1541 Ohio. Call
424-4242
COOL AIR GNIFITNESS 2 bedroom apt. for summer leave. Access from stadium. 8400 month negotiable Comfortable for 3 people. Lease renewal 924,204. Leave a message.
Extremely nice spacious; 3 bdm townhouse /wage;
garden 2 female non-smoking roommates need,
year lease beginning August and/or summer
sublease. $10 s_ultilities. Kerr 845-0626.
Female for summer sublease. Close to camps.
Fully furnished. Own room and bath. No security deposit. $u_2$ utilities, rent negotiable. 843-298
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apart
ment in May. Call 843-8315.
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice townhouse $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! May Call Mill Amenities best! 814-454-3807
Fully furnished, air conditioned apartment for sale in SALISBURY, this summer and fall. Located close to campuses 111-105a Louisiana Fail rent. You can move in and store your after sale F22 you can move in and store your after sale F22
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water paid $300. Call 841-2583. Kitchenette with kitchen sink. Bedroom apartment with sunporch. CA wood floors, no pets. Available价 $180, at木屋 doors, no pets. Available价 $180, at木屋 doors, no pets.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it legal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, hand, familial status or national origin, or age. Real estate advertising is not applicable, 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.
**Key:** HU Med students. Move June 1 and
*Receive* your on rent for two months. *Sundays,*
and 2 bedrooms *i* Heat and water paid *Across*
Center, Rainbow Tower Apts 913-801-693
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $280.00
841-913. leave message.
Lerimar Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spaces, with all the amenities. Brand
Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 8419-7843, 8419-7843
**Mackenzie Place Apt 63:** 3 birtymail apt, new leasing for August 19, 2015 year, washer dryer, microwave oven, fan 2 packs 1 year lease, no weekends. 4777 evening, and weeks. 8421 8124 daytime
New Apartments
2-1 BR, 4+3 BR Washers drives in each unit, ect.
fans, fans microwave, fireplaces, 2 full baths in
br. on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
Call today: 749-1568
New leasing. Extra space, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including refrigerator, dishwasher, blinds and blind. Low utilities, pool and bus route. Quote completion $160 for SPANISH CREAT APARTMENTS
New leasing, and 1 bed room at a spacious Apt. Apsa, beds 875, beds 2 rooms start at $835, 10 month lease. Water and cable paid.
*remodeled kitchen, new carport.* Call 842-3188.
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU
Now leasing, for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apens. Aspen West Apartment $100 for bedroom, $253
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid Walk to camps.
Call 842-184 or 842-183
84-6239 One bedroom apt for summer sublease
Supacious one bedroom apt for summer sublease
Casa Colina Calla, HA8429E
Starting May 1, large bedroom, pool, DW, W/D,
microwave, TV, VCR, fully furnished, $160
842-7590, Mellon
Professor's house for rent June 1991-Aug 1992 2
BR, East Lawrence: $810-844-8844
SUBLEASE at HANOVEN PLACE. Furnished one bedroom. From mid May to December Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386 900-110m
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid-$300.00 841 682
VILLAGE SQUARE
Arvand merda
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
close to campus
close to 10 simple spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus rour studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
SouthPointe Apartments
1 or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Knsold
843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Quiet studios
Pool
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
-Washer and dryer
-Mirroeur
-Gas heater, air
-large beds
-Mini blinds
-On KU bus route
-Carports available
1-bedroom $355, $350
2-bedroom $440, $460
3-bedroom $560
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardy's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Satur
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
S
Swan Management
SUMMER SURELEE, with option for fall 1
bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid,
all electric, 157 Lynch Court, Sundance 8423-825
or 843-664
- Gravstone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F 1-5 p.m
2512 W. 6th St.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. B 2H, 14>. Rent and
nominations negotiable. Close to campus. 868-0726
Georgetown
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
Apartments
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS · BY APPT.
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
24TH & EDDINGHAM
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Call about our Summer Special
24 hour Maintenance
- Low Security Deposit
630 Michigan 749-7279
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
EDDINGHAM PLACE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
SUMMER SUBLEASE: STARTING NOW
bdrm 72bath house, central air, off street parking
$50.00/month. 846 Maine, Call Mark. 794-184
- No pets
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Affordable Price!! Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-6 pm Sat.
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
Now leasing
Double Take
for summer & fall
spacious & comfortable
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
1991
(on apartments)
-Tennis courts KU bus courts
TRAILRIDGE
-on KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
-3 Pools
...
843-7333
apartments
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Boardwalk
Showing Units Daily 9-6
342-4144
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2
blocks from campus on Ohio. 865-0907.
- Walk to grocery
- Unfurnished with
524 Frontier
appliances
Summer sublease with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call 865-2993.
Summer sublease: Furnished one bedroom apt,
pool at complex, water paid. $325. Call Amy
865-3637.
OPEN DAILY
1 - 5 P.M.
Summer sublease 1: bedroom apartment for 1 to 2 people at Sunrise Terrace Apartments. Call Carrie. 843-2762.
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed by
Subleases Available Immediately
MASTERCRAFT
OFFERS
749-2415·10th & Arkansas
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
KENTUCKY PLACE
Spacious 1,410 square feet 1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with dressing area unstairs
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass
ORCHARD CORNERS
Designed with you in mind!
841-1429 * 1145 Louisianis
2 Bdmm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1/2 baths, available May 1st
841-5255 7th & Florida
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 squam foe.
Furnished Studios 435 sq.feet
1226 • 15th & Kasold
HE DID, JAMAL. IT
WAS A BIG DEAL AT
THE TIME.
YOURE FULL
OF IT.
I AM NOT.
YOU ARE TOO!
AM NOT!
HANOVER PLACE
CAMPUS PLACE
Summer Sublease
1 & 2 Bdrm. apartments
Newly remodeled apartments
TANGLEWOOD
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two with fireplaces
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
842-4200
meadowbrook
--the move now!
COASTAL TRAVEL
- Studios
- Sunrise Apts
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vii.)
Tennis Court Bools
- Garages (Vill.)
- Free Cable T.V. (PI. & Terr.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable TV (W/L)
- Luxurious Town Hc
- Apartment Living
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
- & Apartment Living
• On Bus Route
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
--the move now!
---
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
SUNRISE VILLAAGE sansebu sublimate. Can fit up to 3 people for $130/mm. dishwasher, microwave, pool summer, party first. Keg hot on us for new tenants. Call 842-7217
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tube
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun,12-4 p.m.
ANISSA'S RIGHT! NOW, CLAM
UP. I'M TRYING TO STUDY.
- On Bus Route
$355 - $425
- 3 Hot Tubs
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
842-5111
apartment.
1301 W.24th
THERE'S NO WAY WELLES COULD HAVE FILMED MACBETH IN THREE WEEKS.
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
YOU ARE NOT.
OH, CUT IT OUT!
- Free utilities
* Computer Center
* Great social events
* "Dine Anytime"
by Tom Avery
Wise up and make
NAISMITHHALL
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)834-8559
Summer submit, Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
near Holidome, patio, dishwasher, W/D, AC
$375/month. Call 794-4823
Summer sublease. Nice 1 BR apartment with dishwasher, microwave, washer/dryer, AC. Call 865-1653
Summer sublease. Spacies 2 bedroom apt at Northwinds 3 b blocks north of 80th on Michigan W/D hookups. Brand new $75/month plus utilities. Call 841-665.
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt-close to campus. Two to four people. 841:298.
Summer sublease with option for fall 3 bedroom.
$505.00 Water, gas paid. 841-4708.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 728 Long Island lease optional. Call 749-1789 Rent negotiate.
Summertime sublease. Cooperative has rooms available summer and fall. Call 749-1784 or by drop 1496 Tennessee.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate needed. Share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment from May to August. $205 plus $t_2 utilities. Deposit: Call Monica, 843-4108
April Rent Free-Female roommate needed immediately.
Share 3 bedroom duplex-WD,
M-drawer, dishwasher, air conditioned, garage,
stainless steel kitchen, call Caissie 9427 8492, home #843-4598
Female roommate needed to sublease apartment for the summer. Call 865-3971.
- Policy
Roommate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house
Two rooms for 1-2 people. Reasonable rent/
utilities. Alison. 865-2578
Summer Sublease 1, use 2 or 3pice (male or female) needed to share 3 bedrooms/2 bath at ORCHARD CORNERS COORS. Pool: A/C cable, on bus route $10/month plus 1 unit. Calls Hotel 841-217-691. Summer Sublease: Female wanted to share 4 bedroom浴室option For fainting. $180/mo.
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month. 749-5628
Call now for summer sublease Female roomate at Orchard Corners Call anytime at 842-3626
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Rommate needed in 3 bres house w. DW, DEP
$818 plus $i, utilities: 8419-492 use for Dan or Pat
Rommate needed 2 bbr ap 614 Kentucky
$140 month, utilities included. Nolease 8418-
Two female roommates needed for furnished 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom at orchard Corners, starting Aug.19. Call Beth Bailh at 841-4278.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE, count as 5 words.
Continued text counts as 7 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
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No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising Blind box ads; release add $4.00 service charge.
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Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 m.p. 2 days prior to publication
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.
| 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 last & found 305 for sale
110 business persons 105 help wanted 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
120 assistance 225 services required
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wa
**Address**
(phone number published only if included below)
*Please print your all one word per box.*
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
ABS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW
Date ad be paid
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OLLOW RANSAN POLICY
take check payable to
Ransan Insurance
19 Stauffer Fiml Hall
Lawrence, RS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
4.9
TOMMY IS IN THE OFFICE.
"Just ignore him. That's our rebellious young calf Matthew — he's into wearing leather clothes just for the shock value."
12
Tuesday, April 9, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
STOP
Hendingers
809 Vermont
F42-0206
STOP & Recycle!
Bend masters
803 Vernon Lane
642-8900
PARTY TIME!
Prom dresses, Tuxes,
Cummerbunds, Bow Ties,
Rhinestone Jewelry,
Pearl Purses
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. M-S 10-5:30
841-2451
PARTY TIME!
Prom dresses, Tuxes,
Cummerbunds, Bow Ties,
Rhinestone Jewelry,
Pearl Purses
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. M-S 10-5:30
841-2451
EASY DISCREET RENTING
AD
RENTING
Must be 21. I.D. Required
XXX VIDEO - 1420 W. 23rd
Clip this ad
LUNCH BUFFET
11:30-1:30 Mon.-Fri.
$2.99
with coupon
Add $1.00 for salad
Limit 4 specials/coupon
MAZZIOS PIZZA
THE BEST ANY WAY YOU SUE IT
2630 Iowa 843-1474
NEW OWNER'S SPECIAL
UYU
Alley-Cat
RECORDS
Albums - Cd's - Tapes
10% OFF ANY PURCHASE 717 Massachusetts 865-0122
Colony Woods Apartments
Hurry In Today!
Available
- Summer Leases Available
- 1 Bedroom $355
2 Bedroom 2
bath $425
- Indoor Heated Pool, Volleyball & Basketball Courts
- On Bus Route
- Near Restaurants, Grocery Etc.
1301 W.24th (24th & Naismith) Lawrence, KS 842-5111
- 3 Hot Tubs
*Managed With The Student In Mind!
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents the
University Dance Company
Department of Music and Dance Presents the
University Dance Company
8:00 p.m. Friday,
April 12, 1991
2:00 & 8:00 p.m. Saturday,
April 13, 1991
SPRING CONCERT
Tickets on sale in
the Department of
Music and Dance
Office, 452 Murphy
Hall, and the SUA
Office, Kansas
Union; all seats
general admission;
public $5, students
and senior citizens
$3; for reservations,
call 913/664-3436.
Partially funded by
the KU Student
Senate Activity Fee.
8:00 p.m. Friday,
April 12, 1991
2:00 & 8:00 p.m. Saturday,
April 13, 1991
Have an opinion?
Write 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
ETONIC
The ST Series is "Stabilizer Technology"
A high tech outside in-corporates the unique stabilizer spike place more secure maximum stability.
Revolutionary pyramid-shaped turf grips give the shoe the added traction a golfer needs during a swing
BANK
THE MALLS
23rd & LOUISEIA
749-5332
-PRIME TIME -
SPORTS
County tax appraisals create outrage over large increases
$10 OFF ALL MEN'S & WOMEN'S GOLF SHOES.
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
The property reappraisals Douglas County taxpayers received in the mail this weekend were evidence of the property's tax relief still has a few potholes.
Kansan staff writer
A backlash of complaints hit the Douglas County Courthouse yesterday Operators in the county appraiser's office took calls from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. from residents, who received their property reappraisals Saturday
August Dettbarn, an appraiser who handled incoming calls, said that all four lines were being ringer monstop. He called the calls to continue for two weeks.
*Listening to the taxpayers helps me do my job better and understand*
But rather than talk by telephone, one Lawrence resident yesterday morning wanted to express outrage that some County commissioners in person
James Schneider, 3708 Stelson Drive, drive, "You think I am mad? There are a lot of people out there who are madder than I am."
Schneider said he bought his home two years ago for $88,950. He had the
house appraised by an independent appraiser this year at $104,000. However, the county, which conducts the official appraisal for property tax, assessed $138,000, nearly 40 percent more than either the original cost or appraisal
"You can't tell me that the property value has gone up by 36 percent," he said. "It's beyond 'Let's investigate this and see if it's not reasonable.' There is a serious problem with the process."
Commissioner Mike Amyx said he also had received several telephone calls this weekend from property owners who were angry about repreahrais.
"I've heard of increases of over 40 percent," he said. "Quite a few may be clinical errors. Well, I can't tolerate clinical errors."
Amxy suggested that the county hire an auditor from outside the county to check the work of county appraisers. The problems caused by overblown appraisals were too severe to be dismissed, he said.
"Maybe this is what we wish property would sell for," he said. "But in truthfulness, it's not."
were inevitable so soon after the property tax crunch in 1989, when the property in Kansas was appraised for the first time in about
"We're starting a new era in property taxes," he said. "There's going to be some bugs in the process."
Allen Ford, professor of business, said that problems with reappraisals
Dettmann said that some of those bugs were due to occasional dataentry errors in the computer model the county used to calculate property value. But a bigger reason for some of the upset is that property had not been valued highly enough in 1989, the last time the county appraised property.
"We really underscored the last time," he said.
The large increases in assessed property value can be attributed to land appraisals, which jumped 40 to 50 percent in some cases, Dettbarn said. But the appraised value of most buildings decreased so the total increased by only a few percentage points.
Appeal processes for reappeal will begin at the end of April, and the county will decide most of the appeal for the first week of May. Dettarn said
K
KU
D
Advertising Law from Leo Burnett
Mike Breslin, attorney at Leo Burnett, will be speaking on the legal aspects of advertising
- Tonight, 7:00 p.m.
* Kansas Union
* Alderson Auditorium
Invest In Your Future
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
749-0055
Free delivery
620 W.12th (Right behind the Crossing)
--donation.
Taste the Rudy's difference! Our classic, spicy italian wine sauce is deliciously unique. In addition to our old-fashioned homemade crust, we are proud to serve our new golden. honey whole wheat crust.
Speciat
2 10" Pizzas
2 Toppings
2 Drinks
$8.55 plus tax
Offer good only on Tuesday.
Rudy Tuesday
Rudy's Thursday Night Special
Night Special
One Large Pizza
with 2 toppings
2 Drinks
$7.99 plus tax
Offer good only
on Thursday.
Under new management!
Every Day
Lunch Specials
One Monster
Slice
Salad
Drink
$2.45 plus tax
NEED SOME EXTRA DOLLARS?
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Take advantage of our March special!!!
Take home an extra $10.00 by donating plasma! At Lawrence Donor Center you receive a $10.00 bonus on your sixth donation
New donors: Bring in this ad for an extra $5.00 on your first donation. Whole blood donors: Earn $10.00 for your donation.
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KU
The University of Kansas COMMENCEMENT
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Caps, Gowns & Hoods STARTING NOW
All participants, including faculty, doctorate, law, master's and bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns, and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26. To ensure proper fit and availability of regalia, participants are asked to visit the order center IN PERSON.
Out of town commencement participants unable to visit the campus order center may reserve regalia by following the instructions in the graduation mailing.
4
√
VOL.101,No.128
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE U.
(0304050-640)
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Service in Statehouse marks Holocaust
Y. H. L.
Students have remembrance for Holocaust
Josef Zatzkis, Topeka resident, lights the first of seven candles in remembrance of the Jewish who died during the Holocaust, while Rabbi Lawrence Karol leads a song.
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Bv Beniamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Finney, Jewish light candles honoring the 11 million victims
At the service, members of the audience read testimonials of survivors, and Louis Fryman, associate professor of social welfare and a survivor of the Holocaust, offered a personal remembrance.
Forty-seven people gathered last night in Smith Hall to commemorate the six million Jews killed during the Holocaust.
Frydman said remembering the atrocities was especially difficult for a university community in light of the fact that many of the Holocaust victims and perpetrators were highly educated.
Frydman recounted his experiences as a young boy in Poland when his family, with skillful planning and some luck, hid from the Gestapo in order to avoid capture and the concentration camps.
"There is pain involved in realizing that the people that have been killed are not really different from us," he said. "It is also very discomforting to realize the people who did these actions are also not very different than us."
However, when he was captured and interned in the camps, Frydman said he survived because of "luck, pure luck."
Audience members read different testimonials from their seats in the circular auditorium. Each passage provided a different perspective of the Holocaust, illuminating the history and events that gay and lesbian experiences. Members of all these groups were persecuted and killed in the Holocaust.
The remembrance of the Holocaust coincides with the day Auschwitz was liberated
"If we cherish life we must remember that which makes life sacred, whether it is the horror or the beauty."
Daveen Litwin, director of Hillel,
which sponsored the service, said,
"We must bear witness. That is our
role here. We must do more than
never forget. We must speak and
teach.
Jenifer Marck. Chicago freshman, said the Holocaust was not significant only to the Jewish people.
"I feel if we don't remember history will repeat itself," she said.
By Lara Gold Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A custom in the Jewish religion is the lighting of a candle on the anniversary of the death of a loved one.
Members of Kansas' Jewish community and Gov. Joan Fainny lighted Holocaust Memorial candles yesterday in the Capitol Building rotunda in
honor of the 11 million deaths during the Holocaust.
Yesterday was the national observance of Holocaust Memorial Day. Finney issued a proclamation naming the week of April 7-14 as "the days of remembrance of the victims of the Holocaust."
"Every person, every Kansan, can commit their part to never forget the
Holocaust," Finney said to about 65 people.
A remembrance ceremony for those who died in the Holocaust has been observed in the rotunda since 1983.
"Only through remembrance can we learn through the past and apply it to the here and now," said Rabbit Lawrence Karol of Temple Beth
Shalom in Topeka.
Karol said Hitler killed six million Jews, in addition to five million Europeans who were gays, lesbians, Gynes and Catholics.
Allison Kort. Prairie Village junior, has walked in the footsteps of the Holocaust victims.
year in the "March of the Living," a tour that began in Poland's concentration camps and ended in Israel.
Kort and 4,000 students from around the world participated last
"We retraced the steps of the European Jews through the concentration camps." she said.
"We were only a group of 4,000 — only a fraction of those who marched to their deaths." Kort said. "Why? Whv did it happen?"
1nree Student Senate candidates run as independents
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate elections start today, and three students, facing tough odds against posters, fliers and $2,000 budgets, have chosen to run independent from either coalition. Facts or impact
Marcie Wakefield has the task of running for a Nunenmaker seat Because all freshmen and sopho mores can vote for the seats, several hundred votes usually are needed to win.
Wakefield, Alqonquin, III , freshman, has been involved in Student
Union Activities this year and was recently elected treasurer of the All Scholarship Hall Council.
"And I've done a lot of studying actually." she said
Wakefield said she was interested in learning how Senate worked so that she could better address issues women of her, particularly women's issues.
Marcia Quores is a Lawrence graduate student in history. She decided to run for a graduate seat in Senate and gave her governance was restructured.
Student Senate Elections
at the last minute, "Quiros said, 'I didn't have time to investigate some of the issues the coalitions were talking about."
'I have to admit, I decided to run at the last minute. I didn't have time to investigate some of the issues the coalitions were talking about.'
"I have to admit, I decided to run
Marcia Quiros Lawrence graduate student
She said the two coaltions did not seem to be very different.
Quiros, a single mother, said she could provide a new voice in Senate
David Suroff, engineering candidate, has been involved in Senate for the past year as a senator and as vice chairperson of the student rights committee.
He said he was unable to commit to either coalition because he did not have the time
Suroff, Leaward senior, has spent much of this year working on the engineering fee issue, and he is the chairperson of the subcommittee for the code of student rights and responsibilities.
The disadvantages to running independently are obvious,he said
"You don't have that umbrella to carry you," Suroff said.
Quiros stated on her budget that she would not spend more than $20. Suroff and Wakefeil agreed to abide by the suggested limit of $75, but both said they had not spent nearly that much.
"I've spent about $15," Suroff said. Wakefield said that her only monetary expense was making photocopies, the biggest expense is effort, she said.
"I've actually been really, really, busy," Wakefield said.
U.N. peace force will monitor Iraq
PINL
The Associated Press
The 15-member council, however, delayed its formal declaration of a cease fire in the war until Iraq delivers the report of its National Assembly accepting U.N. terms for a permanent military end to the war was expected to be announced today.
UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. Security Council yesterday unanimously established a 1,440-mem peacekeeping force to monitor the Iraq-Kuwait border and the risk of U.S. forces from southern Iraq.
Under the permanent cease-fire resolution adopted by the council last Wednesday, Iraq must scrap its military armament and navy heavy war reparations.
Iraq attached a long list of objections to the notification of acceptance it sent to the Security
Carol Beeson tries to help her team decipher her drawings during a Win, Lose or Draw game last night as part of Greek Week.
Meanwhile, the 15-member council also was expected to discuss a European Community proposal to provide a haven for the refugees living in the homes in northern Iraq by a devastating Iraqi campaign.
Joseph J Lies/JANSAN
Council on Saturday, stirring speculation that its acceptance was provisional and that it might be the International Court of Justice.
U. S. Ambassador Thomas Pickering has said general precedents existed in the creation of corridors of tranquility last year for transporting relief supplies to the people of Sudan.
U. N. lawyers are studying the proposal. Officials said the creation of a U.N. zone within a nation has been proposed, but retu ges was unprecedented.
► More on Mideast Page 7
Greek Week proffers broad array of activities
Week begins with Win, Lose or Draw
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
As the professor looked on, Mark Sizemore confidently walked up to the board
But his confidence soon turned to contusion. He shifted his weight from one foot to the other, held his head and remained in frustration, but he could not.
Finally, he asked another student for help, and five seconds later the students got the proper response 'I Hawaii Five-O'.
Sizemore, Sacramento, Calif.
sophomore, along with more than 100
professors, staff members and
fraternity and sorority members,
played Win, Lose or Draw last night in
the Kansas Union Ballroom. It was the kickoff event for Greek Week 1981.
Julie Bahr, Greig Week co-chairman, said she designed last night's event to give professors and staff the chance to meet members of the greek
system.
would provide more interaction."
"We were going to play Jeopardy," she said, but then I thought if you have a professor of history, he's not going to play Jeopardy category right, so I thought this
Milton Scott, assistant director of housing, said he was invited to dinner at a fraternity, as were the other professors and staff members.
'That was really nice,' he said. 'I
was very impressed with them. But they said they were counting on me with the game, and I kept saying, 'Oh, you don't want to do that!'
Scott Rutherford, Greek Week cochairperson, described the rest of the week's activities:
- Today there will be a scavenger hunt, in which teams will collect clothing and furniture and meet at the army, where the pieces will be donated.
Tomorrow there will be a Greek Show, where teams will perform anything they can in six minutes. The event will cost $1, even for those who perform. Proceeds will go to the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence
**Friday the interaction with the Boys and Girls Club will become more personal as greeks will have individual children for a field day**
Saturday there will be a 5-kilometer Fun Run co-sponsored by KU residence halls. Greek Week Olympics will be in the afternoon
Sunday, the week will conclude with a trip to the Lady Jayhawk softball game in the afternoon and Greek Recognition Night.
2
Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Mostly
Sunny
HI:65'
LQ:49'
51/38
70/48
45/32
62/37
74/58
78/56
84/71
Kansas Forecast
We'll see a short break in the winds early this morning, but by afternoon southwest winds will increase. A chance for thunderstorms tonight.
Sallina 65/42 KC
Dodge City 67/45
68/42 Wichita
69/50
3-day Forecast
Thursday- Cloudy with a chance for showers. High 67/
Low 48.
Friday - Lingering showers. High 64/ Low 40.
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Saturday - Partly cloudy and cooler. High 60/ Low 37.
forecast by Rodney Price
Temperatures are today's Nights and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USF$ 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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
642 Mass.
642 Mass. LIBERTY HALL 749 1912
Cyrano de Bergerac 5:30,8:30
Nasty Girl 5:45,8:45
Shawnee Mission
Ford
Up to an additional
$1,000 cash for:
• college grads
• first time buyers
Contact Brad Shull
(913) 631-0000
SUBWAY
Get a 6 foot Party
842-4782
Expires 5/31/91
Get a 6 foot Part.
Sub for only
$48!
(Feeds 25-30 people) 1720 W. 23rd Street
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
SAT, SUN 2:30
MARRYING MAN (R)
EVERS 5:00, 7:30, 9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
642-8400
842. 6400
DEFENDING
(HP) SAT 9 AU 20H
(SW) SAT 8 AU 15H
SLEEPING WITH
(WC) SAT 8 AU 20H
(SW) SAT 8 AU 15H
THE LONG
(HP) SAT 8 AU 20H
(SW) SAT 8 AU 15H
THE HOME (HP)
SAT 8 AU 30H
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WOLFS (NP1)
SAT 8 AU 45H
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WOLLS (NP1)
SAT 8 AU 45H
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THE LAMBHS (WP)
SAT 8 AU 45H
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CINEMA TWIN
LUISIANA
TEMEANT MAGAMY
NINIA TURTLES (PJ)
REVERSAL OF
FORTUNE (R)
SAT, SUN 1/10 - 3:30
8:30
SAT, SUN 1/15 - 7:30
9:30
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Dickinson
23rd & IOWA 841-8600
$300 PRIME-TIMER SHOW (+)
SEN CITIZENS TAMMY
NEW JACK CITY (R)
5:10, 7:25, 9:45
IF LOOKS COULD KILL (P-13)
4:40 7:05 8:30
THE FIVE HEARTBEATS (R)
0.98 7.16 0.25
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES (P-13)
4:45, 7:10, 9:20
CLASS ACTION (R)
4:35, 7:20, 9:40
HOME ALONE (PG)
4:50, 7:00, 9:25
NEED MONEY?
Here's the Solution! Full and Part-Time Positions Available
$5-$7 per Hour
- Excellent Sales Experience
- Paid Training
- Advancement Opportunities
- Flexible Hours Call for an
- KU Accounting Club and IRIS will conduct volunteer income tax assistance workshops at 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
or Apply Today 841-1200
Appointment
ENTERTEL
E. O.E m/f/h
- KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop on stress management at 12:10 p.m. in 138 Robinson Center.
- KU Wellness Center will have a lecture called "Contraception and Safe Sex" at 2:30 p.m. in 138 Robin-
On campus
KU Office of Study Abroad will
have an information meeting about Fu bright scholarships, graduate exchange and other grants group graduate at 3:30 p.m. in 206 Fraser Hall.
Summer and fall business managers Kansan staff report
Katie Stader, La Jolla, Calif,
senior, was selected as the University
Daily Kansan business manager for
Fall 1991 Christine Mussel, Newton
junior, is the Summer 1991 business
manager.
- Consumer Affairs Association will be in front of Wescoe Hall distributing pamphlets about renting apartments.
Hawkers: Business Pioneers of KU will have a guest speaker, Fritz W. Szeitzschmert, founder/owner
Applications for summer and fall editors' positions are available in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
- KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 6 p.m. at the Party Room in the Burge Union.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a workout at 6:30 p.m. in 207 Robinson Women's Resource Center will
sponsor a workshop called "Auto Mechanics for Beginners" at Byron's Autohaus at 7 tonight at 640 N. Second St.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
Police report
The Center for East Asian Studies will present a lecture and slide show called "Tibet: Yesterday and Today" at 7:30 tonight in Dyche Auditorium.
A side emblem was taken from a KU student's car between 9 p.m. Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday in the 2400 block of 25th st. Lawrence police reported. Paint on the car was scratched, causing $30 damage.
A motorcycle valued at $2,500 was taken between 1:30 and 10:30 a.m.
Monday from the 2500 block of Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's bike was taken between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. Monday in front of the Kansas Union, KU police reported.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 10, 1991
Campus/Area
3
GLSOK to rally for national action day
Kansan staff writer
By Patricia Roias
The Gay and Lesbian Student Organization of Kansas will rally at noon today in front of Strong Hall in connection with the National Day of Action.
The purpose of the day is to protest the Department of Defense policy that bans gays, lesbians and bisexuals from the military and thus from ROTC programs, said Mike Sullivan, GLSOK director.
The designation of April 10 as the
day for colleges and universities across the country to protest the policy originated at the University of Wisconsin Madison, he said.
Sullivan said GLSOK would deliver a letter in the morning to Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, explaining the purpose of
"We feel it's important to coordinate with the administration instead of working on our own or against the administration." Sullivan said.
In the letter to Shankel, GLSOK
lists five requests, he said.
First, it asks for Greg Hughes, University Council member, to read at the rally the Council's resolution about discrimination in the ROTC.
Sullivan said GLSOK was pleased with the resolution, which denounces the current Department of Defense policy.
Second, GLSOK wants the University to specify in all literature concerning the HOTC program, such as the requirements of the gram discriminates against people of
homosexual orientation and therefore conflicts with the KU policy against discrimination.
Sullivan said GLSOK members understood that KU administrators had to follow the Department of Defense's policies and therefore could not set the rules for the ROTC program on campus. But he said the administrators should express their disapproval of the existing rules.
ceremonies as official representatives of the University.
The third request GLSOK members make is that KU administrators do not attend ROTC commissioning
Fourth, GLSOK asks to meet with those administrators who visited Washington, D.C., during spring semester against the discriminatory policy.
GLSOK also will ask for a progress report on KU's discussion of the ROTC issue with other universities, Sullivan said.
He said that the fifth request was for the administration to create a scholarship for students who are not
eligible to receive ROTC scholarships because of their sexual orientation.
GLSOK has asked other student organizations on campus to participate in the rally, Sullivan said.
Kristin Lange, member of the Women's Student Union, said she and other members of WSU would participate in the rally.
Comics perform at Frontier Room
"I think this situation has gone on much longer than it needed." Lange said, speaking about the policy.
Full-time comedian finds job satisfying
By Patricia Rojas Kansan staff writer
NI ACTIVIT
Mike Saccone's childhood reasoning yielded to his love for jokes and laughter.
"I remember thinking right before I did something. 'It's worth it, even if I get in trouble.'" Saccone said.
"It was sick, kind of. But I've turned it into a job," he said.
Saccone, a Kansas City, Mo. native currently living in Los Angeles, was one of two comedians in Room, in the Kansas Union room.
Pervis Powell, a Kansas City, Mo., sixth grade teacher, was the other performer.
About 100 people attended the event sponsored by Student Union Activities to inaugurate the opening of the Frontier Room.
Saccone's performance included jokes about moving away from home for the first time, deciding which classes to drop and flying in airplanes in which cigarette smoking is banned.
He has performed on MTV's "Half-Hour Comedy Hour." Arts & Entertainment's "Evening at the Comedy Club" and "Comedy Club Network" amuse others.
A comedian for 12 years, Saccone was the "Star Search" comedy grand champion and Performance Magazine's best new comic in 1989.
His first public performance was in 1980 at Stanford & Sons Comedy House in Kansas City, Mo. But that performance did not his first comic performance.
His ability to entertain others in grade school was what triggered the only compliment he ever got from his sixth grade teacher. Mrs. Wilson, who really hated him, Saccone said.
"I knew you'd be good at something," she told him after he made the whole class laugh during a skit
Mike Saccone tells a joke at the Burge Union, Saccone, "Star Search" comedy grand champion and Performance Magazine's best new comic of 1989, performed for about 100 people last night.
Sacone said that at first it was hard to live on a comedy career, because when he started there were not many clubs. But he managed.
"As long as I was able to feed myself and pay the rent, I felt I was ahead of the game," he said.
For him, the fun involved outweighed the inconveniences, just as it did when he got punished for his jokes in high school.
"The pay wasn't that good, but the satisfaction was," he said, speaking about the jokes he played in school.
Unlike Saccone, Powell is a part-time comedian. But he is planning to work as a full-time comedian for at least a year.
"I'm testing the waters," he said. "It's tough, but it really helps when you see good comedians."
Powell's first public comedy performance was in 1989, also at Stan-
He said he could earn the same
Powell said he still worked the
amount of money doing comedy for 10 minutes as he did teaching for eight hours.
"master of ceremonies" stage for comedians. This means he gives a 10 to 15-minute act prior to another comedian's presentation.
Warm weather heats buildings
Turning on cooling systems takes time
By Katie Chipma
Kansan staff writer
If it seems that on warm days the temperature inside some campus buildings is uncomfortably hot, there is a reason.
Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said campus heating systems were not like furnaces in homes and could not be turned on and off with the flip of a switch.
Porter said it took 24 to 72 hours for facilities operations crews to switch to cooling systems because they had to change from heating to cooling controls and add coolants to the systems.
"Air conditioning is not what the name imperson." Porter says. "It's not cooling the air, it's taking the heat of the air. And that process takes time.
The temperature outside will have to reach 70 degrees and stay there for a few days before the decision to turn on air conditioners is made, he said.
Porter said the heat in most buildings had been turned off because of recent warm temperatures, and in some buildings the air conditioning had been running until Monday, when the temperature dropped.
Some buildings, however, have not had the air conditioning turned on
because of maintenance reasons
"Last fall, we ran the air conditioning up until the middle of November." Porter said. "We were not able to get through it so do the winter maintenance until late."
"Now that we had some warm days above 75 degrees, we can't turn on those units that weren't maintenanced."
Porter said that facilities operations tried to maintain a temperature of 74 degrees in buildings all year but that there was a period of four to six months when no one could be satisfied with the temperature in the buildings.
The facilities operations crews work with departments in each building to determine the need for air conditioning and heating. Buildings that contain animals, computers or child research areas that have children present are given attention first.
Jill Joiner, Overland Park parkmore, works at the information counter on the fourth floor in the Kansas Union.
She said it was difficult to work in the Union because the windows could not be opened and the fans only circulated hot air.
"Everybody was complaining about how hot it was," she said. "It was really frustrating to keep telling people that the air conditioning wasn't coming on until it stayed warm."
Men charged in bomb incident plead not guilty
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan staff writer
Two men charged with planting a pipe bomb under a security jeep behind IBM R. Pearson Hall last week, the police say yesterday in a Topeka federal court.
Joseph Ceresko, Derby freshman, and John Bitker, Lawrence resident, both 20, were charged with using explosives at an institution receiving federal financing.
Bitter remained in custody without bond. Ceresko was released last month on a $10,000 bond, said Greg Hough, assistant U.S. attorney.
The two were arrested March 28 in the early morning after a KU police officer saw someone tampering with the jeep.
Another officer picked up the explosive and put it on a hill about 10 feet from the jeep, where it detonated. The police window and a nearby car windshield.
If convicted, the men face a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a 2520.00 fine. Hough said
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the
two men now would go through separate hearings before the trial would begin.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said the University would seek full prosecution in the case because of the number of bomb threats that had been received prior to this one.
Thirty-nine bomb threats were made last semester, in addition to seven this semester, including one room shortly after the March 28 incident.
Mullens said that the last bomb to explode prior to this one was in Summerfield Hall in the late 1960s, when all three threats had to be treated seriously.
There have been no threats since the one called in after the explosion, he said.
"For whatever reasons, people may have a little more sense to not call these in and cause this pandemonium," Mullens said.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Star Wars revisited
Nuclear-powered rocket may thrust arms race into space, but at expense of safety on earth
The Pentagon is developing a nuclear-powered rocket that would lift weapons into space as part of the Star Wars program.
The rocket would include a nuclear reactor.
Government officials are interested in the rocket because it would "pack more punch" than a conventional rocket, producing more power to keep the rocket in the Earth's orbit
But the real benefit of a nuclear-powered rocket, according to officials, is that it could lift about 70 tons of weapons. The nation's largest conventionally powered rocket, Triton 4, only can lift about 20 tons.
In response to Cold War tensions, President Reagan introduced the Star Wars program in 1983. The plan was to send armaments into space to destroy enemy nuclear missiles as a large-scale defense system.
Now, in an ironic response to perestroika, glasnost and thawing relations between the United States and the Soviet Union, the Pentagon is developing a nuclear-powered rocket that can carry more weapons.
The operation was cloaked in secrecy until the Federation of American Scientists disclosed the Defense Department's activity.
The federation is a private group based in Washington that has opposed the Star Wars anti-missile program.
The federation is concerned about the rocket's radiation release into the Earth's orbit. It contends that the rocket will produce a cloud of radioactive material from its exhaust. The federation also contends that the planned rocket would be so hot that it would operate near its melting point, increasing the risk of catastrophe.
Even a slight chance of a nuclear meltdown should deter the creators of a nuclear-powered rocket.
A malfunction in the space shuttle Challenger killed six astronauts and a New Hampshire schoolteacher. A simple malfunction in a nuclear-powered rocket could have even more devastating consequences. The risk is not worth what could be gained: the efficient placement of nuclear weapons in space.
U. S. tax dollars are paying the monetary cost of the development of a nuclear-powered rocket
But the world may pay the price of a nuclear disaster.
Jennifer Schultz for the editorial board
Faulty leadership
Gates and his racist officers should be removed
He is chief of the nation's second-largest police force. Some of his officers beat and kicked or watched the beating of a motorist and then joked about it.
a motorist and then joked about
Fortunately, it was videotaped.
To outraged citizens in Los Angeles and across the nation, the responsibility for the March 3 beating of Rodney King rests with police Chief Daryl Gates.
Chief Gates should be fired or should step down.
By ousting Gates, Los Angeles and its police department would be showing the nation that the department is taking steps to repair its damaged reputation and gain the community's trust and support.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, who is trying to mend the split in the city since the beating, said at a news conference last week that Gates should step down.
Then on Thursday, Gates was ordered by the Police Commission to take a two-month paid leave of absence, giving several groups time to investigate King's beating.
But the City Council voted Friday to return Gates to work.
Gates had a chance in the aftermath of the
King beating to try, at least, to assure the public that he would not allow this sort of behavior from his police officers.
But Gates' response to the beating was deplorable and serves as an excellent example of why he should be removed from the department.
In a news conference March 18 Gates said,
"We regret what took place. I hope he (King)
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."
Some of Gates' police officers should be the next ones to go. The department needs to clean house and fire officers who have racist mentalities.
In tapes of communications between officers on the night of the attack, some of the officers were heard swapping racist jokes and boasting to other cops about the beating
Now is the time for the Los Angeles Police Department to make an example of Gates, Los Angeles citizens and the nation should not tolerate a police chief who allows his officers to hand out their version of curbside justice and take the law into their own hands.
ANY MORE HOT TIPS, YASSR?
BETS
TODAY'S
RACES
'Exit' makes a sudden entrance into blase Senate election circle
Rich Bennett
The fact that thousands in students are being accused by people evenly dispersed throughout campus only can mean one of two things: Either the Gideon Bible people have returned, or it is student election time. And because the aforementioned accosters are not wearing overcoats or antiquated hats, it must be the latter.
Staff columnist
During last year's election, KU students had five fabulous coalitions to choose from. This meant hours of deliberation on behalf of voters, trying to decide which coalition had the best issues, the most qualified candidates, and most importantly, the prettiest signs. Using this strict criteria, voters elected the presidential candidate from a coalition cleverly named after the ever-popular pronoun You. The less popular pronouns be, she, me and I followed closely behind.
This year, however, only two coalitions have decided to enter the field, and I don't mind telling you I feel gypped. Don't get me wrong. It's not that the candidates that are running aren't well-qualified or anything logical like that. But anyone who knows anything about the recent history of Lawrence elections knows that to have a good, healthy election you have to have lots of candidates, ideally 40 or 50, such as in the recent Lawrence City Commission elections.
I have no real qualifications, but I do have plenty of experience in losing elections. I ran for a Student Senate
It it's obviously too late to add that many candidates at this stage in the race. So, as of right now, I am not sure how to proceed for president of the student body.
seat last year and lost by a handful of votes. I ran for president of my residence hall two years ago and lost. I was, however, my class treasure in junior high school and feel that my experience will serve me well if elected.
My first move is to pick a catchy coalition name. I'll need one that indicates what I stand for and at the same time is guaranteed to be ingrained deep in the memory of potential voters.
But because I've been told I can't use anything of a sexual nature, and because all the effective pronouns are male, I've chosen Exalt as my coaIon name.
With Exit as my name, I won't need fliers, recycled or otherwise, at any point during my campaign. My campaign signs are up already and can be spotted above the backs of doors all over campus, and, for that matter, the majority of the free world.
I thought about choosing Campus/GSP as my slogan, and rely on KU On Wheels to relay my coalition name to the public, but I didn't just have the kick. Erik
Let's face it, neither coalition has come up with one new idea for this year's campaign - environmental improvements and blah and improvement improvements and blah and
'With Exit as my name, I won't need fliers, recycled or otherwise, at any point during my campaign. My campaign signs are up already and can be spotted above the backs of doors all over campus, and, for that matter, the majority of the free world.'
blah and blah. Anyone with a brain larger than a Cheerio knows there is very little Student Senate can do about these issues.
I intend to deal with brand-new issues. For instance, what about the fact that Wesco Hall is slowly falling down the hill it now sits upon. This is no joke. Since Wesco was built, it has sunk two inches closer to Molt Hall. While members of other coaltions will be hopelessly trying to phone in their enrollment, I'll be working to stop Wesco in its tracks.
I will deal with issues that can be dealt with. I won't, however, do anything foolish like concede that there is no realistic way to stop tuition increases. Read my lips, "Tutition will not increase." Everyone one knows that this statement is a blatant lie, but to admit otherwise is politically foolish. Just ask my campaign manager, Walter Mondale.
Anyway, as my candidacy is off to a late start, I must hit the campaign trail. I'm not sure how well I'll fare. I'm confident that polls will indicate I'm in the lead.
■ Rich Bennett is an Overland Park junior magoring in journalism.
U.S. needs to accept moral responsibility for its actions
Most people who are not engaged professionally in politics or international business would admit readily that meddling in the affairs of a sovereign nation is out of bounds.
But this time, it is different. The extenating circumstances include more than 40 days and nights of rigorous bombing and a plea from our commander-in-chief for the people of Iraq to overthrow their leader.
We have assumed a moral obligation to help defend the civilian population of Iraq. This happens to translate into assistance for rebels who are fighting overthrow Saddam Hussein as Kurds and Shite Muslim civilians currently are being massacred in Iraq.
We are burdened with this moral millstone because the horrible turmoil and violence now under way is a
Jeff
Listerman
Guest
columnist
direct repercussion of what we, the United States, and our allies have wrought.
If we had not destabilized Saddam and then insinulated our support for the rebels with President Bush's call to arms, it is highly unlikely that the revolt in Iraq would have broken out. But it was a very northern and southern cities.
We are directly responsible for this chaos. Still, we have not taken responsibility for our actions.
Some U.S. government officials
have claimed that we are aiding the Iraqi masses through the International Red Cross. This is propaganda designed to placate and deceive. Perhaps some Red Cross aid that is not sucked up by Saddam's militia may help some civilians in and around Baghdad, but it will be allowed to reach any areas near those populations that need it most.
Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf admitted to David Frost the other night on TV that he was "suckered" into allowing the Iraqi military to fly its helicopters, which it has since militarized and used systematically on the Iraqi people. Why have we not demanded a renegotiation of those terms? Some sources also claim that Saddam's air force is flying fixed-wing aircraft in direct violation of the cease-fire agreement. Why are we
not putting more effort into enforcement and verification of the agreement? I am afraid that we have let the joy of a victory with so few U.S. casualties obscure the fact that inimobility children are being slaughtered in Iraq.
These sorrowful events, along with the recent executions of Palestinians in Kuwait, make for a hollow U.S. victory. If we are genuinely concerned for the welfare of the Kuwati people under Iraqi occupation, where is our compassion for the Palestinian, Shifites and Kurds who are suffering right now? And what about those Palestinian who continue to suffer under the Israeli occupation of the West Bank?
We must face these questions and face the fallout of our bombings.
Despite the balking, rhetoric and ambiguity, the administration's posi-
tissue is nauseatingly clear. It is prepared to stand on the sidelines of a bloodbath and do little more than cry, "Foul!"
The truth is the White House hopes that Saddam Hussein, the man Bush repeatedly has compared to Adolf Hitler, will crush the uprisings in his country. The administration further hopes that Saddam Hussein was leaving the Sunni Muslims in power as a buffer against Shite domination from Iran.
I am not concluding that Sunni rule, without Saddam Hussein, would be without any benefits.
But who exactly would benefit, and how much would change if Saddam's entire cruel and regime remained intact? I also do not mean to imply that the Shites would rule Iraq more humanely. These are the
unhappy dilemmas one faces when meddling in another country's affairs.
But wait a minute! "Then why meddle in them?" you ask. Because we have to finish what we started. We cannot just bomb the hell out of their country and then leave them in the lurch.
Understand that I am not necessarily advocating that we throw direct military support behind one faction or another. But we do wee the people of Iraq a guarantee that we will not let Saddam use his airplanes and weapons — regardless of whether they are Sunnis, Shiites or Kurds.
Jeff Listerman is a Lawrence senior majoring in ceramics.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
General manager, news adviser
Business staff
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNÉ HINES
Sales and marketing advise
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 Harbarger
Sports Ann Semmaterlah Katie Stader
Photography Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Einbinder
Graphics Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chrisy Hals
Features Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kik Crowner
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 will not be contacted.
Great colonials should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
the Kranen reserves the right to reject or edit edits, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kranen newsroom, 113 Staffer-Flun Hall.
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4
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 10, 1991
5
SANDY LEE
Dan KleinKANSAN
Lawrence city clerk Ray Hammert swears in the three city commissioners elected last week. The commissioners, (from left) Bob Schulte, Bob Summim and John Nalbandian began their terms last night.
Former City Commission has faith in replacements
Rv Vanessa Furhmans
Kansan staff writer
Beaming faces packed the Lawrence City Commission chambers last night to usher in a new city hall where he will about the achievements of the old.
Newly elected Mayor Bob Walters, who was nominated by outgoing Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith, said he was a strong candidate in the potential of the new commission.
PETER W. MORRIS
Martin-Smith commended the old commission on a job well done despite occasions when commissioners locked horns on several issues.
Newly elected mayor Bob Walters.
"We all know we've taken the heat for not getting along and getting festy sometimes," she said. "But we want to let that get in the way of the issues."
Martin-Smith, who received an honorary gavel for her service as mayor, said the commission's most important project was to raise two years included development of a sister-city program with Hiratsuka, Japan, the continued preservation of Lawrence neighborhoods and a city ethics policy, which the commission adopted two weeks ago.
Although a proposed circumferential highway system is still in the early stages of planning, Martin-Smith said the commission had made great strides toward completion of the project, including a successful
bond vote in November.
"This commission worked for two years to the point where we knew we would have roads or we wouldn't have roads," she said.
In a few parting words, former commissioners David Penny and Mike Rundle thanked those who had supported them and offered advice to new commissioners Bob Schulte and John Nablandian.
"I don't think we solved all the problems," Penny said. "And I hope the new commission will pick up where we left off."
Rundle told the commissioners to use their love for Lawrence as a guide in their decision-making.
"I suggest the commission do what is sometimes difficult to do, and do the right thing." he said.
Ray Humertt, city clerk, administers the oath to Nalandian, Schulte and Bob Schumm, who will serve, and one-year term, and one two-year term.
Schulte, who was elected vice mayor, said, "I'd just like to say welcome to the honeymoon period so I hope it lasts beyond the reception."
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Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Yugoslavia threatens force against Croatian protesters
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — the head of Yugoslavia's collective presidency warned independence-minded Croatia yesterday that the army would use all means to prevent further anti-military protests.
Borisav Jovic, a Serb who heads the eight-man body that commands the armed forces, issued the threat after thousands of protesters damaged military buildings in several Croatian cities Monday.
The army issued a similar warning Monday night. Yesterday, armored personnel carriers belonging to the army and to Croatian police sealed off a military court in the Croatian capital of Zagreb.
Monday's violence forced a delay in the military trial of Croatia's defense minister, Martin Spegel, who is charged with plotting against the armed forces. No injuries were reported, but authorities in the Dalmatian city of Split said 10 people were arrested after protesters smashed the windows of several hotels and owned of companies based in rival Serbia.
In a letter to Croatia's president, Franjo Tudman, made public by the official news agency Tanjug, Jovic said Monday's events showed the collapse of the institutions of the federal presidency and the implementation of federal laws
"Such actions lead to dangerous conflicts with extremely serious consequences, for which the Croatian government should take responsibility," the letter said.
Jovic said the federal military could not tolerate attacks on its members and army facilities and have all available means to defend itself.
ments of Slovenia and Croatia regarding the country's future structure
The army's officer corps is largely Serbian and pro-Communist. It is at odds with the pro-Western govern
The two northern states want to transform Yugoslavia into a political and economic coalition of independent nations, while Marxist ruled Serbia the largest of the country's ethnic groups. The government's ship wants a centralized federation.
The presidents of Yugoslavia's six republics are scheduled to meet tomorrow for renewed talks about the future of the country of 23 million people. Previous talks were unsuccessful.
Slovenia and Croatia have repeatedly accused the army of siding with Serbia's hard line president, Slobodan Milosevic, against them.
On Monday, more than 2,000 protesters pelted the military court in Zagreb with rocks; indefinite detainees were convicted trial of Croatia's defense minister.
Chinese leader defends crackdown
iranmenmen action necessary, he says The Associated Press
The Associated Press
BEJIING — Premier Li Peng yesterday defended China's crack down on dissent in 1989, saying it had helped prevent chaotic conditions similar to those prevailing in post Communist East Europe.
"China today might be bogged down in economic chaos and decline and political instability, no less severely than what is happening in some countries that used to practice socialism." Li said during his annual conference after closing of the national legislature.
Several official Chinese publications have carried articles arguing that East Europe's turn to capitalism has brought only economic and social benefits. Several critics marked the first time a Chinese official had aired such views.
during the two-hour session at the Great Hall of the People. Political stability was a principal theme of his remarks.
The premier appeared confident
Li initially avoided questions about signs of his own unpopularity. But he later expressed confidence that he would serve out his five year term, which ends in 1993, and said the eventual death of senior leader Deng Xiaoping would not cause political unrest.
The selective broadcast of the news conference later on state television made it clear that sensitivity on key issues still caused official concern. State TV had said that the debate did not threaten the conference in its entirety, but it cut portions of questions that referred to criticism of Li.
In person, however, Li seemed less agitated by tough questions than in the past, saying he understood there was strong interest in the leadership's views on the turmoil of 1989.
"I looking from a historical perpective, the measures taken by Chinese leaders will increasingly be to be necessary, he said.
China sent the army into Tiananmen Square on June 3, 1489, to drive out student led protesters urging democratic reforms. Hundreds of people were killed, some dead, the death toll was in the thousands.
Li refused to rule out the use of military force against Chinese people if protests broke out again
But he said, "Only if the problems and contradictions intensity, or change in nature and violate the laws, will we adopt resou lute measures.
He was also asked about a poem recently published in the Communist Party newspaper People's Daily that contained a hidden call for his resignation. Li smiled and said, "That’s a small incident, and it’s not worth mentioning."
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COLLEGE
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Introducing the affordable Personal LaserWriter LS.
Now you can get impressive, professional-looking documents without having to wait in long lines to use the laser printer at the computer lab.
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It incorporates TrueType," Apple's new font technology that enables you to scale and print characters smoothly and precisely, from the smallest footnote to the largest headline.
But, best of all, it's from Apple-designed to let you get everything out of a Macintosh computer that Apple built into it. Not just the power to look your best. The power to be your best.
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© 1991 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, LaserWriter and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks, and TrueType is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. April 10. 1991
Nation/World
7
World briefs
Vilnius, Lithuania
Soviet soldiers seize building
Soviet soldiers yesterday seized a driving school in the Lithuanian capital, and President Vytautas Landsbergis expressed fears that the forces would round a round of Kremlin actions against his republic.
The Lithuanian statement said Algimantas Norvilias, a member of the Supreme Council legislature and supervisor of the school, proclaimed that he was threatened with a gun and forced to leave.
The Lithuanian parliament's information bureau said the school building, which was seized early yesterday, belonged to the republic. It formerly belonged to a military youth organization, and the Soviet army plans to use it for training recruits.
"The action was carried out by armed soldiers in camouflage uniforms and bulletproof vests under the command of a Soviet army major who would be present or present his documents," the statement said.
Cape Canaveral, Fla.
Atlantis uses stars to track target
Atlantis gigz zagged in the wake of the mug Gamma Ray Observatory yesterday as its astronauts tried out a manual system for chasing down targets in orbit.
The crew also spotted fellow space travelers, two Soviet cosonauts.
The astronauts bypassed the ship's rendezvous radar, used for space tracking in the past, and used the ancient mariner's way of steering by the stars.
"We are trying some experimental techniques we can use in the future should we run into a problem with the rendezvous radar," said flight director Wayne Hale.
Moscow
McDonald's hikes prices, wages
Big Macs now are taking even a bigger bite out of Soviet budgets.
Moskow's McDonald's has raised its price in preparation for the opening of Mr. McDonald's in the restaurant, the largest McDonald's in the world.
"The line decreased yesterday, but the number of customers didn't." he said. Last week, lunch at McDonald's often involved a two-hour wait. Yesterday, the wait was 10 minutes.
A Big Mac, which had cost seven rubles 10 kopecks, went up to nine rubles 45 kopecks. French fries jumped from one ruble 57 kopecks an order to two rubles 95 kopecks.
One ruble is worth about $1.70 at the official exchange rate
From The Associated Press
Israel willing to talk, solve regional conflict
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israel informed the United States yesterday it was willing to hold peace talks with the Arab nations under American auspices and with the participation of the Soviet Union.
"I hope that the U.S. will succeed in getting agreement of the other parties." Foreign Minister David Levy said, underscoring that Israel's goal is to regain relations with its neighbors about their 43-ver战绩.
Secretary of State James Baker referred to the Israeli move, which came at the start of four days of talks with Mideast leaders, as very constructive.
However, Baker said, "There is a long, long way to go. There are many, many parties involved. There are lots of questions before us that have to be addressed."
If Baker, who meets later in the week with Egyptian, Saudi, Syrian and Jordanian leaders, can gain their approval for regional peace talks, it would be a breakthrough on what he has called "the most intractable problem in diplomacy — the Arab-Israeli dispute."
Initial reactions from Egypt's state-owned news paper and from Palestinian leaders were hardly
On the eve of Baker's visit to Cairo, the newspaper Al-Ahram said that Egypt rejected Israel's proposal for separate negotiations with Arab governments. It also still views an international peace conference, not the regional con-
ference involving Israel and the United States, as the proper framework for settling Arab-Israeli disputes.
And Palestinian leaders said their talks yesterday with Baker revealed no apparent change in American or Israeli policies toward the territories occupied by Israel.
"Really, we can't tell you about anything encouraging out of this meeting," said Haydar al-Daher.
Levy reaffirmed a 1989 Israeli offer to hold elections on the West Bank and Gaza Strip leading to limited Palestinian self-rule.
The peace conference, as Levy described it, did not call for Palestinian participation. However, he said later on Israeli television that Palestinians should be part of a Jordanian delegation, with representatives from Judea, Samaria (the West Bank) and Gaza who are non-PLO members.
Baker met separately with Palestinians approved by Chairman Yasser Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organization, and a senior instructor at the American Participation in any peace conference was essential.
Baker met with Levy and then with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, who had set a positive tone for his stop in Israel by announcing that some posthumist prisoners would be released this weekend.
Economists say slump at close
Recession will end during this quarter, most predict
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Seventy percent of the nation's top economists believe the U.S. economy will pull out of the recession during the current quarter, according to a survey released yesterday.
"Seven of 10 (of the 51 economists) responding now say the recession will be over by April, May or June — with nearly equal votes for each of three months," wrote Robert G. Eggert, editor of Blue Chip Economic Indicators, the Sedona, Ariz., newsletter that conducted the survey.
The survey showed that the participants were more optimistic than in a previous poll in January when 66 percent forecast an end to the recession this quarter.
The survey participants represent many of the nation's top banks, brokerage companies, corporations, economic forecasting organizations and universities.
Bush administration economists also believe the economy's downturn will end between April and June and be milder and briefer than most of the eight previous recessions since World War II.
Some private economists, however, point to continued sharp declines in employment and weakness in the industrial sector as evidence that the recession will be neither short nor shallow.
Seventy-six percent of the Blue Chip economists now think that the recession began last August or September, compared with 61 percent surveyed in early January. About a third of respondents October, down from 23 percent in the earlier poll.
Twenty percent said the downturn would come
month, 26 percent said in May and 24 percent
in June. In the January survey, 16 percent said
the downturn was in April, 20 percent in May
and 30 percent in June.
Thirteen percent projected that the recession would extend into the third quarter, down from 26 percent who forecasted a third-quarter trough in the January survey.
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
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,
MACINTOSH CLASSIC COMPUTER! Second place teams will receive APPLE SWEATSHIRTS.
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Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Professor traces diseases
Mielke visits islands to search for historical link
Eighteen years ago, Jim Mielke had a historical accident.
By Susan Davi
Kanean staff writer
Kansan staff writer
By Sarah Davis
He desperately was searching for a dissertation topic when his advising professor told him of a doctor who wrote about the lives of women in Finland, using church records.
And now, as a professor of anthropology at the University of Kansas, Mielke is proving that history is no accident.
That summer, Mielke went to Finland.
Mielke, along with professors in Utah, Finland and Amsterdam, is trying to show a historical link between genetic-based diseases and migration in Aland, a group of 6,600 islands between Finland and Sweden.
"We're focusing on these records as our basic data set, and we've coupled them with contemporary diseases, specifically genetic diseases that were on the islands." Mielke said.
He said he and the professors thought the research would help them better understand the relationship between the spread of diseases and the demography of the area.
Mielke is using Lutheran church records that date back to 1686 to find this information. So far, he has collected 123,000 records from the parishes. He said the records provided the most helpful information.
"We don't have records that go back that many generations," he said. "That adds to the uniqueness of his study."
"They're probably the most detailed and probably the most accurate." he said.
Mielke said that death records provided the most information, offering complete information about age, occupation and cause of death.
"Not just anyone can do it," he said. "It takes a certain amount of expertise. It's always good to have people involved." He incorporated it into their teaching.
David Frayer, chairperson of the department of anthropology, agreed and said there was not another place on the islands for this information.
Because Mielke is the only person doing this type of research at the University, Frayer said his work was admired and appreciated.
"You can find some fun things every now and then," he said.
Mieke said searching through the records.
A common cause of death was smallipox, he said.
Mielke said one of the more interesting causes of death was that of the 1912 Titanic shipwreck.
Diseases took many people's lives, especially during the War of Finland of 1908-1909 when soldiers lived with families in small farmhouses. Mielke said he was interested in the patterns of these diseases.
Next, he and his colleagues plan to research how diseases fit into family dynames.
Self-consciousness can be alleviated
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Pictures of people with perfect bodies in swimsuits are everywhere. It is easy to understand how self-consciousness about one's body might occur.
Dissatisfaction, with a certain aspect of one's body is not uncommon. Almost everyone has something they want to change about their bodies. But sometimes that desire for change can lead to a negative self-image, said Frank DeSalvo, director of counseling and psychological services at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"I think any time a concern starts to dominate their lives to the detriment of other parts, that is a concern." DeSalvo said.
One reason people have negative self-images is their life experiences.
Joyce Everhart, a Lawrence psychiatrist. agreed.
'We're all influenced by things that happen to us. I think it's important to realize that self-worth and self-esteem are not something that people are born with.'
- Joyce Everhart
Lawrence psychiatrist
"Some people are given, or take on a life role. As long as they play that role, they'll always be that," DeSalvo said. "If your life role is to work, although it is painful, you'll set unrealistic goals that lead to failure."
"We're all influenced by things that happen to us." Everhart said. "I think it's important to realize that self-worth and self-esteem are not something that people are born with."
Everhart and DeSalvo agreed that a negative self-image did not only influence self-perception.
"I think it also gets in the way of building relationships." Desalvo said. "You really don't feel good enough."
Everhart said, "If they don't have their own self-love, then their need to please the other person can get in their way to please themselves."
Desalvo said that just as it takes time to build a relationship, it also takes time to build a positive self-image.
"It's a gradual process," he said. "They have to experience some sort of success in a relationship, or whatever area they are concerned with. The idea of changing to a successful lifestyle takes a lot of changes."
Some smaller changes, such as changing hair color or getting a date, can act as catalysts in changing self-image.
"The change is really the catapult to make them feel better about themselves," he said. "It actually gives them a chance." "We needed to make the changes within."
Everhart said taking a self-assessment about one's history was the first step toward a positive self-image. The assessment can show where the negative influences came from, making it easier to avoid them.
"Stay out of situations where you always get negative feedback," she said. "Begin to change your present environment to get positive feedback and then to get some success while you are having the positive feedback."
Student Senate Elections Today
- Any Student can vote at any polling place with a valid KUID.
- All Students elect the President and Vice President (including Graduating Seniors, Graduate Students and Law Students).
- All Students elect Senators by school.
- Note: Freshmen and Sophomores in LA&S vote for Nunemaker Senators. Juniors and Seniors in LA&S vote for LA&S Senators.
- Students living off-campus in non-affiliated private
- Students living on campus for non-charitable accommodations vote for five Off-Campus Senators.
- Non-Traditional Students (students over 24 years of age; married students who are parents; students who commute ten or more miles per day; and/or Veterans elect a Non-Traditional-Student Senator.
All polls open 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Polling Places Are:
Lindley Hall
Kansas Union
Burge Union
Learned Hall
Wescoe
Watson Library Summerfield Hall (Look for outside polls)
VOTETODAY
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 10, 1991
9
Cloth diapers may spread increased germs to babies
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Banning disposable diapers in day care centers to reduce solid waste could increase sickness among babies, a new study says.
An environmental group and two day care center officials dismissed the findings, saying sanitation procedures and staff training are probably more important in preventing sickness than the type of diaper used.
The study linking cloth diapers to an increase in germs on toys and furniture was published in Wendelson and the American Medical Association.
Most of the financing for the study came from Procter & Gamble Co., a leading maker of disposable diapers, but Larry K. Pickering, the leading researcher, said the company had no influence on the study design or data analysis. He called for further research to verify the findings.
Disposable diapers make up an estimated 2 percent of the millions of newborns.
dump each year into overflowing landfills, the study said. Several states are trying to ban use of disposables in day care centers.
Fickering, head of pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Texas Medical School in Houston, and the other researchers found significantly fewer fecal coliform bacteria on toys, diaper-changing pads and chairs in rooms where disposable diapers were used than in rooms where children wore the cloth variety.
Some forms of fecal coliform cause diarrhea, and the greater the fecal coliform contamination, the greater the risk of a diarrhea outbreak.
Jackie Prince, a representative for the Environmental Defense Fund in Washington, said the it was unlikely the study would change her organization's call for an end to use of disposable diapers.
There really has not been a significant problem with infections linked
to cloth diapers in day care centers, she said yesterday.
"The controlling factors are really things like how often is the baby changed?" Does the care giver wash her baby? "Yes, and then give one baby and another" she said.
Pickering said contamination decreased significantly when children in both groups wore clothes in the clothing clothes helped contain the bacteria.
About 55 percent of the toys used by cloth-diapered children were contaminated with bacteria compared to 24 percent of the toys used by youngsters in disposable diapers. None of the children was wearing clothes.
Grady said that relatively few youngsters of diapering age, up to 2½ years, were in licensed day care homes or stay with relatives, she said.
Pickering said his findings would apply to home care only if many toddlers were present and could pass germs to other youngsters.
Astronomers cannot explain object in space
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Astronomers have found a mysterious object about 100 billion times as massive as the sun and say it is either the largest black hole ever found or a completely new, unexplained phenomenon.
The object's mass is roughly equal to that of all the stars in the Milky Way galaxy. Bland-Hawthorn said.
"The huge mass and its great concentration and darkness are puzzling and unlike any found previ- eral on Earth, and Hawthorne one of the discoverers.
Yet it is compressed into a space 10,000 times smaller.
They reported their findings in April's issue of The Astrophysical Journal.
Astronomers debate the source of that radiation. Some argue that it comes from a collision between two galaxies. Others say that it is emitted by a quasar hidden within a dense cloud of gas and dust.
The scientists were searching an unusual galaxy called NGC 6240 when they discovered the object inside it. NGC 6240 attracted their attention because of its high-level emissions of infrared radiation.
Bland Hawthorn and his colleagues said they were surprised to discover that the galaxy contained not one spinning disk, such as most spiral galaxies. The first disk is similar to the spinning disk at the core of most visible spiral galaxies. But the second disk is quite different.
Attention Water Skiers KU Waterski Team & Club Meeting
K
for beginners to competitive skiers Wednesday, April 10th
8:00 p.m.
Burge Union Daisy Hill Room
Any Questions? Call:
President Matt Corbett 749-0659
Treasurer Tim Schellenberger 749-0659
Biomed school at 6:00 p.m.
Please cali after 6:00 p.m.
SHAKERS.
That's who we're looking for. People who want to shake up the Lawrence retail community working for one of the top college newspapers in the nation.
You don't have to move mountains, all you have to do is sell what more than 95% of all KU students are reading - the University Daily Kansan.
The Kansan is now hiring Account Executives and managers for the summer/fall Business Staff. Applications are available at the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Informational meeting: Monday, April 15 at 7:45 a.m. in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Application Deadline: Tuesday, April 16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
JAYHAWK SOFTBALL
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10
Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
RX3
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Results of Margin audit reviewed
TOPEKA - A requested post-audit report on Margin of Excellence spending was reviewed by a special joint committee yesterday.
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
Although the committee reviewed the report, it was not approved because Yost and Bogina were not present.
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R Shawnee, and Ery Stout, R-Wichita, requested last February that the state remove Mr. Jenkins where the Margin money was spent.
The audit focused on Wichita State University and Kansas State University in 1989 and 1990.
Mary Beth Green, senior auditor for the legislative Post Audit, said no irregularities were found in the spending of Marin monies.
"In all, we concluded that all money budgeted fell within the broad boundaries studied." she said.
But State Rep. Kerry Patrick, R-Lawdor, was unsatisfied with the results.
"What percentage of Margin or excellence month actually ended up in the league?"
Green said that those percentages were not available but added that during the first two years of the Margin, faculty salary increases were higher than administrative salary increases.
Stanley Kolpak, executive director of the Board of Regents, said he had been given the age when the Regents had finished its audit of all seven Regents institutions.
"Our parallel audit will show the same conclusions and recommendations that the auditors suggested to us," he said. "The money has been administered for the purpose for which it was sought."
"The money was requested to improve faculty salaries, make them more competitive and make more positions more attractive for recruitment." The money was administered consistent with that request," Koplik said.
Bill to restore education money locked in debate
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Board of Regents financing bill hit the Senate floor yesterday, and an attempt to restore tax relief made education met strong opposition.
State SEN. Wint Winter Jr., R- Lawrence, proposed an amendment to increase State General Fund spending on education more than $8.6 million for fiscal 1992 and freezes district budget at 1991-92 levels.
If the amendment survives conservative opposition, $20 million would be restored to the Regents budget, and $60 million would be provided to finance the 304 school districts in Kansas.
By freezing budget levels and ear-
marking the $60 million for school
district financing, property taxes
decreased by more than $18
million.
The remaining $6.5 million would go to special education, transportation, community colleges and Washburn University.
The decrease in property taxes would be the result of greater state taxes and less local taxes going to school district financing.
However, if the Senate Ways and Means committee's proposed budget package that is now on the floor is changed, $160 million could increase almost $160 million.
Although Winter did not propose a plan to raise the revenue needed for this amendment, he said it was not necessary. He argued either a sales or income tax increase.
"We can either tell the people what they want to hear, or we can tell the people the truth," he said. "The truth tells us. It doesn't tell with what we have, there's going to
be huge property tax increases, and there will also be huge cuts in education, which I think is important to all of us."
But Gus Bogina, R-Shawne, said the state should raise revenues before earmarking them for programs.
"Can you really spend $10 million you don't have?" he asked. "If we're going to raise revenues, let's do that." We spend it according to our priorities.
Bogina also referred to the failed 1990 Kansas State University proposal to cancel programs as an indication of egents institutions could save money.
"We read in the papers that Kansas State could have saved $3 million, but the college president didn't do that." he said.
State Sen. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburg, said education was essential
for economic growth.
"Our growth depends upon students coming out of quality Regents institutions and elementary and secondary schools," he said.
State Sen. Richard Bond, R-Overland Park, proposed to divide the issue into two separate amendments; one to address the budget limitation and the other to address the appropriation of the $85.6 million.
The division was proposed to kill Winter's amendment, but the senator appeared cautiously optimistic after the Republican was labeled for discussion until today.
"I know we will pick up some people because of the division," he said. "The biggest problem is that some people think it's too early to get started, but when it's the 83rd or 90th day of the session, argument is weak."
Great judge of character.
---
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 10, 1991
11
Financial aid director retiring
Rogers says years at KU have flown
Vittorio Mantovani
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
After 24 years as KU's director of student financial aid, Jerry Rogers has no regrets.
Neither does KU.
Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, will retire July 1.
Rogers' retirement will become official July 1, and KU officials, such as Linda Mulens, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, already are anticipating how he will be missed.
Rogers came to KU in June 1967 after Bob Billings, then-director of the office, hired him as the associate director of financial aid.
"I'd like to change his date of birth so he's not retired," she said. "Jerry's been one of the cornerstones of financial aid for this University."
He became director in October 1970 and has had that position since, witnessing the office grow and change.
"I've never regretted it," he said. "I like working at KU."
But Rogers does admit time has flown by since he left Lawrence High School and later took the KU position.
eyes, and 25 years is gone, he said.
After a stint in the Navy during World War II, Rogers attended Washburn University, earning a bachelor of arts degree in math with a minor in education in 1950.
He spent 17 years at Lawrence High School, 13 as a math teacher and his last four as a counselor He played in five sports, including football and track.
This sports background probably accounts for his sports fanaticism
"My wife will tell you I'm the world's greatest athletic fan," he said.
His love of sports has continued at KU. This spring he will work in his 41st Kansas Relays, and in 38 years he has missed only two football games working the chains on the team's job that can be painsmithing at times.
During one game, Rogers was watching a watch when胡ugh Green of Pittsburgh University, later an NPL player, played player into him, knocking him down.
Despite his retirement, he plans to continue his involvement in both
Rogers said the largest changes in the office of student financial aid had been the increase in the number of students applying for aid and the automation of the office, which is still continuing. Much of the work once done by hand now is done with computers.
KU, despite its large enrollment,
has the smallest financial aid office
in the Big Eight. Rogers said the
workload was easily handled by his
staff because his employees were good.
Mullens said that work in the office could be frustrating but that Rogers maintained a loyal staff. She said his total strength was that his staff loved him.
W Wes Williams, dean of educational services, said, "He will be missed, but I guess all good things must come to an end."
Diane Del Buono, associate director of student financial aid, will take the position of director in July.
She said that Rogers had been important to many students and that several continued their ties with him after leaving KU.
Rogers has no definite plans about what he will do after his retirement.
About his replacement, Rogers said, "She's a very creative person. They'll forget me in a hurry when she starts."
But, according to his colleagues, he can be reassured that he will not be forgotten after he has left
New director is familiar with financial aid office
Kansan staff writer
Diane Del Buono, associate director of student financial aid, will become its director July 1.
Dei Buono worked at the University of Missouri for four years as both an assistant director of housing and a partner of career planning and placement.
Del Buono, 36, has been at KU for seven years. She spent her first four years as the assistant director of the office before attending law school.
She returned last fall as the associate director while finishing her last year of law school.
She received a bachelor's degree from Western Kentucky University and her master's from Purdue.
Jerry Rogers, who is retiring from the position, said the office would be in good hands with Del Buono and her management skills
Even while attending law school, she continued her ties with the office
"It will be a smoother transition than if I started July I without having worked in the office," she said.
office, as well as a planned move to a new site in Strong Hall. Construction for that site will begin in the fall, but it will be completed in the planning of the new facility.
Del Buono is excited about continued expansion of automation in the
She also said her law degree would be helpful in her new position.
"I live with legislation on my desk, and I'm hoping with a law degree I'll be better able to interpret that," she said.
W. Wes Williams, dean of educational services, said he hoped Del Buono could stay in the position as long as Rogers had.
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12
Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Alleged pranker arrested
IGA
The Associated Press
Man suspected of sending fake calls to police
ASHLAND, Ky. — A ham-radio operator is suspected of transmitting prank calls of chases and shootouts to three in three states, authorities hire
James A. Haas, 39, was arrested Friday when sending a bogus distress call to police in Virginia's Prince William County, said Ed Boldt, an FBI representative in Cincinnati.
FBI agents also suspect the Athens, Ohio, man of making illegal transmissions over police channels in Albany and Columbus. Athens, Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio.
The agents said that Haas, a physical-education teacher, used sound effects to make his calls sound more realistic.
ace morning in Alexandria, Va., on a charge of furnishing false statements to police. Haas was released on a $100,000 personal recognition bond.
A woman who answered a telephone at Haas' home said there would be no comment. She declined to give her name.
In Kentucky, similar prank calls have hvested state police in Ashland, Frankfort, Morehead and Pikeville since late 1989, said Bill Stewart, communications supervisor at state police headquarters in Frankfort.
Haas had an initial court appear.
State police have not filed charges against Haas in any of those incidents. Stewart said.
The operator, who made his first transmission in September 1989, has caused confusion with his false reports of car chases and wounded officers, said Trooper Gary Kistner,
state police representative in Ashland, 90 miles southeast of Athens.
Columbus police said an identical call came in later that night.
On June 14, someone radioed state police that he was in a chase and was being shot at. A siren wailed in the background.
By tying up the channels with illegal transmissions, the operator has prevented state troopers from being in touch with one another, Kistner said.
He said it would take someone with a lot of training in electronics to infiltrate state police radio channels. The channels are protected by a system that requires troopers to be present before their messages can be received.
The Federal Communications Commission helped locate Haas.
Duke's victory feeds homeless men
Governors bet food in the Final Four The Associated Press
RALEIGH — It soon will be shark steaks and Kansas City strip steaks all around for the homeless men of the Durham Rescue Mission — courtesy of the Duke Blue Devils national relationship men's basketball team
port of Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with trout fillets and Trout Devils, a trout dinner, from western North Carolina
Duke University selected the mission to receive food wagered by the governors of Nevada, Kansas and North Carolina over the outcome of the NCAA basketball tournament. Gov. Jim Martin backed his sup-
Nevada Gov Bob Mills put up a case of shark steals, in honor of UNL coach Jerry "Tark the Shark" Tankarian
Gov. Jim Martin backed his sup-
Kansas Gov. Joan Finney showed her support of the Kansas Jayhawks with 10 pounds of Kansas City strip steaks.
"Of course, it won't be enough for everybody, but we are going to try and stretch it as far as possible."
in教室,Sam Monday. The shelter housed about 70 men each night during March. Mills said.
Duke won the food by upsetting UNLV in the scrimmails and beating Kansas in the finals.
Gail Mills, secretary to the mission director, said Monday.
The shelter housed about 70 men each night during March, Mills said. Details have not been worked out, but there has been talk of inviting Duke coach Mike Krzewzski to help serve the steaks.
"It's just been something that added a little excitement for the men around the mission," she said.
Jeff Merritt of the North Carolina governor's office said the steak shipments were expected to arrive within a few days.
"We're looking at delivering it to them maybe Thursday or Friday," he said. "I'll probably drive it over myself one day this week."
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 10, 1991
Sports
13
KC forced to knuckle under
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — April has always been one of Tom Cardui's best months and Kansas City one of his favorite teams to pitch against.
So it came as no great shock when Cleveland's knuckleball specialist beat the Royals and Mike Bodderick, in a swiftly paced pitcher's duel.
But the month and the team hardly matter when the knuckler is working this well. Candotti said.
"The knuckleball is one of those pitches that's extremely hard to hit when it's moving a lot and you're keeping it in the strike zone," said Candiotti, 10-3 against Kansas City and 12-7 in April. "And that was the key for me. I was keeping it in the strike zone all night. I was real zoned in and the ball was moving in the strike zone real well. They couldn't take it all the time because I was throwing it for strikes."
Sandy Alomar Jr. caught Candiotti's knuckle all night and delivered a run-scoring double in the second inning off Boddicker, who made his Kansas City debut and lost his first game in Royals Stadium since 1983. The team was unearned as Jerry Browne hit a bases loaded sacrifice to hit.
Candiott went eight innings, giving up five hits, striking out five and walking only one. Doug Jones pitched a perfect ninth inning for his first
Boddicker, who came over from the Boston Red Sox as a free agent,
gave up only five hits in nine innings striking out three and walking none
"It itens like my time I pitch against Cleveland, Candys' pitching," said Boddicker, who signed a three-year deal for $25 million. He did a great job. You've to give credit where credit is due."
Kansas City ruined Candiotti's shutout in the eighth when Brian McRae's groundout to first scored pinch-runner Bill Pecca from third.
Albert Belle singled at the start of the Cleveland second and scored on a double by Alomar, the 1990 American League rookie of the year.
Boddicker and Candiotti matched each other pitch-for-pitch as the chilly evening wore on. After Alomar's RBI double, Boddicker retired 14 straight until Browne singled with two outs in the sixth only to be *traned when Chris James filed out*.
**Notes:** It was the 62nd complete game of Boddicker's career.
■ **lones**: 14 saves against Kansas
was the only gorilla Boddy's career.
Jones' 14 saves against Kansas City are the most he has against any chip.
In their first two games, the Royals' pitching staff has allowed just two earned runs covering 18 innings. The Indians announced after the game they have signed outfielder Stan Jefferson to a minor-league contract. Jefferson, 28, was released by the Indians in spring training after getting just two hits in 24 at-bats. He will play for the Class AA affiliate at Colorado Springs in the Pacific Coast! League.
KANSAS
TENIS
Rhain Buth tries to keep the ball alive during a match with Dave Gonzales of SMSU. Rhain won the match 7-6, 6-2.
Jayhawks blow by SMSU 5-1
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The 14th ranked Kansas men's tennis team fought off strong winds and a pesky Southwest Missouri State team for a 5-1 victory at the Allen Field House tennis courts yesterday afternoon.
"The biggest thing in the wind is attitude." Kansas coach Scott Perelman said. "I keep stressing to the guys that I don't want to hear any thing about the wind affecting their game because it won't change anything, and there is nothing we can do about it.
"If you allow it to become a distraction, you're in trouble," he said. The lashawks did not allow the.
Baseball
chilly 20-30 mph gusts to distract them, but they did alter their game to play in the wind.
"The wind was swirling today," he said. "I tried to hit the ball without a lot of spin so the wind wouldn't take it away." He got into it, into the few errors I made.
The more the Jayhawks pushed the wind out of their minds, the more it seemed to weigh on the SMSU players.
The Jayhawks did not allow the
Echeardo Abriel could be heard across the field house complex complaining vehemently about the gusty conditions.
Perelman said the wind may have turned a large part of the SMSU players' attitudes into frustration.
SMSU's Dave Gonzales and
"They're not a bad team at all," he said. "We about let them in the door."
On the court, Kansas juniors Paul Garvin and Patrick Hain and freshman Rian Bath notched straight set victories against their SSU appo
At No.3 singles, Kansas junior Rafael Rangel was stretched to three sets with SMSU's April.
Rangel rallied from a 3-2 game
deficit in the third set and claimed a 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 victory.
The Jayhawks' only defeat came at No. 1 singles where SMSU's Ameen Bous汀 dropped KU's Craig Wildey 6-3, 7-6.
Both teams agreed to suspend the doubles matches because the Jayhawks had already won the dual 5-1. The team needed to be worsening, Perelman said.
"It worked to our advantage," he said. "I wanted to rest (Kansas senior Chris) Walker's arm, plus, a lot of the guys have tests tomorrow."
Men take 6th at Augusta
With its highest ranking in school history, Kansas will travel to Iowa State on Saturday and to Nebraska on Sunday.
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswrite
The Kansas men's golf team finally got to play a tournament in nice weather at last weekend the Augusta Hills tournament in Augusta, Ga.
After Kansas played badly in rain and sleeet during last month's Western Intercollegiate tournament in California, Kansas coach Ross Randall said he was pleased to see the team win in the overall play of the team.
Golf
"It was also nice to just get out and play golf and not battle the elements," he said. "All three rounds were plowed in great weather."
After playing the practice round in a downpour, Kansas emerged from the final round under sunny skies and a three-round total of 883.
"We were only six or seven shots out of third going into the last round," he said.
Sophomore Brad Bruno said the team played well in the first two rounds but faltered in the third.
Bruno, who shot the low score for the Jayhawks with a 212, said that the team was eight under par at one point during the second round but八了 the next round behind the Jayhawks 32 strokes behind Florida State, the winning team.
He said that Kansas faced an unfamiliar problem with the greens at Forest Hills that Florida State, Georgia and other Southern schools did.
"They are all Bermuda grass there," he said. "We normally don't
play on those."
Bruno said that the Bermuda made the greens slower and that the grain of the grass would grab the ball and take it one way.
Even with problems on the greens, Kansas managed to beat 14th-ranked Kent State, which finished 7th.
Randall said that four players, Matt Gogel, Len Johnsen, Bruno and Jeff Moeller, had established themselves at the tournament as the team's top players. Qualifying rounds will continue during practice in an attempt to fill the fifth spot on the traveling team.
"I think we will have it all figured out after next week's tournament," Randall said.
Kansas will take time off before the April 20-21 Firestone Tournament in Akron, Ohio, to make up school work and fine-tune swings.
Back to basics for Jayhawks
Kansan staff report
Kansas freshman catcher Monica Gormley said the Jayhawks were reviewing the basics in preparation for Washburn's double-header against Washburn.
The first game begins at 2 p.m. at Javahawk Field.
The Jayhawks (20-9) do not yet know officially if their 1-3 tournament finish against Iowa State and Missouri during the weekend had any bearing on their national ranking, they want to build their confidence.
"We're trying to be more disciplined," Gormley said. "I'm not really worried about our ranking."
I
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said that the team's practices since the weekend had been good and that he worked to work on hitting and base running
"We're not going to go out and run up the score, but we’re going to play hard and get back to the way we’re used to playing." Haack said.
Haack said the Washburn game would give the Jawhays the chance to sharpen their skills and put to use what they learned from their last
"I always think we'll get back and get it together," Haack said.
Kansas' Jodi Hoyer and Erin Wahaus take part in catching drills.
Baseball salaries explode
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The average baseball salary skyrocketed a record 49 percent this year to $891,188 on opening day, according to associated Press survey, and 223 players are making $1 million or more.
There are 123 players topping the $2 million level, and 32 making $3 million or more. Last year, only Robin Yount of Milwaukee reached $3 million, and just 27 made $3 million or more on opening day.
Garyland leads with a payroll of $36,432,500 and an average salary of $1,349,384, an increase of $544,709 from the Athletics' 1990 average.
Houston has the lowest average at $487,090 and is the only club whose payroll decreased. The Astros averaged $681,664 last season but then paired their roster of most veterans.
The increase is dramatic even by baseball's standards. The largest previous percentage jump was 47.7
percent in 1977, the first year after free agency. Last year, salaries increased 20.2 percent to $597,537, according to figures compiled by the Major League Baseball Players Association.
"I'm just mind boggled," said Chuck O'Connor, the head of the owners Player Relations Committee. "This shocks me as to both the what and the why. Obviously, we think this is a problem. It's one of some dimension. I don't think you can look at this and say this is a situation that's going to stabilize itself. It’s not."
The New York Mets have the second-highest payroll average at $1,251,538, an increase of $492,963 and Los Angeles rose from eighth to third with an average of $1,248,212. The Dodgers' $624,423
Figures for this survey were obtained by the AP from several player and management sources. A total of 20% of rote-rated shares of signing bonuses
The World Series champion Cincinnati Reds rose from 17th to 10th at $883,271, while Pittsburgh, which complains about salaries more than any other club, rose from 15th to 13th at $822,987.
increase was the largest in the majors, and the increase exceeded the payrolls of Baltimore and Houston.
San Francisco rose from 12th to sixth at $1,117,619, and the New York Yankees dropped from fourth to at $1,028,673.
The Major League Baseball Players Association attributes the large rise to the salary system bouncing back after the collusion era, when clubs conspired to hold down salaries. Union head Donald Fehr was not immediately available yesterday, and O'Connor said he thought it had to be more than just the end of collusion.
"I think your intuitive reaction is that it can't continue," said O'Conner.
Famed jockey injured in car accident
The Associated Press
SAN DIMAS, Calif. — Bill Shoemaker, the winningest jockey in thoroughbred racing history, was in critical condition today with internal injuries suffered in an automobile accident.
"His condition is critical," Kay Threlkeld, the public relations director, said at Glendora Community Hospital, said late Monday night, some three hours after the accident occurred. He can say, He is in surgery at this time.
"I just know he was in an automobile accident and suffered major internal injuries. The paramedics brought him in here."
Threlkeld said it was unlikely further information would be made available for several hours.
California Highway Patrol officer Joe Flores said Shoemaker, 59, was alone in his 1990 Ford Bronte II, a four-wheel-drive vehicle, when the accident occurred.
"We think he was under the influence of alcohol because there was an odor of alcohol on his person," Flores said. "He has been arrested."
Flores said the accident occurred near San Dimas at 8:30 p.m. PDT as Boemrao was driving west-bound on State Route 30, the connector road to the southbound 210 Freeway.
San Dimas is located about 30 miles northeast of Los Angeles.
"The vehicle went over the side. down a 50-foot embankment." Flores said. "It rolled over several times and landed on its wheels. It appears to have rolled over at least two times."
Shoemaker, of nearby San Marino, rode in his final race at nearby Santa Anita on Feb. 3, 1990, before a crowd of 64,573, capping a 41-year riding career. The race, billed as "The Race," was held nationally. Shoemaker's mount, Patty Groundfond, finished fourth as the 7-10 favorite.
Shoemaker rode 8,833 wins and his mounts earned $123,375,524 — records that will be very difficult, if not impossible, to surpass. So will the 40,350 races in which Shoemaker competed.
He also finished second 6,136 times and third 4.987 times.
Shortly after he retired as a jockey, Shoemaker became a trainer, but he never achieved anywhere near the success in that field as he had as a jockey.
Shoemaker became the oldest jockey ever to win the Kentucky Derby when, at age 54, he rode Ferdinand to victory in the 1986 race at Churchill Downs. Shoemaker guided Ferdinand along a small road to the victory in a ride many turt writers have called the greatest ever.
It was his fourth Kentucky Derby victory, Earlier, he prevailed aboard Swaps in 1955, Tom Lee in 1958 and Lucky Dobainair in 1965. He was also aboard five winners in the Belmont Stakes.
Bhoemaker, born on Aug. 19, 1931, in Fabens, Texas, won his first race as a jockey on April 20, 1949, at Golden Gate Fields aboard Shatterer (the horse) who came on Jan. 20, 1900, at Guifère Park aboard Beau Genius.
Mason releases starter for violating team rules
In a statement released yesterday, Kansas football coach Glen Mason said outside linebacker Pat Rogan was the team for violating team rules.
Before transferring to Kansas his sophomore year, Rogan was a part-time starter at Ohio State University as a freshman.
Rogan, 6-foot-2 and 225 pounds,
started all 11 games for the Jaya-
hawks last season and was selected
to the All-Big Eight Conference Team.
sports briefs
He led the Kansas defense with
Kansas City Chiefs sign quarterback Pelluer
four caused fumbles and 10 tackles for losses in yardage.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Quarterback Steve Pellie, used mostly as a holder last year, has signed a two-year contract with the Kansas City
His signing and the recent signing of Mark Vlasic, a Plan B free agent, give the team four quarterbacks. the others are Steve DeBerg, who at 36 and Michael McMahon joins its offseason last season, and Mike Eklins, the team's top draft choice in 1989.
"It was a very quick negotiation." Carl Peterson, the Chiefs president and general manager, said Monday of Pelluer's signing. Leigh Steinberg, Pelluer's agent, described Peterson as being very persistent.
"Carl indicated that although they were pleased with Steve DeBerg's performance, they are hoping that Steve (Pelller) starts to move into a position where he might challenge for the starting position," Steinberg said.
12 jurors take seats
for Howard Spira trial
NEW YORK - Ten men and two women were sworn in yesterday as
jurors in the attempted extortion trial of Howard Spira, the self-described gambler whose dealings with George Steinbrenner caused the New York Yankees owner to lose control of the team.
Spira's trial in Manhattan federal court, will continue this morning when attorneys present opening arguments to the jury.
The 10-count indictment also
Stainbrenner, a key prosecution witness, is expected to testify during the trial, which is expected to last three to four weeks.
Spira, 31, of the Bronx, has pleaded not guilty to charges he tried to get money from Steinbrenner by threatening to ruin his reputation.
settle two-day strike
Major league umpires settle two-day strike
accuss Spira of threatening a United Airlines employee and a Houston attorney, Earle Lily, who once represented a woman in a matrimonial case against former Yankees outfielder Dave Winfield.
NEW YORK - Major league umpires returned to the field vester-
Steinbrenner agreed last summer to give up day-to-day control of the Yankees after commissioner Fay Vincent found Steinbrenner had not acted in the best interest of baseball when he paid $240,000.
day with more money, more vacation time and more benefits.
"All of us are happy to be back," Bruce Froemming, an umpire at Shea Stadium, said. "We didn't want to be on strike."
The two-day strike was settled Monday, but the agreement came too late for the regular umpires to work at Shea Stadium and six of the other seven season openers. Instead, former major and minor league umpires and current college umps handled every opening-day game except the one that President Bush attended in Texas.
From staff and wire reports
14
Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Woman fakes breast cancer
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A woman jilted by her fiance sought sympathy by faking terminal breast cancer for two years, shaving her head and dieting away 20 pounds or so, a psychiatrist who even failed a cancer support group.
The woman, who also feigned listlessness and loss of appetite, built up a network of close friends among
That was gratifying for somebody who usually had trouble establishing relationships and who faced the aftermath of the broken engagement.
"The felt that the process of rebuilding a social life for herself was simply overwhelming," said Marc Feldman, a psychiatrist in Birmingham, Ala. who treated the woman. "She needed a shortcut."
The woman had what psychiatrists called a factitious disorder. In this condition, a person consciously fakes an illness for some psychological reasons.
Feldman is a co-author of a report on the case in the spring issue of the journal Psychosomatics.
The woman, who by then was 35, began the charade while working as a corporate secretary. She told coworkers that the cancer had already spread and that her prognosis was grim She modelled her symptoms on a cancer nurse of an acquaintance.
After experiencing a gratifying outpouring of warmth from co-workers, she joined a support group because it was a ready-made social network. Feldman said in a telephone interview.
"The groups there really work to be unconditionally supportive, very nurturing and warm," he said.
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Classified Directory
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120 Announcements
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ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, culture and study skills, boost self-confidence using biotech audio recordings, and improve communication between Honors and Stress Management Center
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Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
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732 Mass. 843-0611
B. A. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and ac- tribute shop. Auto repair. VISA Mastercard & Discover cards.
Adam Alumun Center is accepting applications for part-time waiters, waitresses, bartenders and hostesses for a fine dining private club and banquet facilities. Applicants must be available to Adam's Mother's Day, Commitment and summerApply in person. 186 road Ave. M/E/F/H
BEFORE signing a lease, talk to Consumer Affairs and get the facts about renting. In the Union Man Tries, Westcott Wedge 11:2
EXTRA MONEY-Making Business Brochures from home RUSH self-addressed stamped business envelope Dept. MUJB Domestic Inc 1606 Lake Ridge Ds F, 803 Riverside
FORMAL WEAR
Rental and Sales 732 Mass.
Grandma, I would care if I had money, and if I had; I a Bioethics elderly care discussion at 7:00 4/11/91 in the Jayhawk Room -Roln.
Max U. wants you to VOTE TODAY Student Senate Elections are today. Any student with KUID may vote.
'New Analysis of Western Civilization' makes sense of Western Civ. 'Makes sense to use it.' Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
---
Students, tired of being poor? If you're nervous about the possibility of your student becoming dependent, if you're willing to do a little work and wish to learn. You need to contact us for help with your student's learning. (Formation System P - P Box 816, Ellicott City, Maryland)
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771 Mass. 840416
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841 2345 1419 Mass.
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CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN * COSTUMES
732 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE * 66044
91.434.841.67
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
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400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
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Wanted
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WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantee a more attractive option for you summer. Call 1-800-823-9702
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120 Announcements
*College Money* Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Forest. Since 1981 COL Moneymath has provided scholarships to 500 students. Mo 64021 McBaule 1 890-747-3634
EARTH SPIRITS Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesday, April 9, 10 am; Free introductory lecture April 2. 7, 30 pm, Lamphiser book, 10 E North
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free confidential referrals returned by counselors. Headquarters for RU info 844-3606 Sponsored by GLOSK
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy 481-6622 or go fly a kite.
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members.
Call Vickie at 841-4115
Suffering from abortion* Write Hearts Restored,
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential response material will follow
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 814 2345 or visit 1491 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
TIME TO LOVE THE NUTRI-PUGGEN? Good tasting, natural, nutritional balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money-back for you or You Call for information. 1-800-879-0722
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
Hillel
לִשְׁת
Events of the Week
A KU student needed to enter scholarly manuscripts. Must know Word 5.0-FP. Visit www.ku.edu for details on weekly/week app. Apply in person, Wed-Friday afternoon. Hall Center for the Humanities, 211 Watkins Street
Faculty Forum
"The Trauma of War"
Dr. Mott Mark, Freiberg
Scholar,
Nom. B.C.M.
Friday, April 12
Shabbat Dinner & Service
6 p.m. Hilzel House
R.S.V.P. by April 11
Festival of Nations
All day. Wescoe Beach
For rides and more information,
call 864.3948.
130 Entertainment
140 Lost-Found
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS 841-2752, N. I. 1
identify, 864-2406
Found: Women's watch, Wed. April 3, on Mississippi Street near the Spencer Art Museum
Found: Watch in Summerfield Hall 4/4. Call to identify. 864-2406.
FOUND: Sterling silver ring in Ladies Restroom the evening of April 5th. Claim at UDK Business Office.
Found: Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and Vermont. Call 842-6527 to claim.
LOST-set of keys Sat. night 3/30/91 If found,
please call 841-3808 REWARD
LOST: 3:00 at Wescow after KU vs UNC, gold KU keychain, letter "J" on ring, 1 car key and 2 apt keys. Phone: 664-8148
Found: Eyeglasses on Wescoe after KU vs NC game. Call to info, 864-2406.
Found. Women's watch. Wed. April 3, on Mississippi Street near the Spencer Art Museum-Call Betsy at 847-110 to tie
Employment
205 Help Wanted
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for dishwasher prep cook. Apply in person, 189 Crassiate Dr.
ATTN. Psychology, Education, Sociology, and
ATTRAIN. Relations related majors. Summer program for
teachers who need to develop behavioral difficulties has positions for
teachers and counselor/activity instructors.
Located on lake near EIH. MN and Boundary
countries. Full-time position. Salary plus room and board. Internships available Contact Ed IA 845-0577 or Trom Bauer
MA 55421 811 W. 457-5087 Minneapolis MA 55422
CAMP COURSELIGHTS Wanted for private Michigan boyjunior summer camps. Teach summer campers how to play tennis, riffle, archery, tennis, golf, sports competitions, camps, crafts, dramas, or riding, martial arts, golfing, or even more plus &R; Marc Marek. 1750 Maple, NdL. I 60095 780-464-244
Burky's Drive in I is now taking applications for part time employment *s* price on meals, uniforms provided, flexible hours. Apply in person between 10.5. Burky's Drive in I & nth & ira
COLORADO ROCKIES SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT-Summer camp for disabled
children and adults hiring舍膳 Attendance:
Rocky Mountain Village at 908
693 2333
COMPUTER OPERATIONS STUDENT ASSISTANT TADINE. Deadline: 4/12/91. Salary: $43.50 per hour. includes making math assignments on a computer software system maintains console logs, and providing services to user community. To apply, complete a job application at the reception desk at the office. Job location: New York City.
College student, energetic, imaginative, man,
woman to watch two boys age 9 & 10 through
must. Must have car and enjoy playing. Some
activities scheduled. 40/0 hour. Call after.
5:30PM.
EARN $5,000-$10,000 Now hiring-managers and
laborers limited. opportunity Part-time now.
Full-time this summer STUDENT PAINTERS
.Call: 816-434LORGE, Mr. Garcoon
Full-time summer work. National firm looking for motivated students. Receive excellent P.R. and Communication experience, travel to eastern U.S. $150/book (work) Call 841-1234
GRADUATE ASSISTANT in office of Foreign
Missions (FOM), Assist in the foreign
students program planning, train and supervise
orientation leaders Applications available in 18
countries.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-CAREer position for aggressive candidate with degree in business or commerce and excellent startling salary; company car at location; call collection; person留名 Call collect; Mr. Schwartz,
HELP WANTED - Orientation leaders for Foreign Service Students. Provide orientation to life at KU Applications, now being taken for positions available in the U.S., and provide orientation to foreign Student Services. Room 108 Struthall Hall.
Hire Wanted, Daytime Bartender, Part time thru
summer. PRIVATE CLUB, experience preferred.
must have references and 21. Call for app.
842-0083
Help wanted -firing afternoon aide for kindergarten and preschool classes. Classroom experience and study in early childhood. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 311 Main Lane, KS 60049
IMAGE CONSULTANT
Excellent income opportunity. Flexible hours. Perfect summer or part-time job. Training provided. Call 1-832-2474 for interview.
International Company seeks career minded in individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,232-6829
Lake of the Oarks Summer Employment. The large Ferry Restaurant is accepting applications from businesses. Excellent salary and tips. Great work environment. Available online or in person at hourly job sites available. Contact Frank
MANNES- immediate positions on the East Coast. WASHINGTON D.C. and Florida. Excellent salaries plus benefits. 1 year commitment. Call area representative. 913-827-3044
Need handyman to work as partner Truck, tools,
etc provided If interested call me 841-4266.
Need money fast! Make up to $0.125 day per hour.
No experience. No experience necessary)
1009-6758-2788
Part time summer jobs available for men and women! Farm $8.50-$16.50 per hour as loaders, and farm women's $16.50-$24.50 per hour. Perfect job for those interested in keeping experience will train interested students; necessary will train interested persons; Saturday, April 26 from 8:30 am to 11:00 am only at 40th Washington, Cloverleaf. Flexible transportation and a greater Kansas City residence for the summer a must. Identification
PRESCHOOL HELP WANTED Substitute and after school now. Also summer past and full-time positions available. Junior students and seniors only. Sunrise Acres 841-2233. PROGRAM ASST (Superior of Electronics Lab) at $1,500/$1,600 annual salary; effective May 5th in week 12; advanced technical skills required for repair and maintenance of electronic devices, repair and maintenance of electronic devices, application deadline. all materials must be received by April 24 deadline or resume via or at least two other acceptable sources of
Professional couple wishes to hire baby-sitter for summer. Monday Friday: 8:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Excellent pool. Some flexibility on hours if you have summer class. Salary commensurate with qualification and experience. Any anytime weekend or leave message on machine. RACING ENTHUSIASTS: We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, or Sunday. Ticket prices include Taupo Position. Inclusive tickets taken, ticket sellers, ubers, nests, gate attendants, and managers. If interested apply at Manpower, 211 east horth.
Sitter Solutions, Inc. is in need of caregivers Flexible schedule. Experience or edu. References required. 843-7286.
SUMMER SUBLAGE. Beginning May to June
1 July 31. Four bedroom townhouse in Sunrise
Village 865-0106 No deposit necessary.
long-term care for part-time summer work at a kid's daycare. Interested, call 842-2088.
Warehouse and light industrial work. Reliable people need with car and car. Kansas City area. PC Templates. 816-746-4800.
WEED INSPECTOR
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Temporary, part-time position. Responding to complaints regarding tall grass on private lands, will manage tall grass. Prior experience dealing with public and knowledge of City's weed ordinance and local laws $ 45 hourly. Apply by April 19 at Admin. Office, 2800 Alma St., Eighth Ave., Lawrence, KS 60044. EMP M/D F
225 Professional Services
School Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FRENCH TUTOR. Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
865.5273
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
Government photos, passports, immigration visas, senior portraituring, & arts port follow /BW-AH, FB-H11, FB-H11
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
TRAFFIC • DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
*rompt contraception and abortion services in
awrence. 841-5716*
Artibus & Observations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E. 9th Street
843-600
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2063, days or evenings.
*price for Word Processing Fast service*
*a 90 double-spaced paper Call. Theshern. 841-677-677*
Almost cheapestheet in Lawrence
*a 90 double-spaced paper Rash job problem*
794-468-483
Call R. J. S.'s Typing Services, 8192-904 Term
B. J. S.'s Typing Services, 8192-904
Dunna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers; letters; dissertations; letters,
journals; resumes; e-mails; spelling corrected. 820 G.W. St 53th
B. J. S.'s Typing Services, 8192-904
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25/double-spaced page Call 10 a.m. 6 p.m.
Mrs. Matthes 841-1299
A+ Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your work the professional appearance they deserve. @ w427.783
B's professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1 90 pm. 841-6345
Professional Resources - Conclusions, or Insights,
typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 9271
Mass. 841-1071.
FAST, ACCURATE, TYPING $1.50 per page. In
PCs and DLE, but in any cities in limits
Transcriptions and Database Projects also handi-
d. Call Mae at: 842.382
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call 842-1203
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets questionnaires. Call
KeyWorks, 922-8307
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8588
Word Processing/Typing. Papers, Resumes.
Dissertation Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.
S Degree. 841-6254
300s Merchandise
Bicycle for sale. Red Bataus, 23 in. 15 speed,exc.
price: $95, 748-3131, lance message
305 For Sale
1983 Honda 750 Interpreter. Must sell $1200. New starter. Call Jjm, 749-5247.
condition cell 2, 784-8413, leave message
FOR SALE: Hamilton hydraulic Drafting Nation
w/ Vernex drafting machine Good condition.
museum 500,000 obo CALL M F 83,841741
1981 Mobile Home Excellent condition, 2 bed, 2 bath, fireplace, wet bar, garden炉-$13,000.00
"all for showing. 828-930
For sale to a good home-Cocker mix puppy
$30.00 Call 841-2862
KING SIZE WATER BED. Semi-waveless Nice headboard Padded rails Drawers in pedestal Call 841-8421 after 3pm
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-ins welcome. Call 845-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
Nishiki Road Bike, excellent condition! $200. Call Cathy at 865-294-1f interested
NEW REALIZE BRIEFT WITH SCHWIMM 1509
PUMP (INCLDES GUAGE) 842,814-9168
Nikish路自行车 excellent condition $200. Call
Atcus at 863-7455 (f interested).
One-way ticket, KCI to DEW on May 16th. $100
obo Call Kelli, Mallory 84117
Peugeot bicycle men's 25" 12-speed, 3 yrs old with approx. 200 miles. Road/touring bike. Excellent condition Call 841-655-655
Thaibook趴播 and portable printer Japanese
Taibook趴播 with keyboard, mouse and
Letus 123 Word Perfect 9.0. sidechair, Tornado and
in English in Japanese. Retail for
$45.00 for the $75.00 retail,
for $85.00 for the $125.00.
Call 864-3327 (egg) or
for $200 Call 864-3327 (egg).
340 Auto Sales
1971 VV camperbuck, rebuilt engine with 8000 miles, good condition, $1000. Call 642-3423 MWF5
1976 Black Trans Am, 455, AC, New Paint, Great Condition, Beautiful Car, 841-8536, Pat
1810 Silver Suitbar, 2 door, AC, am-i-m, will need new clutch soon, $30. excellent employee 841-4133
1812 Blue Buck Lester, AC, new brakes, good condition, $120 or best offer Call 842-7151
1986% Toyota Supra, black with gray leather,
sunroof, 5 spd, sports pkw w/ 4 mounted
Yokohama wheels $81 milres $11 000 814.4777
1989 Plymouth Laser RS, automatic, A/C factory CD player, Blue, 15k miles, perfect condition $12,500, 841-4777
12.08.2015
For sale: Mercedes Benz 180E 2.3, 1985, black
full; option 10,500 TLP # 865-8516
firm, full option. 10,000 LFP # 86-6536
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
On TV's, VCK's jewelry, stereo, musical in-
cameras, cameras, and we honor
women/MC/A/MEX Disc. Jayhawk Pawn &
Jewelry, 10W. B 6/14, 789-119.
Lawrence Glass Tinting Special rates for students. Call anytime, 7am to 10pm. 737 E. 22nd
841-7019
USED HONDA MOPEDS now in stock. All have been reconditioned. Starting at $150 DAVIS CYL.
CLE, 4063 S. Topeka Bld. 1988-12-31 8:00am
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CD' s- $6.00 and down Records and tapes-$2.00 and down. Top dollar for collections. Alley Cat Records. 717 Massachusetts. 852-0122.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842 897/1631 1601
APARTMENTS: Small, large. Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many areas. 816-361-9928
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 10, 1991
15
1 bedroom app available now过三月 31 Aug.
sunny and newly painted. Off street parking.
2 blocks from campus $775 month Option for next year.
842 9021. Leave message.
2.8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842-8971/843-1601
2 Bdr apt available August. Walk to KU or downtown. Wood floor, washer/dry hookups. Water paid. No pets. $440 mo. 841.1024
2 REMEDY APT Available June 1 with option to continue in fall. 5 min walk from Union. Big bedrooms, off street parking, clean, W/D/400, UTILITIES Call: 849-3843
2 bedroom apt, summer sublease, Brafford
square, Available May 19th Pay only June and
July. No deposit required. Option for fall lease.
$400; mq 82,4621
2 bt apt available in new building of West Hills
2 ap for Great. June 1, Great ap with microwave, w/d
computer, energy efficient space, energy efficient gas heat
new campus. 100 Emere Itd. 440 mg. No pets.
3 bedroom/2 $t_2$ bath townhouse for summer sublease at Sunrise Village. Available mid-May.
No tenm June 1, 2008 @ 9:30pm 92-423-626
48 bpr suit for summer II. W/D, W/W DAC, microwave, pool tennis courts, on bus route
Village. Call Kim, Kibu 9025, leave
Village.
6 bedroom house at 2301 Massachusetts and 5
bedroom house at 1290 Ohio and 3 bedroom house
at 788 Arkansas. Call 841-332-1323.
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, 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.
APARTMENTS
- Chamberlain Place Apartments. 78th obie construction and 14th BR (Formerly Vista Capri) building. 2-2 bath, new construction; 2-BR-1 bath, 3-BR-2 bath with all washers, dryers & access from Memorial
4. *Michaels* room, 8 plex, 1 yr lease, BH-2 BR-2 bath. All with washer/dryer.
*Brandford Square Apartments*, 500 Colorade, 217 Lexington Ave., Brandon, FL. Call today. First Management 749-1366. Open house every Saturday from 12:30 at Bradford Square, 500 Colorade. C.A. Office hours Mon-Fri
Available June Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice older home. New bathroom. Wood floors. A/C $440 Gas/watera no. Noets 841-7074.
Available Aug 1 at 12:07 Tennessee, 749-603 1 BR tandem acpt. 18-month plus month insurance. 1 BR tandem acpt. 18-month plus month insurance. 1 BR tandem acpt. 18-month plus month insurance. 1 BR tandem acpt. 18-month plus month insurance. 1 BR tandem acpt. 18-month plus month insurance.
Available June or August. Efficiency 1 bedroom
girls in new older houses Walk to KU or
down $285 and no. Pets kU-1074
Bradford Square Apartments 520 Gold Place
Available June 1: bourbier 1300 block Vermont
wood floors, window A/C, w/awber, dry hookups,
off street, parking, dishwasher, 14 mo. lease.
665/mi No pets. 811-1074
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
dishwashers, disposals, refrigerator freezer,
cabinets, and refrigerators. Management
KU bus route, off-street park
management your apartment for summer
or fall 794-1566
Check out Berkley Plats Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments Close to campus and downtown $900.8415/mo. Call 843-2116
Female for summer sublease. Close to campus.
Fully furnished. Oven and bath. No security deposit. t₂ utilities, rent negotiable. 843-2486
Excellent Location! 1 block to a campus, 2 bedroom apt in 4-plex, dwbschowr, WD hookup. CA, no pets, available 1床 $360 At 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice newroom. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! May, Call Ann (evenings best!) 841-4548
Female roommate needed to sublease 4 BR apartment in May. Call 843-8315
COOL, air CONDITIONed 2 bedroom apt. for
summer leave. Access from stadium. $400 monthly
negotiable. Comfortable for 3 people. Lease
renewable 842.204 Leave a message
Female non-smoker wanted for sublease sublease
or Orchard Corners. Call Cristin at 864-1462.
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water费 $100 per call. C84 213-8511. Double bed or twin bedroom apartment with sunporch. CA wood floors, no pets. Available June 1, $30 at uncle.
Hey KU. Med students-move in 1 and receive $2 off your rent for two months. *Studies*, and 2 bedroom apartments. *Heat and water paid* with student fee. Mid. Center. Rainbow Tower Rows. 913-831-6831
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and
Hey! KU med. students for your 2 rent on mornings. *Station 1, and 2 beermats* *1 heat and water pairs* *Across the room*. *Center. Rainbow Tower Ages 913-983.*
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $280.00.
841-9113. leave message
Lornair Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality space, with all the amenities. Brand
new; available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease then
May; July or for 12 months. 8749-7843, 8749-7843
Mackenzie Place Apt 53: 38 brm luxury laundry for lesung August; 1 yr old, washer/dryer, microwave fan, 2 blinds; 2 weeks, 1 year lease, no room. Mackenzie Place Apt 6773, eagles weeks, 841-8218 daytime.
1-2 BR, 4-9 BR Washers, dryers in each unit, cell
microscopes, fireplaces, 2 full baths in
a BR on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old
叫749.7566
Nice, spacious a b duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, central air, W/日房, garage, low utilities. Avail. in June. $450/mo. No pets. 843-2988.
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including an eat-in kitchen, living room and blinds. Low utilities, low bus. pool. quiet complex $110.00 • SPAINCH APARTMENTS
New leasing. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Siprue Plaza Apt. 812. Room rent: $75.2 rooms start at $55. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid. kitchen renovated, new carpet. Call 841-168-123
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apers. Apset West Apartment, $350 for bedroom, $875
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid Walk to campa-
mp. Call 842-1690 or 842-1899
Starting May 1, large bedroom, pool, DW, W/D,
microware, TV, VCR, fully furnished, $180,
849-7524. Mellissa
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. For rent to serious graduate students, upperclass students or RU employees. One BR furnished. No pets. Room rate $290.00. 841-3838 after 6 PM.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid-$300.00 84-662-662.
Professor's house for rent June 1991-Aug 1992 2
BRT, East Lawrence. $501-841-8844
Sparacious one bedroom apt for summer sublease.
Will negotiate price. Call Sara. 843-9129.
SUBLAGE at HAMVER PLACE. Furnished one bedroom. From mid-May to December. Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386 10pm-11pm.
Relocated Apartments in older home near KU.
841-6254
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall 1
bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid, all
elective 107 Lynch Court, Sundance 8425325 or
8461641
SUMMER SULEASE 2, BR 1hr, 1Mr and fornishangs negotiable. Close to campus. 86-972-5700
SUMMER SULEASE STARTING NO. 3, bdm2/ bath central, air off, street parking.
$85.00/month 84 Maine Call Mark, 764-104
**MURSER SUMELEAR:** Orchard Corners, 1/4-bd bmr available, furnished, pool, bus route, clean $170/person, Mail 843-0290
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
SUNRISE VILLA LAGEUM submarine subsume. Can fit up to 3 people for $134. no dishwasher, microwave, pool, summer parties. First keg is on us for new tenants. Call 824-7214.
in a superior location at a superior price, 2 bedrooms. Room Call 812-3340 (21 HOURS) Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Colton Woods, May 20-Aug 18 week $free 2 weeks $month plus rate
Sublease one bedroom. Berkeley Flats. Across from football stadium. Water/cable paid. Make offer 749-2277.
Sublease 1 br apt. Great location Avail. May through July. Rent negotiable. Call 832-0713. Leave message
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 1k from KU with off-street parking, no pets. 841-500
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished room with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bk from KU with off street parking. No pets. 841-500.
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus on Ohio. 865-0987.
Summer sublease with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call and see.
Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
S
Swan Management
- Gazebo
- Gravstone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M/F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th st.
749-1288
West Hills
APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June of August Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid!)
$280 to $335 per month (water paid!)
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(persons)
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
Sunrise Village Luxurious Townhomes
Great location Near campus
Mon. Wed. Thurs
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
EASTERN VILLAGE SCHOOL
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus rout studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Foo
...
Apple Lane Apartments
Free cable
Water paid
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Georgetown Apartments
Pool
Close to KU bus route
ach apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large windows
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
1 bedroom $35, $350
2 bedroom $440, $460
3 bedroom $560
office
611 Main Street
(across from Hardie's)
HOURS:
4:00; 6:00; Fri
9:00; 12:00; Sat
843-1971
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On-site MCTu/Holidome
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Food processors
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- On Site MGT./Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
10am-12pm
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Low Security Deposit
630 Michigan 749-7279
Please call Kristy for appt.
Call about our Summer Special
- No pets
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS - BY APPT.
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Office Hours:
841-5444
Now leasing for summer & fall 1901
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
TRAILRIDGE APTS
(on apartments)
studios - 3 pockets
1.8.2 BR apts - tennis courts
2.8.2 BR townhomes - KU bus route
no heat & water bottles
(Cal for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Summer sublet: Large BR, own bath in duplex near Meadowbrook. $220/month, $ utilities. AC, WD, DW 749-6746
Summer submit: Large, very nice 2 RR duplex,
near Holidome, patio, dishwasher, W/D, AC
$75/month. Call 749-4823
Summer subside. *Spacius* 2 bedroom apt at Northrids. 5 blocks north of 6th on Michigan W/D hookups. Brand new. $73/month plus utilities. Bid 841-7651.
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt-close to campus. Two to four people. 841-2268.
apartments
842-4144
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
810 1111
- Clean & well maintained
- Clean & well maintain
- Large closets & living
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Large closets & living space
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
524 Frontier
- Walk to grocery
山水画
appliances
Sunrise Apts
1
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Terms Count, Pools
* Free Cable T.V. (Pl & Terr.)
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
Luxury Town Vans
ADDISON AND
PEACHES SITTING
IN ATREE...
K·I·S·S·I·N·G!
9th & Michigan
- Luxuous Town House
* Apartment Living.
- Sunrise Terrace 10th & Adjacent
- On Bus Route
6th & Gateway
Sunrise Village
Open House Daily
FIRST COMES LOVE...
841-1287 or 841-8400
--close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
MASTERCRAFT
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
THEN COMES DEPRESSION. DESPAIR AND HEARTBREAK.
Enlarged to Show Texture
OFFERS
OPEN DAILY
749-0445 • 1310 Kentuck
SUNDANCE
1-5 P.M.
KENTUCKY PLACE
HANOVER PLACE
841 1912 Lath & Me
749-2415 * 10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
841-5255·7th & Florida
841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 * 15th & Kasold
TANGLEWOOD
842-4455
SouthPointe Apartments
by Brian Gunning
Aww...
WHY'D YOU
HAVE TO DO
THAT?
SORRY ADDISON, DEAL WITH REACILITY... RRI
or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
Summer sublease with option for fall. 3 bedroom
$505.00. Water, gas paid. 841-4708.
Summer subcase - can continue in lat. 4M BR apa
at Orchard Carriers. Furnished. 842 972.
Summer subcase. Nice one BR furnished apa.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 728 Ohm. Longer lease optional. Call 749-7599. Rent negotiable.
Summer sublease-can continue in fall. 4 BR and
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
super location, great pool. Tail 749-6211.
Summer sublease. 2 BR apartment. Great location.
Rent negotiable. Bk431-8390
Summer sublease. Realty nice studio apt, water and basic cable paid. Cab and laundry facilities $110/mo. Call 749-4235
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
3 Bbrm Townhouse.
Spacious, 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with dressing area upstairs
Summer subasesse. Available May 15-Aug 15 with limited availability. Entrance on the south side of town near great fast food, and other entertainment. Laundry facilities available. Anyone needing a place to stay for summer sesquicentennial events may anyone needing a place to stay for summer sesquicentennial events.
Subleases Available Immediately
2 Bdmr townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
Summer Sublease 1 & 2 Bdrm. apartments
Newly remodeled apartment:
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two with fireplaces
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sun 8-5
Sat 1-4
842-4200
meadowbrook
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
---
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today!
- Basketball Court
- Volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor
- Pool
- Exercise Room
- On Bus Route
$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
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
9th & Avalon
842-3040
THIRTY SECONDS from lauradam. Summer
subLEASE, furnished 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Vaulted
A/C, dishwasher, near campus, on bus
route. 855-0588
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has room available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 1486 Tennessee.
NAISMITH HALL. Living anywhere else doesn't make cents.
- "Dine Anytime"
- The cost of living has
- Free utilities
- Convenient location
- Great social events
PEN
The cost of living has gone down at Naismith!
• NEW LOWER COSTS!
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 813-8559
DR.
NAISMITH HALL
April Rest Free-Female roommate needed immediately. Share 3 bedroom duplex-wD/M微波炉/dishwasher air conditioned garage Call Lsa 642-978, home@484-833-4086
430 Roommate Wanted
April rent paid. Female roommate wanted immediately.
Share three bedroom. Orchard Corner. $195.00 per month plus 4* utilities on bus route Call Amanda. B14-472
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners Call anytime at 842-3626.
Female roommate need to sublease apartment for the summer. Call 863-3971.
THE FAR SIDE
Female roommate needed. Share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment from May to August. $205 plus $12 cities. Deposit. Call Monica, 434-4108.
Express Car rental
Gung to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month.
49-5678
Roommate needed in 3 in house w/ WD, FW, PP $184 plus 5 utilities. 6492, ask for D. Roommate wanted, 2 bbr app. 46 Kentucky $160/month utilities. included No.LEASE 814-6884
Roommate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house
Two rooms for 1.2 people. Reasonable
rent/utilities. Alison, 863-2578.
Summer Sublease 1, or 2 people (male or female) need to share 3 bedrooms / 2 bathroom at ORCHARD CORNERS Pool, A/C, cable on bus route. $180 per month plus tolls. Call Carmen 841-227-117. Summer Sublease 2, option to share for 4 rooms. Option for room #1 ($180.90), $149 deposit. Call Gina, 749-1590.
two female roommates for furnished 4
bedroom units at Orkard Gurnes,
starting August 21. Call Mr.
Two roommates need to share three bedrooms
for summer. Close to campus.
Call 841-1400.
By GARY LARSON
ENTERING
THE
MIDDLE
NOWHERE
"Well, this is just going from bad to worse."
16
Wednesday, April 10, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
You've Got It 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
Armour Jumbo Meat Hot Dogs 16 oz. Pkg. BUY ONE GET ONE FREE!
ARMOUR
JUMBO
HOT DOGS
The Dog
Kids Love
to Hate
from our Deli...
ARMOUR
JUMBO
HOT DOGS
The Dog
Kids Love
To Mate
2
Whole DeliRoast Chicken 2/$7
from our Seafood Shoppe...
Fresh Pacific Snapper Fillets $299 Lb
Super Savings At Dillons...
Thin Star
Thin Star
Thin Star
Thin Star
Tri Star Truckload Hand Tool Sale
99¢ Sale Period April 10-30 AND UP
Shop Early For Best Selection.
Sprite
Calorie Free
diet Coke
Coca-Cola CLASSIC
diet Coke
from our Bakery...
Coca-Cola
Classic, Diet,
Caffeine Free Diet
or Sprite
And Selected Coca-Cola Products
12 Pack - 12 oz. Cans
$298
SPECIALTY PACK
20 FL. OZ.
COLOURFRESH
BIRD'S FUCK!
PURE OF
Aqua fresh
4 FL. OZ.
Aqua-Fresh Pump Toothpaste
20¢ Off Label, 4.6 oz. Regular, Extra Fresh,
4.3 oz. Tartar Control or 4.4 oz. Kids
from our Produce Dept...
$149
ALUMINO
ALUMINO
ALUMINO
WHITE ENRICHED DIGESTION
Top Fresh White Bread
16 oz. Loaf
4/$1
Str
California
Strawberries
$398 Half Flat
from our Flower Shop..
TRY DILLON'S AUTHENTIC
Spring Elegance Bouquet $1599
MILK AND CREAM
CHINESE KITCHEN!
HOT CHINESE FOOD TO GO
Located in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence
Combination Plate
Beef With Pepper, 3 Fried
Won Tons, Pork Fried Rice
$369
Dillon's Authentic Chinese Kitchen Foods are cooked fresh on the premises over day. Our expert cooks are trained in traditional Hong Kong, Szechwan, and Cantonese style cooking.
Combination Plate
Beef With Pepper, 3 Fried
Won Tons, Pork Fried Rice
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.)
$369
Sweet & Sour Chicken Quart Serving $549
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
Grom our Video Dept...
Majorie Turner married into a family of doctors who cause her more headaches than they cure. Now, her famous brother-in-law is returning to join the family practice. In a moment of weakness Marjorie has a one-night fling with a stranger who suddenly drops dead of a heart attack. When Majorie discovers the corpse is Charles, she's got more than a guilty conscience to hide. NELSON
Available This Weekend
KINSTIE ALLEY
SIBLING
RIVALRY
"SIBLING RIVALRY"
SHYERTAINMENT
"Till They're Home Again."
Dillons FOOD STORES
Ad Prices Effective April 10-16, 1991.
Lawrence Ollion Stores Only.
Limit Rights Reserved.
VOL.101,No.129
KANSAL
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
HURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
County orders external audit of reappraisals
NEWS: 864-4810
Property owners outraged by skyrocketing county appraisals
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Public outrage over properly reappraisals came to a boil last night, prompting the Douglas County Commission to order an external audit of the county reappraisal program.
Disgruntled property owners, most with notices in hand, packed the county commission chambers and voiced their anger about inflated property appraisals they received Saturday.
“But you’ve got to understand something too, he said. “I will promise the start this. We will work together.” But maybe more that we get this audit done.”
Commissioner Mike Amyx told the full-house audience that the county acknowledged that errors had been made in many of the reappraisals and that they would be corrected.
Chris McKenzie county administrator, said he would contact the Property Valuation Division of the Kansas Department of Revenue today to request the audit.
said much of the problem stemmed from drastic increases in land-value assessments. Although appraisals of land value have jumped, they were balanced by decreases in building value.
But Ray Polk, who presented the commission reappraisal notices for several properties that be own land reappraisals had doubled
In addition, the commission passed a resolution to conduct an internal audit. As a board, the commissioners will look at property appraisals on a neighborhood basis to determine whether property values match that of neighboring lots. McKernie said.
"Louie, that doesn't go with what you are saying." Polk said to McElhaney. "This is just one big mistake."
James Drury. 1906 Marvonne Road, said. "We can't accept that all this was computer generated. That is not true in the broadest sense. Somebody instructed that computer."
Although county officials attributed some of the problems to state statutes and the computer software, which also is mandated by the court, Don Gordon received much of the heat for the reappraisal program.
A few property owners commended Gordon and the ap praiser's office for handling questions and appeal requests, but more criticized him for patronizing property owners who had complaints.
Gays protest military ban
Although the commission's resolution met with approval from the public, any attempts to justify skyrocketing increases in property values were countered by bots and holsters from the audience.
Russell Getter, whose county appraisal was more than 50 percent that of that a private appraiser, said, "Please don't make any more excuses, point the finger or blame someone in the legislature. You've got a problem here and you've got to deal with the problem here."
GLSOK rallies for change of Department of Defense policy
Polk said, "Your office has been run very shabby. If you all worked for me, I'd be handing out pink slips."
Commissioner Lotie McElhaney
By Lara Gold Kansan staff writer
The deadline for reappraisal appeal requests is April 26, but McKenzie county might be overloaded the deadline in an overload of requests were made.
Four additional telephone lines have been opened in the appraiser's office since property owners received their notices Saturday. To accommodate the influx of telephone calls, the commission has expanded telephone service at the county appraiser's office to 5:30 to 8 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays.
"We're here. We're queer. We're fabulous. Get used to it."
That was the message members of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas chanted yesterday in protest of the Department of Defense.
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"It's going to take a war of protest to stop this discrimination," said Mike Sullivan, co-director of GLOSK. "About 60 people in front of Strong Hall."
GLOSK the administration and students took part in the National Day of Action, a nationwide protest condemning the Department of defense or buming gays, lesbians or homosexuals in the military and ROTC programs.
Sullivan said the protest was to increase awareness about the discrimination inflicted by the policy.
"It is a policy that forces our administration to discriminate," he said.
Sullivan, however, praised the administration for working with students to overturn the policy.
Del Shakel, interim executive vice chancellor, said the administration would continue to work with the University to expand the Department of Defense policy.
"We do support the change you are seeking in the Department of Defense policy," Shankel said at the rally.
Greg Hughes, University Council and University Senate Executive Committee member, read the Council's response to the Department of Defense policy.
Women's Student Union members Jennifer Boyle (left) and Michaela Hayes demonstrate against the Department of Defense policy banning lesions, lesbians and bisexuals from the military.
"This discriminatory policy is inconsistent with the equal opportunities that are consistent with higher education," he said.
Hughes said the change would come if everyone on every campus across the country worked together.
Ami Hyton, Topeka sophomore, said the exclusion of gays, lesbians
"As long as discrimination exists on this campus, education cannot be a reality for everyone," he said.
GLSOK circulated a petition for members of the crowd to sign protesting the Department of Defense policy.
and bisexuals from the military was ludicrous
"It is ironic that the Army, which is designed to preserve freedom, is actually undermining it," she said. Caverly Smith, president of the
Native American Student Association,
said that, as an American
Indian, he understood concerns about
discrimination.
Smith said society had tolerated too much bigotry, hatred, prejudice
and narrow-mindedness.
He said, "We must continue to address the issues of homophobia, racism, sexism, anti-Semitism and all other social illnesses."
Official Persian Gulf cease-fire to take effect today
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — An official cease-fire in the Persian Gulf War is to take effect today at 9 a.m. cst. Security Council diplomats said yesterday, as long as no council members object before then.
Also, U.N. officials said the first elements of the new 140-member U.N. monitoring force for the Iraqi war will arrive tomorrow in Kuwait City.
Members of the council received copies of the Iraqi parliament's decision on Saturday accepting the Security Council's conditions for a permanent cease-fire.
The two-line Iraqi statement simply said the body accepted Security Council Resolution 687, passed April 3, which requires Iraq to pay for war damages and destroy its weapons of mass destruction.
The council had been prepared to declare the cease-fire Tuesday but at the last minute decided it needed to see whether the Iraqi Parliament had expressed any reservations or conditions on its acceptance.
Because the Iraqi lawmakers accepted the resolution unconditionally, diplomats said they fawsaw no
problem with declaring the official cease-fire this morning
The Security Council members also have been holding private consultations on the composition of the mission, called UNIKOM. Mission, called UNIKOM.
The leader of the force has not been announced officially, but it is widely expected to be Austrian Maj.Gen. Gunther Greendl, who commanded the U.N. peacekeeping force in Cyprus from 1981 to 1988.
Greindl will arrive in Kuwait City tomorrow, but the main units of peacekeeping infantrymen, military
observers and combat engineers are not expected for another 10 days to two weeks.
The force's headquarters probably will be established at Um Qasr, an Iraqi town in the demilitarized zone near the outlet of the Shatt al-Arab waterway. A logistics base will be set up in Kuwait, and liaison offices will be opened in Baghdad and Kuwait City.
The core unit of the force is a 300 officer group of military observers. They will carry light sidearms but they are not likely to attack anyone who violates the bar.
der.
They will patrol the about 120 mile border of Iraq and Kuwait, maintaining a dermitilized zone six miles from Iraq and three miles into Kuwait.
Because that border strip was mined heavily by the Iraqis and still is littered with unexploded bombs, shells and missiles, a contingent of about 200 combat field engineers will move to remove ordnance and clear the roads.
About 27,000 refugees and displaced persons are crowded into the zone, and U.N. officials are worried
about crowd control if riots break out as U.S. Army troops are withdrawn when the peacekeepers move in.
The United Nations will send five infantry companies drawn from other peacekeeping units in Cyprus, the Golan Heights and Lebanon to enforce force, a total force of about 680.
UNIKOM is not responsible for law and order or other civilian functions in the area, however. That duty rests on the governments of Iraq and Kuwait.
▶ See related story Page 16
Student Senate Elections Where to Vote:
Speakers focus on future of higher education
Kansas Union
Watson Library
Wescoe
Lindley
Learned
Burge Union
Summerfield
Students need KUIDs to vote. The polls are open until 4:30 today.
See story Page 3
By Eric Nelson
In the first of two evening programs commemorating the 125th anniversary of KU, two nationally known speakers focused on the problems and challenges of higher education.
Kansan staff writer
About 130 people attended last night's seminar in the Kansas Union, which featured Ernest Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and action, Yolanda King, actress and Yolanda King, civil rights activist, actress and daughter of Martin Luther King Jr.
Boyer spoke first and stressed five points that he said would shape the future of higher education, including strengthening the nation's economic standing by increasing equality of opportunity for all students.
In addition to the problems posed to minority students because of discrimination, he said many students remained faceless in the shuffle and was mistakenly asked. He suggested smaller classes as a solution.
"I've concluded many students drop out of school simply because one noticed that they had been doing something stupid."
Other points included how the United States must integrate different areas of study and strive for an overlapping academic neighborhood, how improved status must be given to the teaching profession and how more emphasis should be placed upon the importance of
language and communication.
Boyer said that although he thought the United States was still the envy of the world in terms of higher education, improvement should be the goal.
"Our task in the coming generation is to sustain that excellence, not only to serve the nation but to provide global leadership as well," he said.
King said the essential issue facing higher education was multicultural diversity. People must be willing to respect and accept all people as equals.
She stressed that the country was not a melting pot but more of a mosaic, with many different and interesting individuals who could contribute.
King also questioned the values and financial priorities of this country, mentioning the sums of taxes and government spending.
"We must understand that education is as much of a national security issue for America's survival as is military preparedness," she said.
In the spirit of her father, King was hopeful for the future. She envisioned a society in which people could live together and respect one another's differences.
"To live with this dream may be crazy, may be somewhat foolish," she said. "To live with this dream may be crazy."
WONDER OF THE WORLD
During a symposium commemorating the University's 125th anniversary, Yolanda King, civil rights activist, actress and daughter of Martin Luther King Jr., emphasizes the need for acceptance of cultural diversity to ensure the future of higher education. About 130 people attended the seminar last night at the Kansas Union.
2
Thursday, April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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TODAY
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H1:65°
LO:53°
56/33
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59/26
71/32
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Kansas Forecast
Warm winds bring clouds today. A chance for severe thunderstorms. High 65/ Low 53.
Salina 68/44 KC
Dodge City 64/51
63/26 Wichita
65/52
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864.3300
3-day Forecast
Friday - Continued cloudiness. High 61/ Low 50.
Saturday - Cloudy with a chance of early rain. High 59/ Low 46.
Sunday- Cloudy with a chance for showers. High 60/
Low 48.
forecast by John Winter
Temperatures are today's Nights and tonight's lows
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The Associated Press
Yesterday morning, U.S. District Judge Michael Boudin in Washington denied requests for a temporary restraining order from a group called the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.
WASHINGTON - A Supreme Court justice last night barred the killing of two monkeys in a Louisiana medical experiment after two federal judges refused to do so earlier in the day.
Supreme Court justice saves lives of monkeys
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A short time later, U.S. District Judge A.J. M McNamara in New Orleans turned down a similar request from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and the International Primate Protection League.
Kennedy's order against the National Institutes of Health instructed the Justice Department to file arguments by 2 p.m. today as to why the experiment should be allowed to proceed.
The monkeys, named Titus and Allen, are being kept for the institutes by Tulane University's Delta Regional Primate Center in Covington, La. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has been trying for years to gain legal custody of the monkeys.
Nerves in some of the animals' arms had been severed as part of the research at the Maryland lab. As a result, some of the monkeys had badly mutilated themselves by biting and chewing on the limbs.
Justice Anthony Kennedy granted a petition from an animal rights group, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, for a temporary restraining order barring the killing of the two monkeys seized in a noted animal cruelty case 10 years ago.
The experiment had been scheduled for 6 a.m. today, New Orleans time. Similar experiments have been done with three other Silver Spring monkeys.
The two were confiscated by police in 1981 from a Silver Spring, Md. laboratory amid complaints that they were treated cruelly. Two others seized in the same raid are at Covington.
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The government contends the research could aid the rehabilitation of patients.
Woman settles with doctor who offered 'secret vaccine'
The Associated Press
Peter Gerone, director of the primate center, said researchers at the center intended to conduct an experiment on the animals' brains while the monkeys were under "terminal anesthesia."
The NIH and Tulane say the monkeys are suffering and should be put to death.
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Both sides agreed not to disclose the amount of the settlement reached Tuesday, said attorney Joseph Fahey, who represented the 21-year-old in his lawsuit against Julio Soto of New York City had sought $1.05 million
Justice Robert Nicholson ruled in October, based on uncontested facts in the case, that Soto had committed medical malpractice. The state
Soto admitted to the state Board of Professional Medical Conduct that he lived when he told the woman that she was suffering from herpes and that he could obtain a secret vaccine. He told her the most effective way to administer the vaccine was through sexual intercourse.
Board of Regents revoked Soto's medical license last year because of his conduct with the woman in 1988, when she was a student at Fordham University.
The woman was suffering from a minor urinary tract infection when Fortham officials referred her to the doctor who was under contract with the school.
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- KU office of study abroad will have an informational meeting at 10:30 a.m. at 203 Lippincott.
■ Consumer Affairs Association will hand out pamphlets about renting apartments from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in front of Wescole Hall.
Canterbury House will celebrate the Holy Eucharist at noon at Danforth Chanel
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop entitled "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
■ Nihon Club will meet at 1 p.m. at Alcove in the Kansas Union.
■ There will be an entomology seminar at 3:30 p.m. at 1005 Haworth.
■ Amnesty International will sponsor a letter-writing session at 4 p.m. at Alcove in the Kansas Union.
KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas University
KU Tritathletes will meet for a group bike ride at 4 p.m. in front of Wescow Hall.
- Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union
KU Gamers and Role-players will
KU Astrology Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
Champions Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Flying Club will have a "Federal Aviation Administration Safety Seminar" at 7 p. m. at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Unit.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will conduct its weekly open meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Convention Center.
KU Student Biothess will present a discussion entitled "The Elderly: Who Cares?" at 7 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
- KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alcove C in the Kansas Union.
Police report
A KU student's mo-pod was taken between 9:45 p.m. Monday and 7:50 a.m. Tuesday from the 1500 block of West Ninth Street, Lawrence police station.
meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
Baptist Student Union will have a Bible study at 6:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center
■ Someone took a 150-watt amplifier and a pair of speakers from a KU student's vehicle parked on Walden Court between 8 a.m. Monday and 2 a.m. Tuesday. Lawrence police reported. The items were valued at
of East 19th Street was bitten by a dog at 7 p.m. yesterday, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student used another person's credit card to pay tuition, fees and assessments in January. KU was awarded the捐赠. The charges totaled $1,005.45
Have an opinion? Write a "letter to the editor"!
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A sign in front of the Theta Chi fraternity, 1011 Mississippi St. was damaged between 1 p.m. Monday to Tuesday. Law enforcement police reported
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 11, 1991
3
Election turnout surprises
High numbers placing votes in Senate race
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie Kansan staff writer
STUDENT SENATE
ELECTIONS
If turnout remains steady, about 4,200 students will have voted in the Student Senate elections by the time the polls close today.
Yesterday, the first day of elections, about 2,000 voters turned out. Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said that figure was surprising because only two coalitions were running.
Student Senate Elections
Last year's race produced a relatively high voter turnout, when 2,600 voted on the first day. The total for five counties was 5,400. Five coalitions ran in the election.
With only two coalitions, many people do not expect a high turnout this year. Poer said.
Voters kept the tables in front of Wescoe Hall the busiest, where about 700 students voted, and lines of up to 150 were set up in the morning and about midday.
Jeff Johnson, Emporia senior, spent five hours monitoring the Wescoe poll.
Voters cast Student Senate ballots outside the Kansas Union, one of seven polls on campus.
"This is by far the busiest booth," he said.
The Wescoe location also has the largest staff.
"When you've got six people working, you can roll through it pretty quick." Johnson said.
About 500 students voted at the polling table in front of Watson Library.
Josn weerasingne, vaney rans senior, has worked for two years at the polls. He said that the turnout was higher on the second day last year.
The volunteers who monitor the polls must ensure that no campaigning takes place within 50 yards of the polls.
This entails making sure that no coalition buttons or fliers are in the open. As students approach the tables to vote, volunteers at the polls ask them to remove all campaign paraphernalia.
Minorities want to see more results
Kansan staff writer
By Lara Gold
It was a year ago today
African-American students joined many other KU students and walked from Strong Hall to the Chancellor's home in outrage after a Pizza Shuttle incident. All were sharply stirred at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house, according to police reports.
The group of about 50 demanded that the University of Kansas make changes so that all students would be trained to feel discriminated against at KU.
However, some African-American students say nothing has been accomplished in the past year to make the comfortable for minority students.
"There isn't a University-wide unity to help minority students," said
Cory Anderson, executive board member of Black Men of Today.
Today, Anderson, along with other members of the African-American community, plays to rally again with other KU students in front of Strong Hall in response to concerns they think have not been met this year.
As the anniversary of the rally approached, Anderson resubmitted the plan to the administration two weeks thinking the plan had been ignored.
At the rally a year ago, Black Men of Today submitted a 12-point plan to the administration that it thought would help the campus climate for KU's African-American students and all minority students.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said the administration was continuing to address programs for minority students
But the administration's response has left Anderson and other African-American students thinking that KU is oblivious to their needs.
"We are continuing to work on their concerns," he said. "We want to meet with them to also discuss further concerns."
He said he wanted proof that steps were being taken to help the minority community.
He said that the administration, always seemed to be exploring ideas or looking into new programs but there was never any direct action.
"It looks like a bunch of nothing," Anderson said, referring to the response.
"I don't think the University is committed to helping Black stu-
Carter, who also marched last year, said the administration had failed to meet the needs of the minority students at KU.
Corey Carter, president of the Black Poets' Society, agreed.
"We want to let them know that we are not going to accept it," she said.
Sherwood Thompson, director of the office of minority affairs, said it was the administration's role to address student concerns.
"But I feel sincere that the administration is fostering that conducive environment," he said. "My experi- pendents are that they want to be heard."
Senate candidate joins election late
Thompson suggested that the students and the administration work together to address the problems of minority students at KU.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The last time Gary Ashwin ran for office, he was in the third grade.
"I ran for class president, but I lost," said Ashwill, Berkeley, Calif., senior.
Asbwill is running for a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Student Senate seat as an independent write-in candidate. He is a self-proclaimed anarchist and co-founder of the Oread Anarchists.
Ashwill filed for candidacy two hours before the deadline Monday.
"I had been thinking about it for a while," he said. "But it was a spur of the moment thing to file."
Ashwill said that he thought it was possible for an independent to win a Senate seat but that it would be more difficult than the two highly visible coalitions.
"If Senate can't recognize me, the independent candidate, then how can they recognize the individual student?" he said.
Ashwill has been distributing fliers about his platform to make himself more visible to the voting student public.
"I'm trying to get people aware that there are alternatives to the two coalitions." he said.
His platform includes the removal of the chancellor's veto power over Student Senate. Ashwil said the elimination of the wdo would give more power to Senate.
Ashwill said he wanted to see
'If Senate can't recognize me, the independent candidate, then how can they recognize the individual student?'
- Gary Ashwill
Student Senate independent candidate
the structure of Senate changed so it would be more accessible to students.
"I want to democratize Student Senate," he said. "We need to solve the tremendous problem of apathy towards Student Senate."
Ashwill also would like to see a ban of toxic pesticides on campus, more recycling and wind generators on top of Fraser Hall.
Boog Highberger, second-year law student, said he endorsed Ashwill as an independent candidate for Senate. Highberger was student body vice president in 1984.
"I think the Student Senate would do a lot better with independents elected," he said. "Student leaders from more diverse view points."
But Highberger said he thought Ashwell's chances for being elected to a Senate seat were dismal.
"People tend to vote in herds," he said. "They usually vote for the coalitions instead of the independents."
Senate cuts budget for Regents schools
Higher education loses $20 million from House plan
By Joe Gose Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The state's fiscal 1992 higher education budget package may have barely enough money to hire its own gravedigger, unless a last-minute tax increase saves it from peril.
The Senate passed the Board of Regents financing bill 28-11 yesterday without restoring any of the cuts from the state's general fund spending.
The proposed budget is $20 million less than the House recommended and reflects a 2.6 percent decrease in general-fund financing.
If the proposed budget is signed by Gov Joan Finney, the University of Kansas, a Regents institution, would suffer a severe financial setback.
Not only would KU's operating budget be cut by $50,000, but cost increases in health insurance and other benefits for employees could drive that number to almost $3 million.
The University of Kansas faced similar cuts in the early 1980s, which led to dramatic cost-cutting measures. The university has summer classes and salary freezes.
Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, had proposed an amendment to replace $20 million to the Regents as well as a general education fund and $5.5 million to community colleges and Washburn University.
However, senators killed the proposal 22-16 after debating it for two days.
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R Shawnee, who led the fight against the $0.5 million amendment, said he was not opposed to spend money the state did not have.
"What would happen if you went out wanting to spend $85 or $5,800 had no way to raise it?" he asked. "What would go to jail? That what would happen."
State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, echoed that sentiment.
"When you were young and went to the candy store with no money in your pocket, you didn't buy any money," he said. "And right now the state doesn't have money to buy candy either."
But even after the vote, Winter said that there was still time left to restore money to the budget and to make a sustainable damage to higher education.
"Maybe I'm just trying to put a happy face on you, but I was happy with the debate," Winter said. "I exploded the myth that we can get through this year without raising revenue. That was my primary goal."
"But I am disappointed that we haven't come to grips with it yet. We need a more courageous Senate to do it now."
Winter said the tax increase could be introduced in conference committee action or through the omnibus appropriation bill, a catch-all bill for budgetary items left unresolved at the end of the session.
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Thursday, April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
War unresolved
Saddam prolongs fighting in attacks on Kurds, but United States should stay out of civil action
he war with Iraq is over.
President Bush announced last week that the United States officially had saved the Kuwaiti people from the wrath of Saddam Hussein.
Thousands of Kurds, a nomadic group living in northern Iraq, have been wiped out by Iraqi forces.
But the war is far from over for the Iraqi people.
Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis are fleeing for the northern border of Iraq. During their journey, they suffer from hunger, sickness and harmful exposure to the cold of the mountainous border region.
They are now the victims of Saddam's efforts to rape and pillage his own country to stay in power.
The Bush administration has refused to order U.S. military forces to intervene in the Iraqi civil war. Instead, the United States is providing relief to Kurdish refugees with food and medical supplies.
This is a wise decision on the part of the Bush administration. The U.S. government should provide as much aid as possible to the Kurdish rebels so they can survive against or flee from the ruthless attacks by their own government.
The Iraqi people are being inflicted with the same kind of bullying as Kuwait was, but the Iraqi situation is different because it is a civil war. The U.S. government should not get involved militarily in a civil war. Korea and Vietnam are two disastrous examples of what can happen when the United States puts its nose where it does not belong.
Whether the United States should have gotten involved in the gulf war is debatable. But the U.S. government had international laws to fall back on when it entered Kuwait.
Bush is making the right choice by sending food and medical aid to Iraq. By staying out of another war, the government is discouraging war itself.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
Iron Curtain rises
Eastern Europe must find place in world arena
The Soviet Union began to clamp its iron fist on eastern European countries when it seized freedom from eastern Germany in 1946.
But the era of Soviet domination in the East is over.
One by one, the Warsaw Pact nations (Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and East Germany) have regained their independence.
The Soviet Union's inability to manage its own republics and its obvious loss of control in the satellite nations indicated to eastern Europe that the opportunity for escape was at hand.
The Iron Curtain has been pulled open.
In 1898, Communist leadership resigned in Czechoslavakia. The rest of the nations grasped the chance to follow suit.
The new question facing these nations is what will be their role in the world political arena?
Denied access to participating in the affairs of the rest of the world and prohibited from completely controlling their own fates,
the nations have a new-found freedom thrust upon them.
Their position with the Soviet Union in the future will be of great interest.
But their relationships with the United States will prove to be a crucial turning point in East-West relations.
These nations are being denied entrance to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO nations argue that security in the East would be weakened.
But eastern Europe is aware of the possible growth that establishing new ties with the United States will provide.
And the United States is catching on to the potential advantages new alliances could offer.
Economic prosperity on both sides in the form of investment for the United States and industrial and technological growth in the East are among the benefits.
And the United States would be wise to consider its options.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
VOTE
YOUR NAME HERE
FOR
PRESIDENT
PHOTO
10:95
Administration lacks concern for fostering minority growth
On April 11, 1990, student activism at the University of Kansas reached a high point.
That day about 500 students occupied Strong Hall demanding to speak to the chancellor The Sigma Alpha Epsilon incident, in which a Black woman was physically and arbitrarily pushed out of her report office and incited this mass protest. The incident quickly grew to include a potpourri of concerns
From GLOSK to KJIK, every special interest group was represented that day, and everyone had an agenda to push.
The students who organized the protest, Black students, also had an agenda that day. That agenda included things such as better recruitment and retention of Black students, increased Black faculty and staff, a multi-cultural center and a redefining of the office of minority affairs.
In the past year, there has been at least one positive development as far as Black and other students of color were enrolled. In the spring 2014 was the hiring of a new director of the
YOUNG
These issues and many more were of great concern to Black students at that time. Unfortunately, a year later, many of these issues have yet to be addressed. The University administration has become an expert at dragging its feet.
Cory
Anderson
Guest column
Guest columnist
office of minority affairs. Unfortunately, a very competent and creative individual is forced to work in the same repressive and underfinanced position as his predecessors.
In the area of recruitment of Black students, the office of admissions has taken two steps backward. Both of the older, more experienced minority student recruiters have left the office and have been replaced by a graduate teaching assistant and a recent KU graduate.
These two people no doubt are committed to their jobs, but unfortunately they lack the resources and the experience to be immediately able to perform the position of Minority Recruitment Coordinator remains vacant.
All of these issues are important to Black students. If inaction is the way the administration chooses to show its concern for Black students, then the future for Black students on this campus is indeed bleak. We
marched, protested and dialogued ourselves into a very uneasy frustration.
We are tired of waiting for change. And today, one year later, we intend to make that feeling known, once again, in front of Strong Hall.
Personally, I find it more and more difficult to recommend this University to prospective Black students. The apathy of our administration is appalling. I would hesitate to subject anyone to the climate that Black students are subjected to on this campus.
I will graduate in May, and this column and today's protest are my last effort to impress upon this administration the importance of recruiting and supporting Black and other minority students.
I would implore the administration to listen to the voice of reason and look to history for a lesson on the commitment of Black students.
In 1969, Black students at Cornell University protested these same issues. Those students used guns and force to take over their administration building. Those students got what they wanted.
Cory Anderson is an Omaha, Neb., senior majoring in journalism.
Other Voices
Smokers knew risks
In a new twist on the old Flip Wilson line, "The devil made me do it," some smokers are trying to convince the nation's highest court that "Philip Morris made me do it."
The courts have reasoned that because of a federally required warning label on every pack of cigarettes, smokers cannot argue that they were given no warning of the dangers of their habit.
For years, a few longtime smokers have tried without success to hold tobacco companies liable for their destructive habit. So far, the federal court system has refused the right to sue tobacco companies.
In contrast, state courts have been moving in the opposite direction.
A current case before the Supreme Court should resolve this smoldering issue. The court decided to hear a case involving Rose Cipollone, who died of lung cancer in 1984 after smoking a pack of cigarettes each day for 42 years.
In 1987, a trial court awarded
her family $400,000 in damages against Liggett Group, a cigarette manufacturer. After an appeals court threw out the award, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case this fall.
Smokers cannot credibly argue that they have been kept in the dark about their habit. For the past 25 years, cigarette makers have been required to print warnings on cigarette packs.
For the past 30 years, the media have carried stories on new studies documenting the dangers of smoking cigarettes.
Even if a smoker somehow manages to avoid all the dire warnings, perhaps by living in a cave, you think plain common sense would help breathing hot, tarry smoke into his lungs would not be healthy.
If the Supreme Court allows tobacco companies to be sued because of bad decisions made by smokers, the court will have struck another blow against personal responsibility.
From the Delta Democrat Times, Greenville, Miss.
Whether a person smokes or not
is in the end, a personal choice
An opposing Voice raises funding questions
The student group Voice was recently denied financing by the Student Senate, one of only four groups so excluded. Moreover, while the other three groups were denied on consideration of their functional uniqueness, Senate had to devise other criteria for Voice. In doing so, the issue of the financing of Voice reaches beyond the details. For the rest of the matter is a compelling lesson on where the University as an institution stands in relation to intellectual diversity.
For newcomers, Voice is a KU peace group formed in response to the outbreak of war in the Persian Gulf and pursuing an agenda that promotes regional cooperation, with its spider grip on our society, economy and government.
Senate denied Voice financing on three "borderline" considerations: that the group was partisan, reactive and controversial. 'Partisan' was clearly a mismiser because there was no electoral candidate or party nominee to win and rally around — even if they wanted to, which they did not.
"Reactive" means that because the war was over, there was obviously nothing left for Voice to do.
PETER F. MUSCHER
Cynthia Ingham
Guest columnist
Hadn't the glorious liberation of Kuwait been accomplished? Hadn't the Army Corps of Engineers repaired the emir's palace? What more was needed to vindicate the New World Order?
The end of the war has demonstrated in brutal terms that militarism must be opposed more strongly than ever. It may take time to sink in, but this war has shamed the United States, and no amount of flag-waving by military officials will do the damage that fact Reactive? Voice's work has only begun.
Finally, Senate was leered of financing Voice because it was too "controversial." Twice during the year, Voice was told that it would have had a better chance at financing if Voice had presented both sides of the issue and hadn't taken such a strong position to the ultimate sin! Voice was not nice!
Here it is, folks, the new catechism for intellectual legitimacy on the eve
of the 21st century: feel good fairness. Surely this must cause shivers down the spine of every activist group on campus. Is there a pro-torture position in Amnesty International? Do Students Against Hunger sometimes present the case for哭鸣? Or, more seriously, should Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas allow room for the idea that homosexuality is not a legitimate lifestyle? By its very name, American Friends of Palestine has taken a position. How can this be?
It can be because Senate has decided on a threshold of acceptability that Voice doesn't reach and that other groups apparently do. The Voice crime was compounded by another: its position was probably lower than the average. Not only was Voice staring things up, but it failed to adjust its positions when it seemed the group wasn't swimming with the tide.
In a sense, Senate's action is a continuation of the popular mentality running rampant during the Persian Gulf War. Don't offend anyone by taking a position. In the vast comfort zone, you might say what's right and what's wrong? Niceness takes precedence over controversy, because controversy
'The end of the war has demonstrated in brutal terms that militarism must be opposed more strongly than ever.'
makes people feel bad. What's the nice response? Support the troops. Don't question the war, don't ask, don't think.
Intellectual diversity requires controversy as the force of opinion-making. Intellectual cowardice, on the other hand, fits well with niceness as its ethical fulcrum. But prettending one can escape individual responsibility for moral decision is a fool's game.
Senate's action is a mere symptom of a corrosive attitude within universities: a pustule, so to speak, amid the leprosy of intellectual cowardice.
Free thought certainly has not been stifled by this financing denial, but the masonry is there — any time you want to have a building what constitutes acceptable opinion.
Cynthia Ingham is a Lawrence graduate student in U.S. history.
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name and contact information, including the university with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columnists should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be required to meet the right to respect or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be written in any language they wish.
Sketch
LIFE IS FULL OF POSSIBILITIES—
AND YOU SHOULDN'T BE AFRAID
TO EXPLORE ANY OF THEM.
FOR INSTANCE, I HAVE AN
INSTRUCTOR WHO WAS A
STUDENT HERE IN THE '60S.
AND HE HAD A CLASS IN
BLAKE HALL TWICE A WEEK...
LIFE IS FULL OF POSSIBILITIES — AND YOU SHOULDN'T BE AFRAID TO EXPLORE ANY OF THEM.
FOR INSTANCE, I HAVE AN INSTRUCTOR WHO WAS A STUDENT HERE IN THE 'GOS.'
AND HE HAD A CLASS IN BLACK HALL TWICE A WEEK...
EVERYTIME HE ENTERED THE BUILDING, HE WOULD SAY "HI!" TO THIS CUTE YOUNG LADY WHO WAS ALWAYS LEAVING JUST AS HE ARRIVED EVENTually, SHE BEGAN TO SAY "Hi!" TO HIM, TOO.
WELL, ONE DAY, HE GOT THERE EARLY AND FOUND HIS CLASS WAS CANCELLED. SO, AS HE LEFT THE BUILDING, GUESS WHO HE RAN INTO?
THE CUTE YOUNG LADY...
SO, INSTEAD OF JUST SAYING "HI," HE BOLDLY INTRODUCED HER TO THE UNION FOR A COKE.
AND, WELL, ONE THING LED TO MATHER AND THEY WOULD UP BACK AT HIS APARTMENT...
ONCE THEY GOT THERE, BEFORE HE COULD SAY ANYTHING, SHE STRIPPED NAKED AND ASKED HIM TO GO TO GED WITH HER!
...AND THEY LIVED HAPPily EVER AFTER?
WELL, NO. IT TURNED OUT THAT SHE WAS A NYMPHOMAIC AND AFTER THREE MONTHS OF A PURIFYING PHYSICAL RELATIONSHIP, SHE DUMPED HIM FOR SOME OTHER GUY.
BUT DO NOT YEESE? IT WAS A GREAT LEARNING EXPERIENCE FOR HIM AND IT NEVER WOULD've HAPPENED IF HE DIDN'T SAY "Hi!" TO HER...
THE MORAL OF THE STORY is...
THE MORAL OF THE STORY IS: LIFE IS FULL OF POSSIBILITIES AND YOU SHOULDN'T BE AFRAID TO EXPLORE ANY OF THEM... WAWA GO GET A COKE?
OVER...
X3
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 11, 1991
5
MISSION
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Second-year architecture students, in conjunction with Independence Inc., 1910 Haskell Ave., receive hands-on experience with environmental barriers faced by disabled individuals who use wheelchairs.
Architecture students find new perspective at Watson
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Architecture students got a different perspective on design when some spent part of yesterday in wheelchairs to experience how some constructions can be barriers to people with disabilities.
Students in wheelchairs left Marvin Hall and went to Wenatchee Library, where they toured the building and used the elevators, bathrooms and stacks.
About 120 second-year students participated in the activity, which was sponsored by Alpha Rho Chi, a professional architecture fraternity. Wheelchairs were borrowed from local pharmacies.
John Monshausen, Leawood junior,
spent about half an hour in a wheel
chair.
"Going up the ramps was pretty hard because you had to keep going or you'd come to a complete stop," he said. "But it was fun gone down."
Monshausen said the activity made students think about how to design buildings for people with disabilities.
"We're going to design a library in class next, and this was a learning experience for that," he said.
Jim Skinner, Overland Park senior, uses a wheelchair every day. Skimmer, a fine arts major, pointed out that he must contend every day.
"I was always too afraid of cracking my head open to do that," he said as he watched two architecture students balance on their two back wheels.
Skinner said that campus had some barriers for people in wheelchairs
but that overall, KU officials were conscientious of the needs of disabled people.
Clay Phillips, St. Charles, Mo., junior, rolled up a ramp at the library.
"Man, I'm worn out," he said. "The ramps are a little steep."
Phillips said that he found some places in the library where he could not turn the corner because the rows of books were too close together.
He also said it would be frustrating to use the stacks because the books on the top shelves were inaccessible to students in wheelchairs.
"I'm pretty tall and my arm span is long, and I still couldn't reach the books on the top shelf," Phillips said. "Someone who needed those books would be out of luck."
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Thursday, April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Caring makes Hannah's House a home
Oberhelman uses her faith, experience to help unwed pregnant women and to learn from them
Kansan staff writer
By Amy Francis
Hannah's House easily could be called Melinda's House, but Melinda Oberhelman would not think of it.
Her faith and 'calling,' as she refers to it, gave her the courage to establish the nonprofit home in which she helped pregnant women 19 or younger.
"God just really put it on my heart," she said. "It was something that I felt in my heart I had to do." Overheilman started the house in Foley, where he worked closely with its board of directors. That is only part of what she does.
She lives in the house as disciplinarian, friend, counselor, chauffeur and sometimes birthling coach for her husband. She will go up to three months after giving birth.
She chose the name Hannah's House because of Hannah in the first book of Samuel in the Old Testament. She gave her first son to the church.
"I did some research on Hannah, and she was a good example to me as a mother," she said. "She was a woman who believed in prayer."
Oberhemlan was not aware of it at the time, but she now thinks that God was preparing her for Hannah's House when she was younger.
Experience
"I looked back at all the times where I really didn't care what happened to me," she said. "I must have told her that I must have had his hard on me."
She said she stopped caring about things when she was about 24 years old. She was married at 19, gave birth to a daughter at 22 and divorced at 23.
idea of what it would be like to be a single parent.
"It was after my divorce. I was just so desperate to feel good about myself. You want to prove that you re still OK. I did a lot of drugs, and I d a lot of drinking," she said. "I needed people to look at me, accept me, and that's what I think a lot of the girls are looking for."
"I've been a single parent for 17 years," she said. "I support them with whatever the decision."
Otterbeman is not ashamed of her past. She uses it now to let the women at Hanna's house know she understands what they are going through.
While the women are living in the house, she also tries to inform them about birth control and to teach them how to protect themselves have to have sex to gain acceptance.
Many of the women in Hannah's house consider putting their babies up for adoption, she said. She can provide insight about what the child's life might be like if the woman is soooo so. Oberheimer herself was adopted.
She said she also tried to let the women know she was more than just a counselor to them. She is also a friend.
And if a woman decides to keep the child, Oberhelman can give her an
'I looked back at all the times where I really didn't care what happened to me. I thought that God really must have had his hand on me.'
— Melinda Oberhelman Founder of Hannah's House
"I become very attached to the girls," she said. "If they are sad, I cry with them."
Oberhelman also has learned a lot from working at Hannah's House.
"I've learned I can't be all things to everybody. That's hard for me," she said. "I had to deal with a sense of guilt over my decision to help everybody, but I wanted to
"I thought that everyone would be really happy here and everything would be peachy. That wasn't realistic."
"Maybe (God) was preparing me then," she said.
Hannah's
House
2216 Alabama
Getting started
Working with pregnant women was nothing new to Oberhemlman. She worked at Birthright, an organization that provides counseling for pregnant women, when she lived in Pittsburg, Kan.
Melinda Oberhelman runs Hannah's House, 2216 Alabama St., a home for unwed mothers.
But it was not until she moved to Lawrence more than five years ago that she thought of starting Hannah's House.
She got little support.
"Everyone felt that the need wasn't there," she said. "They weren't real encourag."
Oberhelman recruited other friends for the rest of the board.
Later, her friend Julie Bramschreiber gave Oberhelm the support she needed to get the house started. Bramschreiber later became the first president of the house's board of directors.
knew," she said. "Most of them didn't have any experience in this, just like I didn't."
But she did look for people who had experience in their own fields. Board members range in profession from an artist to a lawyer. She met many students and served in church. 1330 Kasold Drive in Lawrence, where she is a member.
"A lot of them were people that I
Oberhelman had to get more for the house than a board of directors - she also had to get money
Financial problems
She quit her job as a proofreader at work University Printing Service to work for the house. That left her with no regular income.
Heather Oberhelman, Melinda's daughter, said she was worried about what would happen to them when her mother quit her job.
"I was really seared when she quit her job, like we wouldn't be financially stable," she said.
Melinda Oberhelman said, "I get scared, sure. Things aren't secure here in a lot of ways.
"Sometimes I question God choose me to do it. Then He brings about something to happen that convinces me that I have no doubt."
The house depends on fund-raisers, donations, a nominal fee for the mothers who can afford it and government grants for financial support. Melinda Oberhelman spends a lot of her time writing requests for grants and finding out what grants are available to the house, she said.
Phép Mening/KANSAN
Oberherman receives a salary of $1,350 a month, she said. For a 39 day month, that averaged to about $1.90 per hour. Oberherman is taking in the house with no time off.
There are now three staff members for the house. They are paid $4.50 an hour, she said. Heather Oberhelman is one of the staff members.
"I really try to use the resources hat are available in the community." Melinda Oberhelman said.
Stacey Lamb, a board member,
said, "it's going to be hard to get
money because it's a nonprofit
organization. Our wask is of
routhe here and there."
Board member Dan Trent said,
"Most of us, I'm sure, didn't think
we'd get it off the ground in the first
place."
Annual operation costs of the house first were estimated to be from $105,000 to $106,000 but were actually $80,000. The money was used for items such as the staff salary, rent for the house and the cost of operating the house, he said.
Getting away
Sometimes the house has been almost too much for Oberhelman.
"My life ended up being Hannah's House, and I had to learn to separate the two. she said "That was really hard. I've spent much time there."
'She has a real religious commitment with what she does. She felt a religious leading, you might say, about having a home for unwed mothers.'
Bob Eales Board member
Heather Oberhelman agreed that her mother needed to separate her self from the house
"I think that it is important that she gets away from the house. She used to be here all the time, she said." I asked whether I had any time to herself or be neededs.
house. She said that she, a staff member or a member of the board must be in the house whenever one of the women is in the house.
It was not always easy for Melinda Oberhelman to get away from the
But she still said she needed the time away from it.
"When you're in the midst of turmoil, it's hard to be objective," she said. "It's hard to stay focused."
She now stays focused by spending time at her daughter's apartment She said the one rule they had at the apartment was not to talk about the
"One thing that's really good is to get away from it for a little while and get objective," she said.
"When I sit and look, it's really overwhelming to me to see what
Dawn Trent, wife of Dan Trent,
said; "It really takes a lot of energy
to do what she's doing
The need
Three women are in the house now, but since it was founded it has been a temporary home for 17 women and six babies. Oberhehelman has been the birthing coach for four of those women.
we've accomplished," she said.
"Nothing is impossible. The only limits I have are those I put on me and God."
Bob Eales, a board member, said, "She has a real religious commitment with what she does. She felt a religious leading, you might say, about having a home for 'unwed mothers. Some girls have been literally thrown out of their homes. That's what Hannah's house is for."
Oberheilman said that prospective mothers sometimes did not stay at Hannah's House because they felt that things were too structured or the rules were too strict. Residents are not allowed to smoke, drink use drugs or utter obscenities. But regardless of the reasons women leave the house, they are welcome to come back and visit.
"The girls are really part of my family," she said. "I want the best for them, and sometimes that means I want to be with them, but I still want them to know I love them."
"If I were not to do this and could do anything I wanted, I don't know what I would do."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 11, 1991
Nation/World
7
Minsk, U.S.S.R.
Workers defy Gorbachev, go on strike
An estimated 200,000 workers ignored Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's moratorium on work stoppages and poured out of factories yesterday to strike in the Byevorussian canal.
The republic's leaders granted strikers a key demand and let them read an unprecedented anti-Communist statement during the republic's nightly television news program
"The Communist Party of the Soviet Union is guilty of the collapse of the economy, lies around Chernobyl and annihilation of the peoples and their languages," said strike committee member Georgi Mukhin during the broadcast. "This party tries to preserve its dominance over us at our expense."
Strike leaders told reporters the walkout would continue today because the Byelorussian government refused to negotiate their political and economic demands, which include Gorbachev's resignation.
The strike in Minsk, a city of 1.5 million and the capital of the western republic of 10.4 million people, was set off by national price increases. It followed a nationwide strike by coal miners that has sapped the already-weak economy.
Ankara, Turkey
Iraq seeks active role aiding refugees
Ira has offered to help Turkey distribute international aid to more than 300,000 desperate refugees camped along the two nations' border, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said yesterday.
Turkish officials reported last week that Saddam Hussein's forces attacked the refugees, who are mostly Iraqi Kurds with mortars. Turkey said yesterday that it is responding to its soldiers inside Iraq territory to protect the refuences.
Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have fled to Turkey and Iran to escape possible reprisals after the failed invasion.
Despite claims by Turkey, the refugees and the rebels that Iraqi forces have attacked the Kurds, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said Tuesday that Baghdad now wanted a fight against them and have become sick and are going hungry on the border.
Ministry representative Murat Sungar said that the Iraqi ambassador reported that the Iraqi Red Crescent, the Muslim version of the Red Cross, was willing to cooperate in any way possible.
Sacramento, Calif.
An unparalleled $13 billion budget deficit over two years, with roots in the Proposition 13 tax rebellion, means residents of the nation's most populous state will soon be paying more for less.
"We could close all our state universities, we could open all our prisons, we could eliminate our entire state workforce, and we would still not close this gap," said Gov Pete Wilson.
The projected shortfall is the largest ever faced by any state, according to the Department of Finance.
Californians could be paying higher sales taxes, higher liquor and motor vehicle taxes, and higher college tuition. One proposal would tax services such as those provided by attorneys, architects and plumbers.
Public schools and colleges will likely have larger
classes and fewer courses, teachers and state workers could lose their jobs, and fewer health, mental health and welfare programs will be available for the poor.
Last July, lawmakers thought the current year’s $35 billion budget was balanced with a $1.4 billion reserve. Instead, there will be a record $3.6 billion deficit by the time the fiscal year ends June 30.
And next year's proposed budget, a $5.57 billion spending plan for 1991-92 that Wilson proposed in January and takes effect July 1, is projected to have a deficit of more than $9 billion.
Washington
Court asked to open files on meeting
A federal court was asked yesterday to order the release of State Department files on former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq April Glaspie's meeting with Saddam Hussein a week before his troops invaded Kuwait.
The July 25, 1990, meeting in Baghdad has been a pivotal issue in the debate over whether the United States led Saddam to believe it would not intervene if he tried to take over his tiny, oil-rich neighbor.
Alan Morrison, attorney for the Ralph Nader group Public Citizen, which filed suit in U.S. District Court, said the State Department effectively waived its secrecy right by discussing the meeting in public.
"This is a case about fairness to the public." Morrison said in an interview. "Things cannot be classified for the convenience of the government."
A State Department representative said he could not comment immediately on the lawsuit.
Various members of Congress have criticized the Bush administration and have said it sent confusing signals to the president.
An Iraqi-released transcript of Glaspe's meeting with Saddam fueled the debate. It said she told the Iraqi president the United States would not take sides in Arab affairs, including Iraq's border disagreement with Kuwait
In testimony three weeks ago before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Glaspic conceded she made the statement. But she said she also told Saddam that the United States would insist that any dispute be settled peacefully.
That line was omitted from the Iraqi transcript, which she said was subjected to crucial and misleading editing.
Washington
Tap water may be better than bottled
Plain tap water may be safer than some pricey bottled waters because of lax federal regulation of the bottled-water industry, congressional investigators and lawmakers said yesterday.
The General Accounting Office, the congressional watchdog agency, concluded that the Food and Drug Administration needed to do more to ensure bottled waters were safe.
Inadequate regulations mean that bottled water, including mineral water, may contain levels of potentially harmful contaminants that are not allowed in public drinking water, the report said.
The accounting office conducted its investigation at the request of Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., carperson of a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on overfishing and issued the PDA for its handling of the bottled-water industry.
From The Associated Press
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How can Humanity Exorcise the Specter of War?
Come hear
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Sponsored by the Baha'i Community of Lawrence in association with the KU Baha'i Club
Place: Big Eight Room,
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For more information call 843-2703
**No donations please**
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Tickets $2.50, available at the SUA Office in the Kansas Union
Friday and Saturday at 7:00 and 9:30pm Sunday at 2:00pm Movies shown in Woodruff Auditorium. Kansas Union
Movies shown in Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
8
Thursdav April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Standing up to closed minds: Student leader works to encourage cultural awareness
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Liz Mendez's voice shakes when she is really serious about something.
"Don't think I'm crying. My voice just gets like this," she tells Student Senate.
"When I was selected as chairperson, I told everyone that I would help them with their
Mendez has addressed Senate many times in the past year as the Minority Affairs Committee chairperson. She said she had vowed to join the party and have a new role, an officer, in student government.
That vow has included sponsoring bills that have brought minority speakers and artists to the University of Kansas. Unfortunately the president has not spoken in front of Senate. The pressure is on.
But she speaks anyway. Standing 5 feet 1 inch, she often looks nervous or intimidated when she speaks, but she thinks that she has to make her point clear.
As a committee chairperson, Mendez has to report to Senate about her committee. That is easy, she said.
That's my job.
But speaking about something she feels strongly about, something she feels emotional about, makes her nervous.
For example, last semester during Hispanic Heritage Month, Mendez was angry at Senate members because she thought they had not shown their support for the month's activities because they had not attended many of them.
"I wanted them to know that it's not enough to give money to something," she
Speaking in front of the entire body at which she was angry was not easy, she said.
"Sometimes, you have to overcome your nervousness. What you have to say is more important than what you say."
important that he coexists with her.
After her speech, some people came to tell
her she was right, she said. Not all, but some,
and that was encouraging.
"I feel that I've been so fortunate in my life, that the Lord has blessed me so much. It is important to help other people, because I realize how lucky I've been." Mendez said.
That encouragement has been a part of Mender's growing up and learning about life.
Community ties
Her fortunate life includes coming from a loving family, she said. Her family has long-standing ties to the community. Three of her grandparents were born in the Kansas City area.
Her parents have been married for 23 years. Her father, a Catholic, and her mother, a Southern Baptist, have made Mendez realize that people with religious differences can live together and love each other.
Mendez has taken that idea a step further and argued that people with obvious differences can live together, not just tolerate each other, and grow from new experiences.
"That's what going to college is supposed to do. It's supposed to open your mind," she said. "And in some cases, it's supposed to seduce you, but it doesn't happen to everyone."
Prejudice and bigotry exasperate Mendez
listens to what people say with a sensitiv-
ity.
"That's sexist," she scolds a friend when he uses the word 'babe.' "That's so sexist."
Sometimes, pointing out sexist remarks is difficult, she said. Such as when her father says jokingly that women belong in the kitchen.
"It makes me angry, because I know that he isn't sexist, but sometimes he doesn't understand how remarks like that can be upsetting. I mean, there are three women in the house," she said, referring to herself, her mother and her sister.
"I try to make people more sensitive," she said.
Mendez said that her father had become more sensitive with his speech since she began mentioning the subject.
"He comes from the old school." she said. And if her father can become more sensitive, coming from the old school, Mendez thinks that younger people can, too.
Discouraging discrimination
Mendez has a theory about why people say things that are discriminatory. It goes something like: People try to generalize in order to say things succinctly.
"We're lazy when we talk. We want to say things as short as possible," she said.
Mendez tries to make her friends and other students she knows more careful about what is going on.
ALANNA BLOCHMAN
She lets them know that what they are saying might be hurtful or offensive to a group of people.
Liz Mendez, chairperson of the Student Senate Minority Affairs Committee.
"It's not going to help me out, and it's not going to help that person to confront them in a challenging way," she said. "I can at least tell them more sensitive to what they're saying."
Pointing out that what people say is discriminatory does not always work. Sometimes people, for whatever reason, are prejudiced, she said.
"I feel kind of sorry for those people," she said. "They're closing themselves off to so many different people. It's a sad thing. It's bad that we can't change someone's mind."
Growing in awareness
As a member of Hispanic American Leadership Organization, Mendez has learned a lot about other cultures and diverse groups, she said.
"I've learned so much, not just from HALO, but just from being in the hallway, next to GLSOK or Black Student Union," she said.
The Organizations and Activities Center has offices for student organizations, and HALO, BSU and Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas have offices there, as does Hillel, Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic and Student Senate.
Louis Lopez, HALO president, said Mendel's involvement in both Senate and HALO
was helpful to organizations that normally might not be involved in Senate.
There is an improved dialogue between Senate and minority groups, he said.
"I think she and the committee have done a good job," Lopez said.
Mendez plans to complete a bachelor's degree in political science in December. She wants to go to law school but is not sure whether her grades are good enough.
"I look at it this way. If it's meant for me to go to law school, or if it isn't, I won't go." "Why are you saying it? It was me."
If she cannot get into law school, Mendez
probably will go into public administration "I'll definitely go to graduate school" she said.
She feels a sense of community and wants to be involved in a community wherever she is.
Mendez said her desire to be involved in a community came from her family. Her father is a city administrator in Kansas City, Kan.
"I remember from childhood always going to public events, always feeling involved. I remember my grandfather taking me to these things, too."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 11, 1991
9
Shell-shock victims often misdiagnosed
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Five years ago, psychiatrist Mark Mordechak tried to walk his friend up the stairs, but his friend pulled away in fear.
His friend would sweat and tremble whenever he thought of climbing up to his office on the eight floor of the Israeli medical building. So great was his fear that he quit under this thesis, which he kept in his office.
It was Mordechal who finally diagnosed his friend as having Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. His friend had been a medical officer during the war between Israel and Jordan, and in Lebanon during the early 1980s.
Although he had been diagnosed as having chronic depression, phobias, anxiety and paranoia, one no one had addressed the real cause of his condition.
Head of Central Mental Health Clinic in the Israeli Department of Defense, Mordechai spoke at noon yesterday at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., about PTSD, which is known by many names, including combat fatigue and shell shock.
He said the disorder was often confused with other psychological conditions, such as schizophrenia, paranoia and anti-social tendencies
Such a confusion leads to wrong treatment and, therefore, a lack of progress in a patient's mental condition.
Mordechai said that research of PTSD had been neglected until recently. Only in the past decade
have researchers acknowledged its importance.
"The treatment of choice is still not clear," he said. "No treatment is wholly satisfactory for PTSD."
But understanding the causes of the disorder helps mental health professionals provide adequate treatment.
"One important thing is not to let your patients think that you are going to cure him from a post-traumatic injury. You don't have there is no cure," Mordechi said.
He said a patient hoping to return to his pre-PTSD state could be devastated because such results were unrealistic.
Kala Bhana, visiting professor of psychology, said it was important to understand PTSD in a time in which the world was experiencing more than 20 wars, ranging from guerrilla to civil and international battles.
The effects of the trauma always will be there, but mental health professionals can help the patient understand the trauma and help him or her deal with it in a nondestructive way.
"Some of the affected communities have been able to take measures to protect some of their members," she said. "But others have been helpless from events that appear completely beyond their control."
"To those exposed to war, some trauma is inevitable. Since millions of people are involved, it becomes crucial to reasearch and provide preventive care and mental health services to the places affected."
WASHINGTON — the armed services plan to cut more than 60,000 personnel over the next five months— nearly as many as envisioned before the Persian Gulf War, a Pentagon representative said yesterday.
The Associated Press
The four services, whose ranks swelled during the gulf buildup, will come within 1 percent of the lower levels that Congress had ordered last fall.
The 1991 force reductions for each service officially were approved Monday by Deputy Defense Secretary Donald Atwood. A copy of his memorandum to the uniformed chiefs of the services and to Gen. Colin Powell, chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was released yesterday.
The military will shrink from about 2.06 million members currently to about 1.99 million by Sept. 30, the end of the current fiscal year.
Congress recently agreed to waive the earlier plan and said Defense Secretary Dick Cheney could set up in view of the huge gulf deployments.
"The reshaping of the United States Armed Forces continues in light of changes in the world situation and constraints on the resources available for the national defense," Atwood wrote.
The Army, which has about 745,000 officers and soldiers, will trim 35,000
U.S. armed forces cuts to leave 60,000 jobless
The Navy plans to reduce the number of officers and sailors from 579,000 to 573,086
The Air Force will cut its force from 529,287 to 514,000.
The
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The army and the other services plan to give 90 days notice to members who had been prevented from leaving during the war.
"The Run For Your Life"
Run For Your Life
AURH IFC
5K Fun Run
West Campus
Saturday, April 13, 1991
JRP
10:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon
Sonsored by AURH, IFC, & JRP
Triangle Fraternity would like to thank all the fraternities and sororities that participated in the 1991 Super Bowl Tournament The winners are:
Bowling Tournament
1st - KAΘ
2nd - AEΠ
3rd - ΓΦB
4th - ΔX
Pool Tournament Men's Winner - Steve Helvey - TKE Women's Winner- Nikki Morton - AΓΔ
Thanks to our sponsors: Dominoes Pizza, Treble Clef, and Royal Crest Lanes.
All Proceeds were donated to The Capper Foundation of Topeka.
Shawnee Mission Ford
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1101 Massachusetts
841-0800 8:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
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KU DAY AT JC PENNEY
Thursday - April 11
Come in between 9:30 and 6pm, show us your KUID and receive a JC Penney Savings certificate good for
25% Off
On every Regularly priced* item in the store! The JC Penney Savings Certificate is good all day Thursday at JC Penney Lawrence. Pick up your 25% off Shopping Spree Certificate between 9:30am and 6:00pm with your KUID and Save 25% ALL DAY!
Sale prices on all merchandise in this ad effective Thursday, April 11.
*Except Catalog and Styling Salon
Pick up your certificate at the catalog desk located at the catalog entrance.
Regular prices are offering prices only. Sales may or may not have been made at regular prices.
Sale prices on all merchandise in this ad effective Thursday, April 11th. Percentages off represent savings on regular or original prices, as shown; intermediate markdowns taken on original priced items may be reduced by the percentage price merchandise effective until stock is depleted. Do not include JCPenney Smart Value items.
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10
Thursday, April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
VISIONS an optical dispensary
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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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David Johnston, Lawrence freshman, studies at Clinton Lake while on a geology field trip.
Affordable Rentals Call or visit our leasing offices MASTERCRAFT
Students rock at Clinton Lake
842-4455
By Sarah Davis
Clinton Lake offers students a little rock history.
CENTRAL SCHOOL OF HIGH SCHOOL ENGLISH, BROADWAY STREET, N.Y.C. 10237
Although students will not see any Rolling Stones or Beatles at the lake, they will find ancient rocks.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Each semester, these geology classes take a field trip to Clinton Lake. In the past, classes went to the Kansas
"It is interesting for them to see something that lived 300 million years ago," said Pat Colgan, one of seven graduate teaching assistants who took Geology 101 students on a field trip to the lake. "It tells them something about the Earth's history. That's what the class is designed to do."
Max Harshman, Leavenworth junior, said that he learned a lot in his geology class but that he was looking forward to being able to study the units as they actually occurred in rock layers opposed to the clean and easy-to-tidy rocks in his class.
Students in beginning geology course labs traveled to Clinton Lake for several hours yesterday and today to view rock structures. Rocks at the lake are typical of Kansas rocks.
The students are studying two sections of well-exposed
rock outcrops in different places at the lake to determine whether the rocks are similar over distance.
Jen Johnson, tab coordinator, said that by taking the students out in the field, they could get a feel for geology by looking at rocks in their natural setting.
"What geologists know about the earth they learn from studying rocks," he said. "I think they come back with a new approach to geology is about. Some people find that when we look at rocks and get to apply what they were learning about."
Students had studied rock types in their labs before going out in the field.
"I think it's more interesting to get out and look at the rocks, look at them in their natural state," he said.
Student Senate Elections Today
- Any Student can vote at any polling place with a valid KUID.
- All Students elect the President and Vice President (including Graduating Seniors, Graduate Students and Law Students).
- All Students elect Senators by school.
- Note: Freshmen and Sophomores in LA&S vote for Nunemaker Senators. Juniors and Seniors in LA&S vote for LA&S Senators.
- Students living in Residence Halls vote for a Residential Senator.
- Students living off-campus in non-affiliated private
- accommodations vote for five Off-Campus Senators.
- Non-Traditional Students (students over 24 years of age; married students who are parents; students who commute ten or more miles per day; and/or Veterans elect a Non-Traditional-Student Senator.
All polls open 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Polling Places Are:
Lindley Hall
Kansas Union
Burge Union
Learned Hall
Wescoe
Watson Library Summerfield Hall (Look for outside polls)
VOTETODAY
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 11, 1991
11
**Yvonne**
Jule Denesha/Special to the KANSAN
Condom cents
Candyce Waitley, registered nurse and health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center, displays a condom packaged in a decorative coin container. Waitley explained various forms of contraception and new trends in designer condom packaging. She stressed the importance of communication in relationships to help avoid the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Waitley spoke yesterday at the Wellness Center in Robinson Center.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Government auditors will look over research programs at a handful of universities to see if they have charged taxpayers for luxury items, such as antiques, and have nothing to do with their work.
Feds expand list of schools to undergo research audits
Federal officials Tuesday added nine universities to the list of those to be audited to see whether they have billed the government the same way
The additional institutions were announced on the same day that Harvard University said it would drop $50,000 in research billings to the government from its medical school. Those charges included $1,100 to help pay for a retirement reception for a dean
Auditors estimated that similar questionable expenses would amount to about $1,000, and the rest of the withdrawn charges would be the result of incorrect bookkeeping and other mistakes
charges on its own, before an audit begun last week by the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress.
They are Rutgers University, the University of Chicago, the University of Michigan, the University of Texas Southwest Medical Center, Washing State College, and the University of Southern California and the University of Pittsburgh.
Harvard said it found the over
Investigators from the Department of Health and Human Services have begun reviews at two of the nine schools, Duke University and Emory University, said Judy Holtz, a representative for the department's staff.
Last week, the department said audits had begun at Yale University, the university of Pennsylvania, the University and Dartmouth College.
part of a beefed up plan by the HIS inspector general's office to assure that schools are not charging the government inappropriately for their overhead costs associated with federally financed projects.
Seven other schools have been notified that their audits would begin over the next two to three weeks, she said.
The schools were selected because they were among the largest recipients of federal grants, Inspector General Richard Kusserow has said. Some were selected because they charge higher than-average overhead rates, while some already had paid for them. The schools selected because investigators wanted a geographical cross section of schools, he said.
About 20 schools may be audited as
In Stanford's case, the university billed the government for expenses related to a $1,200 antique commode. a $10,000 set of donated silverware and a university-owned shopping center. A General Accounting Office auditors.
University officials withdrew about $700,000 in billings for most of the questionable expenses.
Peruvian inmates take meals over freedom
The Associated Press
Life behind bars in a Peruvian jail is tough, but freedom, apparently, is even worse.
ment official said yesterday
After an earthquake toppled the walls of their jungle prison April 4, TM inmates at the San Cristobal penitentiary were taken into custody where they were fed, a government.
"The prisoners themselves are going to rebuild the walls," said Miriam Solano, representative for the National Penitentiary Institute.
The quake that hit the prison in Moyobamba, 400 miles north of Lima, measured 6.2 on the Richter scale. It was one of three quakes in
the area over the past week that left 38 people dead and thousands homeless.
Solano said the inmates include leftist guerrillas and common criminals. The prison has no electricity or running water, and prisoners fetch water from a nearby river, the Lima daily El Comercio reported.
New results cause EPA to examine dioxin risk
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency said yesterday that it would review the risks of dioxin, long considered one of the most toxic substances, partly because of new studies that suggest small amounts are less dangerous to humans than previously thought.
Dioxin, an unwanted byproduct of certain chemical reactions, has contaminated some weed and insect killers, including the herbicide Agent Orange used extensively in Vietnam. It also is produced in tiny amounts by most paper mills that use chlorine bleaches.
Dioxin appears to be the most powerful cancer-causing agent ever tested in lab rodents. The latest studies have suggested that exposure to small amounts of dioxin may not be associated with a substantial cancer risk in humans, but large amounts might be.
Red Cavayne, president of the American Paper Institute, the principal trade association of the paper industry, said pulp and paper products reeled current dosimeters standards for a new type of evolving science that has come out."
But Robert Adler, a senior staff attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, said his group had pressed for a reassessment of the risks because it thought the EPA had disregarded丁丵's toll on ecosystems and had underestimated human dxposure. For example, Adler stressed that statistics for how much fish the average U.S. citizen consumes.
"We applaud the EPA for undertaking what I sure will be a rigorous review." Cavaney said.
"We don't want to see any presumption that this review will weaken dioxin standards, when there is considerable evidence that the standards are too weak." Adler said. In a letter directing Erich Bretthauer, assistant administrator for research and development, to lead the new, year-long dioxin study, EPA Administrator William Reilly said the agency had to be careful not to prejudge the results.
Dioxin accumulates in the bodies of fish swimming in rivers and lakes that may have extremely small concentrations of the chemical.
"There has been much speculation about the effect of these new developments on our revised dosin risk assessment," Rely said. "Some have suggested a new level of concern. Others may result in estimates of increased risk."
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In a related but separate action, Reilly also asked a group of senior agency managers to consider what the reassessment might mean for current regulations involving dioxin, cleanup, hazardous waste sites, discharge permits under the Clean Water Act and enforcement cases.
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Thursday, April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
waiting periods for handguns
A House subcommittee voted yesterday to require a one-week waiting period for handgun purchasers. Current state requirements.*
Waiting period No waiting period
Length of waiting period for handgun purchasers, In
states requiring it:
Ala. 48 hours
Calif. 15 days (all guns)
Conn. Without permit, 2 weeks
Hawaii Up to 16 days (all guns)
Ill. 72 hours
Ind. 7 working days
Md. 7 working days
Mass. Long wait for permit for first-time users
Minn. 7 days
Mo. Up to 7 working days
Mo. Up to 7 working days
N.J. 30 days
N.Y. Up to 6 months for permit
N.C. Up to 30 days
Ore. 15 days
R.I. 7 days
S.D. Without permit, 48 hours
Tenn. Up to 15 days
Va. Instant background check on purchasers
Wash. 5 days
Wls. 48 hours
- Handguns are banned in the District of Columbia
SOURCE : National Coalition to Ban Handguns
Brady Bill succeeds in House Threat of Bush's veto remains unless his crime bill is passed
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A seven-day waiting period for handgun purchases cleared its first legislative hurdle yesterday as the Bush administration raised the prospect of a veto unless Congress also passed its crime bill.
the veto threat was made in a letter by Attorney General Dick Thornburgh as the so-called "Brady Bill" was approved 9-4 by the House Judiciary Department, which sent the measure to the full committee.
Thornhurth bill Bush might refuse to sign the handgun bill unless Congress also passed the administration's crime bill. Supporters of the Brady Bill hailed the attorney general's letter as representing what he called "a powerful Presidency" and had embraced the concept of gun control, something that he long has opposed.
gress acted favorably on the president's comprehensive crime bill, the president would accept, as part of that bill, appropriate measures to identify felons attempting to purchase handguns.
control, something that he long and oppose.
In the letter, Thornburgh said that if the Con-
Thorumburn said that the administration would not accept a watered-down version of Bush's crime
"But such legislation must be presented to the president as part of, or together with, his crime bill," the attorney general said in a letter delivered by Republican Rep. Jeffrey Gleiter's chaperone, Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.
Otherwise, the president's senior advisers will recommend that he veto any bill that is not part of legislation consistent with his *Comprehensive Control proposal*, the attorney general said.
Democrats supporting the Brady Bill dismissed the seriousness of the veto threat and hailed what
they called a significant concession by the administration.
I am pleased that this letter indicates, for the first time, that the president is not opposed to the concept of the bill per se, but rather, in favor of enhancements which he believes would facilitate the identification of felons attempting to purchase handguns." Schumer said.
"While I am happy about this shift in position, I continue to believe that the president should move out of the caboose and become the engineer of the aircraft fleet, which will endorsing the Brady Bill in its current form."
The bill is named for former White House press secretary James Brady, who was shot in the head and left paralyzed by a gunman who tried to kill President Reagan in 1981. Reagan last month gave the Brady Bill added momentum with his surprise endorsement of the proposal.
Program targets criminals who use firearms
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — U.S. Attorneys from Kansas and the Western District of Missouri yesterday announced a Justice Department crackdown aimed at dangerous criminals who use
Western District of Missouri, and Lee Thompson,
U.S. attorney for Kansas, coordinated their
announcement in Kansas City with more than 90 of
their counterparts across the country.
the program, dubbed "project trigger-lock"
seeks to better coordinate efforts between federal
and local law enforcement agencies to imprison
immigrants, and members who use firearms to commit crimes.
"This initiative is to get the most dangerous armed offenders off the street and into prison,"
Although he said law enforcement agencies previously had focused on convicting drug offenders, there has not been a concentrated effort to focus on firearm offenses.
The program does not involve enactment of any new laws, the officials said. But Thompson said the shifting in emphasis to focus on federal crimes and firearms could help stop the worst offenders.
The two U.S. attorneys also announced the formation of force forces of federal and local law enforcement.
Jean Paul Bradshaw II, U.S. attorney for the
The task forces will determine which offenders should be prosecuted under more stringent federal statutes that carry longer sentences than state laws and deny defendants the chance to plea bargain or to be released early on parole.
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Kansas Football button to first 1000 fans
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 11, 1991
Sports
13
'Hawks sweep doubleheader
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack said he thought his team was on track after defeating Washburn 7-0 and 13-6 yesterday.
"We finally came out and hit," Sack said. "We pulled together and played together as a team."
Junior pitcher Shelly Sack also said that yesterday's games rebuilt the Jawhaws' confidence.
More than the team's hitting improved with the victory.
Freshman pitcher Stephani Williams raised her record to 10-8 after a win in the first game against Wash. burn.
During the second game, sophomore pitcher Jill Bailey was replaced by Sack, whose record improved to 7-0.
Sack said that although Washburn was able to get more hits than they should have during the second game, the Jayhawks outplayed the Icha-
Senior outfielder Jessica Hennig said that the Jayhawks' play was much improved since their last outing, but that she was not convinced
Softball
the team had solved all of its problems.
"It wasn't one of our toughest games," Heming said. "Just because we did it today does not mean we'll do it again the next teams we're going to play."
Hening said other players would agree that intense hitting practices during the week paid off in yesterday's victories.
The team has had morning practices in addition to its usual afternoon practices since Sunday Haack instructed the team by giving them their morning off.
Haack said the team needed to work on hitting in clutch situations by putting pressure on the Kansas bat in training so she would not pance her.
Junior shortstop Christy Arterburn extended her hitting streak to 14 games
With the victories, the Jayhawks' record improved to 22-9.
Kansas will play Oklahoma at 3 n.m. tomorrow at Javahawk Field
KA
Derek Nolen/Special to the KANSAN
Junior outfielder Jennifer Frost gets caught in a rundown with Washburn's Rina Hembrough between second and third base.
KC edges Cleveland 1-0 Appier wins pitching duel: Royals take series
Appier wins pitching duel; Royals take series
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Some players think spring training lasts too long. Kevin Appier isn't one of them.
"All that hard work I did in spring training paid off, I think," Apper said. "I know it paid off."
Appier, who started intensive workouts two weeks before spring training, pitched eight shutout innings, and Danny Tattarbull drove in the only run yesterday as Kansas City beat Cleveland 1-0.
Kansas City held Cleveland to two earned runs while winning two of three in its season-opening series.
Appier, whose 2.76 ERA last year was fourth-best in the American League, up gave seven hits, struck out four and walked one. Jeff Montgomery pitched a hitless ninth for the save.
'You get pitching like this, you
think it’s a shame you don’t win all three games," said Royals manager John Waltham. "But that’s the game we want." He complains about anything right now.
Cleveland rookie Charles Nagy allowed seven hits, struck out six and walked one in eight innings.
"I was getting my slider over for strikes," said Nagy, who had a 0.5 ERA in 16 spring injuries. "As the game progressed, I was able to spot my fastball a lot better, to letties and to righties. They hadn't ever seen me before, so they didn't know what I was going to strike at them."
B both pitchers got off to shaky starts in the first inning but managed to escape with no damage.
Alex Cole opened the game with a double, was sacrificed to third and Carlos Baerga walked. Albert Belle then struck out, and Sandy Alomar
forced out on a bouncer to end the inning.
The Royals failed to score in the first after putting runners at first and third with no outs. Brian McRae led off with a hard ground up the center, and turned it into a double when Cole didn't rush after the ball in center.
Seitzer's single put McRae at third. But Nagy struck out Brett, and the inning ended with a double play when Tartabull struck out and McRae was thrown out at home on an attempted double steal.
Kansas City escaped a bases-loaded jam in the seventh Singles by Alomar and Chris James and an infield single by Turner Ward loaded with two outs. But Appler got Cole to hit a high bouncer to the mound.
NCAA empowers new panel to review infractions process
The Associated Press
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — Warren Burger, former chief justice of the United States, and nine others will make up a committee to review the NCAA's rules enforcement and accreditation, it was announced yesterday.
The committee, which was authorized by the NCAA Council in January, will be led by Rex E. Lee, president of Brigham Young University.
The panel was appointed by the NCAA Administrative Committee. Its charge is to review the entire process with an eye toward suggestive changes that could be acted upon during the convention in Jan. 1982.
No date has been set for the committee's first meeting
"The purpose of the review is to make sure that the enforcement and infractions process is being handled in the most effective way, that fair procedures and due process are guaranteed, that penalties are appropriate and consistent and also to determine ways to reduce the time needed to conclude the investigation and infractions process," NCAA executive director Dick Schaltz said in a prepared statement.
"The group also will be requested to determine if there can be innovative changes that will make the process more positive and understandable to those involved, as well as to the general public," he said.
Other committee members are Reuben V. Anderson, a former state supreme court justice in Mississippi;
Morris S. Arnold, U.S. district judge for the Western District of Arkansas; Charles Cavagno, director of athletics at Memphis State University and a member of the NCAA Council; Charles W. Ehrhardt, faculty representative from Florida State University; Robert R. Merghue Jr., senior U.S. district judge for the Eastern District of Virginia; William M. Sangster, dean of the college of engineering at Georgia Tech; and Paul R. Verkul, president of the College of William and Mary.
"I am very pleased with the people who have agreed to serve on this committee," Schultz said. "The caliber and experience of the committee ensure a candid, open review process." The group accepts acceptance and credibility."
Positive attitude key to team's success
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
Kansas sportswriter
One of his assistants answered, "Yeah, that's pretty good."
"Man, that's a good play!" Mason said.
Mason slammed the projector of and said, "Now, that's the problem around here."
Kansas football coach Glen Mason and his assistant coaches recently viewed a tape of one of his team's spring football workouts.
The assistant answered, "What? What's the problem?"
"I'm going to turn this back on." Mason said. "Now, everybody in the room, imagine that guy doesn't have the phone," he added. "And an OU on the side of his helmet."
"What's your comment now?" Mason asked.
The assistant responded, "I'd say that's a great play."
For Mason, a positive attitude will be the most important ingredient if the Jayhawks are to succeed next season.
"I'm afraid, more than anything, that we might sell ourselves too short," Mason said. "The kids have always had a good work attitude since I've been here, but I'm not sure that that confident attitude that I like."
The Jayhawks' defensive attitude is of special concern to Mason.
"So much of football, especially defense, is attitude and confidence,"
Football
But Mason is encouraged and so are his players.
he said "We've taken our lumps on defense the last couple of years. Because of that, I'm not sure if we want us to feel of attitude or confidence we need."
Kansas quarterback Chip Hileman said that the Jayhawks' spirited spring practices had led to a strong team morale.
"Last year, we couldn't wait for spring ball to get to over," he said. "This year, we're hoping the sum will fly by so we can go to next year."
0
Mason said it was too early to tell whether his Jayhawks would be a team to be reckoned with next season.
However, the Jayhawks are closer than ever before to the attitude required to be competitive every season. Conference Football, Mason said.
“When you start talking about improvement and expectations, I don’t want to set them so low we don’t achieve above them,” he said. “I’m not going to fight if we tail short, then we fall short, I want to reach for the sky.”
His reasons include 18 returning starters, more experience, more depth and the best incoming Kansas recruiting class in recent memory.
Kansas wide receiver Rob Licursi catches a pass as coach John Jefferson offers instruction. The football team practiced yesterday in preparation for its spring game Saturday.
Sports briefs
Sixth player is signed; Jayhawks reach limit
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams confirmed yesterday the signing of 6-foot-10 center Eric Pauley of Community College in California.
Yesterday was the first day high school seniors and junior college players could sign national letters of intent.
Pauley has met academic requirements for eligibility and will enter Kansas as a junior.
The Jayhawks have signed six players and are at their scholarship limit for the 1991-92 season.
The six sigmees are: Pauley; 6-foot-8 forward Ben Davis of Mouth of Wilson, Va.; 6-foot-5 guard Greg
Gurley of Overland Park; 7-foot1 center Greg Ostertag of Duncanville, Tex; 6-foot5 forward Season Pearson of La Grange Park, Ill.; and 5-foot7 point guard Calvin Rayford of Milwaukee.
Baseball team to play Wichita State tonight
The Kansas baseball team will play host to interstate rival Wichita State at 7 p.m. at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
The Jahyahws dropped a 7-3 decision to Northern Iowa yesterday afternoon and were rained out Tuesday.
Tonight will be the first of five straight home games for the Jayhawks.
Jones, normally a third baseman,
played all nine positions in one game
against Baker University on Tuesday
night.
Seventh-ranked Wichita State has won 15 straight games and features one of the most versatile players in the country in Mike Jones.
Ticket sales for football higher than last year
Figures released by the Kansas sports information office yesterday show an increase in ticket sales for Kansas football games over last
At this time last year, 5,607 season tickets had been sold. This year's figures show 7,216 tickets sold, a 1,609
ticket increase.
The figures include season ticket packages sold to students, alumni and the general public.
NCAA settles benefits for catastrophic injury
OVERLAND PARK — Catastrophic injury coverage has been settled for all NCAA schools and student athletes, effective Aug. 1, 1991, through July 31, 1992, the NCAA announced.
The NCAA said yesterday that the insurance provided benefits to people who sustained injuries in competition, practice or related travel that result in irrecoverable loss of physical or mental capacity.
From staff and wire reports
Gridders' depth gives offense more options
By Mark Spencer
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Bigger roster makes spring training more productive
The end of three weeks of spring football practice has left Kansas coach Glen Mason with a cautious smile on his face.
"I don't know if I'm optimistic, I'm just happy to feel like a coach again." Mason said. "This is the first time since I've been at the University of Kansas that we've gone through something that resembles what spring practice is supposed to look like."
The Jayhawks will practice in pads for the last time today in preparation for their annual football day at 1 p.m. at Memorial Stadium.
Mason said that a deeper roster contributed to the Jayhawks' most productive practice spring practice, four-year tenure as head coach.
"As recent as last year, we had one scholarship quarterback and seven offensive linemen," he said. "It's hard to accomplish the way you want to accomplish. That hasn't been the case this year."
Kansas tight end Chad Fetter said the increased numbers allowed the Jayhawks to expand their attacking games during spring drills.
"Our offensive execution as a whole is much better," he said. "We've all got a great attitude. We've been winners with win instead of hope to last up."
"You've still got to get your football team ready." Mason said of the condensed schedule. "The biggest thing I've noticed is you don't waste time. Every practice is an intense practice."
In Saturday's scrimmage, the Jayhawks' first team offense and first team defense will take on the other players. Mason said each
Because of new NCAA regulations imposed this year, Kansas has had to squeeze its spring schedule to 14 practices (10 in the first 21 days). In the past, schools could practice 20 times in 36 days.
Glen Mason Football coach
player would play for a time equivalent to half of an actual game.
'This is the first time since I've been at the University of Kansas that we've gone through something that resembles what spring practice is supposed to look like.'
"I expect them to compete," he said. "For some of those guys, depending on how they perform, they are going to start off next fall."
Mason said a few injured Jayhawks would not play Saturday.
They are wide receivers Jim New and Terry Bell, linebackers Marc Ettruck, Steve Harvey and defense tackle Mack Nolen.
Running back Chaka Johnson, who had knee surgery yesterday, and wide receiver Rodney Harris, who is having the same surgery today, also will miss Saturday's game.
Mason said Johnson and Harris would recover completely from their surgeries and would be ready next season.
"We've gone awful tough," Mason said. "This has not been an easy spring practice. We've been hard with a lot of contact."
KANSAS NOTE: Mason said the status of loneback Pat Rogan, who had been dismissed from the team this week for violating team rules, was uncertain.
"I hate to ever talk in absolutes," Mason said. "I've dismissed Pat Rogan from the football team, not suspended him. I've dismissed him, and I just like to leave it at that."
7
Thursday, April 11, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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'All Vickie at 841-4115.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS con-
cern, call 841-2343. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters or AU Info 843-5060. Sponsored by 'GLSOK'
*PIRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Receive ront stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 481-662-1062 go fly a kite.
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 811 2145 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters 'Counseling Center'
Johnny's UP & UNDER
Hillel
בָלְא
Suffering from abortion" Write Hearts Restored,
Box 44. Grinnell KS, K7738 Confidential
material will follow
130 Entertainment
FOUND. Sterling silver ring in Ladies Broomroom the evening of April 13th. Claim at UDK Business Office.
ALL
NEED
MERCY
Shabbat Dinner & Service
6 p.m. Hillel House
R.S.V.P. by April 11
Festival of Nations
All day. Wescoe Beach
140 Lost-Found
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
811 9779 6 N J 3
40 years ago today President Harry Trump unified General Douglas MacArthur for conduct contrary to the Commander-in-Chief
Found: Eyeglasses on Wescool after KU vs NC game (Call to identity, 864-2496
Events of the Week Fridav. April 12
For rides and more information,
call 864.3948
40 years ago todav
Broom to avoid
Watch in Summerfield Hall 4/4. Call to
918-625-3400.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Found. Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and vermont. Call 842-6527 to claim
How Fortunate We Are To Have A God Who Is Merciful
Found. Women's watch, Wed. April 3. on Mississippi Street near the Spencer Art Museum-Call Betsy at 864-4710 to identify
205 Help Wanted
1204 Oread 843-4948
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m
Found. Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and Ver-
200s Employment
$42.5/hr Convenient store clerk Phillips 66 in DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 38-303.
Alamu Akra Center is applying applications for the Business Administration program for a fine dining private club and hotel facilities. Applicant must be available to attend the summer summer apply at 1260 Necrom Road, EA 107. Apply online at [epcc.necrom.org](http://epcc.necrom.org).
A KU student needed to enter scholarly manuscripts. Mk know what is required by a P-PT course. Work 8 hours/week. App apply (in person, Wed-Pr afternoon Hall Center for the Humanities, 21 Wakum Hall
Alvarnar Country Club is now accepting applications for dishwasher pop cook. Apply in person. 1895 Cassius Dr.
ATTN Psychology Education, Sociology, and ATTN Relation related matters. Summer program for special needs youth learning disabled children with teachers and counselor activity instructions. Locate on lake near EIJ. MN and Boundary Lake. Contact Ed. at 415-897-3000. Salary plus room and board. Interests available. Contact Ed at 415-897-3000 or Tom Rauer (415-897-3000) 311 W. Browne Way, Minneapolis.
Bucky's Drive in is now taking applications for time employment '6 or price on meals, uniforms provided. Flexible hours. Apply in person between 9-5 Bucky's Drive in '8 & 9th aisle
CAMP COURSELORS wanted for private
Michigan boys' golf summer camps. Teach
swimming, carrying sailing, wolfing gym,
basketball, swimming, gardening, campa-
ns, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding.
Also kitchen, office maintenance, salary $1000 or
more. Location: 750 North Eagle, 750 Nile
NBL 6103, 780-464-2244
Catering Depot Kansas Union hiring for Fri April 18th from 12pm to 4:25 p.m. pay in cash day following employment. Food service exp. required. CAREER EXAMINATION Kansas Union Personnel Office, Level E & F. COLORADO ROCKIES SUMMER EMLOYMENT Summer camp for disabled children and adults hiring combines attendants at Rocky Mountain Valley at 903 788-3680.
COMPUTER OPERATIONS STUDENT ASSISTANT
T deadline 12.11/91 $4.35 per hour
Dates include: checking mail mails to ensure proper
arrival of materials; providing maintenance
console guides, and providing services
to user community; to apply; complete a job;
to submit resumes; to work at the Computer
Center E0; EA/EMPLOYER
College student, elephant imaginary man or
woman to watch two boys age 9 and 10 through
Must have music and enjoy play. Some aca-
tivities charged $400. Call after 2:
298 1857
EARN $1,000-$1,000 *Now hiring managers and
laborers, limited opportunity. Part-time now,
Full-time this summer STUDENT PAINTERS
Call I. Callme 401-4012; M. Gannon
Full-time summer work. National firm looking for motivated students. Receive excellent P.R. and Communication experience, travel to eastern U.S. SEM 450周 611 Call 811-1224
ENVIRONMENTAL POLYCHART ANYSTAT
Entry level position of DIPA incorporated, a specialized laboratory in environmental and regulatory issues. Applicants should have an advanced degree in resource management and regulatory business, public administration or environmental science and can expect to work on pesticide and herbicide applications that will demonstrate with significant multidisciplinary experience in biology agrometry, hydrology and soil chemistry. A graduate degree in a quantitative area (e.g. mathematics, statistics, system science or engineering) is required but would be very beneficial but is not required. Excellent verbal, written and interpersonal skills are required. Send letter and resume to Director of Human Resources Dep. P. DIPA (incorporated).
benefits. Send letter and resume to Director of Human Resources, Dept. P. DIPHA Incorporated. P.O Box 727, Marlboro, KS 6582 No phone calls. Equal Opportunity Employer
Fun & Exciting. Plus you can make $4 hour waitressing. Must start part time now. 18 yrs and up. Apply: 1:39 a.m. today at 901 Mississippi
GRADUATE ASSISTANT in office of Foreign Exchange Department. Assist in training for 9/12 year. Assist new and returning foreign students, program planning, train and supervise in all phases of the program. Available in 18 Strong Hall. Deadline: April 19.
GRAHATUING STUDENT NEEDED-COURSE position for management in client management. Benefits in code excellent salary training, company car. At job offered must have experience as a mall cust agent M. Schwartz
Help Wanted: Diaptime Hardenter, Part-time h
summer: PRIVATE CLUB; experience pre-
mired. must have references and 21 Call for app.
862.0083
Help wanted-Hiring afternoon aid for toddler and preschool classes. Classroom experience and study in early childhood. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 331 Main Avenue, SK 60549
Excellent income opportunity Flexible hours
Perfect summer or part time job. Training provided.
Call 316-382-2547 for interview
Lake of the Oarsman's Employment. The Lake of the Oarsman is a beautiful place for waitresses, waiters, cooks, bakers, and businessmen. Excellent meals and service are still furnished. Apply while housing is available. Contact Frank Hessler at fhessler@oregonstate.edu
NAMES: Immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida Excellent salaries plus benefits. 1-year commitment. Call information: 917.977.3641
Need hand man to work as partner. Truck tools, etc provided. If interested call me; 841-4206. Need money fast! Make up to 10 aries day. trim photographs. No experience necessary.
PRESCHOOL, HELP WANTED. Substitute an after school job. Also summer part and full time job. Child development or early childhood seniors and juniors. Sunshine Aisles. 942-2233.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beginning May or June
July 31. Four bedroom townhome in Sunrise
Village J-851-606. No deposit necessary
The City of Oklahoma will be accepting applications for pool manager applications can be picked up at the City Hall, 605 Delaware in Oklahoma. Karen & Dan, 8:30 a.m., noon, Monday-Friday.
Two reliable assistants needed for part-time summer work at a kid's daycare. Interested, call 812-2088.
PROGRAM ASTT / Supervisor of Electronics Lab. $1,000.00 annual salary, effective May 31, 2014. Manage and skilled work in the design, construction, repair and maintenance of electronic devices, components, systems, mechanisms, and supervision of techniques. Applicance贴面, all materials must be received by Lab. $50.00 per letter of reference to Dennis H. Karpowitz, Dept. of Electronic Engineering, RK Lawson K. Ranaher, Lawrence RS. 6500 EOAA Equipment.
Professional couple wishes to hire baby-sitter for summer Monday Friday: 8:06 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. Excellent pool! We offer private swimming pool. Some flexibility on hours on board for junior class. Mature commissaire with qualification in childcare or education; any anytime weekends or less message on mobile RENTING ENTHUSIASSTS: We need outgoing individed interests in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday projects at a major racing facility in the UK. We accept parents, sellers, unhers, hostesses, gate attendants, and parking persons. If interested apply at Managers' Office.
Sitter Solutions, Inc. is in need of caregivers.
Flexible schedule Experience or educ
References required 843-7286
SUMMER JOB. Mature student to care for 2 children. Must have car, excellent references. Full-time preferred Leawood (913) 341-9431
Warehouse and light industrial work. Reliable people need with phone and car. Kansas City. PCB, PTEM. 816-756-4000.
WEED INSPECTOR
CITY OF LAWRENCE
WHITER WANTED. Pixen need words, word needs
photograph. Photographer would like to freelance /
writer-Human interest. Environmental. New Age.
Call. Steve. 842-3414
Temporary, part time position. Responding to complaints regarding tall grass on private lands and residential properties. Prior experience dealing with public and knowledge of City's weed ordinance and local laws $4.90 hourly. Apply by April 19 at admin@cityofla.gov. Eighth, 6th, Lawrence K5 6004 EGA 8048
225 Professional Services
FRENCH TUTOR. Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
865-3223
Driver Education offered thru MidWest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, drivers license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.749
SENIOR PATRIVES, MODELING & ARTS
B&W, color. Call Tom Swells 749-1
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841 3716
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street
843-4000
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
i-der Woman Word Processing Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality. #84283, days or evenings.
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service $1.00 double-spaced paper. Call Therease 841-7076. Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrenry. Cheapest rush. Job no problem 793-448.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call 10 a-6 p m.
Mrs. Mattila. 841-1219
A> Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve . 842.7383
pages, legal papers, etc. No calls after 9 p.m.
Dana's Quality Typing and Word Processing
classes; also provide resume applications, mailing lists. Laser printing and spelling corrections. 1220 BG I University print.
FACTOR ACCURATLY $TIMES-1$ per page. InCLUDES PUT and DL, anywhere in city limits. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Mae at: 843-3822
1 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 6255
Ks professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1 100 pm. 841-6345
introductory book to iPad 2 or higher
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting,
typewriting and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927
Mall. 841-1071
Professional typist Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
Research Project? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call
Key Works. 842 8307
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer
- Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Near Orchard Corners. Phone 643-688
Word Processing Typing. Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations. Applications. Also assistance in
competition. Compare. Haven M. S.J. Degree. 841-6244
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1983 Honda 750 Interceptor. Must sell $1200. New starter. Call Jim. 749-5247
Bicycle for sale. Red Batava, 23 in. 12-speed, excellent condition. $225, 749-6413, leave message.
Attention Horse Owner! Hale 2-horse trailer.
Completely redone $900 firm. 841-3398 or 484-3441
evenings.
purchase for sale; no cash required. No equipment is available to sell.
FOR SALE: Hamilton Hydraulic Drafting Station v/ Mercury drafting Station CALL M-F 8-51 - 841-7641
to a good home to match.奶皮混料 mixer
GOVT'S SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
gentev clothing, collage clothing, wet weather gear,
combat, jacket, and Speeddress Boots Also
417-2734, 173-2734, 183-2734, 193-2734,
M.S. Martyya Sales. S., Martyya, M.S.
Honda CM4662, 1928, new in 85, 7, 300 miles, warra-
gee, 85, 83, 483, 616.
KING SIZE WATER BED. Semi-waveless. Nice headboard. Padded rails. Drawers in pedestal. Call 814-8412 after 3pm.
One-way ticket, KCI to DFW on May 18th. $100
ope. Call Kelly. 864-817-8
NEW REALIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 910P
PUMP (INCLUDES GARAGE) $250 819-9146.
Nishisle Road Bike, excellent condition! $200 Call;
Hatc at 869-258 if interested.
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-in welcome. Call 843-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
Paintball guns and equipment, cheap RPG books
gurps. Traveler, etc. modern, Aquaria and
filters 841-0313
Peugeot bicycle: men's 25" 12-speed, 3 yrs old with approx. 200 miles. Road/touring bike. Excelsion condition. Call 841-5655
340 Auto Sales
1973 Pontiac LeMans, original miles, 51,000
1,640 843 336 2016 Laeward Ave
1976 Black Trans Am. 455, AC, New Paint, Great Condition, Beautiful Car. 841 8561, Pat
condition, behemoth car 841-6541, fuel.
119 Chevette, new radiator, water pump, fan and battery Great college car Only $850 Call 249-3758
1818 Silver Suprara 2, door AC, am fm, will need clutch soon, $30, excellent cell phone 841-4153
1818 Blue Buck Lauren 2, AC, new brakes, good condition, $109 or best offer BK 827-7151
*Toyota Supra, black with gray leather;**
**sumoil, 5 spd, sports pkg. w/ 4 mounted**
**Yokohama snows. 61 K miles $1,000-847 477**
**GL 4L, drive 4, AM索菲 A-mon车。**
'or sale' Mercedes Benz 190E 2.3, 1.85, black
*full option* 10,500 TLP # 865-836
Seniors and grad students' Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call BILL 843-5000.
'85 Pontiac Fiero SE, low miles, 32138 mpg, loaded, stereo cassette, 5 speed. Call 841 3598 or 8441 3441 times.
370 Want to Buy
360 Miscellaneous
YOU, SELL. DANI CUM
On TV's *Jewelry, steroid, music instruments*, can cast musical instruments.
We honor Visa/MC/AMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 18 W. Gath 649-7191
USED HONDA MOPEDS now in stock. All have been reconditioned. Starting at $150. DAVIS CY.
CLE, 486. S Topeka Blvd. B2D-388-1198
Lawrence Glass Tinting. Special rates for students. Call anytime. 7am to 10pm. 777 E. 22nd
841-7019
Wanted. CD- $40. $80 and down Records and tapes $2.20 and down. Top dollar for collections Alcat Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts 865-0122
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842/971/843/190
2.8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842 8971 843 1601.
2 bedroom basins and dwellings. Available on
1 sorry, in押。Bed at 842 9687 9434-1800
bdrg apt available August, Walk to KU or
downstreet. Wood floor, washer/door hookups
1 bedroom apt available now until July 31. Big
sunny and newly painted. Off street parking.
banks from campus $275/month. Option for next
year. 842 9012 Leave message
2 BEDROOM APT. Available June 1 with option to continue in fall 5 min walk from Union Big bedrooms, off street parking, clean, W/D (464) 667-0915 UTILITIES Call 643-8492.
2 b rr available in new building of West Hills
and Camden, cool room, ceiling fan, cabling,
back ceiling, fan light, balcony, walk in
cellar, energy efficient gas heat. Great location
near campus. 100 Emmer. Id. #4905-No. 100
No pets allowed.
=
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 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.
3 bedroom/2' $ bath townhouse for summer at Surise Sunrise Vailable mid May No rent until June 1. $600 per month 824-950 $龄卧 to adult rent for startup at $600. No pets $
4 BR apt for summer sublease 2 b卫/W, DW. DRAC, microwave, garden tennis, court buses, onroad. Sunrise Village. Call Kim, 865-9625, leave message
6 bedroom house at 230 Massachusetts and 5
bedroom house at 1240 Ohio and 3 bedroom house
at 708 Arkansas. Call 841 3231
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 710th Ohio Ave construction 1 and 2 * RI (Formally Villa Capri) * Stadium View Apartments, 812th & Mississippi AVE construction 1 * Windsor dryers/airbcs From Memorial
- 541 Michigan, 8 yr old, l-3rd BH-3R-BH-
bath All with washer/dryer
* Brardt Square Apartment Apartments, colorado;
701 South Bell Street, colorado;
Call today. First Management 7494-1566. Open house every Saturday from 12:35 at Brardt Square, 500 Colorado - C. Office hours Mon-Fri
Available June Extra large one bedroom, could be used as 2 bedroom in nice older room. New bathroom. Wood floors. A/C, $40. Gas/wateraid. No beds. 841-1074.
Available June or August. Efficiency 1 bedroom
ages in nice older houses Walk to KU or
downtown $285 and no. Pets k141-1074
available 3 bnb house, 130b clock Vermont
wood floors, window A/C/water/dry井堰ops
off street parking, dishwasher 14 mo lease
665/690, no beds, 841/1074
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$309-415/ms. Call 843-2116.
COOL, Air CONDITIONED 2 bedroom apt. for summer leave. Across from Stadium. B440 month negotiable. Comfortable for 3 people. Lease remaining. 847.9024. Leave a message.
Delightful summer sublease in 2 or 1 bed May August. Dates neg. air-conditioned. Beautifully furn. close to campus, downtown Very reasonable rent. Must see. Calib 814-4531
Available immediately one bedroom, gas and water paid, $25 per month. Available minimum rent of $350. Some with utilities paid, ceiling fans, mins bins. *parking water, laundry facilities, just one block from school*.
Excellent Location, 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom in 4+ gplex, dishwashers, WD hookup, CA, no pets, available June 1. $360 At 1314 Ohio. Call 842-4242
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 11, 1991
15
Extremely nivea, spacious. 3 birmingham townhouse / garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer lease. $120 v_1 utilities. Kerr 843-6562
Female for summer sublease. Close to campus.
Fully furnished. Oven and room. No security deposit. $_2$ utilities, rent negotiable. 843-2498
Female non-smoking romaine house to share nice 216 sq. ft. bedroom. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! May, Call Am. Amennies best! 814-548
Female non-smoker wanted for summer sublease at Orchard Corners. Call Cristin at 864-1402
Great location for K1 and donations. Studio art
Great location. Quaint and close to campus. 8 Great locations. Located in CA, Los Angeles, floors, no pets. Available June 1, 2000 in Maryland. Call 842-4242
Hey KU students-move to June 1 and receive *y* off your rent for two months. *Studies*, 1 and 2 Bedrooms apartments. *Heat and water* and *Bedroom* for one Bedroom. *Center*. Rainwater Towers 913-831-6831
Hey KU Med. students Move in June and
hey receive 'o your off rent for 2 months. *Studies, *
and 2 bedrooms* a1 Heat and water paired *Across*
the Center, Rain Cement Tower, Apts.
831-981-863
House share: 2 BRL, big yard; $187.50, mo. 414 Minnesota.
Call: 843-8436
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stay opens 365 days a year and is a great place to learn. Resumes: 160 Emily Kroger - 794-687 or 481-0484
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease Ready on June 1st. Rent $280.00
841.913, leave message
Lorimar Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality space, with all the amenities. Brand
new available. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until
May, July or for 12 months. 87418, 74834, 87453
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF THIS SUMMER. 2 ft., furnished, opt for,灭 May pd, cable pd, all summer. 843-4742
**Mackenzie Place Apt 5:** 3 brass latrush apt new for leasing at August 1 yr, 12 months. washer dryer, microwave oven, 2 beds, 2 locks, 1 year lease, no furnace. **Mackenzie Place Apt 6:** 6733晚营, weeks. 84218午晚营
Nice. nipaces 3 b饺餐. Has all kitchen pla-
nees, central air, D W) hookup, garage, low
utilities. Avail. in June $450 mo. Nn petts
843-2888
Now leasing. Extra nice spaces two bedrooms apartments with all kitchen appliances, including stainless steel appliances and blinds. Low utilities, poor bus route. Poor finances $10.00. PRESENT CHASSE CAPITAL $25.00.
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southeast Plaza Apt. 134, downtown, $75, 2 bedrooms start at $35, 10 month lease Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1168
Non leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Appeal West Apartments, $40 for bedroom, $875
2 bedroom. Celing fans, paint. Walk to
campus. Call 842-1166 or 842-1389
ONE BLOCK FROM KANASAS UNION. For to senior graduate students, upperclass students or KE employees, one BR furnished. No pets. The Warner Fund warmed $380 mid-61st after 6 PM.
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU 841-6254
Professor's house for rent June 1991-Aug 1992 2
BR, East Lawrence. $501,841-844.841
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom
towhouse with 2 bathrooms $135.00 per month,
* 1 utilities, 841.252
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Missourissippi Water, gas, cable paid $400.00 841 662
SUBLEASE at HAMMER PLACE. Furnished
one bedroom. From mid May to December Close
to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386
10am-11pm.
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall.
1 bedroom, furnished, private pool, water past,
all electric. 1517 Lynch Court, Sundance 8425 3295
841-6614
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 BH 1.1 RR1 and fornishings nestsighlights Close to musem 86-6728
SUMMER SUBLEASE STARTING 01 NW berm 2 h of home central air off street parking
SUMMER SUBLEASE STARTING 01 NW berm 2 h of home central air off street parking
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Orchard Corners,
14/bdrm available, furnished, pool bus route.
871/cmma person #184 831-6209
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location at a superior price.
Summer and Fall leasing Furnished 1 an-
door beds 1.1k from KU with off-street park-
ing, no pets. 841-5000
SUNKINE VILLAAGE summer subsuite. Can fit up to 5 people for $134/mo. Dishwashers, microwave, pool, summer parties. First keg is on us for new tenants. Phone 842 7417 8214
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid 1 bill from KU with off street parking. No pets. KU-845-500
Summer sublease with option for fall. Very new
apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call
963-2983.
Summer sublet: Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
near Holiday, patio, dishwasher, WD, AC
$75/month. Call 79-4823
Summer sublease. Furnished one bedroom apt.
pool at complex, water paid $25. Call Amy
865-367
Summer leave with option to renew avail. mid
May Beautiful 2 bdrm trbm. G, D W
D hookups. D W very nice I rent $48 Call 842 5322
Summer sublease 2 unfurnished 2床 room
D W very nice I rent $48 Call 842 5322
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 bedroom apt at Northwinds. 3 bighorns of 0.75 on Michigan W.D.) hookups Brand new, $735/month plus utilities. Call 841-5655
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt-close to
campus. Two to four people. 841-2268
$65.00 Water, gas paid; 841-4708
Suburban 2, bldg; 7298 Ohio, Longer
lease optional. Call 749-2397 for negotiation.
Summer sublease can continue in full. 4 BR apt
at Orchard Corners. Furnished. 842-8722
Now leasing
Now letting for summer & fall 1001
1&2 BR apts -tennis courts
2&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
studios -3 pools
&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
TRAILRIDGEAPTS
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th
843-7333
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
SouthPointe Apartments
1 or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
S
Swan Management
9th & Avalon
842-3040
- Graystone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F. 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts. - Furnished
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$290 to $235 per month
$280 to $335 per month (water paid!)
Great location Noor campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
Summer subway. Available May 15-18 May an option to enjoy a meal at one of town's own grocery store, fast food, and other entertainment. Ideal for anyone needing a place to stay for summer holidays.
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(water paid)
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom townhome. Sunrise Village. Pool, microwave. $185 each negotiable. 749-2483.
...
Summer sublease Large 2 bedroom available in May. $175 each. Negotiable. Call 841 9173 for information.
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Quiet studios
Pool
.04
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
Free cable
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliable
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Earmold need care with
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
* 10 or 12 Month Lease
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Low Security Deposit
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
Each apartment features:
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Guest bathroom air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini beds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $350, $350
- 2 bedroom $400, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
Office
611 Main Street
(across from Hardie's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Brantley will rent you
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
Please call Kristy for ap
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Affordable Price!! Office Hours:
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
0-3 pm Sun.
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus rou.
studios
townhomes
2,3 Bedrooms
Free cable
Water paid
Pool
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc
No Appt. Necessar
841-5444
Sunrise Village Luxurious Townhomes 3-4 Bedroom
841-5444
apartments
1 & 2 Bedrooms Showing Units Daily 9 -
- Clean & well maintaine
3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
Boardwalk
- Unfurnished with
- Showing Units Daily 9 -
842-4444
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Clean & well maintain
- Large closets & living
- Water & trash paid
Summer sublease 2 HR apartment. Great location. Rent negotiable. Call 843-8390
Summer sublease. Reality site apt, water ap, laundry facilities. Pool and laundry facilities $150 per month. Call 749-4235
THIRTY SECONDS FROM laundramat. Summer sublease, furnished 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Vaulted ceiling, A/C, dishwasher, near campus, on bus route 865-058
- Walk to grocery
- Laundry room 504
Double Take
Women students: Want to live in a non-existent environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Sunflower House, the women's workshop alternative 140 Tennessee 79-8877 or 84-0784.
Large closets & living space
- 2 on-site bus stops
METRO DE MADRID
appliances
1. 2,3 & 4 Bedroom
Sunrise Apts.
MAN, COOKER, EVER SINCE YOU GOT A HOLD OF THAT NINTENDO, YOU HAVEN'T LEFT THE HOUSE EXCEPT TO GO TO CLASS.
---
- Garages (VIII.)
- Tennis Court. Pools
524 Frontier
- Studios
- Garages (Vill.)
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- Luxurious Town Home
- & Apartment Living
- On Bus Route
- BRAND NEW 2 Burn, at Vill
Sunrise Place
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm at Vill
- 9th & Michigan Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas Sunrise Village
- Close to Campus
Sunrise Place
3 Bdmf Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
---
6th & Gateway Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Subleases Available Immediately
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
2 Bidm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1/2 baths, available May 1st
Newly remodeled apartments
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartmen
- Two with fireplaces
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
1200
BE OUT TOSSING THE FRISBRE
AROUND OR SOMETHING.
IT'S ALREADY TAKEN
CARE OF
meadowbrook
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass.
MASTERCRAFT
KENTUCKY PLACE
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
749-0445·1310 Kentucky
749-2415·10th & Arkansas
SUNDANCE
841-5255 * 7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
749-4226·15th & Kasold
842-4455
Summer sublease. Nice one BR furnished apt.
14th & Ohio Call Juile, 865-4058
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
super location, great pool. *Call* 749-0213
by Tom Avery
HUH? WHAT?
NINTENDO PRISBEE
PROGRAM. JUST
LIKE THE REAL
THING.
LEARN THE A B C's of NAISMITH.
Affordable Living
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Better quality living
We have our own computer center, Dining anytime, and great social events.
Convenient location
Summer sublease. Large studio apartment.
Water paid. Pool. On bus route. Option for fall.
$75/mo. $65-$199.
Harris Student House. Corporate room has
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route Naismith spells out a wise living move.
NAISMITHHALL
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 869 Tennessee.
430 Roommate-Wanted
April Rent Free-Female roommate needed immediately. 3 bedroom 2寝房-xD/W, microwave, air conditioned garage, laundry, washers, air conditioner, Caitlin Lahs 8427.987, home 8443.458 use
April rent paid. Female roommate wanted immediately. Share three bedroom. Orchard Centers. $195.00 per month plus 1$ utilities. On bus route. Call Amanda, 814-469.
Female roommate needed to sublease apartment for the summer. Call 965-3971.
A roommate needed for summer sublease. On bus route, nice apt. $150 a month plus utilities. 843-4780.
Summer Suitebreak 1: or 2 peple (male or female) need to share 3 bedrooms / 2 bath at ORCHARD CORNERS Pool, A/C, cable on bus route $185 month plus utilities. Call Nursery 841-212-617
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3636.
*remale roommate needed. Share 2 bedroom, 2
bath apartment from May to August. 850 plus
utilities. Call Don, Calmon. 934-410-386.
Roommate wanted, 2 bpt apt. 616 Kentucky.
$150/month, utilities included. No lease. 841-8554
email.
- Policy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take this summer, furnished 4 brom. $180/month. 794 5678
Male roommate needed. Duplex S W part of
town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robert. 842-4252.
kommunite(s), spacious a 4 bedroom; 2 bath house
rental; reasonable utilities. Alison. 865-2578.
Roommate needed in 3 br house w/ DW, FD, PF 8145 plus $9 utilizes 8415, aiks for 494. Roommate wanted: House bordering campus. Roommate needed: Bathroom. Billing: $220.00 total. Call Richard at 749-264.
Two female roommates needed for furnished 2
room cabinets. Corner Carpet was
starting August 1. Cowl beffel or Satin of 8
room cabinets. Two roommates needed to share three bedroom
three story townhouse for summer. Close to cam-
panels, laundry facilities.
Summer Sublease: Female wanted to share 4 bedroom townhome. Option for fall. $180/mo., $140 daxst. Call Gina. 749-1590
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University Daily Kansas
119 Staunton Flint Hall
Lawrence KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
A man and a woman sit on a picnic blanket in the desert, one holding a basket of water while the other looks at it with a mirror. In the background, there are mosques under a tree.
Lawm 4.11
"Curse you, Ahmad! This is a picnic lunch, and I specifically asked you not to bring your work with you!"
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
16
Thursdav April 11. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Kurds may get U.S. protection Iraq warned not to interfere with refugee aid
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The United States, drawing a new line in Iraq, said yesterday that it had told the Iraqi government that it not to use ground or air forces that might be a threat to fleeing Kurds or to relief operations
"We are simply saying that we do not expect the humanitarian efforts to be interrupted or thwarted by Iraqi military, period," said White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater.
He said that the warning, which covers much of northern Iraq, was delivered during the weekend amid reports of the bombing the Iraq Embassy in Washington.
Fitzwater's announcement implied that any Iraqi combat helicopters or other aircraft used against the Kurds would be shot down, although the press secretary did not state this explicitly.
Fitzwater also voiced new enthusiasm, but no specific plans, for the idea of a sanctuary for Kurdish refugees who are freeing Saddam Hussein's army by the hundreds of thousands.
Fitzwater said yesterday that Bush had called British Prime Minister John Major and U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar to discuss ways a sanctuary for the Kurds could be set up. The leaders also about the offer under way to provide humanitarian aid to the Kurds.
"Everyone agrees on the need for a sanctuary." Fitzwater said. "The
concept of some location has to be considered."
He had said a day earlier that the administration had not yet made a judgment whether it would support the creation of a sanctuary.
Major and Turkish President Turgut Ozal have proposed that a U.N.protected sanctuary be established for the Kurds in northern Iraq.
Kurdish area
Turkey
Mosul
Erbil
Kirkuk
Syria
U.S. warns Iraq not to attack Kurds north of 36°N
Iran
Baghdad
Iraq
Kuwait
0 Miles
Saudi Arabia
Also yesterday, Fitzwater's office put out a statement saying Bush and Major had discussed humanitarian aid for the Kurds in the safe haven in northern Iraq. When asked if use of the term "safe haven" meant the United States considered the area "firefront," it says "It's not officially designated." He declined to offer further clarification.
Rebel groups said they had been attacked by Iraqi military helicopters, and an explosion saw the Bush oil attack should have done more to stop such attacks.
In the six weeks since the informal end of the Persian Gulf War, the United States has shot down two Iraqi warplanes but has downed no helicopters. The United States said it violated the terms of the cease-fire.
Fitzwater would not specify the area that was now off-limits to Iraqi military operations, saying only that they were among areas where Kurds have taken refuge.
But a senior Pentagon official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said he was trying to find someone.
thing above the parallel that marks 36 degrees north latitude.
That area includes all of northern Iraq, including the cities of Mosul and Dohok, where hundreds of thousands of Kurds live.
In effect, the White House statement asserts U.S. military authority in northern Iraq for the first time since the informal cease-fire. U.S. forces control considerable territory in southern Iraq
Officials said the U.S. declaration prohibited helicopter gunships as well as fixed-wing aircraft from opening fire on the tens of thousands of homeless Kurds and other refugees.
Fitzwater said that there had been no military activity in the region during the past few days.
Special to the Kansan
Carrier delivers in backyard blaze
By Justin Knupp
Instead of just putting the evening newspaper on the doorstep. Zac Huston made sure the house had a doorstep to put the newspaper on.
Huston, a 13-year-old paper carrier for the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, got a first-hand lesson that you should never play with fire. He discovered a fire about 8 last night at the home of Mike and Sandy Wellman, 1808 Mississippi St.
When Mike Wellman started a barbecue, he had planned on cooking hot dogs for dinner After meeting with him, he went to more hot dogs.
WARNING
When he returned, he discovered three fire trucks in front of his house and cinders from the back of his garage in his backyard.
Sandy Wellman said that the barbecue was probably the cause of the fire. Fire officials do not yet know the cause of the fire. There were no injuries.
Huston was collecting money for his paper route when he stopped at the Wellman home.
"I saw flames coming over the roof of the garage as I went to the door." Huston said. "I told Mrs. Cormack, and she told me to call 911."
Lawrence firefighter Pete Easterwood examines a garage that was probably ignited by a barbecue grill at 1808 Mississippi St.
Huston said that after calling the fire department, he ran outside. He picked up a garden hose and began to extinguish the fire
"By the time the fire department arrived, Zac had put out most of
the fire all by himself." Sandy Wellman said. "He was my little hero."
Huston said, "I have worked this route for three years, and nothing like this has ever happened. I sort of hesitated at first, but then I just
grabbed the hose and turned on the water. "
Mike Wellman said, "For three years, our paper has been on our front step every day. This is just the right thing to give a great kit I want to thank him in."
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Sonny Kenner 39th Band R&B Jam Session.
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April 11 Modern Times
April 12-13 Kevin May &The Deconaires
April 17-18 The Breakaways
April 19-20 Caribe
April 24-25 Now See Here
April 26 4 SKNNS with Guido Toledo
Great Live Music 6 Nights a Week!
must be 21
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We reserve the right to put up to 5 per lane
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Midnight - 3:00am/ $8.00 per person
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The Ice Chateau of King Louie West
Only Olympic Size Ice Arena in the Midwest
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Around Back
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GUITARS & CANLIACS
TWO #1 BINGLES OF A RECORD NASHVILLE
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Tickets available at Ticket Master
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with Hot Country Music,
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Friday - Happy Hour BBQ Hors d'oeuvres
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TUESDAY
APRIL 20, 1953
WEEKEND
✓
VOL. 101. No. 130
THE UNIVERSITY DAIL KANSAN
T THE STUDIATINEL NESPAAPER OF T THE UNIVISIBILITY OF KANASAS
FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Impact carries Senate election
BANGKOK, CAMBODIA - AUGUST 20TH, 1986. BAND MEMBERS OF THE BACKYARD KIDS SHOW GATHERING IN A LOCATION THERE.
By Michael Christ
Kansan staff writer
Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden of the Impact coalition celebrate their victory as Student Senate president-elect and vice president-elect.
At the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, several hundred people stood around the radio, impatient, yelling at the announcer to hurry.
Although the off-campus seats are usually a good gauge for determining victory, Fulcher was hesitant to start his victory party
"I'm really excited for them," he said. "They camped their butts off and they won it. I didn't. They won it."
Everyone at the Impact party was celebrating the coalition's sweep of the off camp seats except for one person Duran Fulcher, presidential
Ron Klein/KANSAr
He could not control their elation, however, as the Nunemaker sweep was announced. In that one moment victory seemed assured
Fulcher remained stone as the celebration enveloped him. With eyes closed, he crossed himself and pulled his shoulders tight together. The presidential and vice presidential results were announced
When Fulcher heard his name, the tension that he had been holding washed from his body. Amid a thud, across room from the crowd, he and Aim Lawson, vice president of the group, jumped on the table to be crowned "table the people"
"We did it." they yelled to each other. "We did it.
They were swarmed by supporters as champagne rained over the room.
Mike Schrener, student body president, presented Fulcher with a base ball and had him sign it.
"It's the Student Senate baseball." Schreiner said. "Darren's the fourth guy on it."
More election coverage Pages 2,3
R
Facts coalition faces dejection, disappointment
Party turns into condolences
Facts coalition candidates Jason McNtosh (center) and Giles Smith (right) shake hands after losing in Student Senate elections.
Kansan staff writer
By Jonathan Plummer
The party last night for the Facts coalition never seemed to start.
Because members of the Sigma Chraternity, where the affair was held, were participating in the Greek Week show, many coalition supporters were absent when the first winners were announced.
The mood cooled further because election returns came slowly. Late in the evening, candidates who listened to voters closely communitaries waiting for a delayed bid.
After the graduate school announcement, in which every Facts candidate won, the excitement momentarily returned. But the news
from that point on never was good for Facts.
As Jason McIntosh, presidential candidate, listened for incoming results. Giles Smith, vice president candidate, played records in the fraternity's dining room for anyone who wanted to dance.
When the final results were broadcast, McIntosh smiled as he had all evening, offering and accepting condolences.
He said it was hard to guess how much the campaign violations alleged against both coaltions had effected the election's outcome.
“At this point I just want to serve Student Senate in whatever capacity possible.” he said. “Darren and I
met Sunday, and we can come together on many of the issues."
Though Smith was disappointed, he thanked those who ran on his ticket.
recruiting and obtaining senators,
and I'm so upset because barely any
of us got in," he said. "I love them all
so much."
Allegations plague election of Senate
"Since November we have been
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Although elections results indicate a landslide victory for the Impact coalition, the results will be evaluated by campaign violations are investigated.
The elections commission will meet today to investigate complaints against both coalitions and their findings in the late afternoon.
Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said complaints charging each coalition with a pattern of assaults had been filed with the commission.
A pattern of minor violations is considered to be a significant violation of campaign rules.
Poer said that violations could result in fines or even expulsion from office, but he emphasized that the commission would determine the legitimacy of the complaints.
He said 15 to 25 complaints had
been filed against the Impact coalition and 70 to 90 complaints had been filed against the Facts coalition.
Jason McIntosh. Facts presidential candidate, said, "All in all it was a pretty clean race, and I heard the main points were the issue."
Alan Lowden, Impact vice presidential candidate, said that some of the campaign violations filed against Impact may have come from supporters, who were hanging posts without knowing the rules.
This is the first election where there have been official complaint forms.
Poer said, "Violations were not taken down and investigated like they were this year."
Public hearings about the complaints will be at 5 p.m. Monday at Alcove in the Kansas Union and English Room in the Kansas Union.
Propelled by hunger Kurds try food raid
The Associated Press
CUKURCA. Turkey — Turkish troops used guard dogs to try to control desperate Iraqi Kurds who were grabbing grain and vegetables from a truck, but the crowd swarmed back when the dogs were off, thus trampling the cargo it had struggled to obtain
The incident yesterday demonstrated the growing fears of hundreds of thousands of Kurdish refugees threatened by starvation, freezing temperatures and disease on the Turkish-Iraqi border.
The German shepherds bit an old woman on the shoulder and tugged at the sweater of another woman. The difference inence at the Cukurca refugee camp
Turkish authorities pleaded yesterday for more international aid for the 400,000 to 500,000 refugees
they say now have arrived at their frontier.
But relief officials said distribution of staple products had been severely hampered by roads that have been rendered impassable by mud and rain in the mountainous border region.
At the entrance to the Cukurca camp yesterday, Iraqi refugees ransacked a truck loaded with bulgur wheat, beans, pasta, onions and potatoes donated by Turkish Kurds.
"Delaying aid means abandoning these people to their deaths," said Health Minister Hali Sivgin
Turkish troops menaced the crowd with fierce German shepherds in an attempt to restore order. But when they called the soldiers back on the truck, spilling and trampling nearly half its contents.
Minority students say KU slow to reform
By Lara Gold
Melinda Griggs, like most students, came to KU for an education.
Kansan staff writer
But disappointment with the University of Kansas has overshadowed her education.
"I feel comfortable here, but I don't feel right here," she said, referring to the University and its educational programs.
"One of my TAs once told me that I wasn't intellectually smart enough for the class," said Griggs, Liberty, M. freshman.
Griggs and about 40 African-American students expressed their displeasure with the University and asked for assistance at a protest in front of Strone Hall.
"No one wants to take responsibility for the minorities around here," she said to the crowd.
A year ago yesterday, African-American students ted a group of about 500 students from Strong Hall to the chancellor's home demanding that the administration take the responsibility and make reforms for
'I feel comfortable here, but I don't feel right here.'
- Melinda Griggs KU student
KU's minority community.
At that rally, African-American students submitted a 12-point plan to the administration that they thought would help the campus climate for African-American students and all minorities.
A year later, some African-American students say the administration's commitment to the reforms does not exist.
"Our 12 points of emphasis have not been addressed," said John Lewis, executive board member of Black Men of Today.
is that the position of coordinator is being advertised and will be filled in the near future.
Some of the 12 points of emphasis submitted last year are that the University appoint a coordinator for all recruitment and retention programs dealing with minority students. The administration's response
Another point is that more scholarships should be offered for minorities. The response from the University is that it has established a new endowment fund for minority students, which is $1.9 million has been denoted so far.
Before yesterday's protest, Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said the administration had looked at the students' concerns.
Shankel said the administration was committed to working with the students to discuss further concerns. However, Lewis said the protest
"I believe we have addressed all the points," he said, referring to a letter the administration sent to Mr. Greenberg in response to the 12 points of embryals.
"If the administration is not willing to do anything, why should Black students attend here?" he said.
Lewis said that like most African-American students, he has had to struggle with limited finances to
receive his education.
Just because some African-American students are not graduating on time does not mean they are stupid, he said. They are not graduating on time because they do not have the finances or the opportunities for University financial aid to pay for their education.
He said many African-American students were frustrated because they often were the only African-American in a class.
The administration has not adequately financed recruitment and retention programs for African-American, Lewis said.
Cory Anderson, executive board member of Black Men of Today, said the administration's commitment to recruitment efforts was inadequate.
Anderson said the protest's purpose was to reiterate what African-American students wanted from the administration.
"We've worked with them for a year and a half now," he said. "We are pointing out what hasn't been done."
6
2
Friday, April 12. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
TV actor's cancer generates concern
Lawrence organizes get-well card signing
Kansan staff writer
News of TV star Michael Landon's inoperable cancer this week hit close to home at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
"We were shocked, really sad," said Judy Billings, executive director
of the champer's convention and visitors' meal. "The beer is great friend to the people of Lawrence."
Michael Landon
As a sign of support, the bureau has arranged a get-
well poster signing. The poster,
which hangs at the Lawrence Chamber
of Commerce, 734 Vermon St.
Wilsonville, N.J., will be sent to Landon on April 19.
Landon, who announced earlier this week that he had inoperable cancer of the liver and pancreas, has been hospitalized as rest of northeast Kansas since he
filmed the TV movie 'Where Pigeons Go to Die' in Lawrence in 1989, Billings said.
"I sent him some Final Four T-shirts and a running suit for the championship game a couple of weeks ago," she said.
Impressed with the Lawrence area and people, Landon agreed in February to be the host of a promotional video developed by the Chamber of Commerce for the city, she said. The 10-minute video will premiere next Friday at the chamber's 68th annual meeting.
"He loves Lawrence," she said. "He liked walking down and talking to the people when he was shooting there."
Vickey Hendy of the Kansas Film Commission said Landon selected Lawrence as the site for the movie because of the cooperation and quick response of city officials to his interest in filming in the area.
Landon, famous for his roles in "Bonanza," "Little House on the Prairie" and "Highway to Heaven," began having stomach pains six weeks ago and checked into Cedars-Sinai Medical Center last week. ■ The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kane. 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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Martha Barr, Lawrence resident, studies different classes of daffodils during the 12th Annual Daffodil Show of Lawrence at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets. One hundred
The Associated Press
m-F 9 to 7
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PHILADLPHIA — The University of Pennsylvania hopes to clean up the image of its most white fraternity row by turning a Greek house whose fraternity was sus- tained into a center for community service.
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HELLOYD
- Arrangements
The Psi Iupi house, whose members were involved in the kidnapping of a rival fraternity member and the arrest of an "illegal" mother's "living learning" houses next fall
The Ivy League university is looking for a racially diverse group of 24 men and women interested in community service to move into the Gothic graystone known as the Castle.
The house and other fraternities overlook Locust Walk, the main pedestrian throughfare through campus. Women and minorities have complained of being intimidated and harassed* along the four-block
Winners for the Student Senate seats in each school are Architecture and Urban Design. Jeff Shrook, Impact, Matt Edmunds, Ethics.
Education: Kerry Macdonald, Impact; Arlen Baird, Impact; David Sawid, Engineering David Sawid, Independent; Robert Thompson, Impact; Troy Radarovich, Impact
sixty-three varieties, totaling 351 daffodils, were displayed for judging. Several criteria were used to judge the flowers, including color, form, pose, condition and size.
University officials saw a chance to integrate the heart of the university after Ps1 Upslion was kicked off in 2006. University holds the title to the house.
Ten of the fraternity's members were arrested in the January 1990 kidnapping of William O'Flanagan in a fraternity prank that went awry.
stretch.
University Dance Company will have a spring concert at 8 ontion and at 2 and 8 p.m. tomorrow at Crafton Preventhe Theatre in Murphy Hall.
According to a Penn advisory board report, O'Flanagan was blind-folded, at the hands and feet, tethered to a pole and taunted with racially charged rhetoric, including tapes of Malcolm X.
On campus
The deadline for the Japan Language and Society/Business summer program in Hiratsuka, Japan, has been extended to April 19. Interested students must contact Ashbred at 203 Lippincott Hall or call 843-742 for an application.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have "GALA Week - Out and About" at 7 p.m. Sunday at 100 Smith Hall.
O'Flanagan, who is white, was accused of being racist and anti-Semitic and subjected to a mock trial, the report said. A student from a rival fraternity was the intended victim; the case was taken by mistake, the board found.
Five Art Dismisses. Facts, Alexandra Hamm. Facts.
Graduate Palm Law Facts, Chris Sharp. Facts, Trinity Beach. Facts, Briana Marcel. Facts, Marcia Gurdea, Independent John Robertson Facts, Brian Schmidt. Facts, Jennifer Sauer Impact, Juice Juliet Impact, Am I Satterfield Impact, Kenneth Kimball Impact, Patrick Dilray Impact.
Election winners
Music Therapy Student Association will sponsor a "Music Therapy Symposium" at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union
Business, Lisa Garney, Impact; Paige Yarbrough, Facts. Education: Kathy Woodard, Impact; Alison Blair, Impact.
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Social Welfare: Lance Wright and Mike Sullivan, both of in-
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 12, 1991
Campus/Area
3
Who voted
3,778 students voted. The breakdown of each Senate category:
Nunemaker: 1,388 for 15 seats
Fine Arts: 167 for 2 seats
Graduate: 360 for 12 seats Journalism/Mass Communications: 214 for 2 seats
Law: 37 for 2 seats
CLAS: 1,056 for 11 seats
Pharmacy: 40 for 2 seats
Off Campus: 1,744 for 5 seats
Social Welfare: 22 for 2 seats
Architecture/
Urban Design: 123 for 2 seats Non-traditional: 173 for 1 seat
Residential: 1,128 for 1 sec.
Education: 149 for 2 seats
Students received multiple ballots based upon their voting qualifications, such as school and housing type.
Impact claims top spots
Source: Student Senate Election Committee
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff write
A high percentage of for the Student Senate elections boosted the impact coalition to 51 Senate seats and vice presidential and vice presidential offices.
Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden garnered 2,221 votes, or 59 percent, of the 3,778 valid votes cast.
Impact received half of its seats by sweeping both the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the Nunemaker seats.
Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said he thought the turnover was high considering the cold and windy second day of the election.
He said that about 2,100 votes were
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith, presidential and vice presidential candidates for the Facts coalition, received 1,575 votes.
cast Wednesday and about 1,400 yesterday but that the commission did not know exact numbers for each day. The commission last night and early this morning.
Facts won 11 of the 64 Senate seats, with six of its seats won by graduate students.
Its other seats were in the Schools of Architecture and Urban Design, Business, Fine Arts and Pharmacy.
David Suroff and Marcia Quiros, two of four independent candidates, womens seats in the engineering and graduate schools, respectively.
Election results are unofficial until the election commission investigates reported infractions in the campaign. The commission must to complete the investigation today
...
Announcements of returns from some of the professional schools were slow because the ballots had to be printed by machines and machine could not read the ballots.
Another factor slowing the returns was that the press center had to be moved from Bailey Hall, where the ballots were counted, to Strong Hall after KJHK sound equipment activated the fire alarms in Bailey.
Election officials shuttled between the buildings to deliver the results.
Senate president-elect Darren Fulcher is overwhelmed by his victory and Impact's success in the election.
KU grads speak of world's future
**YUHAN**
By Eric Nelson
Education and media have important roles
Paul Ehrlich, Bing professor of population studies at Stanford, accepts the KU Alumni Association Citation for Distinguished Service.
Kansan staff writer
Television and the environment were the two areas of focus last evening when two nationally known KU graduates gave their insights about the future of the world and the role higher education can play.
Paul Ehrlich. Bing professor of population studies at Stanford University and an internationally recognized authority on the environment, joined Bill Kurtz, Emmy award-winning journalist and co-anchor of CBS "Mornings" show, in addressing challenges for the future.
About 130 people attended the seminar, commemorating the 125th anniversary of KU, in woodcraft Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
Before addressing the audience, Ehrlich was presented with the KU Alumna Association Citation for Discipline presented with the citation in 1985.
the environment a constant without really noticing its problems.
Ehrlich, who earned master's and doctorate degrees at KU in 1955 and 1967, stressed the importance of environ- mental factors. He said that may people considered
"That sort of thing has got to be the mission of educational systems and the media in the immediate future." he said.
There needs to be a new perception in which unseen environmental problems, such as global warming and population, take precedence over more visible threats such as national defense. Ehrlich said.
He encouraged the audience members to make a change and spread awareness in the University setting.
"If you aren't going to put that kind of time in," Ehrlich said, "then your grandchildren are going to be very unhappy."
Kurtis, a 1962 KU graduate and 1965 graduate of Washburn University's school of law, described how he changed vastly since its conception.
With increased technological capabilities, television has become a player in the political situation of the Persian Gulf War. Kurtis said.
But he said TV's current role had led to some manipulation of television news. Other problems include lavoffs in the profession.
Kurtis was optimistic about television's endless potential for use as a communicator in the midst of this information explosion.
He said that many people at KU realized the important purpose television could serve as an educational tool.
"But there is no central position or department that can service these needs," he said.
Kurtis suggested a statewide television education system that would include the sharing of facilities among state institutions. With this, the best classes could be transmitted by satellite to other institutions.
"Television would be a benefit to the entire state education system," he said.
Pets' therapeutic value used at KU Med Center
Bv Amv Francis
Kansan staff writer
The patients sat in the room uncomfortable. Some looked around, trying not to make eye contact,Focuses ocused their gaze upon the floor.
All eyes turned instantly to the hallway when the sound of a jingling chain was heard. It was Charea, a black poulce. She was one of the students in the night at the University of Kansas Medical Center's rehabilitation unit.
Pets for Life, an organization that brings pets to places such as hospitals and nursing homes, arranged for Charlee, three other dogs and two rabbits to visit some of the patients in rehabilitation and child psychiatry units.
"It's wonderful," said Delphin Tucker, whose husband Harold is in the hospital. "I had heard of it but had never been exposed to it."
Harold Tucker did not mind being exposed to the animals either. He held almost all of the animals that were there. He also talked to them.
Pam Wing, recreation coordinator for the Med Center, said, "Everybody usually wants to come and see the pets."
Karen Witt, a nurse at the Med Center, described Pets for Life as "bringing people back into reality through pets."
Many times patients who had shown little or no response to people would react to the pets, she said.
But the Med Center is not the only place the pets go.
Mary Buford, director of Pets for Life, said the group usually visited more than 40 area facilities a month. Last month it visited 52 facilities.
The group is financed completely by contributions from the community, she said. The help of about 60 staff members annually operating costs below $25,000.
Some of the volunteers bring their pets with them when the group makes a visit, but not every dog, cat or rabbit can be a Pets for Life pet, she said. Most of the animals used are dogs.
An animal must be in good health, get along with people and other animals, be comfortable in strange situations, have all of its shots. Burford said.
The group's volunteers also must have qualifications. They must go through an hour of orientation, she said.
"We use a gradual approach.
We're not here to push animals on anyone." Buford said. "Sometimes the pets are put back in or open up. Sometimes they aren't really interested in the pets. They want to talk to the volunteers."
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Fridav. April 12, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AIDS awareness
Ignorance, apathy doesn't stop spread of HIV; education coupled with humanitarianism helps
one in 500 KU students is infected with HIV.
Nationally, the largest growing group of people infected with HIV is the 20- to 24-year-old age group.
AIDS Awareness Week began Saturday and will end Sunday. But for many students, this was not a week that increased their knowledge about AIDS.
Virtually everyone is affected by the epidemic, either by knowing someone who is HIV-positive or by fearing contraction of the disease.
Yet, ignorance runs rampant.
AIDS Awareness Week gives students the opportunity to receive information, to play an active role in volunteering their services and to donate money.
Raising money to help people with HIV and their families is crucial. Not only do these people face astronomical medical expenses, but they also need counseling and support groups.
The Stamp Out AIDS/Walk for Health will begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow at South Park.
Pledges of $30 are requested. Save some of tonight's beer money and donate it to a cause that makes a difference. Give.
But don't stop there. Giving money will not
solve the problem unless attitudes change.
solve the problem unless attitudes change. Jeni Dodd, Student Senate AIDS task force treasurer, said, "People need to start practicing safer sex. It's just that simple. On a campus, that's the main way AIDS is spread."
Dodd said she learned from a recent campus speaker that 97 percent of people knew that using condoms reduced the risk of contracting HIV, but only 44 percent admitted to using them.
Students need to start thinking about why they don't practice what they know will reduce their risk of becoming infected.
must become the norm to use condoms The Student Senate AIDS task force could use help distributing information about how HIV is spread.
The Douglas County AIDS project sponsors a program for those who would like to befriend people with HIV or relatives of people with HIV. There are more people with HIV than there are people who want to be their friends.
A simple way to learn more about HIV is calling the AIDS hotline at 1-800-342-AIDS
The push for AIDS awareness must not stop Sunday.
Debbie Myers for the editorial board
Student drug use
Mandatory testing is not key to curbing usage
T the seizure of three fraternity houses last month at the University of Virginia brought the issue of drug abuse on college commits to national attention.
college campuses to national The houses were seized by the federal government after evidence of illegal drug sales from the houses was substantiated.
To address this problem, Virginia Gov. Douglas Wilder suggested that college students should be subjected to mandatory random drug tests.
Instead of taking the attitude that students are guilty until proven innocent, Martinez chose a more realistic approach.
However, the new director of President Bush's drug control policy, Bob Martinez, rejected the idea, and with good reason.
He said drug testing and arrests should not be the primary methods for eliminating the drug problem. The key, he said, was education.
By involving students in drug-education programs and addressing the drug problems that afflict many of today's college students, it is more likely than the problems can be averted. Threats of arrests and random drug tests do nothing more than shut out those who might be reaching for help.
The problem of drug abuse exists, but education is a start in the right direction of eliminating the problem before it starts.
By learning about the harmful effects of drugs before they start using them, college students will be better able to turn away from doing something that could ruin their lives
In recognizing that the first step toward the banishment of drugs from the nation's college campuses is education and nothing else, Martinez is showing that he understands the problem and how to deal with it.
Brent Maycock for the editorial board
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Zeal was not barbaric
David Ambler's guest column about the celebration in front of Wescoe Hall made me want to throw the newspaper in his face. Dave, what's it been fella, 40 years since your college days? This was a celebration of our team making the "Big Dance," not a rotary convention. I was there both Saturday and Monday, and I saw 20,000 college students crammed in a space one fourth the size of a city block. I saw a few alterations, some tree climbing and not very much sobriety, but "barbarian" or "decbacle" I did not see.
Population statistics might suggest that there are a few jerks in a group of 20,000, but certainly not enough to merit a "travasty to all Coach Williams and the basketball team represented." I've played three years of Division 1 basketball on a tournament team, and I would
have loved to have seen such enthusiasm. As for "making a student body in which Roy Williams and the basketball team could be proud of," I have this to say. We're talking about a guy who knows his X's and O's and 13 guys who have the ability to shoot, pass and dribble. A group that we should be proud of, not that should be proud of us. Because they avoided fights and shook hands after games does not make them sole representatives of this university. Our faculty and this horrible student body of our share the honor.
J.T. Marshall Manhattan senior Thanks for AIDS film
Thank you, Beverly Barbo.
Thank you, Jamie Stilkes. Thank you to all those who feel the need to disseminate the healthy news. And thank you even more to those who take the time to listen.
I tattened a screening of the film "Andre's Mother" and a panel discussion this past Wednesday night. The words spoken there by the panelists mentioned above were some of the most wonderfully
courageous I have heard in a very long time. Courageous, because our society still doesn't wholly understand that homosexuals are 100-percent human beings. Courageous, because the words spoken were stories of deceased loved ones and histories of people with AIDS who are thought about every minute by their families.
'Our society still doesn't wholly understand that homosexuals are 100-percent human beings.'
I realize that I am not going to dispel all of the negative feelings and prejudices held by vast numbers of us by writing this letter, but I feel that it is important to consider it worth one's while to embrace non-harmful attitudes toward homosexuals.
I only wish that everyone could be able to hear what 'Cal', "I don't know," he said. Maybe then, we would see how so very injuriously we've been acting.
Glencoe, Ill., junior
MICHAUDIE 1941
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NAME TO KUWAIT
Leaders in Congress urged to reform ROTC discrimination
■ Editors note: This column was submitted by the Chancellor's Committee on Discrimination in the ROTC. The column is intended to clarify the University's actions to bring ROTC policy in line with the University's policy on discrimination.
The University of Kansas is committed to recognizing the rights of all students to pursue their academic opportunities on the basis of individual merit. It prohibits academic discrimination on the basis of race, sex, creed, ethnicity, sexual orientation and irrelevant disqualification. Skiing is included in a number of institutions of higher learning across the country. $^a$
Reserve Officers Training Corps programs provide scholarship and career opportunities for many students. The constant influx of university-trained officers into the armed services is a valued benefit to the nation's military program. Operating under the regulations of the Department of Defense, the ROTC generally follows nondiscriminatory policies in granting scholarships to students in its programs and in commissioning those who successfully complete the prescribed courses of studies. However, the refusal of the Department of Defense to grant scholarships and commissionation qualified gay or lesbian people is the one exception that runs contrary to the military's record in this regard. This discrimination is in direct violation of University of Kansas policy as well as that of many other universities. If the many benefits of healthy college campus ROTC programs are not to be denied to universities and the nation, this issue of discrimination must be resolved.
The authority for the existence of the ROTC programs is federal statutory law. (10 U.S.C. sec. 2102(a)) As implementing regulations make clear, the goal of the ROTC programs is to ensure "that men and women educated in a variety of American schools of higher learning are commissioned annually" (32 C.F.R. sec. 562.5(a)). Nothing in the ROTC enabling statement specifies exactly bars a gay or lesbian student from becoming a cadet or midshipman, or otherwise participating in the ROTC programs, but the discriminatory rule enters the picture under regulations specifying grounds for termination from the armed forces.
in the ROTC programs that lead to commissioning, or for financial aid in connection with membership in the ROTC, one must agree to accept an appointment if offered. Because a gay or lesbian person cannot accept a commission, it follows that such a person is ineligible for advanced ROTC training and ROTC financial aid. This statutory and regulatory framework makes the ROTC programs inaccessible to gay or lesbian students. (See C.F.R. sec. 41.1 et seq.)
"Homosexuality" is one of those grounds for termination. Although the statutory and regulatory framework is not written with absolute clarity, it is apparent that an individual cannot accept a commission in connection with simultaneously subject to separation from the military services set forth in the applicable regulations. To be eligible for the third and fourth years
At some universities the outrage engendered by these discriminatory policies has led to demonstrations and demands that the ROTC programs be banned from campus. It is likely that the continuance of the present policy will cause increasing pressure by students and faculty to discontinue ROTC programs at the University of Kansas and elsewhere.
One of the central themes in U.S. history has been the struggle to achieve equal rights and opportunities for all law-abiding groups and individuals. The degree of success as a result of this struggle has been significant in racial equality, creed, sex, physical discrimination and even sexual orientation.
Consider the changes made during just the past half century. In 1940 Black Americans were widely discriminated against and women faced many barriers to the full use of their abilities. With respect to the military, Black Americans were segregated with scant opportunities for advancement; women were not accepted for enlistment except as nurses.
American life has changed substantially since then. Significant strides forward have been made in securing equal rights and opportunities under the law for racial minorities, women and other groups. In the armed services, Blacks and women have assumed a prominence undreamed of a half century ago. The military reversed its position of being among the most exclusive parts of American life respecting racial minorities to be a relative minority. Civil Rights revolution in the 1960s, and has kept pace with developments elsewhere in the United States as far as women are concerned. What it has not done is catch up with American ideals by extending equal rights and opportunities to gay and lesbian people. The time has come for change.
There is compelling evidence that gay and lesbian people are as able, courageous, intelligent, diligent and capable of dedication as are heterosexuals. Many gay and lesbian people have performed successfully in the military despite the policies against them. The fear that they would disrupt military life — the reason most often cited for trying to
exclude them — is the same reason used earlier to restrict Blacks and women. The armed forces have made racial and heterosexual aggressiveness subject to military discipline. There is no reason to believe that gay and lesbian military personnel would not be as amenable to the dangers of sexual aggressiveness as heterosexuals. As a December 1988 study prepared under contract with the Department of Defense indicated, "homosexual men and women as a group are not different from heterosexual men and women in regard to adjustment criteria or job performance" (Theodore R. Sarbin and Kenneth Karols, "Nonconforming Sexual Orientations and Military Suitability").) The study further demonstrated our understanding of our behaviors, customs and laws is not permanently resistant to change.
The military cannot indefinitely isolate itself from the changes occurring in the wider society, of which it is an integral part."
Because of the inaccessibility of ROTC programs to gay and lesbian students, the University of Kansas, along with other universities in the United States, is confronted with a serious dilemma in carrying out its policy of providing equal opportunity to all students. Discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is highly questionable within the military services and academic institutions, but in university community. The current ROTC commissioning and scholarship program, despite its obvious and significant benefits to the University of Kansas and its students, represents major and direct violations of the University's nondiscrimination policies.
The University Council and the University administration have joined together in a concerted effort to seek a solution to the problem. They are in close communication with other universities with ROTC programs and with national associations of higher education to coordinate efforts in contacting the Department of Defense and members of Congress concerning educational commitments to ROTC scholarships and commissions to otherwise eligible gay and lesbian students. Leadership in Congress and in the Department of Defense must take steps to maintain the viability of ROTC programs nationwide by resolving this discrimination issue.
- Submitted by the members of the Chancellor's Committee on Discrimination in the ROTC:
Sleigried Lindenbaum, chair
Frances Ingemann
Robert H. Jerry II
Donald R. McCoy
Pat Warren
KANSAN STAFF
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RICH CORNELL Managing editor
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Editors
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Planning Holly M. Neuman
Campus Jennifer Royleowski
Business staff
Campus sales mgr. Sophie Whhbe
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Business manager
MINDI LUND
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Sales and marketing adviser
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Photography... Keith Thorpe Marketing director... Gail Einbinder
Graphics... Melissa Unterberg Creative director... Christy Hays
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 are required to have an email address.
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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.
Loco Locals
I'M AT A LOSS
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EYCOSE ME, SIR? WHEN DID 'CRACKER-JACKS" MAKE THEIR PRIZE A DRIVER'S LICENSE? MY 12YEAR OLD SISTER WOULD LIKE ONE TOO!
BEST.
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by Tom Michaud
A man in a hat is opening the car door. He is holding a gun and looking back at himself.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 12. 1991
5
Museum Day looks at home Exhibits will highlight objects from daily life
By Sarah Davis Kansan staff writer
"All the Comforts of Home" will be the theme of KU's 11th annual Museum Day on Sunday.
"Each museum has different things to show in relation to that theme," said Cathy Dwigans, associate director for membership and public relations at the Museum of Natural History.
Four museums — the Spencer Museum of Art, Museum of Natural History, Museum of Anthropology and the Wilcox Classical Museum — will be sites for activities as well as tours. The museums will have exhibits emphasizing objects of everyday life.
Three other KU museums — the Snow Entomological Museum, the Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology, and the McGregor Herbarium— will have displays at the Museums of Lawrence — will have displays in the Museum of Natural History.
"We have this celebration here at KU because it's a way of highlighting the museums and their contributions to the community." Dwigans said.
"It gives a better sense of the variety of museums and objects that are available on campus."
Several activities, all free, are planned for Sunday between 1 and 3:30 p.m.
Visitors can view special displays, such as bird nests, live turtles, fossils, insect homes or an exhibit on pre-Columbian village life in Mexico.
They also can try grinding corn or watching a video on the ruins of a Roman city. A telescope to view sun spots and a pretendyou're a child playing with toy animals is available, and a local artist will demonstrate the craft of steniling.
"It's a nice thing for parents and kids to come to," said Betty Banks, curator of the Wilcox Classical Museum in Lippincott Hall. "This is a little more personal. They can participate more."
Banks said she was always prepared to answer a popular question asked by children who came to her museum.
statues are nude," she said, explaining that she told the children that it was an ancient Greek athletic tradition to exercise nude in the hot climate. She also told the curious women that there were not allowed in the gymnasiums.
"They want to know why the
"The kids are fun," she said. "It's nice to see how interested they are."
Banks said she was looking forward to encouraging people to become familiar with what the classics museums had to offer, especially because people tend to be intimidated by larger museums.
"It lets them see another aspect of our department," she said. "We think you can learn something about ancient practices from a visit."
Dwigans said the celebration could benefit the smaller museums.
"This is an opportunity for the other museums to be involved in exhibit open to the public," she said. "This is just a suggestion of the selection of the activities that the museums offer."
Committee readying for art awards
A group of art students is anxiously awaiting this weekend, when a faculty committee will decide which students will receive Lockwood scholarships and awards.
By Benjamin W. Allen
It is no small matter. Some of the scholarships, or their equivalent, can be as high as $5,000.
Kansas staff writer
Students considered for the scholarships and awards were nominated by faculty members
The Lockwood scholarships are named after a former visiting faculty member at the University of Kansas. Ward Lockwood, whose wife gave an endowment to the University.
One of the endowment's stipulations is that only male students can receive the money.
This is where the phrase "or their equivalent" comes in.
Because the Lockwood endowment stipulates that only male students can receive money, the school uses money from other endowments, which do not specify gender, for female students.
Robert Brawley, chairperson of the department of art, said, "It's a shame the Lockwood endowment stipulates men only because the money is never totally spent. It just goes back into the endowment."
Brawley said some of the money from the Lockwood endowment was not used because not as much money was available for female students. The school gives the same amount to both sexes.
Other endowments provided $34,600 for women this
"An award is for exceptional work and development," Brawley said. "It's a recognition by the department of excellence."
year. The Lockwood endowment supplied $48.400.
Recipients of the awards are chosen by a committee comprised by five department faculty members.
Rik Dishinger, a member of the committee preparing the studios where the art will be displayed, said the
He said the best aspect of the show was the quality of the students' work.
"A lot of time, you don't see a lot of what the students have been doing until it suddenly pops out of their studios and you say, 'Wow! Who's this? I didn't know they were this good.'"
"It's worth seeing," he said. "It's probably the only chance anybody gets to see what they're really going on up here."
Students will hang their art tomorrow night in the painting studios on the fourth floor of the Art and Design Building.
The fourth floor then will be locked, and no one but the faculty committee, which will judge the show tomorrow and Sunday, will be allowed in.
The floor will be locked to provide the faculty committee privacy.
At 1:30 p.m. Sunday, the public, including the artists, will be allowed to view the 54 nominees' work. Scholarships and awards will be posted next to each show will continue from 8:30 a.m to 4:30 p.m. Monday.
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The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents the
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8:00 p.m. Friday, April 12, 1991
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Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
6
Friday, April 12, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Headmasters #00 Vermont 843-8888
"Run For Your Life"
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Saturday, April 13, 1991
10:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon
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--elected as the assistant presiding officer of the body.
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STATE POLICE DEPT.
Justin Knupp/Special to the KANSAN
Car flip
Lawrence Emergency Services workers inspect an overturned car that went off the road yesterday afternoon near the intersection of Ninth Street and Emery Road. The driver, William Harrison, Minneapolis junior, was treated at the scene, then taken by ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was treated and released with no serious injuries.
Date rape often difficult to prosecute, lawyers say
By Nedra Beth Randolph
When the accused pleads not guilty, all the prosecution has to use in its case, outside of any physical evidence, is the alleged victim's word versus the perpetrator's word, she said.
Kansan staff writer
The prosecution of date rape is difficult because convictions often hinge on credibility battles between a victim and the alleged victim, experts said.
Chris Kenney, Douglas County district assistant attorney, said there were two significant obstacles in prosecuting date rape cases.
The other problem arises when the accused claims the accuser agreed to have sex.
"You have to prove to a jury of 12 people that you didn't consent," Kenney said.
According to a Senate Judiciary Committee report issued last month, the number of raped reported annually was 100,000 for the first time in 1990.
Nationally, at least 60 percent of all reported sex crimes are classified as acquaintance or date rapes.
'Our society still does a lot of victim blaming in the crime of rape. This is much more prevalent in aquaintance rapes than in "stranger rapes." '
Mark Brothers, Lawrence police representative, said that in 1990, 24 reports of rape or attempted rape in Lawrence were filed.
Denise Snyder
Title Director of a rape crisis center
in Washington, D.C.
But he said a large number of the rape reports proved not to be rapes.
"We have had everything from totally false reports to reports that proved not to be rapes and were tortured," Mr. Hancock said at the edge of sexual battery." Brothers said.
Lawrence police officer Ernest Gwin said rape cases were more difficult to prosecute than sexual battery cases. The victim's past can be used as evidence in a rape case but not in a sexual battery case.
Rape is a felony, and sexual battery is a misdemeanor.
Denise Snyder, director of a rape crisis center in Washington, D.C., said, "Our society still does a lot of victim blaming in the crime of rape and is much more precluded in acquaintances rapes than in Stranger rapes."
She said that police and prosecutors often responded to acquaintance rape by blaming the victim.
No one knows how many rapes go unreported, but Snyder said that law enforcement officials were told about only one in 10 rapes. Of the reported incidents, some — some estimate fewer than 5 percent — result in criminal trials
Snyder said FBI statistics showed no higher percentages of false reports for rape than any other crime.
But Rikki Klieman, a Boston defense lawyer who also has prosecured rape cases, said the accused was wrongly convicted on the woman's word alone.
Kleman said acquaintance-rape complaints often ended up a credibility contest
"To think the system today is lifted against alleged victims is nonsense," she said.
"The most frightening case, from the defense point of view, is what I call the 'You should have sent her flowers' in case, in which a respectable man meets a woman, sleeps with her and then doesn't pursue her. Next he knows, he's being accused of rage," she said.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
University Council chooses new officers
Kansan staff report
At yesterday's University Council meeting, Frances Ingemann, professor and chairperson of linguistics, was appointed officer for the 1991-92 academic year.
Ingemann served as the chairperson of Senate Executive Committee during the past year.
Greg Hughes, Merriam junior, was
Also elected were the six new members of SenEx. They are Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics; Tom Beiseker, associate professor of communications; Bezael Benjamin, professor of architectural engineering; Nancy Dahl, assso-
ciate professor of physical cell biology, Anita Herzfeld, professor of Latin American studies; and Ellen Ward, professor of law.
Student representatives will be Hughes and Roger Ross, Iola senior
The new SenEx members then elected Beisecker as chairperson and Hughes as assistant chairperson.
SAH
KU Students Against Hunger Declares War On Hunger!
Look for our table in front of Wescoe all week!
War on Hunger Week 1991
Sunday 14
Balloon
Launch
Picnic
Campanile Hill
2-4 p.m.
Picnic, Live Jazz, Win
a hot air balloon ride!
Monday 15
Art Exhibit
Stauffer-Flint Lawn
Multi-Media Display
Hunger Olympics
Fraser Lawn
Different events each day
16
Tuesday 16
Art Exhibit
Stauffer-Flint Lawn
Multi-Media Display
Hunger Olympics
Fraser Lawn
Different events each day
Wednesday 17
Art Exhibit
Stauffer-Flint Lawn
Multi-Media Display
Hunger Olympics Fraser Lawn Different events each day
Thursday 18
18
Hunger Olympics
Fraser Lawn Different events each day
Friday 19
19
Hunger Olympics
Fraser Lawn Different events each day
Saturday
20
Spring Softball Scramble
24 team co-ed tournament
$20 entry fee
For more information on any of the Hunger Week 1991 events, call:
Jay 842-8170
Leslie 865-4023
Sunday
21
Hunger Run
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call R.J. 749-9596
World Hunger
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$2/person
call Jessica 864-5971
Join the Fight !
Nation/World
7
Agencies strive to help Kurds
The Associated Press
Relief agencies seeking donations for Kurdish refugees are getting an uneven response from the American public, and representatives suggest people are holding back until they know more about the situation.
As many as 2 million Kurds have fled from northern Iraq to the Iranian and Turkish borders after a failed Kurdish uprising sought to capitalize on Iraq's defeat in the Persian Gulf War.
While the U.S. government has begun to deliver aid, Turkish officials are pleading for more help for the Syrian refugees in the battle against the burglar, freezing temperatures and
disease
"I think people are still confused about what the response should be," said Tom Getman, director of government relations for World Vision Relief and Development in Washington, D.C.
International aid so far is barely making a dent, relief officials say.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 12, 1991
World Vision, which made a public appeal for donations on Tuesday, received just six calls at his office on Friday, said representative Jeff Sellers.
The leader of a Kurdish cultural institute in New York City expressed concern that donations may not get to the refugees.
The Associated Press
' WASHINGTON — The outcry in end to Saddam Hussein's rule in Iraq grew in Congress yesterday, as Democrats and Republicans alike showed grown discomfort with a U.S. policy that allowed the slaughter of Kurdish civilians.
Congress denounces Hussein
"I think we had, at the high levels of American government, a moral lapse," said Rep. Howard
Berman, D-Calif. "This war has not really ended. Our job is not done."
Nation/World briefs
In a forum organized to hear testimony of a French doctor who had just returned from Iraqi Kurdistan, the co-chairpersons of the Congressional Human Rights Council could not defend Starbucks could no longer allow Saddam Hussein to retain power in his country.
Washington
U.S., Panama sign drug treaty
The United States and Panama have reached a final agreement on a treaty aimed at enhancing cooperation in the fight against drug trafficking, U.S. officials said yesterday.
The treaty, subject to legislative ratification by both countries, was to be signed late yester-
**2957**
The agreement provides for the sharing of evidence in cases involving drug trafficking, money laundering and other crimes, said officials who asked not to be identified.
During the rule of Gen. Manuel Noriega, Panama was regarded by U.S. officials as a favorite country of drug traffickers to launder illegal profits.
The money-laudering process enables criminals to disguise the origin of illicit earned money.
Washington
Wholesale prices tumble again
Wholesale prices fell in February for the fourth straight month, the first time such a trend has occurred in five years, a government official said yesterday.
The Labor Department said its Producer Price Index, which measures inflation before it reaches consumers, fell 0.3 percent last month, reflecting continued declines in energy prices.
The better-than-expected news on inflation was tempered, however, by a report that retail sales were down in March, dashing hopes that rising consumer confidence after the end of the Persian Gulf War would spell a quick end to the recession by boosting sales.
In addition, the government said that new claims for unemployment benefits, while dropping below $500,000 for the first time in three years, will reduce the level of 473,000 for the last week in March.
Financial markets rallied on the economic reports as investors expressed confidence that the combination of moderating inflation and no break in the recession would force the Federal Reserve to further lower interest rates.
Paris
French mav restrict abortion bill
PARIS — A French health official said use of the controversial abortion pill would likely be banned for women who smoke or are over 35, after the death of a woman treated with the pill.
The death of the 31-year-old woman, who smoked heavily, was the first associated with the pill. Known as RU-486, it has been used by many countries and the year it has been on the market in France
Deputy health minister Bruno Durieux told lawmakers Wednesday that recommendations to restrict the pill's use probably would be made under a bill two expert commissions set up after the death.
Durieux said that in addition to leaning toward banning the treatment for smokers or women over 35, the commissions were expected to call for modifying doses and administration of the pill. Use of the pill by itself is not allowed in France.
From The Associated Press
PLO to miss peace talks
The Associated Press
Israel and U.S. draw up a nine-point peace agreement
JERUSALEM — Israel and the United States have agreed that the PLO should be excluded from peace negotiations, and have shelved temporarily the issue of Israel's withdrawal from the occupied territories, Foreign Minister David Levy was quoted as saying yesterday.
These were some of the nine agreements worked out in talks this week between Israeli officials and visiting Secretary of State James Baker, an Israeli radio broadcast said.
Levy was quoted as saying that the agreement specified a dual approach to peace, consisting of simultaneous but separate negotiations between the Arab states, and Israel and the Palestinians.
The broadcast said Foreign Minister David Levy outlined the points in a closed-door session of the 14-member Defense Cabinet, which deals with security issues.
The agreement also ruled out Palestinian independence demands and formation of a
bureau of the broadcast.
Paleaniens in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip consider the PLO to be their legitimate representative. Israel considers the PLO a terrorist group and refuses to negotiate with it.
The agreement also specified that there would be no discussion between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel.
The radio broadcast said that Palestinians were to be represented in peace talks only by residents of the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip who are deemed acceptable by Israel. The agreement was supplemented by Palestinian halions from annexed Jerusalem or the Diaspora, the broadcast said.
In addition, the broadcast said the United States and Israel had agreed that Israel would only negotiate in accordance with its May 1989 plan. That plan calls for Israel to conduct talks concerning limited autonomy, with any negotiations toward a final settlement to be delayed for three
years.
The Soviet Union would have to renew full diplomatic ties with Israel before it could join in the peace process, the radio quoted Levy as saving.
On U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, which says Israel should withdraw from war-won land, Levy was quoted as saying, "The sides agreed that the resolution has several interpretations and would become an issue for negotiations only at the end of the peace process."
According to the broadcast, Levy said that Israel would prefer to negotiate with a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation, but that the nation had been in principle to an independent Palestinian team.
Hard-line Housing Minister Ariel Sharon immediately challenged Levy, saying that Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir had assured ministers that an independent delegation had been ruled out.
Earlier radio reports said Shamir feared that a separate delegation would underscore the Palestinians' demand for independence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The broadcast quoted Shamir as responding,
"We do not want, nor do we agree to, an independ-
ent party."
"Without an agreement on a Palestinian delegation there is no peace process," countered Levy. "If somebody decided to change his opinion, he would have triggered a crisis in our relations with the United States."
The Defense Cabinet immediately split in debate concerning the composition of any Palestinian
Pakistani leader Faisal Husseini said yesterday that he was aware of the split.
"I would aid them (to) ... leave it for the
Pastimists to decide how to be represented," he said.
Hussein was one of six supporters of the mainstream Fushi brand. PLO who met him in 2014 earlier than the
Saudi Arabia cuts aid to PLO
The Associated Press
Arafat planning to survive PLO leadership challenge
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Saudi Arabia's cutoff of financial aid to the Palestine Liberation Organization will impair but not cripple Yasser Arafat's ability to represent the Palestinian people.
Arafat made plans for such an emergency years ago, by investing $2 billion in Europe, Asia and Africa.
Nevertheless, the Saudi decision announced yesterday — after a similar move by Kuwait due to Arafat's support for Iraq in the Persian Gulf War — will cut deeply into the PLO's budget.
Last month, Arafat said PLO revenue had fallen from $300 million to about $40 million annually, chiefly because of the financing cuts from the guilf states.
The Los Angeles Times quoted Arafat as saying that the PLO had closed diplomatic missions, shut down newspapers, laid off workers and slashed travel expenses.
The Saudi decision not to resume financial aid was announced yesterday by Prince Saud al-Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, a senior U.S. official said.
U. S. officials traveling with Secretary of State James Baker in Damascus did not know how much money the Riyadh government was providing the PLO.
Strip, had not been affected.
But Arafat said social programs, such as aid to families of slain FLO fighters and education and employment services, were essential.
In February 1990, a senior PLO official said the Saudis had donated $1 billion to the PLO since 1979, including more than $70 million to finance the omanian uprising in the Israeli-occupied territories.
The 3-year-old infifada was a large beneficiary of the more than $40 million a month the PLO was making. The new investment was $162,000.
The Saudis and Kuwaitis have made it clear that they would like to see a change in leadership in the PLO. This action also would please the United States.
However, Arafat has survived many other challenges to his leadership since he took control in 1979. The PLO still enjoys the support of the vast majority of the 1.7 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, as well as over 2 million more elsewhere.
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Fridav. April 12, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Statehouse approves merger of two Kansas schools
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A bill that would merge two Board of Regents institutions was approved by a House committee yesterday.
The bill, already approved by the Senate, combines the Kansas College of Technology in Salina with Kansas State University. The college would then become Kansas State University Salina, College of Technology.
The House Appropriations Committee unanimously passed the measure by a voice vote after listeners testimony from five proponents.
The bill must be approved by the House and Gov. Joan Finney before the legislative session ends in order to merger to be implemented by July 1.
The merger would cost $10.44 million, $4.5 million of which will come
from a half-cent sales tax levied in Salina specifically for the project.
The state would pitch in $1.59 million, and the rest of the project would be financed through private bonds from the state and the sale of the south KCT campus.
The bill phases out the two-year engineering technology program at K-State, combining it with the program already in existence at KCT.
Stanley Konlik, executive director
of the Regents, said the merger was beneficial to Kansas for several reasons, primarily that it would strengthen the two institutions.
"I believe we can truly view it as a win-win situation," he said. "Kansas College of Technology will benefit us with Kansas State. It will flourish."
Maj Thomas Martin, education services officer for the Kansas National Guard, said the merger
could translate into dollars from the Pentagon, because KCT offered courses in aviation technology and training to air aviation battalion near the campus.
He said the Kansas Guard had sent personnel to other states to be trained in aviation technology because the Pentagon felt the program in Salina was not strong enough.
But the merger would change that
perception, Martin said.
"The Army wants to get out of the training business," he said. "They want to turn the training over to the educators.
"Here's a chance for Kansas to move light years ahead of the rest of the country in aviation technology, he said. "We know aviation won the race by traveling where the Perlagon is going to spend money for the next five years."
Italian ferry hits oil tanker
The Associated Press
LEGIONH, Italy — A cabin attendant dangled from the side of a flaming ship for two hours, the only known survivor yesterday from a ferry fire that authorites fear killed 139 people.
"My friends died beside me, it is a miracle I'm alive," said Alessio Bertrand from his hospital bed, and he was being treated for shock.
Bertrand said he and two other crewmen had been watching a soccer game below deck when the ferry rammed an anchored oil tanker Wednesday night in thick fog off northwestern Italy.
"Flames erupted and smoke was
everywhere, we wouldn't see anything." Bertrand said.
They stumbled over bodies as they fought their way upstairs and outside.
The water, a flaming sea of oil,
offered no hope.
His friends died from the smoke that swept the ferry. Bertrand saved himself by clinging to a rail overboard, and to life.
"I hung on, I don't know how, for about two hours," he said. "Then the coast guard came and told me to jump off. I don't know why I'm here and the others are all dead. It's a miracle."
halted at dusk yesterday, 40 bodies had been recovered. The ferry had carried 72 passengers and a crew of 68. All but one, an Austrian, were Italian.
The 28-man crew of the tanker jumped into lifeboats and survived. The disaster occurred as the Moby Prince ferry was 24 miles off Leghorn, steaming toward Olbia, Sardinia.
By the time rescue efforts were
The ferry blaze Wednesday inadvertently may have been worsened by the captain, who put the ship in reverse after the collision, pulling it over to shore but starting a cascade of oil from the tank. Leghorn port officials said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
'Yuppie flu' hot topic for KU grad
Bv Amv Francis
Kansan staff writer
Once known as the "yuppie flu," CFS is a condition that causes one to feel constantly exhausted.
Neeyan Ostrom, KU graduate,
will appear on Channel 14 at 2:30
Sunday on "Tony Brown's Jour-
ney." She will be promoting her
book
The book, which came out this month, is composed of stories that Ostrom wrote for the New York
"What Really Killed Gilda Radner? Frontline Reports on the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic," is not completely about Radner but deals more with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
"Gilda was diagnosed as having Chronic Fatigue Syndrome one-and-a half years before she was diagnosed with the cancer that killed her." Ostrom said. "It's a very dramatic way of looking at
Native, a weekly publication.
"I've been covering this story since February 8," Oström said. "What we did was publish the two years' worth of columns."
Charles Ortleb, publisher of the New York Native, hired Ostrum and convinced her to report on CFS
"I encouraged her," he said. "I was convinced that Chronic Fatigue Syndrome was AIDS, and I wanted her to check it out.
"This(CFS) is unbelievably scary."
Ortleb said he liked the idea of compiling the stories into a book.
"We just decided we wanted to get this information into as many hands as possible." Orteb said.
Ostrom said, "There aren't really any good books out about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. I hope that more publicity about the illness will lead to more funding for research."
It took a lot of time to research the articles, she said. But one of the hardest parts of the research was interviewing CFS patients.
"It can be emotionally overwhelming because the stories of the patients are tragic," she said. "It can be emotionally draining. Almost every CFS patient has thought about or tried suicide."
Ostrom is satisfied with the reaction to the book so far.
"The reaction we have received has been positive," she said. "What we expected was interest, and that's what we got."
Ortleb said that he expected the book to be a best seller after a few months.
Ostrom plans to write a second book about CFS. It will be a compilation of her stories, in addition to long interviews with physicians. The book's title might be "Anatomy of a Cover-Up." Ostrom said.
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10
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 12, 1991
Arts and Entertainment
9
KU dance company springs into concert
Kansan staff writer
Bv Amv Francis
More than a semester's worth of work will reach a climax of mixed moods this weekend as the University Dance Company performs its spring concert at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murray Hall.
The annual concert will feature eight works, which will be performed at 8 tonight and 2 and 8 p.m. tomorrow.
ALEXANDRA ROBINSON
"It's a dance concert and has a lot of original music," said Muriel Cohen, assistant professor of the ballet and dance. "It's a total experience."
The concert provides a variety of moods for the audience, she said. The different dances range in mood from romantic to extremely intense. There are also mood changes within the individual dances.
The last dance. "Journal Entry No 2." sums up several of the moods of the concert.
"They all are really different," said Michelle Heffner, Lawrence senior and dance company member. "I'm really proud of this concert. Our dancers are really strong; our choreography is really good."
Janet Hamburg, associate professor of music and dance, said that the work was based on the journal that choreographer Jan Erkert kept while he worked.
The third dance, "Protest." has an intensity that borders on being ferocious. Cohen said.
Members of the University Dance Company will perform tonight at 8 for the spring concert in Crafton-Prever Theatre.
Erkert was a resident artist at the University of Kansas earlier this semester. For three weeks in June, he and his students who will perform in her piece
"She choreographed the work," Hamburg said. "She was very speciific with the steps of the dance."
Eckert also provided the set and costumes for the dance. Hamburg said.
The dances will be performed by 26 dancers, many performing in more than one work. They are all KU students who were chosen through open auditions at the beginning of the dance company.
"It's a challenge, but that's what the profession demands," Hamburg said
"Footprints" will be the first performance of the concert.
Hamburg said, "It's a wonderful concert opener. It kind of warms the audience up, gets them used to looking at dance."
"It opens on a sort of joyful note." Cohan said, who choreographed the dance.
Michelle Hyde, KU graduate student, will perform in Cohan's work. She also will perform in two other dance companies with the dance company for nine years.
"I'm always nervous if it's a new work, which is what these three pieces are," she said. "You wonder if you will remember what comes next."
A special concert opener is planned for Friday. One of the 26 dancers performing will be awarded the 1991 Elizabeth Sherbon Scholarship Award. It will be presented by Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts.
Student tickets for the performance cost $3. Non-student tickets cost $5. Tickets will be available at 452 Murphy Hall and at the door.
JOHN LEWIS
The Samples, a quintet from Boulder, Colo., will bring their music to The Bottleneck Sunday
Samples' music socially aware
Special to the Kansan
Is the sense of social activism that coalesced with the music scene in the '60s alive and & cell in the techno-pop, Top-40 market of the '90s?
By Kristine Curley
Although this question may appear unanswerable, it is hard to ignore the efforts of the Colorado based quintet The Samples Using music as its medium, the group communicates a message that corresponds to the planet in which it is planet because of the destruction of many of its resources.
Lyrics from songs such as "Ocean of War" and "Nature" illustrate the group's attitude toward safeguarding the beauty the Earth has to offer.
Charles Hambleton, who plays acoustic guitar for the band, admitted that being environmentally conscious was becoming somewhat of a wind now, but he said that without awareness, there could be no solution.
PREVIEW
'We're not preaching, but I think
The group's desire to get its message to its listeners has forced the band to make some compromises.
our music definitely has a positive impact," Hambleton said.
The names of the actors called back for a second audition will be posted by the Green Room in Murphy Hall on Sunday evening. Second auditions will be conducted from 7 to 10 Sunday night.
Music is what appears to be high on the list of priorities for the band. It will be going back into the studio this summer to record a follow-up to its self-titled release that came out last fall on Arista records. Hambleton said that the new album would be a logical musical progression for the band and that many of the songs evoked a sense of urban life.
The Samples, whose name goes back to the band's humble beginnings in Boulder, Colo., when a lack of money forced the band to eat food from the sample section of supermarkets, arrive in Lawrence on Sunday for a sold-out show at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire ST. It is the last scheduled stop on their tour.
"We're driving across the country in a tour bus eating up a tremendous amount of money," he said. "If forces take me about what is important to you."
Hambleton said he hoped the band's music made listeners think.
"It's like a painting. No two impressions are alike," he said. "I want people to feel good when they hear our music."
Hambleton described the group as a wandering cartoon show, but he said that despite the band's uniqueness, the mood within the band was harmonious. Hambleton said that however different each person was, they all shared the common desire to help the environment.
ally would sit on the stage
"We're psyched to come to Lawrence." Hammleton said. "We've played some pretty bizarre shows on television and I've always believed Lawrence is the best way to end it all."
'Midsummer' to be produced at KU
A requirement for the play is that the person currently must be enrolled at the University of Kansas or enrolled in a summer class. An outside job may be held, but it cannot interfere with the play.
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
Mike Boring, secretary for the theater and film department, said that the group would perform the production at the Theatre and that the audience actu-
from 1 to 4 p.m. To audition, students should make an appointment at 317 Murphy Hall. The deadline to sign up is 5 p.m. today.
"I'm just looking forward to doing this piece," said Paul Meier, director of summer theater. "It seems suitable for summer."
This summer, 14 KU students will have an opportunity that few actors have: the opportunity to perform a Shakespeare play in the round.
Kansas Summer Theatre will produce William Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." It will be performed July 19-21 and July 26-28.
For those who would like to act in the play, open auditions will be conducted tomorrow and Sunday
CALENDAR
Friday
■ "Kindergarten Cop." SUA movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
**Spring Concert.** University Dance Company, 8 p.m. Cranston-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at 452 Murphy Hall and SIA office
hire. $4
Bonedaddy's and Now See Hear, 9.30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire, advance tickets 6
■ Black Cat, Bone, 9:30 p.m. The Jazzhaus, $921⁶⁰ Massachusetts St.$³
■ "The Seven Year Itch," SUA movie, 4 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2
■ "Kindergarten Cop." SUA movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas City $2.50
The Modern Saints, 9:30 p.m. The Mad Hatter, 904 New Hall St.保斯. $2 "Excaburl" SUA movie, midnight. Doodrift Auditorium, Kansas Union. $18
**Spring Concert. University Dance Company, 2 and 8 p.m. Crawley-Pretower Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at 452 Murphy Hall, SUA office.**
- Salty Iguanas and Picket Line Coyotes, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New
Saturday
*Id Explosion*, 9:30 p.m. The Jazzhaus
*261% Massachusetts St.*, $3.
The Modern Saints, 9:30 p.m. The Mad Hatter, 904 Newman St. $2.
"Excaballar." SUA movie, midnight.
Draft Audition. Kansas Union,
$2.99.
Sunday
■ "Kindergarten Cop." SUA movie, 2 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
University and Concert Bands Performance, 2:30 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall, free.
■ The Samples and the Millions, 9:30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., advance tickets, $5.
Monday
Open mike, 9 p.m., The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St., free.
Tuesday
"Sophie's Choice," SUA Movie, 7 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2
information call 864-3982
Chamber Music Series: Paula Robinson, flute, and Eliot Fisk, guitar, 8 p.m. Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., for
■ Reverend Horton Heat and Gul Gut.
i:30 p.m. The Bottleneck 737 New
1am5mchester St.$4
Wednesday
■ "Sophie's Choice." SUA movie, 7 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Jnion, $2
**Inge Theatre Series:** "Cimazano" and "Sinmarina's Birthday," 8 p.m. **Inge Theatre**, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
- Common Ground and Interface, 9:30
p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire
St., $3
Thursday
"iassa in America. A Journey with Isaac Bashac Singer" and "The Catelera." SUA movies 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.
**Inge Theatre Series:** "Cizano" and "Sinmova's Birthday." 8 p.m. * Inge Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Office Box.
Lucky Seven and Ricky Dean, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $4.
■ Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam. 9:30 p.m.
The Jazzhaus, 926¼ Massachusetts St.
$1.
BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS ELECTION
All applications must be turned in to the
Elections for 1991-'92 sophomore, junior, and senior class officers
Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union, by Friday, April 19 at 4:00 p.m. Elections will be held Monday.
April 29, and Tuesday, April 30,
From 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.
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Friday, April 12, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Recycle this paper in your nearest container or in the big blue bin in front of Wescoe Hall.
Free Tax Advice Legal Services Available Free with Valid KU ID Appointment Necessary 148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
You won't get AIDS from a toilet seat.
You won't get AIDS from a classroom.
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You can get AIDS from sexual intercourse. You can get AIDS from sharing drug needles. You can get AIDS by being born to an infected mother.
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The cost of living has gone down! You don't have to be majoring in Economics to see that our prices are more affordable than ever. Come to the residence hall that features great social events, free utilities, our "Dine Anytime"am program, a convenient location close to campus and much, much more.
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Philip Mening/KANSAN
Chong Tang Kota Bharu and Boon Heng Tan Kuala Lumpur, both Malaysia seniors, choose caps and gowns inside Gate No. 22 at Memorial Stadium. Tan plans to return to Malaysia to work as an electrical engineer. Tang wants to stay in the United States to look for a job as a software engineer.
Dead meat is fair game, new road kill rules state
The Associated Press
LANSING, Mich. — Read kill is becoming fair game for many state hunters under rules approved yesterdays the Natural Resources Commission.
The idea is to prevent fur and meat from accidentally killed birds and animals from going to waste, said George Burgoyne, assistant wildlife chief for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.
"I guess to some people it might sound unspetacular, but thousands of road-killed deer are collected and utilized throughout the country every year," he said. "And it's better than just letting the animal go to waste and create a stench or a nuisance or an eyesore."
Michigan rules already allow taking a deer or bear killed by motorists, as long as a special permit is
'I guess to some people it might sound unappetizing, but thousands of road-killed deer are collected and utilized throughout the country every year.'
— George Burgovne Assistant wildlife chief for the Michigan Department of Natural
Resources
obtained.
Under the new rules, a person with a deer-hunting license can take an accidentally killed deer during the season and count that toward his season limit.
"I think there are a number of people that would utilize a dead deer — not one they found there and had
no idea (when it was killed), but if they hit it or actually saw the accident, many people would consider it a suicide. Dennis Knapp, wildlife biologist
The rules, which take affect June 1, cover all creatures, large and small. During the hunting season, a person with a hunting license may keep a game bird or animal and count it toward his daily or season limit.
Species that are endangered or threatened, such as wolves or eagles, cannot be kept.
Burgoyne said he doubted that the rules would encourage motorists to run down animals deliberately.
"Going out of your way to kill an animal is not unthinkable, but certainly it is not going to be a practice people follow regularly," he said.
KANSAS
SPRING
FOOTBALL
GAME
at Memorial Stadium
Saturday, April 13 at 1:00 p.m.
Kansas Football button to first 1000 fans
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 12, 1991
11
'Hawks break losing streak, beat Shockers
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team broke out of a five-game losing streak in grand style last night with a 6.2 upset of the seventh-ranked Wichita State Shockers at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"We had reached that point in the middle of the season where we lost our direction a bit," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "This one builds some confidence. Hopefully, we'll come back this weekend and get ourselves back on the right track for the Oklahoma series."
Before their recent five-game swoon, the Jayhawks had won seven straight and were on top of the Big Eight Conference.
However, the Jayhawks slumped at the plate and in the field, dropping four games to Oklahoma State and one to Northern Iowa.
Bingham said he had seen enough.
"We came back from Iowa and practiced for two hours today and talked about some things," he said. "We were very busy, so it as a challenge and not a negative."
Negativity for the Jayhawks was in short supply against the highly-touted Shockers.
hand shan Dennis for three runs and three hits in three innings, and Kansas right hand Curts Schmidt right hand the first 12 Shocker batters in order.
Schmidt's perfect game was broken up in the fifth by a base-empty home run by Wichita State catcher Doug Mirabelli.
Kansas roughed up Shocker right
With the Jayhawks lead 3-1.
Kansas catcher Garry Schmidt led
off the bottom of the fifth with
a double down the left field line.
2
Schmidt moved to third off a throwing error by Shocker shortstop Chris Wimmer and was sarcastiched on him. He finished off Monroe, putting the Hawks ahead 4-1.
Kansas' Schmidt regained his pose after Mirabelli's blast, mowing down 9 of the next 10 Shockers he faced.
Schmidt said he was more worried about pitching a victory than a no-hitter.
"I don't have the stuff to throw nohitters," he said. "If I threw 90 (mph), maybe, but no, I don't have that stuff."
Schmidt struck out only three Shockers in his complete game victory, but he said that fit his style.
"That's all I do," he said. "I throw it down and let them make the
Kansas centerfielder Chris Moore slides safely back to first and beats a pickoff throw.
plays."
The Shockers touched Schmidt for an unearned run in the eighth, but Kansas countered with two runs of its own in the bottom half of the inning.
accounting for the 6-2 final score
in the Big Eight, will play host to Hardin-Simmons University at 7 tonight and 1 p.m. tomorrow. Grace Crawford will play on the stadium at 5 p.m. Stadium at 1 p.m. on Sunday.
"This game is something we needed," Schmidt said. "It's about time we started playing ball again." The Javahawks 21-12 overall and 6.6
Wadkins leads at Masters; Nicklaus is close
The Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. - It's still Jack's tournament.
Jack Nicklaus led the list of golfing old folks who rose to challenge Nick Faldo's march to Masters history yesterday.
Nicklaus, 51, the only six-time Masters champion, was joined by Tom Watson, Lanny Wadkins and Japan's Jumbo Ozaki among the leaders in the first round of the 55th Masters.
Nicklaus, coming off a victory last week on the Senior Tour, birdied all of the '4-5' on Augusta National and shot a '4-under-par 68.
Wadkins and Watson, each 41, also became potential roadblocks on Faldo's road to an unprecedented third consecutive Masters title.
Wadkins, the first man off the tee,
painted one-11 times in his round of 67
five ahead of Faldos's par round of
72. He had a new putter and his old stroke for a 68.
Wadkins, the 1977 PGA champion,
romped around the course in 3 hours,
25 minutes, compiling the best score
he has ever had in this tournament
It also is one stroke better than the closing 68 he had here a year ago and prompted the junty Wadkins to comment;
"If I can keep on improving a shot a day, I won't have any trouble."
Wadkins said he was putting better than he ever had since he had been on the tour.
"It's nice to get off to a good start. It usually don't." said Wadkins, who has a history of trustrination in this situation. "I would see to it. I can do something with it."
Nicklaus also had his best start in nine years. It was the first time since 1982 he had a round in the 60s in a Masters first round.
Watson, who has two Masters championships to go with his five British Open titles, used a zebra
putter for only the third or fourth time in his career in an attempt to cure the putting miseries that have plagued his comeback try.
And the comeback, he said, is nearly complete.
"I feel like I just get back in the winning frame of mind"
"I haven't really felt like this since '18 when I nabiso Bass," his last victory
Joining those veterans at the top of the leaderboard were Jim Gallagher, Fred Couples and 20-year old left-chief amateur sensation Phil McKelson.
Ozaki, 44, also had a 68.
Gallagher, playing in his first Masters, was followed by his large, gold-oriented ring as he matched Wadkins' 67 with a bogy-effort.
The long-hitting Couples shot a 68, and Mickelson and the national amateur title-holder and a two-time national collegiate champion, became the first hitter to break 70 in Masters history. He shot 69 as Faldo's partner.
KU track teams visit Nebraska
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said the meet was another stepping stone along the path to the Big Eight Conference championship meet.
The Kansas men's and women's track teams will leave this evening for Lincoln, Neb., where they will play tomorrow's Nebraska Quadrangular.
"We aren't doing anything differently in preparation for this meet than we have for the others," Schwartz said.
Kansas will face Nebraska. KState and Colorado State at the meet. The men's team also will compete against Minnesota.
Schwartz said the competition would be a challenge for the Kansas squads.
"Nebraska is the traditional Big Eight power. Schwartz said. "K-State is one of the top three now, and have some close meets with Missouri."
Schwartz said the only team he had not seen was Colorado State.
Freshman pole vaulter Brandon Blain said he was especially excited about this meet.
Blain said that at previous meets he also had competed in the hurdles and the long jump.
"Coach Schwartz thought I would be able to qualify for the Big Eight in those events," he said.
He said he had difficulty concentrating on each single event because he was always running from event to event.
"But after a while I got a little down on myself because I never really did well in one of the events." he said. "I am going to be able to concentrate only on the vault at this meet."
Blain said that he and the rest of the vaulting squad had spent the week concentrating on basic techniques.
"Vaulting is such a technical sport," he said. "I think working on the techniques has gotten me back up to where I should be."
Blaim said he thought the Kansas squad was better than the squads of other schools represented at the meet.
"If we get on the runway and put things together, we can sweep the meet," he said.
AUGUST 1970
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Lisa Pazdernik, Prairie Village junior, spots Sharon Zen during a gymnastics at Robinson Center.
Hang on tight
Tennis teams' Big-8 quests move to Ames and Lincoln
The KU men and women's tennis teams, both undefended in the Big Eight Conference, will continue their game. The title enforcement title on the road this weekend
The Jayhawks will play Iowa State in Ames tomorrow and Nebraska in St. Louis.
The men's team, 12-6 overall and
to beat in the conference, beat Colorado
10-9.
Kansan staff report
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Chris Walker are ranked ninth in the
"I feel we have one of the better teams around," Kansas men's tennis coach Perealman said. "If we take care of the team, they will handle teams will have to抱怨 about us."
country in doubles. The Jayhawks are ranked 14th as a team.
The Kansas women's team, 10-7 overall and 2-0 in the conference, were 8-1 victors against Colorado last weekend.
The Jayhawks are in first place in the Big Eight, with 15 points counting toward the conference title.
Team expects tough game against OU but hopes for strong weekend victories
By Lana Smith
Weather permitting, the Kansas softball team will have a full weekend of games this weekend at Jayhawk Field.
Kansan sportswrite
The Jayhawks will play host to Oklahoma for a doubleheader at 3 p.m. today and complete the three-game series with the Sooners at noon. Kansas will take on Kearney State at 1 a.m. tomorrow and at noon Sunday.
Junior catcher Erin Wahua said that despite the fact that Oklahoma did not play well during the weekend, she was not expecting an easy game.
Senior outfitier Jodi Hoyer said the Jayhawks were not impressed with the Sooners after watching them play during the weekend.
Softball
'I don't think many of the games
Oklahoma went 0-4 against Iowa
State (4-1, 10-5) and Missouri (7-6, 4-
1) on Saturday and Sunday.
The Jayhawks finished the weekend 1-3 in games against Iowa State and Missouri. Kansas defeated Iowa State 7,2; but then lost to the Cyclones 4-2 and to Missouri 1-0 and 2-1.
Haack said Kansas needed to beat Oklaahoma because he thought Kansas was the better team. He said the team had a plan to build up the Jawahirks, confidence.
"They swing the bats pretty well." Haack said. "I'll be disappointed if we don't sweep them, but we'll have to play well."
"They (Oklahoma) have a lot of wins right now, but they haven't
In the case of rain today or tomorrow, Haack said the games would be postponed. He said the teams would play the games early and playing early a day Sunday.
from here on out will be very easy,'' Wahaus said.
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said that the Jayhawks could beat the Sooners but that Kansas' victories might not be blow outs.
Haack said that Kansas had been working on batting to get ready for the weekend games.
He said that both teams had speed and that he was confident Kansas would have a good showing.
played a lot of strong teams." Haack said. "I know they're confident that they're a better ball club than they've been in the past. They'll be ready to play us, and we'll be ready to play them."
Will Spitz's comeback effort go swimmingly?
The Associated Press
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The experiment that is Mark Spitz's comeback attempt is about to undergo its first lab test.
On Saturday, the 41-year-old winner of seven Olympic gold medals will race competitively for the first time in 18% years. His opponent in a 30-meter butterfly match race. Tom lacerated the world's fastest swimmer.
The 26-year-old Jager is the world champion and world record-holder in the 50 meter freestyle race.
Does Spitz really have any better chance than Jim Palmer did with the Orioles or George Foreman does with Evander Holfield?
After a year and a half spent training in an attempt to bring himself back up to Olympian caliber, he expected to expect Saturday at Mission Viejo.
"I'm very nervous and apprise
sive about trying to compete on a
level at which people may expect me
to compete." Spitz said yesterday.
"I've set my goal to at least try to do
the time I was at the 50-meter
mark in Munich, which was 25.38
seconds."
Spitz won his seven gold medals, including one in the 100-meter butterfly, in the Munich games of 1972. He said he hoped to compete in the
butterfly race again at the 1992 Olympics.
The 50-meter butterfly is not race competitively, but the distance was chosen for the match race in order to enhance the sport's appeal to television viewers, said Spitz's coach, Ron Ballatore.
Spitz is confident and has worked hard with Ballatore, the UCLA swimming coach said. But there are two other players on the team that can't win. His body and his start.
The problem with Spitz's body is not just that it is 41 years old. It has matured without the years of weight training that today's competitive swimmers undergo. Since Spitz began his comeback, he has incorporated weights into his training program.
“It’s a good thing we got a Flume to tell us Mark Spitz has a perfect stroke,” Jager said.
Jager hasn't swum the butterfly competition he since was at UCLA, where under Ballatore he set a school under the 108-meter race that still stands.
Last September, Spitz subjected his stroke to a high-ttech analysis in an underwater treadmill called the Flume, located at the U.S. Swimming Center at the University of Spring Colo. The verdict of the $1.6 million gizmo: Spitz still has a great stroke
New Jersey glides 4-2 past Pittsburgh
The Associated Press
The New Jersey Devils couldn't figure out how to win in Pittsburgh in four regular-season games, the playoffs are another matter.
The Devils won the opening game of their Patrick Division semifinal series at the Civic Arena, then stunned the Penguins again last night with a 4-2 victory in game five. Claude Lieuxmix's power-play goal with 7-10 left in the third period broke a 2-2 tie as the Devils moved to within a game of advancing to the division finals.
Pittsburgh missed several chances to take the lead before the
"They were coming at us in waves in the third period, and were getting all kinds of scoring chances," said Terreri, who made 39 saves. "We still know they have been playing our minutes. You can't test a second."
The Devils took a 2-0 lead on first-period power-play goals by John MacLean and Bruce Driver. Goaltender Chris Terris kept the Penguins off the scoreboard until the third period, when Ron Francis and Larry Murphy scored 2:47 apart.
Devils capitalized on a penalty to Penguins defenseman Randy Hillier. Kirk Muller directed the puck down the halfway line, and it behind a prone Trom Barrasso.
In the other Patrick Division semifinal series, Washington took a 3-2 lead with a 5-4 overtime against the New York Rangers.
Boston and Montreal moved one victory away from a meeting in the Adams Division finals. The Bruins scored six straight third-period goals for a 6-1 victory against Hartford and Rust Court, who were able to give the Canadians a 4-3 victory against the Buffalo Sabres.
The four Campbell Conference opening-round series resume tonight. In the Norris Division semifinals, Minnesota and Chicago are tied 2-2 going into game five at Chicago Stadium, and St. Louis plays host to Detroit, which leads the series 3-1.
In the Smythe Division, Los Angeles plays host to Vancouver after the teams split the first four games, and Edmonton takes a 3-1 series lead into game five at Calgary.
12
Fridav. April 12, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Its mission over Atlantis returns
Landing caps first 10 years of shuttle use
The Associated Press
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Cailf - The Atlantis space shuttle landed yesterday, after an extended mission that featured the first U.S. spacewalk in five years and the deployment of an observatory to study some of the violent mysteries of the universe.
The shuttle touched down at 6:55 a.m. on an unpaved runway on Rogers Dry Lake, one day later than scheduled and one day before the 10th anniversary of the first shuttle launch.
"The last 10 years . . . laid the foundation and springboard to go on in expanding our frontiers outward," astronaut P.J. Wetz, deputy director of Johnson Space Center, said at a post-landing news conference.
Atlantis' 93-orbit mission featured hum-radio chats with children in eight states and Sunday's deployment of the $617 million, 35,000-pound
Gamma Ray Observatory, the heaviest civilian satellite ever launched from a shuttle
About 1,300 spectators put up with 43-degree temperature in order to watch Atlantis land
California man arrested after frozen body found
The shuttle's braking rockets were fired about an hour before touchdown, slowing Atlantis enough to send it on a searing dive.
Blustery winds at speeds up to 40 mph had forced NASA to cancel two possible landing attempts on Wednesday. Mission Control had considered having the shuttle land yesterday on the concrete runway at Cape Canaveral, Flat, but the winds sustained enough to permit the landing.
Weltz said the crew and orbiter seemed to be in excellent condition, with no apparent damage to the shuttle's new carbon brakes and only minimal damage to its heat-shield tiles.
The Associated Press
LODI, Calif. — A man was arrested early yesterday on suspicion of killing a girlfriend and keeping her body for five years in a padlock freezer.
A warrant was issued for Michael Shinkel. 35, after a suspicious landlord pried open the freezer and found the partially mummified body.
Shinkel and his wife, Renee, had been evicted from a house in Galt and let the freerzer behind, said Sace Darrell Sheifr. His Specific Darrell Edell.
Police from Sacramento and San Joaquin counties apprehended Shinkel about six miles southwest of Lodi.
The body was discovered last Friday by landlord Rick Harmon, who
said the freezer had been at the Galt property for about seven months.
When Shinkel placed the freezer on the property unconnected to electricity Hanlon asked him to deal with Shinkel. "No, big deal, there's a body in there."
Harmon thought he was joking.
Shinkel's wife apparently had no idea what was in the freezer. Edwards said. The two have been married about two years and have one son.
The victim, Sandra Lee Crane, 44, had stab wounds to the head and chest. Edwards said.
She was reported missing in Livermore in 1986. Livermore officials questioned Shinkel at the time, but there was no evidence of foul play.
Good Luck In Sacramento, Women's Lacrosse!
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1601 W 23rd • 842-6363 • LAWRENCE, KS
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
105 Personal
C
110 Bus. Personal
Engineer Dave, an evening at the Jayhawk that have not been the same without our brief acquaintance. Like to see you again. If so, reply here Pool Stick
IDSA Mihi-Mat-Keep your head in the ca
Questions could you with a woman to
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ANNOUNCING: Beauti Caret Look and feel your very best. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call 1 913 232-6828 for an appointment today!
ACE EXAMS' Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self confidence using hibt audio technology. Prepare for the Hibernation Ivocation and Stress Management Center.
ARTIST SUPPLIES - PRESS & CA mag. issues.
81, 88' paints, design & computer books; paper,
tailor tape; Canon PC-25 photographer; mats
Hebrews, D.C.; Canon PC-25 Overland, O.W.
Dec. 83, Digitization 97.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sug. Retail
The Etc. Shop
714-693-1865
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service appliance shop. Classic to computerized, body shop appliances. Same care as those pressures 100 N x 618 h *w414950 MF B V 8.5 VA. Extra MONEY BUSINESS Mail Business Reminders from home RUSH self addressed stamped mail 100 N x 318 h *w414950 MF 100 Lakewood Lakes Dr 301 Rover, AZ
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Rental and Sales. 732 Mass
'New Analysis of Western Civilization' makes sense 'Western Civilian' Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier bookstores
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LAWRENCE KANSAS 606-44
912 843 7500
Students, tired of being poor? If you're serious about making money and becoming financially in business, they need to learn to be mindful of what learning will bring. Then you need to contact us for information on formation systems. P.O. Box 185, Boxlet 185, Burlington, VT 05429.
WEN YOU CARE, ENOUGH TO SEND IN
WHEN the relationship has ended or feel-
ings gone astray, send that certain someone a
message to make their day. Will deliver one.
Please email us.
ALASKA STATE EMPLOYMENT - FUNCTIONS:
EARTH 8000 / month Free Translational Room
SURVEY 1600 / month Free Translational room
necessary Male or Female of Post-age employee
44000 / month Free Translational room
44000, Seattle WA 90124 - Satellisation
**College Money.** Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Finest. Since 1981 COL $1000. Male only. BOOK 1091. BOOK 1092. MOUNTain Boosters Mo 64001 1-800-747-2555.
BATTERING can be emotional or physical
WTCs Campus Support Group for battered
women Monday night 7:59pm. Call 841-6867 for
location and info
120 Announcements
Gay & Leishman Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice, Free confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters or RU Info 844-3060 Sponsored by GLOSK
Johnny's UP & UNDER
is available for Engagement Parties,
Birthday Parties,
Pinning Parties and any
other party possible.
842-0377
842-0377
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda
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
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 641-2434. Headquarters
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartRestored.
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738 Confidential response/material will follow
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE. Receiver from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Training at 841-0623 then go to a fly a jet
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115
130 Entertainment
140 Lost-Found
FOUND: Sterling silver ring in Ladies Restroom the evening of April 5th. Claim at UDK Business Office.
Lawrence Info Center, content oriented BBS
841.7753.8 N.J.
Found: Eyeglasses on Wesson Beach after KU vs.
Pound Lg Englisch Wcsel beruf wc. NC game.
Call to identity: 864-2406
Nc game. Call to identity, 864-2406
Found. Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and Ver
Found: Set of keys in the vicinity of 17th and Vermont. Call 842 6527 to claim
Found: Watch in Summerfield Hall 4/4. Call to identify
864.4296
Found Women's watch. Wed, April 3 on Mississippi Street near the Spencer Art Museum Call Betsy at b847-410 to identify
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$42.5hr. Convenient store clerk. Phillips 66 in DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 380-303
A KU student needed to enter scholarly manuscripts Mkt must know Perl 0.9.1000 scripting language, HTML and Perl 0.9.1000 week's work Appln in application Wed Fri afternoon Hall Center for the Humanities 221 Watkins
Adams Alumna Center is accepting applications for part-time positions in the Family Support Unit, on the private clinic and hotel facilities. Applicants must be available for two weeks beginning in August. Summer apply in [264] Road Ave, EOE
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for dishwasher prep cook. Apply in person, 1895 Cormorant Dr
BRAJ AHAY S Palm Bay and GriI is looking for energetic people for all positions. Great back great times, great incentives for those deserving. E-mail us at 931-852-6802 for information and appointment.
son between 0.5, Burkay's Drive In Ibw & Iowa
CAMP OUENLOEWSJOURNEL wanted for private
Michigan boys/girls summer camp. French
school, French schools. Golf courses,
natives nibble, archery, tumba golf, sports
competitions. Also kitchen, office maintenance $1000 more
and M&B Mark, Sage (136) Magpie, Nild
more.
Bucky's In-Sea is now taking applications for part time employment. It costs $1 on meals uniforms provided. flexible hours. Apply in person between 0-5:59. Bucky's In-Sea. 8th & 9th floors.
Catering Department, Kansas University hiring for a food service position. Will pay $25-$40 per hour, 24-25 hours will pay cash daily following employment. Food service experience helpful. Must have a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration or Office. Level for all schedule and to apply
COLORADO ROCKIES SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT-Summer camp for disabled children and adults holding camps attendees;
Mountain Rock (Rocky) Mountain Village at 169-233
COMPUTER OPERATIONS STUDENT ASSISTANT TARGE. DAILY 4-12/91. $45.00 Dates include checking markings to ensure completion of assigned tasks maintaining console logs, and providing services to user community. To apply, complete a job application to the Computer Center EO/A EMPLOYER
College student, education imaginative man or woman to watch two ages 9-14 through senior must Have car and enjoy playing. Some call scheduled 440.00席. Call after a 6pm.
**ENTREPRENEUX** Make $3000 per month sell
**ENTRATES of America Sunglasses** retail stores
anywhere in the U.S. NO A/O REQ, Write P.O.
Box 70, Talentia, UT 98062
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY INVESTMENT
Environmental policy investment is research and consulting firm specializing in environmental and regulatory issues. Japan's leading environmental economics, general or agricultural economics, business, public administration or environmental hazardous waste regulatory issues. Prefer candidates with significant multidisciplinary experience in environmental science or some physical science or chemistry experience. Must be a graduate degree or related fields. An undergraduate degree in a quantitative area (e.g., mathematics) or some physical science or chemistry experience. Must have written, verbal, written and interpersonal skills are required. Competitive salary and excellent work environment. Human Resources Dept. P: DRAK Incorporated. P O Box 725, Mahirun HS 69029. Nonskills phone: (813) 548-2733.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT in office of Foreign Student Services. Halt time monthly appointment for students. Supervise students, program planning, train and supervise orientation leaders. Applications available in 1870.
Fun & Exciting-Plus you can make $40/hour waitressing. Must start part time now 18 yrs and on Annie 1:36s at 90 at Westminster
Help Wanted: Daytime Bartender. Part time thru
summer. PHARMACY CLUB. experience pre-
ried. must have references and be 21. Call for appl
842 0083
Lake of the Quarks Summer Employment The Barge Fleeting Restaurant is accepting applicants from businesses. Excellent salary and tips. Great work environment. Housing is still available. Contact Frank
NANNEIS-Immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida. Excellent salaries plus benefit. 1 year commitment. Area representative. 913-827-3044
Excellent income opportunity Flexible hours Perfect summer or part-time job Training provided Call 1-382-2547 for interview
Help wanted-Hiring afternoon aids for teacher and preschool classes. Classroom experience and study in early childhood Apply at Children's Learning Center, 311 Maine, Lawrence SC 60948
Part time and full time employment Apply in person M-F to 0aum 10am. Availen Athena Club, Club 420, Clinton Pkwy Position Tennis Pro Shop/Snack Bar.
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day (trimming photographs No experience necessary 1-800-695-7399
PRESCHOOL, HELP WANTED! Substitute it, after school now. Also summer part and full time jobs. Child development or early childhood program. PROGRAM ASST. Supervisor of Electronics $11; $0.00-$16,000 annual salary; effective May 30, 45 hrs./week. Involves advanced technical and skill work in the design construction, fabrication, assembly, and related software, sophisticated electronic control mechanisms, and supervision of techniques. APplication deadline is September 28. Requests or visit us and at least two letters of reference to Denna H. Karpottz, Dept. of Psychology 24 Brain, University of Kansas
The City of Oakland will be accepting applications for pool managers. Applications can be picked up at the City Hall, 605 Delaware In Oklahoma. Kampus 8: 10am to noon, Monday-Friday
Professional couple wishes to hire babyssher for summer! Sunday 8:04, Friday 8:04pm. Excellent pool. Some flexibility on hours if you have lower class. Salary continues with qualification and benefits. You may work any anytime weekend or leave message on machine RACING ENTHUSIASTS We need outgoing individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday at projects in a major racing facility in your area. Please send your name, sales员, uber, hobbs, gate attendants, and 사극 person. If interested apply at Managers Inc.
Sitter Solutions, Inc. is in need of caregivers Flexible schedule Experience or educ References required 843-7286
SUMMER-FALL PART-TIME JOB as personal care attendant for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Prepare mature, lengthy resumes and prepare resume for afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU: occupations a plan good for job OT, MTP, or PT; students with skills in students or persons with like interests. Reliable car and phone required U. C. citizenship desired. Some lifting. Call 462-1898. Hire午am-1pm.
8-MMER JOB Mature student to care for 2 children. Must have Bach exam, excellent credit. 'all-time preferred' Leawood (913) 345-9413
Two reliable assistants needed for part time summer work at a kid's daycare. Interested, call 942-2080.
Warehouse and light industrial work. Reliable people needed with car and car. Kansas City area. PBC Tremps. 816-746-8000
WEED INSPECTOR
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Wanted: ENGINEERING student with mechanical and home maintenance skills. Flexible working hours: 842.8546 or 843.5877. Roger White.
WRITER WANTED. Pics need words, word needs as. Photographer would like to freelance / writer Human interest, Environmental, New age. Call Steve: 842-3144
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered first Midwest Driving School, served KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841.7439
FRENCH TUTOR Native speaker with degree.
Four years experience. Reasonable rates. Call
mrs. kay.
Government photos, passports, immigration
vision, senior portrait, modeling & arts port
folio. IBW color. Call Tom Swells 799-1601
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Oveland Park
(911) 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 542 E. 9th Street
843-4600
TRAFFIC DU'S
TRAFIC - DUTS
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
i-der Woman Word Processing Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality. # 843.262 days or evenings.
235 Typing Services
A better price for Word Processing Fast service $10.00 double space paper Call Please 841-6756 Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $12.00 double space, call Paper I at 4 m a f 8 p Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $12.00 double space, call Paper I at 4 m a f 8 p
A - Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana
pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. 842.783
paper, legal forms, line sets. No calls after 9 p.m.
Dona's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term paper, theses, and thesis work. Laser print-
ing and spelling corrected. 220 G W St. 201 W St.
Maryland.
FAST ACCEPTANCE TYPEING - 80 per page.
includes PU and DEL anywhere in city limits.
Transmissions and Database Projects also handl.
cal | Mat A4: 942.3822
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors in your manuscript or general help, you will produce your best possible submission.
Kaipou's professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1) 900 pm. 841-6345
Professional resumes - Consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more Graphic Ideas Inc, 9271
Mass. 841-1671
Professional typist. Reasonable rates. Call 842-3291
Research Projects. Save time and frustration!
Experimental professor will enter your data file
from coding sheets questionnaires. Call
KeyWalls. 842-807
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer. Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843 6568.
Merchandise
Northbrook Corners. Phone 843-6588
New York Word Processing. Typeing. Papers. Resumes.
Dissertation Applications. Also assistance in
spelling grammar editing, composing. Have
305 For Sale
1983 Honda 720 Interceptor Must sell $1200 New
452-365-4475 452-365-4475
1996 Trek 7000 Mountain bike 22" aluminum, excellent condition $80.00 plus $400.00 - $800.00 Attention Hare Owner Two 2-hour ride completely redyed 800 firm from 313 or 358 or 48-3441
Bicycle for sale Red Belt Batak 23 in 12 speed,
cellent condition. $25 749-6131, leave message.
PORSA Ihnatan Hydraulic Drainer 8000 Series,
good condition. food condition.
£2.500, £3000 call NF 5 81-84 7641.
For sale to a good home-Cocker mix puppy
¥95 on Call 841-2982
Moving storage and trash boxes Large large quantities at discount prices Small quantities Walk us welcome Call 843-8111 Ask for sales/service department
GOVT SURPLUS | Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tools, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
gauges, hats and jackets.
CARHARTT WORKWEAR Manton S-5:1 47-377.438 St Mary's Surplus Sales St. Mary's KING SIZE WATER BED Semi-waveless Nice King PUDDLED Rattler dawn in pedestal
!!!!! MUST SELL!!
Kenwood amps and equalizer, "8" subwoofer
Bazooka. JVC amp. Best offer. Call David.
865-4027
NEW RALEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDED GAUGE) $250.842-9116.
Nishiki Road Bike, excellent condition! $200. Call Cathy at 865-2948 if interested
One way ticket. KC1 to DFW on May 10th. $100
obo. Call Kelly, 864-8117.
Paintball guns and equipment, cheap RPG books, curbs. Traveller, etc. modern, Aquaria and filters. 841-0313
Pugged bicycle: men's 25" 12 speed, 3 yrs old with approx. 200 miles. Road/touring bike. Excellent condition. Call 841-9655
Specialized mountain bike 18 inches, good condition. $175 or best offer. 749-0797
Technics single CD player, excellent condition,
comes with extended warranty; $130, leave
message. 841.1497
340 Auto Sales
1976 Black Trans Am. 455, AC New Paint. Great Condition, Beautiful Car. 841-865, Pat.
1973 Pontiac LeMans, original miles, 51,000
$1,500 843-3316 2016 Learnard Ave
1982' Toyota Supra, black with grape leather,
sold 5. spd, sports pkg. w/g, 4 mounted
Yokohama snows 61K miles $11,900 841-4777
1981 Chevett New radiator, water pump, fan and battery Great college car Only $89 Call
249.3750
1985 BMW 31B, 4 DR, 62,000 miles, sunroof
stereo, AC, cruise $3,800 b.o.b. Call 941-1057
Message leave if not in mail.
For sale: Mercedes Benz 190E 2.3, 1985, black
searal, full option. 10,500 TLP # 865-8516
181 Silver Suitbar, 2 door, AC, am fm, will need clutch new suitch. $20, excellent cargo 841 413-612
182 Blue Buck Leisure, AC, new brakes, good condition, $120 or best offer. Call 842 711-513
BUY. SELL. LOAN CASH
360 Miscellaneous
16 Pontiac Fiero SE, low miles, 32138 mpg, load ed, stereo cassette, 5 speed. Call 841 5398 or 844 3411 volumes
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, VCS, vckerys, stereo, music in
instruments, cameras and more. We honor
Visa/MC AMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewellery 1804 W 740 7919
Lawrence Glass Tinting. Special rates for students. Call anytime. Fax to topm. 737 E. 22nd 841 709
USED HONDA MOPEDS now in stock ALL have been reconditioned Starting at $150 DAVIS CY CLE, 486 T. Topka Bldg. 1800-388-1196
New location!
THE CHAPMAN
New location!
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0500
Rental by The Town Tail.
370 Want to Buy
Wanted CDs $'6.00 and down Records and tapes $2.90 and down. Top dollar for collections Alice Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts, 852-022
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842 897/843 661
1 bedroom apt available now first July 11. Big sunny and newly painted. Off-street parking. 2 blocks from campus. $775/month. Option for next year. 824-9021. Leave message
2 bed room houses and duplexes Available June 1
needs,驴皮. Dick at 842 0971 0431 1661
Bid:驴 available August Walk to AK or
Cleveland. Dick at 842 0971 0431 1661
Water paid No.驴 3440 mo. 1410 1074
B 2EEDRUM APT Available June 1 with option to continue in fall 5 from walk-up from Union. big bedrooms, off street parking, clean W/D BETTLES INC (BITTES INC, Call 848-2587) leave message
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it legal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap familial status or national origin, or an employment or discrimination."
2 bedroom apt, summer sublease, Bradford
Square, available May 19th Pay only June and
July No deposit required Required for fall lease
4490 no. 982-4621
2 br apt available in new building of West Hill Fence; 4 br apt available in new building of Green Building for dishwasher, walk-in baths and energy efficient gas heat. Great location near camps, 100 Emery Rd. 4600+ no. Pet beds.
2 bedroom / 1/2 bath townhouse for summer subbase at bournsite Vault. Available mid-May. No rent until June 1 $400 per month. 84-5900 st. upright for studio at $2000 at $200. No fees
4 BR ap for summer sublease 2. bath W/D, DWAC
ac microwave, water tennis courts, on board
Rainrise Village. Call Kim: 965-0625. leave
message.
6 bedroom house at 2301 Massachusetts and 5 bedroom house at 1400 Ohio and 3 bedroom house at 708 Arkansas. Call 841 3232
- Chamberland Place Apartments, 17th Ohio Avenue construction 1 and 2 (BHR Formerly Villa Capri) * Stadium View Apartments, 11th & Mississippi Avenue construction 1 and 2 (washers/dryers) Across from Memorial
- 514 Michigan 8 plex. 1 yr old B-3 BR-2 HB
* 2013 Bradley Square Apartments, 60 Colorado 2-BH-1 bath and 3 B-2 bath great prices
Call today First Management 794-868-1006
Open house every Saturday from 8 a.m. at Bradley Square, Colorado 401-611-0122 Manor Fm 2-4
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 12, 1991
13
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower
House, 1469 Tennessee. 789-0871 or 814-0484
Available June or August Efficiency 1 bedroom apts in nice owner houses Walk to KU or downtown $283 and up. No pets B41-1074
Available June 3, 10b house, 1800 block Vermont Wood floors; window AC 'w' air conditioner; street parking, dishwasher 14 mo. lease 6456 mo. No beds, AJ1-1074.
Available June 1, option for fall. 4 bedroom apartment with left in orchard Corners. Spacious, beautifully furnished, pool, on bus route. Extra furniture furnished. 841-1445
Check out Berkeley Flats, Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300-845-110 or Call 845-2116
COOL, AIR CONDITIONED 2 bedroom apt for a summer leave. Across from Campus, $340 month negotiable. Comfortable for 3 people Lease renewal 4024 2024 Leave a message.
Coops have been part of KU since 1998. Come趴 a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun, social responsibility, environmentally conscious and socially responsible. House: 146 Tennessee, 749-6871 or 841-6844.
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people). Clean and efficient. large deck. 843-3861
Delightful summer sublease or 2 bed May
August dates. Nbg, air conditioned. Beautifully
furn, close to campus, downstreet. Very
reasonable rent. Must SeeCall 841-4531.
Available immediately one bedroom, gas and
fire suppression, two bathrooms, one large one bedroom and two, fall, large one bedroom and $293.85 Some with utilities paid Cedar fans, mini blinds,
ceiling fans, storage spaces, fire suppression from campus at 1493 and 1493 Ibge 802-7644
Excellent Location 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom
in 4-ixes, dishwasher, WD hookup. CA, no
nets, available 1年. $360 At 1314 Ohio CA,
842-4242
Extremely nice, nicespares. 3 bdm townhouse wouses 2. female non-smoking roomes need ed, year beginning August and/or summer lease. $12.5 ts utilities. Kerr 834-6026
Female non smoking roommate wants to share a bedroom. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! May Call Me Amy (evenings best): 814-348
Female non-smoker wanted for summer sublease at Orchard Corners. Call Cristin at 844 1462
rent paid. Close to Campus. Call now. 843-4412.
Great location for KIU and downtown. Studio apt
with gas and water paid $200 mon. Call 843-2116.
Great location. Quit and close to campus. 2
bedroom apartment with sunporch. Cafe
browsers. no pets. Avail June 1. $800, at 1801
79th St., New York, NY 10022.
Hey KU Med students-move in June 1 and receive $t_2$ off your rent for two months. *Station 1* and 2 bedroom apartments. *Heat and water paid* $t_3$. Med Center. *Rainbow Towers* A$t_4$ 913.851.8301
Hey! KU Med students. Move in June 1 and hey! KU med students for your 2 month *Studies*, 1 and 2 bedroom apsl. *Heal and water pain* *Across the River* Tower Rains Apts. 821-933-083.
House share 2 BR, big yard, $187.50/mo. 414 Minesota. House # 843-8436
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stays open 36 days a year and is a great place to study. 108 McNamara 749/851 or 410 8484
Lerner Townhomes, 2001 Clinton Parkway,
Quality spaces, with all the amenities. Brand
new. Available now 2-6 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 849-781-8433
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF THIS SUMMER 2 br, furnished, opt, for fall. May pd, cable pd, all summer. 843-4742
Mackenzie Place Aps 13: 30 lbm altrium apt, new leasing for August 11; years to lease, washer/dryer, microwave microwave, 2 beds, 2 locks, 1 year lease, no commuting, 48 hours or 6773 evening, and weeks午 8:24:31 dawn
Nice studio at 1022 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts. Water paid, 843-5272.
Nice, spacious 3 bld dups. Has all kitchen appliances. central air, W/D. w/food, garage, low utilities. Avail. in June. $450 mo. No pets. 843-288.
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two-bedroom apartment, all kitchen appliances, including oven, refrigerator, dishwasher and %15. Low utilities, low bus. route quiet.补偿 $100. SPANISH CREST APARTMENT补偿 $100. SPANISH CREST APARTMENT
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Aspen West Apartment $85 for bedroom; $353
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water walk to camps.
Call 842-160 or 842-139.
ONE BLOCK FROM KANASA UNION. For rent to serious graduate students, upperclass students or KU employees. BAR furnished. No pets. Room available. Water basket. $290 no. 841-3821 at 6 PM.
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU. 841-6254
Now leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Sailorbridge Plaza Apts. 1卧室, rented $72; 2卧室, starts at $35, 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remuneration, new kitchen, carpet. Call 842-1616.
Professor's house for rent June 1991-Aug 1992. 2
BR, East Lawrence $50,841-841-8444
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom townhouse with 2 bathrooms. $185.00 per month.
Utilities: $41,983
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 100 Mississippi Water, gas, cable paid-$300,000 81-6862
SUNRISE VILLAGE LAMPS sunrise sublease. Can fit up to 5 people for $134.00. Dishwasher, microwave, pool, summer parties. First keg is on us for new tenants. Please call 824-7174
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
b "super spacious location at a superior price,
2 bedrooms. 2 floors. Call 821-3250 (24 HOURS)
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D. Call
411.70% Rent $350.00
Sublease av. June 1 2 br, ceiling fan, economical with rent. bw 855-097 or 841-1092
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 1 blk from KU with off-street parking. no pets. 841-5500
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilized paid. 1 bike from KU with off street parking. No pets. 841-5060
SUBLEASE at HAMWEN PLACE. Furnished
one bedroom. From mid-May to December.
Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386
gpm-lrm.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Orchard Corners
1/4dbm available, furnished, pool, bus
clean. $170/mo/person. Call 843-6298
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beginning May 1 or June
1 July 31. Four bedroom townhome in Sunrise
Village 865-0106. No deposit necessary.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Spacious four bedroom, two townhouse, 3. a habitable bedroom, 2. full kitchen, 1. bathroom, 1. dishwasher, trash compactor, cable, storage,久仰 utilities, 4. sports court, proximity location.
Summer leave with option to renew avail. mid-
night, July 21-30. Summer leave with option to
renew avail. mid-
Downtown, O. W. rent $90. Rent call 642-8532.
Summer Sublease. Studio apt. Murphy bed great
haven. Excellent location on campus. Call
Summer Subleave 2 bedroom apartment.
Dishwasher, balcony, pool. $440/mo. Leave
message. 863-2951.
Summer sublease: Furnished one bedroom apt. pool at complex, water paid $225. Call Amy 865-3637
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2
blocks from campus on Ohio. 865-0807
Summer sublet. Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
near Holiday, patio, dishwasher, W/D, AC.
$75/month. Call 794-8023
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt, water and basic cable pool. Pay and laundry facilities $110/mo. Call 749-4235
summer subside. Available May 15-Aug 15 in option to renew. Clean 2 bed room apartment ocated on south side of town near grocery store, ast food, and other entertainment. Laundry room available ideal for needing a place to stay for summer if interested, call 748-789-380.
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
SWAN
Swan Management
- Gravstone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841. 3800
Now leasing for
June or August
cious apts, furnish)
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
Mon. Wed. Thurs
1:00 4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
ach apartment feature
-Wather 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 $600
-office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOLDS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
SouthPointe Apartments
Accepting reservations for summer leases!
on KU bus rout studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
super location, great pool *Gail* 749-6213.
Summer sublease 2 BR apartment. Great loca-
tion. Pent negotiable. *Call* 843-8390.
or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
Summer sublease. Nice one BR furnished apt.
14th & Ohio, Call Julie, 865-4058
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold 843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Water paid
Free cable
苹果
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
Georgetown Apartments
Close to KU bus route
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- On Site MGT /Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Low Security Deposit
Enlarged to Show Texture
630 Michigan 749-7279
Call about our Summer Special
- No pets
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT
24TH & EDDINGHAM
REINSTATING
HIS LOVE LIFE
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Affordable Price!! Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Tuc.
9-3 pm Sat.
-Bei
No Appt. Necessar
841-5444
AT ADDISON'S
for summer & fall 1991
TRAILRIDGE
-on KU bus route gas heat & water pai
ohem...where was I?
Now leasing
-Tennis courts on KU bus route
-3 Pools
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment)
FIRST COMES LOVE.
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
0. 98.98.98
spacious & comfortable
AM PRINTING A
Sunflower House
2500 W.6th
FULL RETRACTION OF WEDNESDAY'S
THEN COMES MARRIAGE.
*1 & 2 BR apartments
THEN COMES
THE BABY
Private Rooms Low rates
HOLD IT RIGHT THERE! T'M
NOT READY FOR
THIS CAN USE
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt-close to campus. Two to four people. 841-2268.
1408 Tennessee
749-0871
IN THE BU
WOOD
WAIT!
Summer sublease with option for fall 3 bedroom $205.00. Water, gas paid. 841-708.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 728 Ohio. Long lease. Optional call 749-7398. Rent negotiable.
Summer sublease—can continue in fall. 4 BHP at Orchard Corners. Furnished. 842 872
Great Location
Boardwalk
apartments
GOBACK?
1 & 2 Bedrooms
$505.00. Water, gas paid. 841-4706.
Summer sublease. 2 bedrooms. 729 Ohio Longer.
Showing Units Daily 9-6
- Large closets & living space
- Clean & well maintained
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room - 50.4
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
MIDDLE EASTERN CITY
BROOKLYN, NY 11201
- Unfurnished with
appliances
524 Frontier
- Walk to grocery
THERE! I'M
Sunrise Apts.
1,2,3&4 Bedroom
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
& Apartment Living On Bus Route
Luxurious Town Home
& Apartment Living
- On bus route
- Close to Campus
Ack
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vil
Sunrise Place
Sunrise Terrace
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway
6th & Gateway
Sunrise Village
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
Mon.-Fri.10-5
--close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
1-5 P.M.
MASTERCRAFT
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
OPEN DAILY
HANOVER PLACE
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-5255·7th & Florida
749-2415·10th & Arkansa
TANGLEWOOD
841-1429·1145 Louisiana
CAMPUS PLACE
ORCHARD CORNERS 749.4326 A 15th & Kingst
10th & Kasol
FIRST COMES LOVE
by Brian Gunning
THEN COMES DEPRESSION, DESPAIR
Summer sublease 4 bedroom townhome Sunrise Village. Pool, microwave. $185 each negotiable. 749-2930.
Summer sublease Large studio apartment.
Water paid. Pool on bus route. Option for fall.
$275/mo. 865-319-319
Summer sublease Large 2 bedroom available in May. 875 each. Negotiable. Call 841-973 for information
Summer sublease with possibility for fall 4
bedroom house, wood floors, close to campus 101
Alabama 843 1435
HUGE. HUGE studio for summer sublease.
Available mid May. May rent paid. $25/mo.
841-4384 at 2pm
AND HEARTBREAK.
Summer sublease starting in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms
THANKS,BOSS!
THAT WAS
DO CLOSE!
*BR apt. 1 block off campus, 2 floors, study area,
water patio. Call 965-890 and leave message. Best
partment in Lawrence.
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square foot.
Subleases Available Immediately
THIRTY SECONDS from lunaandra. Summer
sublease, furnished 3 bedroom; 2 bath. Vaulted
A/C, dishwasher, near campus, on bus route.
865-0688
**Women students. Want to live in a non-sexist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills?** Try Sunflower House, 146 Temple Street, 749-9027 or 841-0443.
Spacials 1,4/10 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
Summer subsaline. Spacies 2 bedroom apt at Northbirds. 3 black nails of 8th on Michigan WD. WD hookups. Brand new $775/month plus utilities. Call 641-965
Furnished Studios 435 sq. feet
2 Bdmm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
Newly remodeled apartments
Summer Sublease 1 & 2 Bdrm. apartments
- Furnished studio apartments
* One bedroom apartments
* Two bedroom apartments
* Two with fireplaces
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
12-4200
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
- Computer Center
* Great social events
- "Dine Anytime"
Wise up and make the move now!
NAISMITHHALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
THE FAR SIDE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
---
Space for Fail!!!
Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Offer for Fall!!
- Volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
$355 - $425
- On Bus Route
Models Open Daily
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
430 Roommate Wanted
April rent paid. Female roommate wanted immediately. Share three bedroom Orchard Carers. $150 per month plus 3* utilities. On bus route. Call Amanda. 814-4497
A roommate needed for summer sublease. On bus
route, nice apt. $150 a month plus utilities.
843-4780
Female roommate needed to sublease apartment for the summer. Call 965-3971.
April Reil Free-Female roommate needed
3 bedroom share 3 bedroom dwelling-W/
microhard dishwasher air conditioned garage.
Kitchen cabinets. Call Lisa.
864 4338, leave message
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626.
Female bedroom needed to share a four
bedroom apartment in Orchard Corners. $132.00
a month plus 1₄ utilities. 749-5430.
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month.
749-5678
Male roommate needed. Duplex SW part of a town big. Room dead on rent. Robert: 841-4225. Roomsmatter盯 2 bdr. apt: 616 Kentucky utilities utilized. No lease 941-8548 evening.
Raminate needed in 3 hr house w./ DW, FP, FF814 plus 9 utilities. 841-695, ask for Dw. For raminate needed: House bordering campground. non-smokey clean, responsible. Rent $22.00
Sublet for summer/Roommate for Fall. Nice place GREAT LOCATION. 842-9994.
Summer Sublease 1-2 or 3 people (male or female)
110th room, A, C, Johnston or ORCHARD
CONNERS COFFS. A, C, Johnston.
118th room plus 5%利息. Call Nancy 841-227-1180,
room 2, bedroom 2 at apt at ORCHARD Corners.
Two roommates needed to share three bedroom three-story townhouse for summer. Close to camps.
Call 841-1468
By GARY LARSON
OK, Norg... SHAKE!
No wait! Dang! OK...
get ready... SHAKE!
NO! OK, OK. get ready.
Early but unsuccessful practical jokes
14
Friday, April 12, 1991 / University Daily Kanan
Time Is Running Out! Lease For Fall NOW!
Berkelcy FLATS
Berkeley Flats
Best Location For Campus Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments 11th & Mississippi
843-2116
PIZZA EXPRESS
"Really GREAT Pizza Delivered For Less"
NO COUPON SPECIAL NO COUPON SPECIAL NO COUPON SPECIAL NO COUPON SPECIAL
2 SUPREME PIZZAS ONLY $8.99 LARGE $10.99 2 PIZZAS 3 TOPPINGS ONLY $7.99 LARGE $9.99 PARTY PACK 6 PIZZAS 2 TOPPINGS $19.99 LARGE $24.99 1 PIZZA 2 TOPPINGS ONLY $3.99 LARGE $4.99 LARGE $5.49
DELIVERY OR CARRYOUT DELVERY OR CARRYOUT DELVERY OR CARRYOUT CARRYOUT ONLY CARRYOUT ONLY
100 PERCENT REAL CHEESE
832-2222
9th & ILLINOIS
8am-6pm MTWF
8am-8pm Thursday
8am-12pm Saturday
Isn't it time you listened to your lenses?
Over time, protein build-up can cause your contact lenses to feel less comfortable. A planned schedule of contact lens replacement helps avoid eye irritations and provides you with improved lens comfort and clearer vision. Listen to your lenses. Innovative new pricing structures allow you to replace lenses regularly at no increased costs to you.
Call and ask whether Fresh Lens Replacement from Bausch & Lomb is right
Dr. Charles R. Pohl
831 Vermont
841 2866
Dr. Kent Dobbins
831 Vermont
843 5665
1980s
Environs member Sue Ask explains a water conservation game to Jonah Tate, 11, and Jake Webster, 11, fifth graders at Woodland Elementary School, 508 Elm St.
Environs helps to teach kids conservation values
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
The message to conserve is every where, and members of Enviroms are helping to educate some of the members of the Lawrence community
Environ, a KU environmental awareness group, is combining learning with fun to teach children in grades 4-12 about conservation of oil and water
Mike Hearn, member of the group, said, "We're talking about things they can do in their own lives, but we talking about the tigre picture."
Haran said that members of Enviro- nous planned to visit elementary schools during the next two weeks.
Yesterday afternoon at Woodland Elementary School, 908 Elm St.
Environs representatives talked to teachers resources with a class of fifth graders.
'We're talking about things they can do in their own lives, but we're talking about the big picture, too.'
Horan told the children that in 75 years the United States nearly would
-- Mike Horan Environs member
be out of oil
"Oil is an important resource to people," he said. "We use it in cars and to make plastic, which we use for machines." Oil is used, and some not so important things.
Heran told the children that although there were other forms of energy sources such as coal, none could power a power plant of them could refine oil.
"That is why it's important to conserve," he said.
Sue Ask, Environs member, made suggestions to the children about ways they can conserve oil and not use as much plastic.
Do you really need to use a straw
when you're drinking" she asked
'Just remember, when you're not
using as much plastic, you're not
using so much oil'
After watching a slide show on conservation, the children played a game in which each child represented a different water consumer such as a farmer, a bird or a nuclear power plant.
Hiran said the water conservation game was a good way to get the children to think about things they had learned from the show slide.
In the game, the children need then new knowledge to tell now they, as water consumers, could conserve water.
When the game was over the Envious members gave each child a pin with colored beads.
Tara Edgerton, Woodhawk fifth grader, said of the beads, "The blue water is to remind us not to use as much water. The black is to remind us to conserve oil, and the pink is for me."
OPEN HOUSE
STUDENTS, STAFF, & FACULTY
Saturday, April 13, 1991, 1-5 p.m.
• CUSTOM FURNISHINGS
• DESIGNED FOR PRIVACY
• ENERGY EFFICIENT
• MANY BUILT-INS
• AFFORDABLE RATES
• PRIVATE PARKING
• LOCALLY OWNED
• LAUNDRY FACILITIES*
• CLOSE TO CAMPUS
• LOCALLY MANAGED
• CLOSE TO SHOPPING
• CENTRAL A/C
• ON SITE MANAGERS *
POOL*
MICROWAVES*
*available some locations
Kentucky Place
1310 Kentucky 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida 841-5255
Hanover Place
14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold 749-4226
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
Ask about:
• Summit House 1105 Louisiana
• Coldwater Flats 413 W. 14th
• Highlands 13th & Ohio
• Oread Townhomes Many Locations
MANY LOCATIONS
MANY FLOOR PLANS
MASTERCRAFT (913)842-4455
P
√
VOL. 101, No. 131
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSTAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
Office of financial aid making changes to help KU students
NEWS: 864-4810
Automated phone system and fee-payment process to change
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
Officials in the office of student financial aid are hoping recent and future changes will improve KU access to financial aid information
The changes include a recently installed, automated telephone system, a simplification of the fee payment process that will begin in August, and a move by the office to a new location. The building will be renovated beginning in the fall.
These plans come after an increase in applications for aid from 11,431 in the 1989-90 academic year to 12,200 during this year, said Jerry Rogers.
director of financial aid.
He said he hoped the change in the fee-payment process would begin in the fall.
He said the new system would not include general student loans, the largest pool of grants, but would include many others including scholarships from the Endowment Association, state of Kansas scholarships, Kansas minority scholarships, Regents scholarships and Pell
grants. The office hopes also to include Perkins loans in the near future.
"It's not the majority of dollars, but it will be a pile of checks they won't have to stand in line for." Rogers said.
Diane Del Buono, associate director of financial aid, said the phone system installed in February at the office handle more telephone calls.
She said that with the new system, the office had handled between 150 and 350 calls a day. It has had as many as 500 in one day.
The automated system can answer many generic questions and can direct students to where they need to go for answers to specific questions
Rogers said, "It sure has reduced the number of calls we've had to handle."
Del Buno will be the director of financial aid beginning in July, when Rogers will retire.
She has helped plan the office's move to the renovated area, which will give the office more space — she is strong in its current location in Strong.
"What we will have for one is adequate reception space." Del Buono said.
Many students prefer confidentiality and privacy when discussing their personal financial situations, she said. This will be provided by the new reception space and two offices for private meetings.
Rogers was unsure whether the increase in applicants for aid would be a continuing trend. But he said it would be a concern with a significant tuition increase.
Georgian president gets powerful post
The Associated Press
TBILISI, U.S.S.R. — In a bold step to assert its independence, the parliament of Soviet Georgia created a powerful new presidency yesterday and elected its current leader to the post.
Zviad Gamsakharda, an anti-Communist leader and former political prisoner, was given the power to institute martial law and presidential rule, to revoke or abstain citizenship and to declare war.
Yesterday's action followed Georgia's declaration of independence from the Soviet Union on Tuesday. Gamsakhurdia said strengthening the leadership post showed that the southern republic decided to accelerate the process of creating an independent state.
constitution to create the powerful presidency, has gone further than any of the other Soviet republics in moving toward independence.
The republic, in modifying its
Gamsakhurda, 52, will serve until a general election May 26, the anniversary of the date in 1918 when Georgia first declared independence. It was forcibly absorbed into the Soviet Union in 1921.
In a show of hands, the 245-member parliament voted to create the presidency and then elected Gamsakhurdia. The votes officially were declared to be unanimous, even though a handful of legislators appeared to abstain. Gamsakhurdia was the only
"Georgia is in danger," Gamsakhurdia said in his acceptance speech.
o regard it as a pet peeve of our school.
Gamsakhurdia was the only person nominated.
Officials to investigate errors made in appraisal
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Mistakes were made.''
That was the statement issued Friday by the Douglas County Appraiser's office as part of a three-page explanation of its 1991 property appraisal program. County officials released the statement in response to an alleged property owner about skyrocketing appraisal property values.
'It's not going to solve people's problems overnight.'
— Louie McEhanyan
County commission chairperson
"It's not going to solve people's problems overnight." he said.
Although the explanation pin-painted some of the errors made by the appraiser office during this year's reappraisal process, Louie McEhanyne, county commission chairperson, said it was only the beginning of the investigation into the program's flaws.
The statement identified three major mistakes in the county appraisal system:
Since county residents received notices of resupplied property values April 6, an overload of questions was generated and have poured into the aruiser's office.
Although the county had accepted private appraisals from landowners in 1898 and 1900, the appraiser's office did not use those results to determine values for the same properties this year.
■ Because problems occurred during the 1989 and 1990 appraisal processes, the county adjusted many property values afterward. However, the appraiser's office did not use these adjusted values this year. Instead, the original, flawed appraisals were used once again.
Although more than 300 adjustments were made to correct obvious errors before the notices were mailed, the appraiser's office failed to detect many others. Those mistakes included falsely record property changes and recognition previously corrected data and actual data error inputs.
When taxpayers packed the county commission chambers for Wednesday's meeting to protest the valuation notices, commissioners vowed to arrange both an internal and external audit of the program.
The commission will begin examining property appraisals on a neighborhood basis today to see whether the properties are in good standing or neighborly or comparable lots.
George Little, director of the county data processing department, said a computer connected to those in the appraiser's office had been installed in the commission chambers for the audit.
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said he had received word on Friday from the Public Valuation Division of the Kansas Department that it would conduct a preliminary external audit within the next two weeks.
THIS WAY
Run for your life
--dissertation, said studying the Evenki was an opportunity to learn about the genetics of an isolated population.
Jon Oler, Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore, and Mike Hybl, Baxter, Iowa, senior, kick in a final sprint to the finish line of the "Run for Your Life" 5-K run run. Oler, running for the McColm Hall team, beat Hybl, representing the Templin Hall staff, across the line for second place. Jesse Griffin of Joseph R. Pearson Hall won Saturday's event. The run was sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls, Interfraternity Council and JRP.
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Four researchers examine Evenki natives of Siberia
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Two years ago, Michael Crawford stepped out of a helicopter into a small village in Siberia completely surrounded by a thick forest.
"It was like going into a whole new world," said Crawford, professor of anthropology and genetics.
This August, when he travels back to the village, it will look much more familiar.
"There are no big surprises that will come this time," he said, smiling. "But it would be nice to find something truly surprising."
What he wants to find are answers to his questions about human evolution and population.
Along with a Russian and a Canadian colleague and a KU graduate student, Crawford plans a month-long study of the Evenki people who live in the village. These natives of Siberia are reindeer herders.
"We want to understand how people who are herders make a living — what food they consume and how their forest environment." Crawford said.
"Our goal is to find out what Siberian populations are most like the American Indian populations," she said. "We have risen to the American Indians?"
The other part of their research involves using DNA analysis to determine the origins of the Eveni. They are examining the Siberian people's link to American Indians. Siberians are examining Indian Indians but are of Asian descent.
Tony Connuzzi, a Lawrence graduate student who plans to work with Crawford in Siberia for his doctoral
'Our goal is to find out what Siberian populations are most like the American-Indian populations. Who gave rise to the American Indians?'
Michael Crawford Professor of anthropology and
"In terms of trying to understand the biological relations, our opportunities are dwindling because these people are no longer living like they used to," he said. "They've lost some of their ethnic distinctiveness."
Crawford and the three other researchers are studying the population structure of the native Siberian bear, which is much known about their genetics.
"They've moved from an arctic environment to a whole series of different environments," said Crawford, who is doing research on this for 16 years.
Because the Siberian people can be found from Alaska to South America, the researchers are interested in how populations adapt to new environments.
An agreement with the Soviet Academy of Sciences, which supports the group's field research, will work in Siberia for five years.
U.S. troops launch final pullout from Iraq
The Associated Press
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — The final withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from southern Iraq began yesterday, 88 days after the United States launched its massive offensive against Dudsen's forces from Kuwait.
U. S. troop strength in the region — which had peaked at more than half a million — has now dropped below 400,000, the military said yesterday.
They said a division-sized force of 10,000 to 15,000 troops would temporarily remain in the newly-established demilitarized zone until a 1,440-member U.N. peacekeeping force was in place.
U. S. officers said the palour officially ended the occupation of southern Iraq, but that U.S. warplanes would remain in the air to protect the withdrawing ground troops. They spoke on condition of anonymity.
The zone reaches six miles into
Iraq from the Kuwaiti border, but
U.S. officers said this was a technical
problem that would essentially end the U.S. occupation of Iraqi territory.
'We have a very rough idea of deployment, but nothing has been finalized.'
All of the other U.S. troops will return home as soon as possible, the U.S. officers said.
The officers estimated that there were at least 40,000 U.S. troops, perhaps more, in southern Iraq, but they could not give a precise figure.
- Joachim Hutter U.N. official
The move back to the demilitarized zone will be completed within a few days, they said.
The U.S. military also said the United States and its allies would not abandon more than 40,000 refugees in southern Iraq, many of whom oppose them. The U.S. said the allies would protect them there reprisals and feed and house them.
Military sources said President Bush issued the withdrawal orders to hasten the U.S. pullout to avoid being dragged into Iraq's civil war for a prolonged period and risk further U.S. casualties.
U. S. casualties in the gulf war were extremely low by military standards - 139 killed in action, 357 wounded in action, six missing in action and 117 dead.
Iraiqi war dead were thought to number in the tens of thousands, but no figure ever was released.
The Central Command said the last remaining army corps, the VII Corps, was moving from south of the Euphrates River in Iraq to the zone
along the Iraq-Kuwait border
The VII Corps includes the 1st Infantry Division from Fort Riley and the German-based 3rd Armored Division, each with up to 17,000 troops, hundreds of tanks and support elements.
The famed 1st Division, the Big Red One, was the first to break through Iraq's defenses in the 100- hour ground war that drove Iraqi troops from Kuwait. It alone has more than 7,000 vehicles of all types.
Joachim Hutter, a U.N. official who is part of the peacekeeping mission, said he could not give a time frame for getting the troops to the DMZ because many logistical matters must be worked out.
Some of the U.N. troops should begin arriving this week, but it is unlikely they will go straight to the United Nations headquarters.
"We have a very rough idea of deployment, but nothing has been finalized." Hutter said.
See related stories Pages 2,7
Kuwait refuses refuge for those fleeing Iraq
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY — Iraqis seek to flee southward from Saddam Hussein's rule will not be granted refuge in Kuwait, and cannot pass through the emirate unless a third country offers to take them, a government official said yesterday.
So far, there have been virtually no offers.
"We can't afford another problem." he said. "We have enough."
Acting Planning Minister Sulayman Mutawa, reflecting the views of many Kuwaitis, said the emirate had its hands full recovering from the Iraqi occupation without a cope with thousands of refugees.
Nearly 30,000 Iraqi refugees are in U.S.-occupied southern Iraq. Many fear retribution at the military base after U.S. troops are replaced
during the next week or two by a 1,440-member U.N. peacekeeping force.
An advance team from the U.N. peacekeeping force arrived in Kuwait City on Saturday and met with officials of Kuwait's defense and foreign ministries to discuss its logistical needs. The force will patrol the demilitarized zone, which will extend up to six miles inside Iraq and three miles into Kuwait.
Allied forces are to remain in the demilitarized zone and continue helping the refugees until the U.N. observer unit takes over.
2
Monday, April 15, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Lack of sleep can cause problems
Doctor says seven to nine hours of sleep needed to prevent unhealthy side effects
Jennifer Humphrey works 25 to 35 hours a week and is enrolled in 160 hours of classes. This does not leave her much time for sleep.
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
"I've been getting about four to five hours of sleep a night since I started the job in January," said Humphrey, Linn, Mo., freshman. "I consume an enormous amount of caffeine."
She is not the only one. With only three weeks of classes left in the semester, getting eight hours of sleep is becoming more of a luxury for
some students than a necessity
Theresa Downing, Wichita senior, said, "Most of the time I stay up late to get my projects done. I don't like going to bed at 6 a.m. to get about eight hours of sleep."
Myra Strother, physician at Watkins Memorial Medical Center, said people must spend about 30 to 40 minutes of their time between two and nine hours.
If a person occasionally does not get that amount of sleep, it is not a problem. If you do, your person gets less than the prescribed amount of sleep often, problems can arise.
Muscle weakness, difficulty concentrating, dizziness after standing up or sitting down, poor reaction time and shortness of breath from mild exertion are some of the problems. Strother said.
arise.
"You'll have a loss of interest in things you're usually interested in," she said.
"It ends up keeping you up, but not mentally alert," she said.
Caffeine pills and products that contain a lot of caffeine are not the answer, Strother said.
Strother said a possible side effect of consuming large amounts of caffeine was stomach problems. Caffeine does the amount of acid in the stomach.
Taking naps is a way that some students deal with sleep loss, but that should not be relied upon to replace deep sleep. A good way to produce a state of deep sleep
However, Strother said the easiest way to avoid side effects from lack of sleep was to get enough of it. Studios would have to sleep at night when they feel tired.
She said exercise was a way to combat some of the side effects of lack of sleep. The body is in good shape, and it makes people better. Good nutrition also helps.
"Basically, your body is telling you to go to sleep." Strother said. "You're not going to be retaining as much anyway, so go ahead and go to sleep."
Police report
A KU professor was walking his dog between 10:30 and 11:30 p.m. Friday in the 2800 block of University Drive, where he tacked his dog, a police reported.
■ A KU professor's car and garage in the 700 block of Kasold Drive sustained $300 damage between midnight Friday and a day after, through a mailbox through the garage window. Lawrence police reported.
A KU student and another person were hit and kicked by someone between 1:30 and 2 a.m. Saturday in the 400 block of North Second Street, Lawrence police reported. A window was broken when valued at $100, was then broken out.
An employee at the Westminster Inn, 2525 W. Sixth Street, was robbed of $83 at knife point between 3 and 4 hours on Thursday. Lawrence police report
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An Israeli newspaper yesterday quoted Shamir as saying he envisioned Palestinian self-government in the occupied territories, with Arab ministers for education, justice, health and trade.
In London, Shamir will meet with Soviet Prime Minister Valentin Pavlov. He said he would ask Moscow to renew full diplomatic ties with Israel as a condition for cement in Middle East peace talks.
offered to the Palestinians and said they were part of the 1978 Camp David Accords, on which Egyptian-Israeli peace was founded
PALM BEACH, Fla. — Investigators for both sides in an alleged rape at the Kennedy estate are roaming nightclubs trying to assemble a portrait of the woman who says she was attacked.
Private investigators hired by the Kennedy family and police detectives have been talking to acquaintances of the woman, employees at her favorite nightclubs and those under the night before the alleged assault.
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Security and foreign affairs would remain under Israeli control, he told the daily Al Hamish mar
The Associated Press
More than 100 people have been interviewed.
Kennedy investigators look for clues in bars
"The Kennedy's have deep pockets and long arms — they are doing everything they can to get out of this," said a local bar employee who has been dogged by Kennedy investigators. "They haven't left me alone and I'm only talking to them to get them off my back."
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He also appeared to be renewing elements of Israel's 1989 peace plan. That proposal called for elections and interim autonomy for the 1.7 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip before negotiating the final status of the lands.
Speaking to reporters at Ben Gurion International Airport before flying to London, Shamir also said Secretary of State James Baker's stepped up Middle East diplomacy "proves that there is something in it, something to talk about."
The woman's attorney, David Roth, sharply criticized the three private detectives Friday, accusing them of tampering and obstruction of justice.
Shamir said he did not have a full report on Baker's talks with Egyptian, Syrian, Saudi and Jordanian leaders. Baker's tour of the region last week.
Mark Schapp, attorney for suspect William Kennedy Smith, the 30-year-old nephew of Sen. Ted Kendrick, are just doing their jobs.
Shamir spent two days discussing that peace plan with Baker, who visited Jerusalem last week. The Palestinians oppose autonomy as a permanent arrangement and the temporary step toward full Palestinian sovereignty in the West Bank and Gaza.
"That's where they seemed to be leading," he said. "She had something to drink, but she didn't leave here drunk."
He would not elaborate
But Shamir said that from what he had heard, "There are positive things and less positive things; there are things that are agreed and things that are not agreed."4
He said late Saturday that the woman was in the bar the night of March 29 and that the Kennedy investigators were interested in how much she drank before the alleged attack early March 30.
The employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity, works at the
Baker is seeking Arab agreement to participate in a peace conference. Israel sees it as a brief one-time event involving Arab governments, to be followed immediately by separate, direct negotiations between Israel and each Arab state.
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He said Sharon was doing nothing without government approval and added, "There is more publicity here than facts."
Safari & Polo Club, a small bar with a jungle motif where the woman and her friends were known to visit.
Shamir confirmed to reporters that these powers were being
Video Department
Smith has denied wrongdoing in the alleged assault. No charges have been filed.
On another matter, Shamir played down Housing Minister Ariel Sharon's promises to step up the job of building in the occupied territories.
JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Yitzhak Sharain, leaving Israel yesterday for his first meeting ever with his Soviet counterpart, said he mixed feelings about U.S. efforts to bring peace to the Middle East.
Shamir will confer with Soviet official on Palestinian issue
The Associated Press
Construction in the occupied lands "continues all the time, it is natural. There is life there, so it is development," Shamr said.
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Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns, and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26. To ensure proper fit and availability of regalia, participants are asked to visit the order center IN PERSON.
Out of town commencement participants unable to visit the campus order center may reserve regalia by following the instructions in the graduation mailing.
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 15, 1991
3
A. K.
Out of his shell
Terry Doonan, Lawrence graduate student and employee of the division of mammalogy and herpetology at the Museum of Natural History, points out different parts of a snapping turtle's shell. Doonan's turtle display was part of the 11th annual Museum Day sponsored by KU museums.
Regents budget bill to remain unresolved until recess is over
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — After two legislative conference committee meetings, the higher education financing bill remains $12 million light and will not be discussed again until legislators return from recess April 24.
The committee, which met twice Friday to hammer out House and Senate disagreements on the bill, negotiated of three members from each body.
State Reps George Teagarden, D-LaCyneg, Bill Wisdom, D-Kansas City, and Rochelle Chromister, R-Neodesha, represented the House
position that would restore $16 million to the Board of Regents budget, while State Sens. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, and Paul Feleciano Jr., D-Wichita, pushed for the Senate's version that would cut $12 million from the budget.
Although many technical discrepancies were ironed out, Chronister said the lack of a tax increase would make it difficult to restore money to the budget.
"The Senate, of course, hasn't passed any kind of revenue measure," she said. "And the House has already spent all the money they
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, who attempted to restore $20 million to the budget during debate on the bill on the Senate floor, said that waiting to discuss the bill would be the best scenario in the long run.
raised on K-12 education. The meetings were not very productive."
Winter said that any tax measure that would make the restoration of some financial possible would not be required by the Legislature returned from recess.
"I would have preferred that my motion passed two days ago," he said.
GALA Week stresses education, celebration
Saturday's parade on Massachusetts, dance to complete week of learning By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Jamie Howard hates when people ask her, "Why are you a lesbian?"
"Why are you the way you are?" responds Howard, co-director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
She said it was frustrating that people did not try to meet gays.
But this week KU students have a chance to change their ignorance to knowledge.
Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week began last night with a performance by KU's theater department. The
performance at Smith Hall was a collection of excerpts from poems and plays depicting various aspects of the gav and lesbian lifestyles.
About 30 people attended last night's performance, which dealt with relationships between gays and lesbians, how they address questions about their sexuality and discrimination from society.
"It bridges the gap between ignor-
"i bridges the gap between ignorance and our culture," Howard said. GALA Week will continue through Saturday with various speakers and including topics about homophobia, combating sexism racism and political activism. The celebration will conclude with a parade down Massachusetts Street from City Hall to South Park and a dance in the Burge Union.
"Part of my duty is to let people know who I am." Howard said. "It's celebrating what we are, and often
we don't get a chance to celebrate."
The goal of the celebration is to educate the entire student body, including the gay and lesbian population, to understand the lesbian and bisexual pride, she said.
Scott Manning, co-coordinator for publicity for GLSOK, agreed.
A gay pride group was started in the aftermath of riots caused by the Stone Wall raid. Manning said.
He said that the police raided the Stone Wall bar because the people were gay and that the bar's patrons decided to fight back.
He said gay pride started in the late 1960s after a gay bar in New York City was raided by police.
He stressed that GALA Week was for everyone to participate in.
"But it makes people realize gay and lesbian students and faculty are important to the University," he said.
House rejects resolution against flag desecration
Debate about proposition arouses strong feelings
By Joe Gose Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A last-minute House debate concerning a resolution supporting the prohibition of flag desecration brought tears to many of the participants and hushed the House's usual cacophonic atmosphere.
The resolution, unanimously passed in the Senate, would have told the U.S. Congress that Kansans support a bill to outlaw flag desecration.
But the House Judiciary Committee reconstructed the resolution to simply warn Congress to weigh freezing such an amendment.
The House passed the committee's version 73-22.
The emotional debate began when State Rep. Jeff Freeman, R-Burlington, said the committee had had enough time to pose to restore the Senate's intent.
Freeman said Gov Joan Finney and more than 40,000 Kansas citizens have joined the campaign.
'Our state deserves better. We've survived because we're rugged individualists.
— Mark Parkinson State Rep., R-Olathe
desecration.
But State Rep. Mark Parkinson, R-Olathe, said that a constitutional amendment was not needed and that the survival of Kansas throughout history was due to the freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.
"It's possible that a statute could be constructed that could pass constitutional muster," he said. "I don't care if other states have done this. I don't care if it passed through the Senate 38-0."
"Our state deserves better. We've survived because we're rugged individualists."
State Rep. Ruth Ann Hacker, JD,
Odette, another opponent of Freeman's proposal, tearfully said that to change the Bill of Rights would be an
affront to the sacrifices her family members had made when defending those rights in World War II.
"Sometimes it's unpupular to take a stand for freedom of speech when we don't agree with some of the ideas that are being offered," she said
a stand for freedom of speech when we don't agree with some of the ideas that are being offered," she said. State Rep John. Solbach, D-Lawrence, a decorated Vietnam War veteran, was chairperson of the committee that constructed the House version of the bill.
Solbach, who also became emotional when recalling the 397-day stint he served in Vietnam, said he had been wounded before he had reached voting age while fighting `n` enemy that wanted to establish `n` a government that suppressed all fundamental human rights.
Freeman said he respected every opinion expressed during the debate but disagreed.
"The question is what kind of message do we want to send?" he asked. "A weak one that came out of it was a simple one that came out of the Senate!"
1990 candidates help Impact
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie
When the Impact coalition's victory was announced early Friday morning, two people were just as happy as darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden, president- and vice president-elects.
Greg Hughes and Pat Warren, student leaders who were unsuccessful in their bid for student body president and vice president last year, helped with the Impact campaign.
"It's easier to go back through a second time and know what to do," said Warren, chairperson of the Student Senate Executive Commit-
"It was important that he do well."he said.
Warren said that Lowden had run their campaign last year and that he and Lowden were good friends.
Hughes, Associated Students of
'I've never seen 61 people work harder in my life.'
— Greg Hughes Associated Students of Kansas
Kansas campus director, said he had provided mostly inspirational support to Impact's campaign, but he stressed that the victory was the coalition members'.
"I've never seen 61 people work harder in my life," he said.
Lowden said that Hughes and Warren had contributed different talents to the campaign.
"Greg was mostly motivational," he said. "Pat helped set up things, organizational."
On election night, as the results came in, Warren sat by the radio with a pen and pad of paper, scribbling the results.
As the results were read, Warren
kept track of the seats Impact was gainen, after the School of Fine Arts results were announced, in which the Facts coalition won both seats, he curbed the disappointment at the party by saying the seats had not really been campaigned for.
When the School of Education results were read and Impact began its pattern of sweeping seats, Warren turned to Fulcher and said, "Darren, that's a really good sign."
Lowden said both Warren and Hughes helped by allowing him to sound off ideas and in choosing the best course of action.
Hughes said that it was nice to be on the winning side after last year's effort, when he and Warren came 48 votes from a victory.
“It’s a lot more gratifying to see your efforts help another group of people rather than yourself,” he said.
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Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Answering students
One year after the submission of a reform plan, the administration's lack of response is sobering
African-American students a year ago submitted a 12-point plan of reforms to the administration.
The reforms were intended to help provide a better campus climate for minorities.
All this in only a year.
One point has been accomplished satisfactorily so far. Now students can obtain the minutes from meetings they attend with the administration.
The administration stated it was committed to working with students to discuss their concerns. But students say the University's action on important issues such as minority recruitment and retention is inadequate.
Tired of listening to empty promises, about 40 African-American students protested Thursday to show how seriously they were committed to these reforms.
According to a flier handed out at this year's protest, what African-American students have received from the University in response to the 12 points is "empty rhetoric, several powerless committees and a handful of worthless promises."
In a letter of response from the administration describing what action has been taken
with the 12 points, jargon such as "exploring the concept" is used.
One of the points submitted in April 1990 is that a coordinator should be hired to oversee all recruitment and retention programs.
The administration's response is that the position of coordinator is being advertised and will be filled in the near future.
Another point is that the University should have a commitment to increasing the number of African-American students at the University. A grand total of two more African-American students now attend the University
The administration said that the office of admissions was committed to working toward recruiting certain numbers of new African-American students each year.
A goal was not met, but the administration still just makes more commitments about how things will improve next year.
It became clear that the administration needed to do more in response to the 12 points when an African-American student, who spoke at the protest said, "It will possibly be a miracle if I stay here."
Amy Zamierowski for the editorial board
Tasteless effort
Game wager to help homeless was a weak stunt
In addition to the many office pools, group wagers and personal betting that went on around the nation for the NCAA Final Four, a truly tasteless one took place among four governors.
The governors from the states with schools represented in the Final Four held a wager among themselves. The losing teams' state governors were to help feed the homeless from the winning team's state. It was a minimally noble effort to legitimize the gambling aspect. It was a decent idea gone bad when their efforts transformed from good intentions to an obvious public relations stunt
Gov. Bob Mills of Nevada sent a case of shark steals to honor the UNLV club, Jerry "Tark the Shark" Tarkianan, Gov. Joan Finney sent 10 pounds of Kansas City strip steaks, and North Carolina's governor, Jim Martin, sent trout fillets which, when specially seasoned, are called "trout devils."
carly seasoned, are careless to do a good deed for the homeless, they should have done one with some substance. The money spent on the shark steaks, strip steaks and trout fillets could have been spent more wisely to benefit more people. A one-night feeding of KC strip steaks, shark meat and trout fillets for the homeless in Durham is like sending champagne and caviar to Ethiopia.
The bet itself, although it probably had good intentions, yielded poor results, making a mockery out of homelessness. Homelessness is a problem that needs to be combatted not with frivolous bets that are thinly disguised moves for public relations, but rather with careful planning and intelligent allocations of donations.
Juli Watkins for the editorial board
The Case for Dumber Bombs
MKEENA Chicago Tribute
The Case for Dumber Domes
Soldier remembers importance of fighting for valuable beliefs
Editor's note: Billy Baxely, a soldier now stationed in Iraq, wrote this letter, postmarked March 24, to a friend in
LAWRENCE. A picture was not available.
My name is Billy. I am a soldier involved with Operation Desert Storm. The fighting for us is over now, and we wait to see what happens about this operation. I have seen and learned much about war. I have also heard and learned much about our country. I know, as I always have, that American people are a truly special breed. I was once told that if Americans were dogs, you wouldn't be able to get papers on them. That is humorously true, since we Americans are from all walks of life. But thinking back, some of the best dogs I have ever known have been mutts. Now, to what's on my mind.
There is a certain group of Americans in our country that I find hard to understand. This is the group that burns our flags and condemns our military action in the Persian Gulf. Further more, there are those that think this whole situation is over the price of oil. That reminds me of a child who loved to buy over the price of tea. Or have you forgotten about that little tea party. Anyway, to move on, let me tell you about a country I know.
Anyway, to move on, let me tell you about a country I know.
The country is Kuwait, and what I know about it assures me that this war was not over oil. You see, this country was evolving with its own population and slowly but surely growing democratically. Sure, it had problems. The women were treated like second-class citizens, and only certain people allowed to vote. Two of my problems. Thinking back, I know of another country that had those problems a few decades ago. Sound familiar?
Anyway, Kuwait stopped growing on Aug. 2, 1990. When Iraq invaded Kuwait, not only did they remove the freedom to grow as a nation from the people, they killed children, raped women and brutally tortured scores of civilians. They stole a country's wealth and tried to wipe out its existence. If that's not enough, they pumped millions of gallons of oil into the sea and set fire to almost all of Kuwait's oil wells.
Yesterday it was dark all day, with the only light coming from the blazing oil wells off in the distance.
their heads removed by the Republican Guard units. These soldiers did not want to take part in the immoral acts committed against their Arab brothers. For their stand, they lost their lives. Saddam Hussein had to be stopped just as Hitler had to be stepped! After all, we could have tied sanctions against Hitler for a couple of years, but the Jewish population in Europe would be slightly smaller today to save the least.
Kuwait wasn't the only victim in this act, either. The Iraqi people are torn and shattered. There are still Iraqi soldiers lying in the sand with
Let me sum up what I'm trying to say with something I read a while back:
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feelings, which thinks that nothing is worth war, is much worse.
People who have nothing for which they are willing to fight, and nothing they care about more than their own personal safety, are miserable creatures.
Creatures who have no chance of being free unless made and kept by the exertions of others better than they are!"
Billy Baxley is a soldier with the HMC 1st armored division now stationed in Iraq.
WWII vets think gulf war hoopla is amusing
They're getting up there in years,the World War II vets.
1 But they're still my choice as this century's most remarkable generation of men.
Most came of age in the Great Depression. Because of hard times everywhere, men who had the brains to be physicists or engineers were happy to get jobs as apprentices and work on building bugging ditches, if that's all there was.
Then they won the biggest, bloodiest war in the history of this planet. And when it was over, they came back and went right to work, making this country the most powerful industrial and economic force in the world. Recently I wrote about how a few of them felt about the homecoming hoopla that followed the abrupt ending of the Persian Gulf War. They were generally amused when they compared the TV coverage of festive airport reunion scenes with their own quiet arrivals.
That column brought a small flood of mail from other World War II vets, sharing their memories. None begrudge the gulf war troops their due. But some are skeptical about flag-waving politicians; others think they are too brave to around too free; and most have良, amused memories of their own
Mike Royko
Syndicated columnist
PETER R. BROWN
homecomings
So I thought I'd share some of their views.
An Indiana man, who preferred that his name not be used, said, "I was in the Pacific for three years. Took part in the fight for two and some other islands. Came home on a stinking ship and hot bus. My mom made me dinner. Now a town near where I live is planning a big parade for one of the local boys there three months and they sent him home because he has a kidney infection. Hey, come on!"
A physician, David Berner of Condon, Mont., took note of a proposal by a congressman that all gulf war troops be given a $10,000 bonus. Berner fired off a letter to the congressman, and sent me a copy:
"As a combat infantryman (New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Luzon). I decided to join you in the orgy of killing the enemy." Admittedly, this war was a pushover
"Anyway, your idea to break the bank on behalf of the gulf vets should logically apply to us who served before — generally longer, bloodier and with less media and public education. Your idea for a $10,000 bonus sounds swell, and I would like mine in one lump sum — with interest, of course, dating from December 1945. Furthermore, though I witnessed ample grape vine errors, I haven't yet needed 'readjustment counseling', which I know is obligatory for all inconveniences. But I'd like Congress to send me a lot of money for the counseling I'll doubtless need in my old age.
and most of the troops saw no combat, experienced little danger and weren't 'over there' very long, as wars go, but that shouldn't detract from their all being 'heroes' in the eyes of the multitudes. Some may feel that the genuine heroes of the world are belittled by such a mass anointment, but they're obviously soreheads.
"I confess that I would be embarrassed to accept this money. You see, I never really thought of myself as a hero. I did think of myself as just another in that endless series of poor slobs paying the repetitive penalty for failure of national or tribal leaders.
"However, I heartily join the bandwagon. I will accept your payoff, I'm practicing a here's swagger, and I'm going to have to sort some of maladaptation."
Agree or disagree, you have to concede that Doc Berner knows how to write a zinger.
Jacqueline Jefferson of Hinsdale, Ill., said of her husband, "He remembers only one conversation after his return from the war. He met a close friend in a neighborhood bar and asked him where he'd served. The friend told him and asked the same question, "Why did you?" His husband said, "Yeah, some. How about you?" The friend said, "Yeah me, too."
"And that was the total extent of his discussion of his war experiences."
That's another quality I've seen of the World War II generation. They were doers, not talkers.
Another homecoming memory, from David Dander, of Tiffin, Ohio: "Had four-and-a-half years, most of it in the Pacific. Comback, it was 21 days on a troop ship. Then five days on a troop train to New Jersey. Then a train to Pittsburgh. My older brother, who survived his destroyer beined up on D-Day, picked me up at the train station at 2 m. But
that was OK. I hate parades, anyway."
Ken Morris of Council Bluffs, Iowa: "Thank goodness the desert war was over quickly and with few losses. But all this euphoria has a movie atmosphere. I was in World War II and Korea. Two of my brothers were killed in World War II and buried at sea. They called us 'The Lost Boys' and don't think some of the people putting up yellow ribbons and waving flags could tell you much about the reality of war and how bad it can really be."
Maybe dim Hill of Arkansas sums up the feelings of his generation best: "I was attached to Patton's Third Army. I seldom talk about the war, the freezing days and nights, the fatigue, the fear, the dirt, the mud and the smell of dead bodies. There was no big welcome for us guys. The welcome was in our hearts, our thankfulness for being back alive. Our welcome was seen in the smiling, joyous faces of our parents, brothers, sisters and sweethearts or wives. We didn't need parades."
didn't need parades.
Maybe Jim Hill didn't need parades. But today's politicians do.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
Other Voices
Book debunks Reagan
It's an unfaltering commentary on the U. S. voter that only a truth book of dubious integregation can help to debunk the Reagan myth.
If Kity Kelly's kiss-and-puke "biography" of the former first lady is eroding that image, she's opening the wrong reasons.
The real scandal is that Ronald Reagan was leader of the free world for eight years. Any real or alleged bedroom pacilloids or crystal-ball fantasizing are irrelevant compared to the fact that the U.S. people elected him not just once, but twice, gleefully tolerating eight years of Dr. Feelgood plattitudinizing while the economy staged to decline, the economy stagnated to a degree that we eventually must come to terms with, and U.S. citizens of privilege were having a ball.
The Reagan legacy would take decades to overcome even if we were taking steps to overcome it — which we aren't.
That's the scandal.
From the Philadelphia Daily News.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 15, 1991
5
Secretary of Education's plan for reforms gets President's support
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — After barely a month on the job, Secretary of Education Lamar Alexander has gotten President Bush's backing for a far-reaching package of reforms that include national student tests and experiments with radically new ways of running schools.
Bush, who pledged during his 1988 campaign to be the "education president," will unveil the school reform package at the White House on Thursday after a luncheon with governors, an administration official said yesterday.
The fast-track initiative will embrace some of the same education themes that Bush and former President Reagan have sounded before: expanding parental choice in education and improving literacy and job training programs for dropouts, displaced workers and other adults.
But it will also put Bush's stamp, and Alexander's, on some radically new ideas, including pressing ahead
to develop a type of national student testing program, which a presidential advisory panel recently recommended.
Alexander is a former governor of Tennessee, who was president of the University of Tennessee, when Bush and McCain, on June 17 to succeed U.S. F. Cavazos F.
He won Bush's backing for his reform ideas within days of his March 18 swearing in, said chief investment representative Etta Fielek.
Alexander has cleaned house at the education department and lured David Kearns, a former chairperson of the Corp., to be his deputy secretary.
The reform package is still evolving. Fielek said.
"It is very complicated. It will not bring results overnight," she said. "But it will bring issues to the table."
The package is intended as a blueprint to help implement the ambitious but broad education goals that
Bush and the nation's governors set after an education summit in Charlottesville, Va., in September 1989.
Those goals include ridding schools of drugs and violence, drastically reducing the dropout rate and making them more academically relevant in the world in math and science by 2000.
The New York Times, in a report yesterday, said Bush would propose several hundred million dollars in new spending, primarily on grants to spur innovations that would include a new generation of U.S. schools to try longer school days or years and end with summer classes. Some schools may be operated by private industry, according to an unnamed official cited by the newspaper.
"There are four broad themes: better schools for the kids in school now, new schools for the students of the future, back to school for the adults, and then 'the other 91 percent.' " said Fieleb.
"The other 91 percent" is a phrase coined by Chester Finn Jr., a Vanderbilt University professor and former education department research chief. It refers to youth spending only 9 percent of their lives in the classroom by the time they graduate from high school.
Bush will seek to improve classroom performance by bolstering that 91 percent of their lives. Fielek said. Under that umbrella will fall such items as improving child nutrition and helping parents improve their skills in tutoring their own children.
National testing was once anathema to most education groups, rejected out of hand by teachers, administrators and superintendents alike.
The federal government plays a major role in funding remedial education for the poor and special education for the handicapped, but it does not set the public school curriculum that falls to state and local control.
Scientist says Soviets covered up the deaths caused by Chernobyl
LONDON — The most senior scientist at the Chernobyl nuclear power station says the disaster in 1986 claimed up to 10,000 lives, and authorities have admitted, a newspaper reported yesterday.
The Associated Press
The Independent newspaper quoted Vladimir Chernusenko as saying the fatalities included miners and military men who died from exposure to radiation during cleanup after the accident.
He is the scientific director in charge of the 18-mile exclusion zone surrounding the power station and said he himself had been given between two and four years to live because of his exposure to radiation. He said that, in part, prompted him to come forward.
"1 expected some measures and
some attempt to honestly deal with the situation," said Chernousenko. 50. "Now that I have seen, over five years, that no such thing is going on before I die I must make the world a aware of what they are facing."
Soviet authorities said 31 people died immediately following the explosion in April 1986. They have told me how many people have died since.
Chernusenko said 3.5 million people living in nearby Kiev were exposed to radiation levels hundreds of times higher than safe limits. He said the city should have been evacuated.
"Instead of focusing all efforts on the task of saving people, the whole system set about suppressing the disaster," he said.
CALENDAR
Monday
- African and African-American Studies will sponsor a lunchtime seminar at noon at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Wellness Center will sponsor a "Stress Management" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will sponsor a GALA Week gay and lesbian graduate student lecture at the Pine Roost in the Kansas Union.
Recycling Task Force will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
Kansas Union
■ KU Accounting and IRS will sponsor a volunteer income tax assistance workshop at 6 p.m. at the
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will sponsor a workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
GLSOK will conduct a GALA Week lecture at 7 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
**Women's Transitional Care Services will sponsor a campus support group for battered women at 7 p.m. Call 841-6887 for the location.**
KU Triathletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Alceove A in the Kansas Union.
Tuesday
■ KU Wellness center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Office of foreign student service will have a "Practical Training for Foreign Students" seminar at t. p.m. in the Alumni Room in the Kansas Union
■ KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union
GLSKO will sponsor a GALA Week gay and lesbian graduate student lecture at 3:30 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
GLSOK, Women's Student Union and women's studies program will
have a GALA Week lecture at 7 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
**Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Resume Writing and Interviewing Skills for Women" workshop at 5 p.m. at the Pine Room**
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Aloua D in the Kansas Union
- Voice will meet at 7 p.m. at 1204 Oread Ave.
Dr Seuss Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 at 101 Rehberg Center.
Wednesdav
GLSOK will have a GALA Week vigil for unity at 9:30 p.m. at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
GLSKO will have a GALA Week
"Wear Blue Jeans if You're Lesbian
or Gay Day" picnic at onno on the east lawn of Wescow Hall.
KU KWella Center will sponsor a "Stress Management" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Study Abroad will have an informational meeting at 1:30 p.m. at 203 Linncott.
■ KU Study Abroad in French-speaking countries will have an informational session at 3 p.m. at 2055 Wescote Hall.
GLSOK will have a GALA Week gay and lesbian graduate student at 3:30 p.m. at the Pine Room
in the Kansas Union.
Environers will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayahawk Room in the Kansas Union. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
GLSOK and the department of art will sponsor GALA Week performance art at 8 p.m. at Downs Auditorium in Dyce Hall.
■ KU Pro Choice Coalition will meet at 7 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
- Deborah Gordon of Stanford University, will be featured at the 1901 Michener Lecture, "Fliximity and the Foraging Ecology of Seed-Eating Ants" at 3:30 p.m. at 1005 Haworth Hall.
Thursdav
GLSOK will have a GALA Week and gay lesbian graduate student lecture at 3:30 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
KU KWellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
GLSOK, Native American Student Association and the Psychology Department will have a GALA Week in the Purdue Pioneer Room in the Burpee Union.
KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
Jayhawk Audubon Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Presbyterian Manor, 15th Street and Kasol Avenue.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Friday
Saturdav
- Lawrence Region Men and GLSOK will have a GALA Week Women's Widowed Group will meet at 7 p.m. at Watkins Museum.
- Readers' Theater at 7 p.m. at 100 Smith Hall.
KU Study Abroad will have a pre-department orientation at 8:45 a.m. at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
GLSOK will have a GALA Week parade, and rally picnic at 3 p.m. The march will begin at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, and the rally and picnic will be at South 12th and Massachusetts streets.
GLSOK will sponsor a dance at 9 p.m. at the Party Room in the Burge Union.
GLSOK, KU Gay and Lesbian Alumni Association will have a GALA Week-KU Gay and Lesbian Alumni Association reunion at 11 a.m. at the English Room in the Kansas Union.
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Now's your chance to make more of that summer visit! Whether you are an undergraduate or graduate student, you can earn additional college credit by enrolling in Summer Session courses at Wichita State as a guest student.
Wichita State offers five Summer Session option
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Study says, If no heart disease, life span grows
BOSTON - Completely eliminating heart disease, the nation's leading killer, would increase the average 35-year-old American's life span by three years, a new study concludes.
The Associated Press
Although the gain in longevity may seem surprisingly small, the finding reflects the difficulty of pushing back the age of old age, the researchers said.
Even if people escape the No. 1 killer, a host of other ailments are likely to take its place as people reach their 80s and beyond.
"If you wipe out heart disease, people don't live forever," said Lee Goldman, a co-author of the study. "It is the leading killer, but some are not." The study shows that one of the leading causes of death are cancer, pneumonia and strokes.
Similar analyses of cancer have concluded that life expectancy would increase about two years if that disease were conquered
Heart disease kills about 500,000 Americans annually.
The average life span in the United States has risen from 47 in 1900 to 75 today.
The latest study was based on a computer program developed by Goldman of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and Milton C. Weinstein of Harvard School of Public Health.
In an accompanying editorial, Robert M. Kaplan of the University of California at San Diego called the study "well executed, well reported and very provocative."
The study asks such questions as:
What if all Americans got their cholesterol levels below 200? What if everyone stopped smoking?
The computer simulation concludes that achieving such major public health goals adds only a year or so to the average life span.
However, the authors point out that even though average increases are small, the gains for individuals can be dramatic, especially if healthier habits prevent occasional deaths from heart attacks at age 40 or 50.
The new food pyramid
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is planning, for the first time since 1956, to revamp the four basic food groups we've all grown to know and live by.
Milk-yogurt- cheese: (two to three servings)
Meat poultry-fish-dried beans (two to three servings)
Vegetables and fruits (three to five servings of vegetables, plus two to four servings of fruit)
Bread-cereal-rice-pasta (six to eleven servings)
Old basic food groups
milk
(tree-four cups daily for children, two cups daily for adults)
Meat
(two or more servings daily)
Bread/Cereal
(four or more servings daily)
Vegetables/
Fruit (four or more servings daily)
SOURCE: Orange County Register, Agriculture Department
"A accompanying literature in the SUSI will literature that you get from foods in each of the preprocessing groups, you use from other sources, such as syrup on parchments or dressings on salads or dressings on bread. You'll recommend for fat and sugar intake based on total cereal needs for food coming from USSIL buillon.
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
FDA says implant might cause cancer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration is studying a possible link between a commonly used cosmetic breast implant and a cancer causing agent, an FDA representative said yesterday.
Susan Cruzan said she had been told that results of a laboratory study were expected to be available within a week or two.
The implant is made by Surgitek, a subsidiary of the Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., and is marketed under the trade names Meme and Replicon.
The New York Times, in its Sunday editions, quoted unnamed scientists familiar with the experiments as saying preliminary calculations indicated that the rate of 200 to 400 cases a year for every million women in whom it was inserted.
The product consists of silicon
coated with a polyurethane foam to avert development of painful and unsightly lumps.
Cruzan said the FDA study concerned the potential breakdown of the coating to a chemical known as triclinid acid, which causes liver cancer in rats.
"The FDA has conducted the laboratory study and it is analyzing the results of the breakdown of the polyurethane to TDA," she said. "There are not any results from that study vet."
Karen Gaukroian Ferraro, a representative for the company in Racine Wis, said Surgitrel had done what the doctors and thought that its product was safe.
Ferraro said that Surgitek scientists, after examining dissolution of the coating in a laboratory setting, found that 70 percent of the solyurethane was minimal.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 15, 1991
7
World briefs
Amsterdam, Netherlands
20 Van Goghs taken, recovered
Two armed robbers stole 20 paintings by Vincent van Gogh yesterday in the Netherlands' pricest art theft, but police quickly recovered the works in an abandoned getaway car, author-
Klaas Wiltling, police representative, said the haul from the Vincent van Gogh National Museum was worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The museum's head van Gogh's masterpiece "The Potato Eaters."
"Still Life With Sunflowers" and "Still Life With Iris," which are part of a series van Gogh did on flowers, were also taken. Other paintings in the series have broken art auction records.
POLICE said they did not know why the robbers abandoned the works less than an hour after fleeing. Police found the paintings in two garment bags in the getaway car, parked at the Amstel railway station about $1\frac{1}{2}$ miles away. There were no arrests.
Ronald van Leeuwen, director of the museum, said three of the paintings were seriously ripped.
London
Activists release park animals
Intruders entered a wildlife park in Scotland early yesterday and released owls, foxes and badgers. A radical animal rights group claimed responsibility.
A man from the Animal Liberation Front told Britain's domestic news agency, Press Association, that his group cut holes in cages at the Highland Wildlife Park to free the animals.
The park is in Aviemore, Scotland, near Inverness.
Aviomere's chief police inspector, Hugh MacKay, said that two cages and enclosures had been opened, but that no dangerous animals had been freed. The wildlife park also has bears and wolves.
The Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility Friday for a spate of recent attacks in New York City.
At least a dozen shops, including furriers, butchers and fish markets, have been vandalized recently, and the group says there will be more attacks.
From the Associated Press
Tanker sinks in Italy, workers begin cleanup
The Associated Press
GENOA, Italy — Rocked by one last explosion, a fire-fraught tanker tanking millions of gallons of oil sank yesterday off the Italian Riviera, and another tanker an ecological catastrophe in the Mediterranean.
The Crypti-registered tanker Haven appeared to have remained intact on the sandy sea bottom 1½ miles off the shore, and it was thought that the vessel's crude remains inside, officials said.
The tanker was carrying nearly 42 million gallons of Iranian crude when it first caught fire Thursday. A Genoa port authority official, giving evidence, said the tanker had said 15 million gallons of oil might have burned.
A few hours after the tanker sank, some oil came to the surface, but experts thought it was released as the tanker settled on the bottom, said Eugenio Fresi, an Environmental Ministry marine ecology expert. It was not immediately determined how much oil leaked.
Patches of oil have ashore on several stretches of beach along a 15-mile stretch of the coast.
Video pictures taken by underwater robots showed the tanker settled flat against the bottom.
At least six sailors were killed when the Haven exploded Thursday. Twenty-nine crew members were hospitalized with burns and smoke inhalation, 11 of them in critical condition.
Officials have theorized that sparks from cleaning equipment may have ignited gas pockets in the tanker Thursday. Black, thick smoke spewed from the fires for four days.
Three more explosions rocked the tanker Saturday, and the final blast came yesterday morning, 4½ hours before the Haven sank.
The tanker went down in waters about 240 feet of the resort town of Arenzano, 16 miles west of Gaderno.
Greenpeace, the international environmental organization, surveyed the area with a helicopter and said oil from the ship could be seen in spots in a 40-square-mile area.
Some English and German tourists summed on the beach just a few yards from the globs of thick oil. Motorists gawked at slicks visible from the scenic highways along the Riviera.
Allies try to help refugees
But the plight of the Kurds remains hungry, tenuous
The Associated Press
ANKARA, Turkey — U.S., British and French aircraft yesterday dropped tons of supplies to Iraqi refugees on the Turkish and Iranian borders, and provided a remote refugee camp to aid the relief effort.
About 500,000 refugees, mostly Kurds, have fled northern Iraq to the rugged, mountainous Turkish border, and another 900,000 have sought refuge in Iran, officials in both countries say.
The Kurds fear the wrath of Iraqi president Saddam Hussein following their failed rebellion, which began after his arrest in War. In the mountains, the refugees have faced hunger, disease and death.
Saddam has insisted that innocent civilians have nothing to fear from his troops and that Kurds will be the target.
In southern Iraq, remaining U.S. forces began
pailing back yesterday to a newly established
army in the city of Kirkuk.
the U.S. Central Command announced.
Despite the pullback, secretary of defense Dick Cheney restated the U.S. commitment to help the refugees stranded on Iraq's northern and southern borders.
In an interview on NBC-TV, Cheney said that for at least the next several days the United States would maintain responsibility for providing food and water for the refugees in the north and south of Iraq. The United States then plans to turn the situation over to international relief organizations.
At Uzumlu, a refugee mountain camp, reporters said Turkish soldiers were allowing refugees to drive about 20 miles into Turkey with trucks and buses. An official said that is a departure from previous Turkish practice.
The airdrops are crucial for inaccessible moutainous areas, but the falling packages, which weigh more than a ton, are a threat to the refugees below.
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Monday, April 15, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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First dean of KU architecture school declares retirement
By Benjamin W. Allen
Professor plans to leave KU
Charles Kahn, first dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, looks forward to retirement after 22 years at the University.
By Benjamin W. Allen Kansan staff writer
After 22 years of service to the University of Kansas as a professor and as the first dean of the School of Design, Charles Kahn is retiring. Design, Charles Kahn is retiring.
Kahn, 65, began his career as dean at the school's inception in the 1988-89 academic year and held the position until he stepped down to full time.
“It’s time.” Kahn said. “There are other things I want to do that I will not have a chance to do if I wait.”
"It was both an honor and a challenge to be the first dean," he said. "It was a pleasurable experience with an enormous amount of satisfaction working with what I felt were an absolutely superb group of individuals."
Kahn said his introduction to the University was quite aiolt.
"I got to the University of Kansas when it was the beginning of the year convocation at which Clark Wescoe, who had hired me, told me. He was then into the convocation, that he resigned as chancellor," he said.
"That was my welcoming to the University."
Kahn said it was hard to pinpoint what accomplishments he was most proud of because there was nothing
He also said KU was a stimulating environment during his early years.
Heller said that even after Kahn stepped down as dean he continued to show a willingness to try things that were new and different and that his innovations made a difference in the classroom.
"Even in the midst of all the physical and political unrest of the late 60s and early 70s, it still was a problem for me, but I and I will regret not leaving it," he said.
Francis Heller, professor emeritus of law and vice chancellor of academic affairs when Kahn was hired, said Kahn had provided the necessary leadership for the new school.
"He brought a tremendous amount of energy and imagination to the job," Heller said. "In the initial years of his deanship, he provided the kind of leadership the faculty had been looking for."
he had done for which he was solely responsible.
"The things I'm proudest of are the school, its faculty, its national reputation, the kinds of graduates we have, their reputation and the dedication they have to the University and the school." he said.
He said he thought the school could be proud of having been at the forefront of the social responsibility movement during the early years.
"We got out of the ivory tower into the urban problems of Kansas City and Lawrence," he said.
"Unfortunately, that emphasis and that drive has faded both from the society and the school."
Kahn plans to move back to his home state of North Carolina where he will pursue a doctorate in art and sculpture at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
"I's something I've always wanted to do," he said. "I also want to open another practice I haven't seen anything in the 22 years I've been here."
"I feel I need to build some buildings before I get too old and crotchety for clients to deal with."
"There were commitments that had been made to me that were not
Kahn said that one problem he faced as dean was to attract and retain nationally known faculty, and the institution did not because of faculty salary issues.
'The things I'm proudest of are the school, its faculty, its national reputation, the kinds of graduates we have, their reputation and the dedication they have to the University and the school.'
- Charles Kahn First dean of architecture
honored," he said. "I felt the only thing I could do in all honesty was to step down, take a promotion and go back to teaching."
Kahn said one of the nicest things that had happened since he announced he was taking early retirement was the first-year students who had told him how disappointed they were because they wanted to take his studio class next year.
"Teaching is the best of all worlds," he said. "You come in contact with bright, excited, able, motivated students."
Kahn said he thought the school was academically strong and hoped it retained pluralism in its ideas.
"I'd like to see it reflect a variety of opinion," he said. "To not have a particular cant."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 15, 1991
9
Former U.S. base ravaged by looters
The Associated Press
CAPAS, Philippines — No sooner had the U.S. Navy left a communications station here than Filipinos stormed the site with picks, shovels and chain saws, covering everything under honeole covers to underground cables.
"You won't see anyone here now because there is nothing left to steal, said the station's former chief, Capt. Jose Edwin Sabijon.
The looters, he said, numbered in the hundreds and were "people from 8- to 80-years old, men, women, children."
Many Filipino officials fear that what happened at the communications station at Capas, about 60 miles from Manila, was a hoax elsewhere unless President Corazon
Aquino's government draws up workable plans for taking over U.S. mili tary sites.
As part of the Pentagon's plan to reduce the U.S. military presence in the Far East, the United States also plans to turn over facilities at Camp John Hay near Baguio, about 200 miles north of Manila . July 1.
The looting began at Capas even before the Navy turned over the 690-acre installation Jan. 31.
It may surrender its five other installations to the Philippine government if no agreement is reached with current lease expires in September.
Sabijon said the intruders generally rushed in after dark in groups of 15. By the time troops had nabbed one group, several others would have slipped through and escaped with their loot.
Kansas man awaiting sentencing for murder
The Associated Press
TAOS, N.M. Prosecutors will ask a jury this week to sentence a Kansas man to death for the murder of a Springer store clerk. His lawyer will argue against executing someone who is mentally ill.
Jury selection is scheduled to begin today in the sentencing hearing for Gregg Francis Braun, who pleaded guilty to murder and shooting death of Geraldine Valdez.
Braun, 30, of Garden City, is a suspect in four other slayings in Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma. They were shot twice before the Springer incident.
During his August 1989 preliminary hearing, Braun stunned a Raton courtroom with his confession that he had secretly kept the information of convenience store, on July 23, 1989.
He pleaded guilty but mentally ill in April 1990 to charges of armed robbery and capital murder. Under New Mexico law, guilt but mentally ill does not meet the critical for legal insanity.
The alternative is a life sentence, which in New Mexico means a defendant serves at least 30 years before he is eligible for parole.
Theater department leaves Joliffe Hall gets downtown spot
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Theater and film majors have had to tolerate uncomfortable conditions at Joliffe Hall for five years, but that will soon change.
The University of Kansas has purchased a building that the department of theater and film will move into next fall, said Glenn Pierce, chairperson of the department.
Pierce said the Centron building, 1621 W. Ninth St., previously was used for producing industrial and educational films and has facilities that were not available at Jolliffe.
"The new building has a large sound stage and film editing rooms," he said. "We'll be able to produce and video production."
The building, although it is off campus, is accessible to students by KU on Wheels and is near a parking lot.
"It's a building that genuinely deserves to be torn down," he said.
As for Jolliffe, Pierce said it was scheduled for demolition
Jollife is situated east of Selfards Scholarship Hall on the east edge of campus. The paint is peeling off its walls and the "e" is missing from the letters that spell Judging's name above the front door.
Inside, classrooms are dainly lighted, pieces of the ceilings have fallen and windows are broken.
The new building has a large sound stage and film editing rooms. We'll be able to teach film production and video production.'
Glenn Pierce chairperson of the department of theater and film
Darrin Lile, graduate teaching assistant in the film department, said, "When Jolliffe is demolished, we are going to try to get it down on the road we can show people and say, 'This is what we had.'"
Lile said that although there were problems with the heating and cooling of the building, the students did not meet the needs of the students.
"We can't get a good television studio because of the wiring in this building," he said. "It is too old. I can't give the power we need."
Lile said there had been a sign in Jollie that warned people that a maximum of nine persons were taken to the hospital. The sign recently was stolen
Kelly Martens, Reno junior,
said that when she had a class in
Jollife last semester, there had
been no calls from the telephone
the telephones had been knock out.
"The teen phones had been taken out. "It's kind of like the forgotten building," she said.
The CLASS Award established by the class of 1987 as a citation for leadership and achievement in Student Services. It was designed to honor a full time professional staff member in the Division of Student Affairs. Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union and are due by 4:00 p.m., April 22nd. WHO CAN BE NOMINATED?
Division of Student Affairs
Dept. of Student Housing
Kansas and Burge Unions
Dept. of Educational Services
Student Health Services
- Student Financial Aid
- New Student Orientation
- Admissions
- Student Records
- Systems Development
Dept. of Student Life
- University Counseling Center
- University Placement Center
- Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
- Foreign Student Services
- Minority Affairs
- Student Assistance Center
- Organizations and Activities Center
- University Information Center
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10
Monday, April 15, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Animal research Animal Care Unit, regulations protect subjects in experiments
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
A small white sign on the door leading into the Animal Care Unit warns all who enter.
"Please do not: annoy, torment,
pester, plague, molest, worry,
badger, harry, harass, heeke, persecute, irk, bullyrag, vex, disquiz, grate, beset, bother, tease, tennile, tantalize or ruffle the animals."
Although the sign is meant as a joke, its meaning is no laughing matter.
"The animals are to be treated with every consideration and possible kindness," said Steve Kozak, a husband at the Animal Care Unit.
The care unit is home to about 4,500 animals, which are housed on three floors in Malot Hall and throughout Haworth Hall.
Frogs, turtles, rats, rabbits, cats, dogs and goats are all used for research at the University of Kansas.
Animal research has always been controversial. Researchers insist that animal testing is necessary to advance science and improve human health. Animal rights activists argue that animals should not be treated like humans, even a rat can sense pain — and that no animals should be used for experiments.
Federal regulation
Although the controversy surrounding animal research continues in other parts of the country, it does not seem to be as strong in Lawrence. The reason for this may be the fact that research on campus is regulated.
Korak said the care unit had never had any problems with animal-rights activists breaking in to free the animals or even any complaints. He said it met the standards of the American Association for the Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care agencies that evaluated an agency
"I don't think the public realizes just how regulated it is," he said of the care unit. "It's got to be by the book here. Our primary function is animal care. We're the watchdogs to animal research."
Research at the care unit ranges from biomedical to behavioral studies. One type of research involves a patient being placed in a room would be absorbed into a person's
skin if a patch were worn.
The care unit provides several services for the University:
services for the University:
■ It provides care to any animals that are used on campus, whether for research, exhibits or teaching. That care involves food, water, medication, sanitation and breeding.
It supports about 55 investigators from 12 different departments. Training and assistance is given in learning how to work with animals, and training of animals at RU is monitored, and guidance is given to researchers.
The Animal Care Unit regulates carefully what research may be conducted on campus through an evaluating committee, the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. KU is required by federal law to have a such committee.
The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee is responsible for reviewing and evaluating any research done on campus. Before an investigator may begin any type of research or even before bringing an animal into a classroom, the must approve it.
Paul Kitos, acting chairperson of the committee, said it scrutinized each research proposal that was submitted to determine if benefits from the team were greater than from the team and to make sure animals received no excessive pain.
"We bend over backward to prevent people from doing anything that would unnecessarily cause distress or harm." And this idea is that nothing frivolous is done.
To prevent that, the care unit must guidelines that researchers must abide by. A research request can be modified if it is modified to follow the guidelines.
Seven full-time animal technicians work in the care unit, and there are also two part time technicians. Six of the animal caretakers are certified through the American Association of Laboratory Animal Science, an organization that promotes knowledge edge in veterinary animal science. Several community service workers and two student employees also work at the care unit.
James Bresnahan, director of the care unit and one of its three federally required veterinarians, said the agency strictly regulated by several agencies.
The Department of Agriculture visits the care unit announced three times a year to check whether guidelines are being followed. It also enforces the Animal Welfare Act, which requires that all researchers working with animals, excluding common mice and rats, have training specific to the animals they work with.
The care unit also is regulated by the Health Research Extension Act, which implements health policy regulations and which regulates all animal research.
Community input
The care unit oversees campus animal research in another way as well. Its Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee has a well-rounded group of members to represent all sides of animal issues. It is made up of faculty, graduate students, administrators, members of the care unit staff, a representative from the office of research, graduate studies and public service, and two community members.
One of these community members is Sister Pat Lynch, an outreach minister at St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. She said she thought the University was a beneficial University resource in monitoring animal research.
If research is done for a cause that will improve life, especially for humans, then I’m in favor of it," she said. "I think I bring to the committee the common viewpoint of the health and a concern for life in all respects."
Stephanie Moody, Wichita state and member of Environs, said she thought animal testing neglected the concern for an animal's life.
"The animals are not choosing to be tested on," she said. "My own personal view is that we view our own human lives over an animal life. I think all lives should be valued equally."
Moody said researchers did not have respect for animals.
student and member of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, said he was unfamiliar with the research going on at KU. He said that animals were considered necessary, that which is done humanely and for a purpose was acceptable.
"They don't see the animals as animals," she said. "They just see it as another part of an experiment. I don't think they've thought it out completely. It just seems really lopsided."
"I can understand looking for a cure for AIDS or Alzheimer's disease
— those are commendable causes," he said. "But these really nasty tests some places have been doing, I have a problem with."
Aside from research being well regulated, animals at the care unit are also well cared for.
Scott Bailey, Lawrence graduate
Inside the care unit, rats are housed in plastic boxes with water bottles and feeding trays attached. Rabbit sits individually in steel cages. The 16 cats, many affectionately named, such as Black Burt and Jake, are housed in large rooms. The 21 beagles and four goats also have the run of their own rooms.
Animal rooms are kept clean. Cages, floors and rooms are cleaned twice a week. Each room has an individual temperature control because rats like it warm and rabbits like it cool.
The caring side
The care unit resembles a hospital, complete with examining rooms, an X-ray machine, operating room and necropsy room.
The necropsy room is used to euthanize animals, either by carbon dioxide or lethal injection. Animals are put to sleep for several reasons; if they become ill or suffer, have a contagious disease (e.g., rabies), they may be tested for analysis or the experiment is terminated and the animal is no longer needed.
Jennifer Bohannon, Ponca City, Okla., sophomore, said that she was torn between both sides of the issue but that she felt some animal research was necessary if it was justified.
"I think we should value and respect an animal's life as much as a human's," said Bohannon, who works at the Lawrence Humane Society. "I think there's a lot of unnecessary research being done, but as far as medical research, if it's going to benefit us and there no other means to obtain it, then I can understand."
Guidelines animal researchers at KU must follow:
James Orr, professor of physiology
1. An investigator must fill out an animal use form, specifying one of the seven types of research listed. They range from Class A, involving experiments that cause only minimal or no pain or discomfort such as injections or blood sampling, up to Class G, which uses unanesthetized animals and causes acute pain such as the infliction of severe burns or trauma. There is only one Class G experiment at KU; it involves socially isolating rats.
2. Researchers must explain the significance and extent of their research, and they also are asked if an alternative to animal use is available.
3. Researchers are given training in the use of the animal, such as humane treatment, proper care and proper use of anesthetics. This involves following the U.S. Department of Agriculture guidelines which are given in booklet form to the researcher.
"The only way we can get answers to the questions we're asking experimentally is to use animals." Orr said. "Medical care is tied to research, which in turn is tied to
and cell biology, is doing research on goats. He is looking at what chemicals lead to changes in breathing, and he said his research, as well as others', was necessary to advance scientific knowledge.
Melissa Unterberg/KANSAN
animals. It involves animals all the way from beginning to end."
Sally Frost-Mason, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, does research on frogs and axolotls, a type of salamander. She studies the animals before they develop a nervous system so they do not sense anything. She thinks this is an important part of animal research.
"The one thing that researchers have to keep in mind is that animals obviously feel things and have sensations," she said. "You want to do it so you cause them no pain or the least amount possible."
Unit seeks knowledge
The search for information is what the Animal Care Unit is concerned about. Bresnahan said.
"We're to use animals to obtain information, not to torture animals," he said. "We want a drug tested on animals before on people."
Shawn Nasseri, Lawrence senior is president of the KU Bioethics club which discusses ethical issues in the modern biological society. Member have discussed the importance o animal research vs. animal rights.
"Would you prefer a surgeon learn: a new procedure on your son or your dog?" asked Nasseri, who has done testing on animals. "It's almost impossible to do it without using it. It's effectively the only answer."
Carol Henderson, vice president of the Lawrence Humane Society, said that not only did animal research show that dogs are better cared for the animals needed to be respected.
"Every effort should be taken that animals are not suffering from excess pain and to make sure that animals are well cared of to have as normal a life as they can," she said. "It's always involuntary to get into an animal's paws, but our great contribution animals have made to the medical field."
Henderson said that the Humane Society was prohibited by law from releasing its animals for research but that she hoped animal research, when it did take place, was done as humanely as possible.
"The animals' future welfare is in the hands of the people, and we have to be wise in the way we use them," Henderson said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 15, 1991
11
Starters survive Blue's effort. 20-19
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In the annual Kansas football game, billed by Kansas football coach Glen Mason as "the first team to win a World Cup," the world credit for a near-miss.
The Blue team, comprised of non-starters, fell short of the first-string White team, 2019. Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium.
In the rule-altered intrasquad scrimmage, each team began offensive possessions at its own 30-yard line after an opponent's score.
"Some of my coaches thought it would be close because the motivation goes onto the second team," Mason said.
It was from there that the White team started the game and the scoring with an eight-play, 70-drive drive.
The biggest play of the drive came on a Chip Hilleary 32-yard pass to Kenny Drayton to the Blue's 12-yard line.
Four plays later, tailback George White scampered into the end zone from 9 yards out. The White's Dan Dodge scored on a long point, giving the White a 7-0 lead.
The Blue offense took the field but, as in the entire first quarter, could not get on track.
The Blue defense, however, forced three White turnovers in its next three possessions including an interception by safety Harold Harris and an interception and tumble recovery outside linebacker Bret Pomrenke.
Pomrenke's interception and
return put the Blue offense on the
horse.
Three plays later, Blue quarterback Fredrick Thomas scored on a keeper from 6 yards out. Alex Chafetz' point-after tie the score. 7-7
The score remained deadlocked until the White's backer Rub哥 Roben brumbed seven yards into the end zone with 3:22 remaining in the half. Eichloch's extra point gave the White a 14-7 lead.
Facing a fourth and 11 from its own 44-yard line, Blue wide receiver Ron Page launched a pass off a reverse to Matt Gav.
The White defense toughened at that point, yielding only a 19-yard field goal by Chaffetz. The White led 14-10 at halftime.
Football
In the second half, the 2,200 fans in attendance were sent searching for their rosters as some players replaced the starters and reserves replaced the starters.
Hilleary, a lock for the starting quarterback job next fall, finished the day at halftime with a 3 of 10 against the 48 yards and two interceptions.
Hilleary said that he had a new respect for the Jayhawk defense after facing them in a game situation.
"We've done the same plays every day for three weeks, so they knew what we were doing," he said. "But IU has been fighting against that defense next year."
With Hilleary on the bench, the White's quarterback chores fell on Nate Florle and Thomas while the White's backup played by Ashekri Preslog and Todd Cora.
On the White's first possession, the Blue's Pomrenke and Ty Moeder separated Florell and the football at the White's 39-yard line.
S six plays later, the Blue's Preston pitched to tailback John Flynn who rolled right and hit a wide-open Marlon Sanders for a touchdown.
Chaffetz' point after sailed wide.
Nevertheless, the Blue was on top.
16-14, with 4:09 left in the third quarter.
On its next possession, the Blue marched to the White's one-yard line, but was once again limited to a pass. The defensive goal that gave the Blue a 19-14 lead.
With 8:59 remaining, the White started with the ball on its own 29-yard line. Seve plays later, the White faced a third-and-one play on the Blue's 39 when tailback Tony Sands found a crease on the right side of the line and outraced the Blue secondary to the end zone.
Mason said the game was an exciting end to a very productive spring practice.
The two-point conversion attempt failed, leaving the White with a slim but decisive 20-19 lead.
"I was more of a spectator today," he said. "I didn't really care about the outcome. I don't coach 11 of them. I coach all 90."
0
White squad quarterback Chip Hillleary struggles to evade linebacker Brad Peebler's sack attempt.
Woosnam victorious at Masters
The Associated Press
AUGUSTA. Ga. — Tom Watson and Jose-Marie Olazabal gave themselves a chance to win the Masters yesterday, but they didn't.
"My cup couldn't stay full enough, I guess." Watson said. "I played well enough to have a chance to win it." He could do it. That what's disappointing."
"I played well, but I'm disappointed because of the finish," said Olazabal, the Spaniard who reached the final hole in a three-way tie for the lead despite having a quadruple-boyage 7 on his second-round card.
Watson, a two-time Masters winner, and Olazabal were tied with Ian Woosnam of Wales at 11 under going to the 2nd hole.
Oqalabaz, playing a twosome ahead of the other two, caught bunkers in the fairway and alongside the green, falling back with a bogey-5.
Watson siced his tee shot into the woods on the right, caught the trap with his second shot and blasted out 30 feet by the hole. It took him three putts to get down, dropping him into a tie for third.
Woosnam claimed the title with a par on the final hole.
Watson appeared to be out of contention when he dropped four shots behind Woosam with a double-boy5 on the 12th.
He sank a 15 foot pit for an eagle on No. 13, then scored from 8 to 10 feet for another eagle on 3 on 15, creat-
tion of the hole that remained until the final hole
Watson said he and Wooam waited 20 to 25 minutes to tee off on 13, giving him a long time to remember the double-bogey on 12 and to think he needed an eagle to get back in it.
"Unfortunately, I didn't think about 18湿度. "Watson said. "It's a lot of fun when you have to wait 25 minutes." "I don't understand," you just hit it in the sturdy water."
Jayhawks batter Graceland, 28-3
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
It was a long day for Graceland as it was pulverized 28-3 by the Jayhawks.
It was a long day for the Jayhawk players as they showed up at 9 a.m. to get the field ready after Saturday night's rainstorm.
It was also a long day for the person in charge of the Kansas record book.
Simply put, the Kansas-Graceland College baseball game at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium yesterday afternoon for a long day for everyone concerned.
In all, five school records were set and another was tied.
Baseball
Kansas senior Mike Bard's eight
at-bats, which broke the old record of seven set in 1983.
■ Kansas sophomore John Wuyche's five hits tied a record set in 1988 and tied again by teammate Jeff Westbrook. In his last Kansas State career
A Kansas team record 30 hits, which shattered the old record of 23 set in 1988.
A combined 42 hits between the two teams, which broke the old record of 39 set in 1985.
A Kansas record 23 singles, which bettered the old record of 20 set in 1969.
A Kansas record 27 RB1, which eclipsed the old record of 22 set in
1988.
One record that the Jayhawks failed to reach, however, was the all-time record of Jayhawk runs scored in a game. That record, 31 runs set against Haskell Junior College in 1984, narrowly missed by the Jayhawks.
"Dung, I knew I should have hit," said Kansas pitcher Eric Stoneipper, whose playing time has been added to the pitching mound this year.
The Jayhawks' dismantling of Graceland was their fourth win in a row. Kansas took two games from Hardin-Simmons University during the weekend and clipped Wichita State on Thursday.
Gibson picked on an 0-1 pitch and drove it more than halfway up the bleachers in right field for his first homer as a Royal. In the eighth, Gibson homered off Eric Plunk down the right-field line.
Graceland, a NAIA school playing their first game ever against an NCAA Division I opponent, was
Kevin Seitzer's one-out single off Hawkins got the Royals rolling in the first inning. George Brett followed with a single and then Danny Tartarau ball doubled to allow, allowing Seitzer to score and advancing Brett to third.
The Jayhaws scored eight runs in the first and fourth innings, five runs in the seventh and eighth and a single run in both the third and sixth.
blasted from the start by Kansas.
Kansas assistant coaches Wilson Kilmer and Brad Hill coached the Jayhawks from the sixth inning on Kansas head coach Dave Bingham left the game for a recruiting visit to Phoenix.
After the 'Hawks had established a comfortable lead, Hill said that he had only one concern.
The victory completed a 42 season-opening home stand for the Royals.
"I had a concern with concentration," he said. "We've been working hard trying to put confidence back in him." Hopefully, some guys got it today.
The Jayhawks, 25-17 over and 6-6 in the Big Eight Conference, will play Emporia State at 7 to tomorrow night at Hoopn-Good Stadium.
Sports briefs
From The Associated Press
The Kansas women's golf team placed fourth in the 12th Annual Azalea/Seaahawk Invitational during a tournament held Country Club in Hampfield, N.C.
The team shot 326, 316 and 314 for a total of 95, 10 strokes off Penn State's total of 946. Penn State won the 13-take tournament.
Kansas golf team ranks fourth in 13-team meet
Two other Big Eight Conference teams participated in the tournament. town State placed third, shootout. Missouri placed seventh with 977
In individual performances, Laura Myers tied for fourth with 233, Holly Reynolds tied for ninth with 237, Shelly Triplett tied for 21st with 232 and Laura Martin and Cathine Reinbiek tied for 37th with scores of 249.
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. — A 19-year-old basketball player was fatally stabbed with a broken-off table knife during a game, police said.
Lloyd Newton, of Queens, N.Y., was stabbed in the back with a leg from the metal scoreer's table at the championship game of a YMCA camp. The attackers, Niagara Falls Boys and Girls Club, according to police in Niagara Falls.
"The argument ensued about the
capt. Capt. Louis Curcione said,
"('One of the teams)' thought they
were getting gypped.
Brian C. Young, 16, of Niagara Falls, has been charged with second degree murder.
Fight over game score results in fatal stabbing
Andy Hawkins (0-1) give up six hits and four runs in the first inning. He then settled down, allowing 10 hits and four runs in six innings.
The Yankees loaded the bases off Mark Davis in the ninth inning and Jeff Montgomery relieved with one out. Pinch-hitter Mel Hall then. Montgomery down in double. But Montgomery nailed down the last two outs for his third save.
Royals defeat Yankees, 5-3
Gibson, who signed as a free agent with the Royals during the winter, hit home runs in the first and eighth innings.
In two starts for the Royals, Boddicker (1-1) has given up one earned run in 17 innings. He walked three and struck out four — including Hensley Meulens three times — while his career record against New York is 12-6.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kirk Gibson hit two homers and drove in four runs and Mike Boddicker gave up no runs in eight innings as the Kansas City Royals beat the New York Yankees 5-3 yesterday.
From staff and wire reports
Kansas advances after four-game winning streak
By Lana Smith
The Jayhawks finished 2-0 against Oklahoma (7-0, 3-0) and 2-0 against Kearnev State (8-0, 3-0).
Gormley said that the Jayhawks' hitting was not as strong as she thought it should have been but that the team did well.
Kansan sportswriter
said.
Freshman catcher Monica Gormley said the Kansas softball team accomplished most of its goals duri- nally in the OKlahoma and Kearney State.
"We won all of our games, so we can't really complain," Gormley
He said that Kearney State's pitcher was not overpowering and that Kansas should have hit off of her better.
She said Kansas had a tough time adjusting to the different pitcher's speeds. Gormley said the Sooner pitcher's ball was much faster than the Kearney State, when the Jayhawks found themselves waiting on the ball.
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said he was disappointed with the team's hitting even though the Jayhawks won all four games.
Haack said the lack of direction had come about from the attitudes of
"We need to be more disciplined and tougher." Haack said. "We've got so much mutual it's scary. If we are always very body going in the right direction."
The Jayhawks dropped out of national ranking after the Big Eight Conference Round Robin Tournament last weekend, and Haack said he would order to get back the team would have to put together a string of victories.
to be." Haack said. "We don't realize yet that every ball game we have to come out and play."
the players
He said that past losses had not been affecting the Jayhawks, but that they did not seem to have the driving desire they needed.
"We're not hungry like I would like us to be." Haack said.
Haack said junior shortstop Christy Arterburn and sophomore pitcher Jill Bailey played some of the games during games on the weekend.
The Jayhawks are on a six-game winning streak.
"If there's a positive thing besides the win today (against Kearney State), it's Jill's pitching."
Junior pitcher Shelly Sack's record improved to 8.0 after her victory against Kearney State on Saturday.
Freshman pitcher Stephan Williams picked up both victories against Oklahoma. She pitched a no-hitter Friday.
Haack said. "It was one of her better performances."
Arterbun went nine for 15 during the weekend, with five runs scored. She had three stolen bases against Kearney State on Saturday.
JUNIOR LEAGUE BOATING TEAMS
After the four-game winning streak this weekend, Kansas' record improved to 26-9 and 3-3 in the Big Eight.
Kansas rows well but misses tournament trophy by five points
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
It was a too-close-for-corcomfort weekend for the Kansas Crew at the Mid-Plains Rowing Championship at Lake Shawneen in Topeka, and Kan
Kansas senior Julie Dietrich said if Kansas had placed in the top three in one more race, the trophy would have been Washington University in St. Louis.
Kansas fell five points short of winning the regatta point trophy.
Despite the fact that Kansas did not win, Dietrich said that the crew did as well as she had expected.
Kansas Crew competes in a 2,000-meter race at Lake Shawnee in Topeka, Kansas placed second in the overall point competition.
Kansas' men and women's varsity four-person boats finished first in their 2,000-meter races, as did the men and women's varsity eight-person boats in their 400-meter sprints
But the women's varsity eight had a close race and came up behind
Washington University. It was a photo finish, and Kansas lost by less than a foot
Kansas graduate student Roland Wacker said the men's squad did better at the regatta during the
weekend than they did last year.
He said he was pleased that Kansas beat Washington University in both the 2,000-meter and the 400-meter sprints this year.
very close," Wacker said.
"All of the races we were in were
He said that the Kansas men's eight finished third on the 2,000-meter course.
Both of Kansas' men's and women's novice teams finished second behind Wichita State in the 2,000 meter race.
Kansas' next race will be the Midwest Rowing Championship in Madison, Wis., on April 27.
12
Mondav, April 15, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Rain, wind complicate Nebraska tournament
Kansan sportswriter
By Rick C. Honish
The Kansas men's and women's track teams endured low temperatures and misty rain Saturday in the Oklahomaoba region. Quadrangular track meet.
The Kansas men finished the meet in fourth place out of five teams with 69 points, while the team finished in third with 51.5 points.
Nebraska's teams won the meet. Freshman javelin thrower Amy Hirschman was another who was cold when the meet began and got worse as the day progressed.
"It itted to mist towards the end of the javelin and continued for the rest of the meet," she said.
She said the weather did not affect the javelin event because the athletes threw from a paved runway, rather than from grass.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said the teams performed well in the adverse conditions.
"We have to run in anything," he said. "If it rains at the championships, we will have to run in that."
Track
too "
Freshman javelin thrower Heather Berlin was not affected by the rain. Berlin extended her streak of first place finishes to three. She won the javelin with a throw of 155 feet, 6 inches.
The weather forced the jump events indoors where the pole vault team helped to pull the Kansas men out of the cellar.
Kansas was in last place before senior all-American pole vault Pat Manson won the event with a vault of $17.4\frac{1}{2}$.
Cox won the event with a time of 3:49.7. He was 4 seconds in front of the second place finisher, sophomore Mark Naveros of Minneapolis.
Freshman distance runner Michael Cox also continued to dominate his event. After competing in Antwerp, Belgium, in the Junior World Championships and in ships, Cox store the show in the 1,500-meter run at Nebraska.
Mathematics Department Placement Test
7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 18th
Is ACT score too low for the Mathematics course you want?
Are you in doubt whether you have the right prerequisites for
MATH 002,101,105,110,111,115,121,and 365? Then take the
Then take the
Mathematics Department Placement Test at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 18.
Call the Mathematics Department 864-3651
for a reservation and the location of the test
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ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ANALYST
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Lake of the Quarks Summer Employment. The Lake of the Quarks offers training in kitchen for waitresses, waiters, cooks, bakers and hostesses. Excellent salary and tips great work environment. Located in Lake Michigan housing is still available. Contact Frank
Need money fast? Make up to $125 0 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary. 1-800-695-2789
Need person to show apartments, answer phone and general office work. Full-time in summer with possible part-time job. Must have war and driving skills. Applicant should have Part-time and full-time employment. Apply in person M-F 10:00am-3:00pm. Alvarac Ramart Club, 4128 Palmview. Position Tenna Pro
PRESCHOOL, HELP WANTED. Substitute and after school now. Also summer part and full-time job. Child development or early childhood professional. Professional college wishes to hire babysitter for summer Monday-Friday 8:00-9:00. Excellent computer skills. Some flexibility if you have a summer class. Salary commensurate with qualification. Any weekends or leave message on machine.
RACING ENTHUSIASTS: We need outing information from our guests to help them practice in outdoor projects at a major racing facility in Topeka. Points are included ticket tickets, taxi fares and parking permits. If interested apply at Manor Park personnel. If interested apply at Manor Park personnel.
Looking for a few key people who are interested in making alot of $$$$
842-2863
Sitter needed for summer for 12 yr old boy
Alvaram area. Live in optional. Room and board
poured 749-3538 after 6
SUMMER-FALL PART-TIME JOB as personal care attendant for disabled, retired KU staff member in setting Sewing mature, bright clothing. Work 7 days a week, afternoons, and mornings. Availability to work during KU vacations a plus. Good job for OT, PT, or nursing home. Resume online or send resume to person or students with interest. Reliable phone or book required U. C. citizenship desirability. Some lifting. B42 18918 between 3:45pm-6:00pm.
- We need Cooks, and Cashiers
Local Restaurant 20 Openings
- $4.50 Starting Wage Apply Tuesday or
Apply Tuesday of Thursday from 3-5p m
Summer help - Local moving company needs guys and gals to pack and load. Pay is above average with lots of overtime. Apply in person at Caleban American Mover, 431 N. Iowa
WATER-SKI COUNSELS OUTFIT BOYS *camp in Berkeley Mountain, West MA. Good good quality boots, hiking pants, hiking shoes, facilities with 1 to 4 mile trails. Must love children & school. Call or camp. Wrap kit. Glen Lawn. Call or camp. Wrap kit. Glen Lawn.
The City of Oklahoma will be accepting applications for pool manager. Applications can be picked up at the City Hall, 605 Delaware in Oklahoma. Kamson 8:00 a.m.-12:00 noon, Monday-Friday
Warehouse and light industrial work. Reliable people needed with phone and car. Kansas City area. PC Temp. 816-746-4000
WHITER WANTED. Fice needs words, word texts. Photographer would like to freelance w/ writer.Human interest. Environmental. New Age. Call Steve. 842.3144
Wanted: ENGINEERING student with mechanical and home maintenance skills. Flexible working hours. 842 8546 or 843 5877, Roger White.
Driver education offered third Midwest Driving School, serving K-U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. AJI-7748.
225 Professional Services
FRENCH TUTOR Native speaker with degree Four years experience Reasonable rates Call 865-3223
DWI-TRAFFIC
JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vsas, senior portrait, modeling & arts portfolios
HB/W color Call Tom Swells 749-1611
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E. 9th Street
843-600
Thesis & Dissertations
Fake IDS & alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLF
TRAFFIC · DUI'S
235 Typing Services
der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubrics into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of etter-quality type. 842/360 days or evenings.
16 East 13th 842-1133
A better price for Word Processing Pack:
$1.00 space-per page 841.0778
$2.50 space-per page 841.0779
former Harvard secretary
$1/2 space-spaced page Call 10 a m 6 p.m.
Matt. Matilla 841.1219
i dollar per double spaced page. Runh jobs no problem. Laser printed word processing. 749-648. For Wood Furniture Fast service
A + Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. @ 842.7833
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841 5942 Term papers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Domna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications mailing lists. LaTeP审
printing and spelling assistance.
E-Mail: E.M.89-18, M.W.27H
FAST, ACQUIRE TYPEIN-30 16 per page.
Includes UU, DL and LDE anywhere in city limits.
Programs and Database Projects also handle
*Calls Max at* 847-3827
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 843-6256
k's professional word processing Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345
Professional resumes-C consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927/
Mass. 841-1071.
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call
914.200.3000
**10 research Projects!** Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file from coding sheets/questionaires. Call Key Works, 842-837-001
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer.
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8668
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
199 Trek 700 Mountain Bike 22", aluminum, excellent condition $60.00 new
exclusive condition $89.00 in 12 speed, excellent condition $225.74 - 641.13, leave message FOR SALE: Hamilton Hydrodraft Drafting Straws $29.00 new $25.00 old £5.00 obo call M F 8-5 841-7644 For sale to a good borne-米克 mix puppy
For sale to a good home-Cocker mix puppy
$30.00 841 2962
GOT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tents, camouflage clothing, weather gear
and other outdoor gear. CARHARTT WORKEAR Mon-Sat 5-9pm
WORKEAR WORKEAR MON-SAT 10am-4pm
Moving, storage and trash boxes Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities Walk-in welcome Call 843-811-871 for sale/service
Kenwood amps and equalizer, 8" subwoofer
Bazakos, JVC amp. Best offer. Call David,
865-4027
NEW RALEIGH Bike WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GAREE) 823-892-9146.
Nishihara Road Bike, excellent condition! Call Cathy
at 865-2948 if interested.
Pannett guns and equipment, cheap RPG books
gurps, Traveller, etc. modern, Aquaria and
filters. 841-6013
One-way ticket, KCI to DFW on May 16th. $100
obo. Call Kelly, 864 8117.
Technics single CD player, excellent condition,
comes with extended warranty, $130, leave
message 841-149
have a message to you!
1986/10 Toyota Supra, black with gray leather,
sunroof. 5 sdx, sports pkg w/ 4 mounted
18mm, Toyota Supra, black with gray leather,
3 spades, 5 spadexes, 4 mounted lights.
90mm, Toyota Prius, $1,699.16.
1994 Plymouth Laser RS, automatic, A/C factory
(U) player, SKL 15k mile perfect condition
(2) player.
1985 BMW 318i, 4 DR, 62,000 miles, sunroof,
stereo, AC, cruise $8,300 b.o.b Call 841-1876
message if not message in
18 Pontiac FIERSE, low miles. 32138 mgm, loaded, stereo cassette, 5 speed Call 841 5398 or 841 1441 windows
For sale: Mercedes Benz 100E 2.3, 185k, black
fall, tip full, 10.300 TLP # 865-8516
Hail Damage! Hot red cougar Convertible,
classic Call Chrms 842-734 evenings.
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill CHEE 843-3500.
360 Miscellaneous
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
On TV's, VCR's, jewelry, stereo, musical in
cameras, cameras and we. more. Wihon
Visa/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewellery
10W. 844. 709-1491
Lawrence Glass Tinting Special rates for students. Call anytime. 7am to 10pm. 737 E. 22nd.
841-7098
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: $CD.90 & up down. Records and
tapes; $2.00 & up down. Top dollar for collections.
Cat Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts 865-0122
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 HR4 avail available immediately Becky, 841-9277
842.7834 MWF 841-4341
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842 8971/643 1601
1 bedroom apt available now thru July 31. Big
campus free. Off street parking.
brays from campus $275 mong. Option for next
year. 842-901-1001. Leave message
1 bedroom apt available for summer sublease
Close to campus. $285/mo. 841-4535
2 Bdr apt available August Walk to KU or downtown. Wood floor, washer/dryer hookups. Water nailed no. Nets: $440 mo. 841-7047
2 BEDROOM AP1. Available June 1 with option to continue in fall 5 min walk from Union, Big bedroom. off-street parking, clean, W/D 460 mm UTILITIES IP1. Call 683-8923.
2 bedroom apt, summer sublease, Bradford Serenade, Available May 19th, Pay Only June and July. No deposit required. Option for fall lease. $440/mo (82-6621)
2 bp apt available in new building of West Hills apt. for June 1 Great. Apt. for August. Apt. for September, energy efficient gas hot, energy efficient gas hot campus. 100 Emerei Id. #4656 no. No pets.
3 bedroom/2 baths b townhouse for summer sublease at Sunrise Village. Available mid-May. No rent until June 1. $80 per month. 842-5900. Call 749-7658. rent start at $2.00. No pets
4 HR app for summer sublease. 2 w.bath, D.W, DWC,
microwave, pool, tennis courts, on bus ride.
Sunrise Village, Call Kim, 865-0625, leave message
6 bedroom house at 230 Massachusetts and 5 bedroom house at 1240 Ohio and 3 bedroom house at 788 Arkansas. Call 841-3323
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 10th Ohio (now construction) 1 and 2, BFR (Formly Villa Capri) * Sanders Place Apartments, 8th B-2 bath, a construction unit, BFR (now lath), B-2 bath, from all waders/wrappers (drivers) from Memorial Church
- 541 Michigan. 8px. lily 1x班. 3BR-2B-3R bath. All with washer/dryer/bright. Bath 1x班. Bath 1-2B, Bath 2-3B. Great prices. Call today. First Management 749-1568. Open house every Saturday from 12:35 at Braddent Square. 801 Colorado C. Office Home Mon-Fri 8am-5pm.
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower House 1462 Tennessee 749-0871 or 814-0848.
Available June 3, bore house 1800 block Vermont.
wood floors,窗 AC / a window/dry bookcases/
off street parking, dishwasher. 14 mo. lease
64th/ no. rafs 811-1024
Available June or August. Efficiency. b bedroom apts in nice older houses Walk to KU or downtown. $295 up. no p beds. 841-1074.
*Cheetah summer sublease!* $160 for large room in duplex. Chris, 842-7543 evenings.
Available June 15th the fall term or August 15th FURNISHED 2 floor b3 floor a/ w/balcony in private home. Ideal for couple or 2 women. Minimum age of 28 years Deposit and references required. No pets. Snorkmers preferred. $45 plus water and electricity. 07/09 after 6pm. If no answer call.
Check out Berkeley Flats, Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300 8415/ms. 945 821-216.
Available June 1, option for fall: a bedroom apartment with loft in Orchard Cottons. Spacious, beautiful furniture, pool, on bus route. Extra furniture free. 841-1454
COOL AIR CONDITIONED 2 bedroom apt. for summer leave. Accross from stadium. $340/mo negotiable. Comfortable for 3 people. Lease renewal. 842-202. Leave a message.
Coop们 been part of KU since 1991. Come join a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun, socially responsible, environmentally conscious, and family oriented. Visit House, 140 Tennessee, 794-891 or 814-694.
Delightful summer sublease. 2 or 1 bed. May August. Dates neg. air-conditioned Beautifully furn., close to campus, downtown. Very reasonable rent. Must See. Call 841-4533
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people). Clean and efficient, large deck. 843-3961.
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water paid, $23 per month. Available summation room with all utilities. Some with utilities paid. Ceiling fans, mini blinds, private parking, laundry facilities. Just one block from the train station.
From Embassy at 492 Third Avenue, New York,
Excellent Location on 1st Floor of bedroom
Broadway, WD hookup, CA. No pets, availa-
sse June 1. $360 At 1341 Ohio. Call
824-4242
Fully furnished. own room and bair. No security depot. $t utilities, rent negotiable. 843-2498
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice houseware. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more. May Call Ann. avernings; best. 841-4548
r emerate for summer sublease. Clone to campus.
Fully furnished. Oven and room, No security deposit, t us, utilities, rent negotiable. 943-288
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 broma townhouse w/ garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer lease. $12,500 t, utilities. Kerr 843-6962
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Female non-smoker wanted for summer sublease at Orchard Corners. Call Cristin at 844-162.
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 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, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
GREAT WEST GLAZE 2' BH. w/ microwave 843-4422
GREATEST KLEENSHADES 843-4422
Great location for KLAND and studio. Dapstie with gas and water账付 $1000 mo. Call 843-2116.
Great location. Quiet and close to campus. 2 bedroom apartment with sundown. CA, wood floors, no fireplace.
Phone: (843) 588-1200. $1,880. tombstones 843-4422
Hey KU. Med. students-move in 1 and receive $2 off your rent for two months. *Student, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments.* Heat and water paid *Arcs from KU Med. Center. Rainbow Tower*
House share: 2 BR, big yard, $187.50/mo. 414 Minnesota.
Call: 834-913-6842
Hey! KU Med. students Move in June and
key! rey1 you rent for your 2 rentments * Studies, *
and 2 bedrm apa1 * Heat and water paid * Access
* Heat and Rainbow Tank Apts. * 831-983-6063
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holiday? Sunflower Place has open 365 days a year and is a great place to make friends. 146 Tennessee. 749-8077.
Leasing now for Fall or Summer. 2 BR apt. in
4 Pix,12 month lease. DA, CW, DOC, 10 Campus,
off street parking. Low Utilities. Call 842-8784
Off for Trees or Leave message.
Lewarmin townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
available. New now! 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thus
May or June for 12 months 843-789-8433
Mackenzie Place Apt 63: bd firm luxury ap new leasing for August 14; yrs old, washier, microwave, dryer fan, 2 checks 1 year lease, no room rent. 6773 events, 8412 daytime. wkli 8412 daytime.
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF THIS SUMMER. 2 br, furnished, opt. for fall, May pd, cable, all sun. 843-4792
Nice, spacious 3 bdr duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, air W/D, hookup, garage, low utilities Avail in June. $450/mo. No pets. 843-2888.
Nice studio at 1032 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts. Water paid. 845-7272.
New leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom suite with separate appliances, including a refrigerator, central air, and blinds. Low utilities, pool and basal routes. Queue cost $150.00. SPANISH CREAT APARTMENT
New leasing and 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southbridge Plaza Apts. 185 bedrooms, £275. Bedrooms start at $35. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid. Renewed kitchen carpet. Call 942-1496.
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apres. Aspen West. Apts $30 for 1 bedroom; $755
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camu-
nage. Call 841-1960 or 843-1989
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. To rent to serious graduate students, upperclassmen or KU employees. One BR furnished. No pets. Room is located. Water turned. Water 8:30pm. 841-385-2 after 6 P.M.
Poolside 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Summer sublease available June 1. On bus route. Call for info. 842-8459
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU 841-6254
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom
townhouse with 2 bathrooms. $185.00 per month,
$ utilities. $41,282
Spal Yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apartment.
W/D, DW, Microwave, Sublease $395. Call
865-3837
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 1088 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid $0.84 861-682
SUBLEASE at HANOVER PLACE. Furnished one bedroom. From mid-May to December. Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4388 091-10pm.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2, BH 1/4, Rent and furnishings negotiable. Clear to campus. 865-7278
SUMMER SUBLEASE STARTING NOW 3, BH 1/4, Rent and furnishings negotiable. Clear to campus. 865-7278
no month. 866 Maine Call, Mark 744-1048
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Orchard Corners,
1-4bdm available, furnished, bus route,
clean. 8170/mo/person. Call 845 6290.
SUMMER SULLEASE: Beginning May 1 or June
-July 31. Four bedroom townhome in Survice
Wilderness 865-0106. No deposit necessary.
SUMMER SUBLASE: Spacious four bedroom, two townhouse, 3 available bedrooms, 2 full bathroom, 1 half bathroom, 2 kitchen, compact house, compactor cable, storage, low utilities, 5 pool, tennis courts, great location
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D Call
841-7645. Rates $250.00 msr.
Sublease two bedroom apt May 15-Aug 15 $34 per month. 749-268 or 843-904,ask for Jennifer
Sublease av. June 12, b. ceiling fan, economical
with rent in: 855-007-0 or 841-1092
*月季* 749-2818 or *852-3040*, ask for Jennifer
Summer and Fall learning. Furnished 1 and
2 bedroom apts. bk i from KU with off street parking,
no pets. 841-5000
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilised paid 1 kb from KU with off-street parking. No issues 841-5600
Summer leave with option to renear avail mid-
fourth week. Summer leave is $1490, dWery free. Rent $490. Call 843-3523.
Summer Sublease. Studio apt. Murpry bed. Great
Excellent score on campus at Campus
447.
Summer Sublease. 2 bedroom apartment.
Dishwashers, balcony, pool. $350/mo. Leave message. 865-251.
4.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 15, 1991
13
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2
blocks from campus on Ohio. 865-0807.
Summer sublease. Furnished one bedroom apt,
pool at complex, water paid. $225. Call Amy
863-967.
Summer suburble, Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
W/D, AC dachwasher, W/D, AC
B737mm, Cell F-404-292
Summer subseries. Spacious 1 bedroom apt at
Juniper Creek, 2 BR plus additional
W/D bookings. Brand new $275/month plus
$40 off.
Summer sublease. Two bedroom apt.-close to campus. Two to four people. 411-288.
Summer sublease with option for fall. 3 bedroom stu. do floridan.
summer ablease. 2 BR apartment. Great location.
Rent. Repposable. Call 847-8891.
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR, super location, great pool. Call 749-2813.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 728 Ohio Long.
lease optional. Call 749-7589. Rent negotiable.
Summer sublease. Nice one BR furnished 1m².
Apt. Ohio Gold, 620 E. Westview Ave.
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt, water and basic cable pool. Paid and laundry facilities.
$110/mo. Call 794 4235.
Summer subshell. Available May 15-18 May 26-Friday. Freshly prepared and located on south side of town near grocery store, fast food, and other entertainment. Laundry and cleaning supplies available. For summer anyone can plan a day for summer seating.
Summer sublease. Large 2 bedroom available in May. $175 each. Negotiable. Call 841-9173 for information.
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom townhome. Sunrise Village. Pool, microwave. $185 each negotiable. 749-2493.
Summer sublease. Large studio apartment
Water paid. Pool. On bus route. Option for fall
$275/mo. 863-5199
Summer sublease with possibility for fall. 4 bedroom house, wood floors, close to campus. 1011 Alabama. 843-1435
**Summer School** $1400 **admission** housework "United to
Arms" or Armed or Grate, GWU
HIGE. HIGE study for summer school
Available mid-May. May rent paid $275/mo
8:41-8:48 at 6pm
Summer sublease start in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-4871 or drop by 486 Tennessee.
SWEET SUBLEASE
2 BR apt. 1 block off campus, 2 floors, study area, water paid. Call 865-3800 and leave message. Best apartment in Lawrence.
THIRTY SECONDS from laudramat. Summer
subseason, built three 3 bedroom, b Bvailed
culsea, A/C, dishwasher, near campus, on bus
route. 865-0488
Now leasing for summer & fall 1991
studios -3 pools
1&2 BR apts -tennis courts
1&2 BR townhome -KU bas route
TRAILRIDGE APTS
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
9th & Avalon 842-3040
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
June or August
pacious apts. - furnished
and unfurnished
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
obious apts. Furni
West Hill APARTMENTS
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid)
1 bedroom ants 735 sq ft
2 bedroom apartments 930 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(water paid)
(water paid!) Great location
Great location Near campus
Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS!
Each apartment feature:
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas oven, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
1 bedroom $335, $350
2 bedroom $440, $460
3 bedroom $560
aFLLA
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 aunt
Sunrise Village Luxurious Townhomes 3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold 843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Quiet studio
Water paid
49
Close to KU bus route
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Studios
Pool
--apartments
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliab 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Low Security Deposit
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Boardwalk
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WRNKS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-729
1 & 2 Bedrooms
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Showing Units Daily 9 8484444
12-6 pm Mon., Fr.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
No Appt. Necessa
841-5444
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Affordable Price!! Office Hours:
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- 2 on-site bus stops
- W&D
- Unfurnished with
appliances
Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
S
Swan Management
* Gazebo
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
- Graystone
12:34 Dec 08
Open House M:F 1.5 p.m.
Sat. 11:3 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St
749-1288
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1 & 2 Bedrooms for Summer & Fall
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- for Summer & Fall
- large rooms & closets
- refreshing pool
- refreshing*
843-6446
2166 W.26th
- central air & gas heat
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m-5p.m
Sat.12p.m.-5p.m.
图象识别
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 Bedroom Apartment
Designed with you in mind!
--gone down at Naismith!
• NEW LOWER COSTS!
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
1-5 P.M.
OPEN DAILY
*1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
Sunrise Apts
HANOVER PLACE
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Place
& Apartment Living On Rue Boves
Sunrise Village
JAKE, I KNOW YOU
DON'T WANT TO
DATE ME NOW...
KENTUCKY PLACE
Open House Daily 841-1287 or 841-8400
9th & Michigan
- Luxurious Town Home
* 8 Apartment Living
6th & Gateway
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
--gone down at Naismith!
• NEW LOWER COSTS!
MASTERCRAFT
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansa
TANGLEWOOD
841-5255·7th & Florida
OFFERS
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
CAMPUS PLACE
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
842-4455
POLICE DEPT.
NAISMITH HALL. Living
Enlarged to Show Texture
The cost of living has
Living anywhere else doesn't make cents.
- "Dine Anytime"
- Convenient location
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Great social events
NAISMITH HALL
More fun for less funds!
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913)843-8559
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
BUT I'M DRINKING GOAT'S MILK SO I'M GROWING BIGGER AND STRONGER EVERYDAY! NOW. IF YOU DON'T ASK ME OUT TOMIGHT
Summer Leases Still
Available! Hurry in
To Reserve Your
Signs so Fell!
- Volleyball Court
O O
Space for Fall!.
Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
Women students: Want to live in a nonexist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Sunflower House. The home is one of the 140 Tennessee 749-807 or 814-0484.
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m.
Sun. 12-4 p.m.
$355 - $425
842-5111
- 3 Hot Tubs
4200
1301 W. 24th
by Brian Gunning
Visit Meadowbrook Apts. Wide range of GREAT
- On Bus Rou
I'LL RIP OFF YER
LEGS AND STUFF EM
DOWN YER
THROAT!!
WOULD
B O'CLOCK
BE OK.?
meadowbrook
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas? Visit Meadowbrook Apts
studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts.
2 & 3 bedroom townhouses
among a peaceful country
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Carports / Garages
Lighted Tennis Courts
True Pools
Laundry facilities in each building
Two Pools Laundry facilities
April Rent Free-Female room need 2m+
Share 3 room bedroom duplex-W/D,
microwave, washerwater, air conditioned garage.
Bedroom laundry. Call Lisla, Calis-
844-358, leave-message
Water Paid
Experienced Professional
Free Basic Cable
Experienced Professional Maintenance
MON-FRI 8-5:30
SAT 8-5
SUN 1-4
842-4200
It's Time to Step Up to MEADOWBROOK
430 Roommate Wanted
Male room needed. Duplex S.W. part of
town big room. Bed on rent, Repon. 842-4235
April rent paid. Female roommate wanted immediately. Share three bedroom. Orchard Centers. $195.00 per month plus 1$ utilities. On bus route. Call Amanda, 841-4479
A roommate needed for summer sublease. On bus route, nice apt. $150 a month plus utilities. 843-4780.
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626.
Female roommate needed to sublease apartment for the summer. Call 865-3971.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
home, share on trailer room needed for Fall
share on 30 trailer, own bedw, w/d, central
room, share on bedroom, rent $12.00/month plus u/y utilities. Prefer grad student or upperclassman. Annette. 843413 (3)
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share 2 bpt at nortwinds. Own room. Brand new. 487.30 mm plus utilities. 842.3571
Female, Room for summer (and Fall?), Share kitchen and bath. Clean. 1300 block Ohio, $129.
749-2793.
Female roommate needed to share a four bedroom apartment or Orchard Corners $132.00 per month plus 4 utilities: 749-5430
- Policy
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month. 749-5678.
Submit for summer/Roommate for Fall. Nice
place GREAT LOCATION: 849-9994
Help! Rooomate needed immediately for
spacious apartment two blocks from campus.
$475, utilities low, off street parking. 823-0730,
Melanie.
Summer Sublease 1. or 2 peppe (male or female) need to share a bedroom/2 bath at ORCHARD COUNTERS POOL. A/C, cable, on bus route. monthly plus $15. %{call} Incutes MA 841-2271.
Roommate needed in *b* house w/ DW, FD, FP 8148 plus *s* utilities. 8415, ask for DK. Roommate wanted: House bordering campus. Call at 749-2564. Rent $2,600 total. Call at 749-2564.
Two female roommates needed for furnished 4 bedrooms. Three boys needed for furnished 2 bedrooms. Starting August 19, Call Bisha of Sanaan at 841-4728. Two roommates needed to share three bedroom three-story townhouse for summer. Come to a cam-site at 841-4728.
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take checks payable to:
119 Sawyer-Hill Hall
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1981 Universal Press Syndicate
4/13
"Got him, Byron! It's something in *the Vespula*
genus, all right — and ooooweeee
does he look mad!"
14
Monday, April 15, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
GALA 1991
Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week
Sponsored By Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
14 SUNDAY:
8:00pm, 100 Smith Hall "Out and About: A reading of original play cuttings. Directed by Mark Nash and LeWan Alexander.
15 MONDAY: 3:30pm, Pine Room, Kansas Union "Madness Leads You: Philia and the Madness of Love in Euripedes' Orestes." Gay and Lesbian Graduate Student lecture series. Speaker Patrick Dilley, English Dept.
7:00pm, Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union Speaker: Lynn Shepodd, Executive Director National Coming Out Day.
16 TUESDAY: 3:30pm, Pine Room, Kansas Union "Teaching in the Sensitized Classroom." Gay and Lesbian Graduate Student lecture series. Speaker: Dan Murtaugh, English. Dept.
7:00pm, Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union Speaker: Suzanne Pharr, Women's Project, Little Rock, Arkansas.
9:30pm, City Hall. Candlelight vigil for unity.
17 WEDNESDAY:"Wear Blue Jeans if you're Gay Day"
Noon, East lawn of Wescoe, PICNIC 3:30pm, Pine Room, Kansas Union "Liberty and Justice for Whom?" Gay and Lesbian Graduate Student lecture series. Speaker: Tom Emerson School of Law.
8:00pm, Downs Auditorium, Dyche Hall Speaker: Holly Hughes. Performance Artist.
18 THURSDAY: 3:30pm, Pine Room, Kansas Union
Workshop: "Good Gay/Bad Gay: Does Coming Out Have to Include Political Activism." Gay and Lesbian Graduate Student lecture series. Facilitator: Liz Gowdy, School of Social Welfare.
7:00pm, Pioneer Room, Burge Union Speaker: Terry Tafoya, Ph.D. Psychologist and Family Therapist.
19 FRIDAY: 7:30pm, 100 Smith Hall Reader's Theatre: Short Story Readings. Directed by Tim Brownlee.
20 SATURDAY: 1:00pm English Room, Kansas Union KU Gay and Lesbian Alumni Association reception.
3:30pm City Hall to South Park Gazebo, Pride Parade and rally, followed by Picnic, 4:30pm- 6:30pm.
9:00pm-2:00am, Party Room, Burge Union GALA Week '91 Dance.
GALA Week '91 is co-sponsored by the Art Department, Native American Students Association Psychology Department, School of Social Welfare, Student Assistance Center (SAC), Student Senate Minority Affairs Committee, Students Concerned About Discrimination (SCAD), Women's Student Union (WSU) and the Women's Studies Program.
√
VOL 101, No. 132
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810.
Band, cloggers cheer taxpayers
NEW VENDING EQUIPMENT FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
ENVELOPES - POST CARDS - STAMP BOOKLETS - COILS
provided musical entertainment for people trying to beat the IRS midnight deadline.
The Barnstorm Cloggers entertain tax filers at the U.S. Post Office, 645 Vermont St. The Alfard Packer Memorial String Band
Slow filers entertained at post office
By Benjamin W. Allen Kansan staff writer
Tax titfers who dashed into the post office moments before midnight were cheered by the audience of a local band and dance group that entertained the near-tardy taxpayers.
Lawrence's main branch of the U.S. Post Office, 645 Vermont St., rang with the sounds of the Alfred Packer Memorial String Band and the Barnstorm Cloggers as it stayed open until midnight to accommodate taxpayers who waited until the last possible moment.
Bill Reynolds, Lawrence postmaster, said that 3,000 to 4,000 tax forms were mailed at the post office between 5:30 p.m. to midnight yesterday and that taxpayers might benefit because of the bond and dangers.
"It certainly makes it exciting and entertaining around here," he said. "It releases the tension."
Some people came in simply to mail their tax forms and others took a pile of documents tucked under their arms and with burrowed brows.
Phillip Wells, professor of botany and systematics and ecology, was one of the last people to file. He handed Reynolds his tax forms as Reynolds was locking up the post office.
Wells said filling out the forms and tending to last minute details, such as photocopying the forms, always took longer than he thought.
Wells, who does not expect a refund from the IRS, said, "You might as well hold on to it as long as possible."
Jay Smith, Lawrence resident,
said his taxes this year were complicated because he had started his business and purchased a home last year.
"I had about eight sheets in the envelope, and I still didn't have everything I needed," he said. "So I just turned the sheet over
wrote, "To whom it may concern:
This is what I'm trying to do, so give me a break."
"I don't think they'll throw me in jail or anything, since they know where I live."
Mindy Kuti, Lawrence graduate student, mailed her tax forms at 11:30 p.m.
"Plenty of time," she said. "I
thought if I ignored it long enough it would go away."
Steve Mason, one of the members of the band, said the idea of playing in the post office April 15 came to him five years ago when he felt a letdown after mailing his tax forms — and then there was no party.
The next year he decided to have
a jam session in the post office.
"We thought they would throw us out, but everybody seemed to like it," he said. "In an article written about it the next year, the postmaster said he hoped the band that plued would come back."
with food for any adventurous tax
filer who wanted to brave wild boar
chili and a side dish of opossum
fingers.
The carnival-like atmosphere was enhanced when Mike Coffman, the band's "personal chef," arrived
Reynolds said, "Whether it's good or bad, it shows we can make a party out of anything. Even something as distasteful as paying your taxes can be fun if you put your mind to it."
U.S. citizens may think their accounts are paid, but they must still work 23 days to satisfy state, local tax agents
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The average U.S. citizen, who just settled accounts with Uncle Sam for 1990, will have to work 23 more days to pay the taxes and local tax collectors this year, the Tax Foundation said yesterday.
Tax Freedom Day — the mythical date on which the average person has earned enough to pay all tax obligations for the year — will fall this year on May 8, the foundation's date is three days later than last year.
The foundation blamed the later date on last year's deficit-reduction tax increase, the Jan. 1 boost in the amount of wages subject to Social Security tax, sharp increases in local and local taxes and the recession.
"Stated simply, tax increases will
'Sited simply, tax increases will easily outpace the growth in individuals' income during 1991. Income is likely to rise by only 3.7 percent this year, while the total tax take is expected to increase by 6.6 percent.'
easily outpace the growth in individuals' income during 1991, "foundation economists concluded. Income is likely to rise by only 3.7 percent this year, while the total tax take is expected to increase by 6.6 percent.
Don't look for quick relief in the trend.
Tax Foundation Economists
"The combined pressures of a persistent federal budget deficit, demands to expand funding for new and existing programs, budget crises in numerous states and the slowdown in income growth could have a devastating effect later on our calendars in future years." the foundation said.
As recently as 1848, Tax Freedom Day fell on April 28 — the same date in 1970. In 1930, the earliest year for which figures are available, workers would have earned enough on Feb. 13 to pay the tax collector and begin working for themselves the rest of the year.
hours and 49 minutes of each eight-hour day this year to pay taxes, an increase of five minutes from last year. The federal tax share of that is one hour and 50 minutes, a three-minute increase.
The private foundation's figures assume that individuals pay all taxes, including those actually collected from corporations.
In terms of time spent, the average worker will have to toil for two
By comparison, the foundation said, the cost of maintaining a home is down to hour and 23 minutes, a drop of three minutes from last week's rate. The company will require 57 minutes a day, one minute less than last year.
Health care will take 46 minutes, up two minutes. Transportation took a 38-minute bite, one minute less than last year. Recreation held steady at 24 minutes, clothing dropped from 24 to 23 minutes, and all other expenses, including contributions and education, declined by a minute a day to 40 minutes.
Time worked until Tax Freedom Day grows;
120 In days
100
128 days
80
67 days
40
20
0
'40 '50 '60 '70 '80 '90
Average number of days worked to pay off state, federal taxes:
SOURCE: Tax Foundation
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/JUDY TREIBLE
Appraiser's resignation astonishes commission
Promise to end reappraisal problems is cited by Gordon
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
County Appraiser Don Gordon announced his resignation yesterday morning, saying that he was unable to live up to the promise that problems with reappraisal would never occur again.
Gordon surprised Douglas County Commissioners with his announcement just minutes before the commission convened to begin an internal audit of the county's reappraisal program.
Gordon said he would continue to help the commission with the audit until he left May 4. But a promise made by Commissioner Mike Amyx to angry taxpayers last week made him change his position, remain as county appraiser, he said.
"Reapraisal is a constant," he
claims in the statement "Property
values are not."
"A promise that 'this will never happen again' has been made by Commissioner Amyx. It has appeared in print at least five times this past week. This promise by Commissioner Amyx cannot be kept, and I cannot help Commissioner Amyx keep it.
"I'm not concerned about the audits. But I cannot, in good conscience, remain in this position under a promised threat."
Since the county mailed appraisal notices to property owners April 4, Gordon has taken the heat for inflated property valuations and errors in the county appraisal program. When irate taxpayers packed the county commission chambers Wednesday night to complain about their appraisals, many called for Gordon's resignation.
Gordon, who has been county appraiser since 1978, will use his remaining vacation time beginning May 4 and will resign officially July
"I apologize that Don feels like he's not able to finish this task," he said. "This isn't the way to fix the problem."
Commissioner Mark Buhler said he was disappointed that Gordon had resigned, despite problems within the apraoiral program.
Commissioner Louie McEhlaney, who learned of Gordon's decision only minutes before the announcement, said that the problems that had occurred during the appraisal process exclusively to the county or to Gordon.
"I know that Don is doing this not only for himself but for the benefit of the county," he said. "But Douglas county in the state have problems."
McElhaney said he hoped Gordon's resignation would not slow the investigation of the appraisal program.
"We will be shorthanded in that probably, now that Don is leaving," he said.
But Commissioner Amyx said he did not think the audit would be slowed because of Gordon's resignation. The most important factor in the good communication among county officials and property owners, he said.
"The comment I made the other evening "I stand behind," he said. "I think the mistakes made are correctable."
Election panel listens to Senate campaign complaints
Kansan staff writer
Bv Michael Christie
The Student Senate elections are over, but both Facts and Impact coalition members cannot rest easily yet because the elections will be won by one of the campaign violations by both coalitions.
The commission heard three complaints against Facts last night that the commission considered to be major campaign violations. Seven major complaints have been filed against Facts, and two have been filed against Impact
Major violations could result in candidates being barred from holding office in Senate.
Two of the complaints against Facts involve distribution of alcohol on campus. The other deals with improper use of campaign
Ann Spikes, Hugoton sophomore, filed the first complaint. She said that March 30, the kung of the KU-North Carolina game, Jason McIntosh, then presidential candidate, gave her a beer in front of Wescoe Hall and talked about the campaign.
posters.
It is a violation of election rules for a candidate to campaign while distributing audits.
"He looked at me. He said, 'Remember Facts,' Spikes said.
Spikes said she had worked on the Impact campaign. She is a minor.
McIntosh said he did not give a beer to Spikes
He said he was holding a 12-pack of beer at Wescop for a friend.
"I was carrying it for her through the
crowd." he said. "I am underage."
He said he gave beer to several people on campus that night.
McIntosh said that he was wearing a Factis button and that he did discuss the campaign
Another complaint involving the same incident, filed by elections commission member Eugene Montes, involves a rule in the elections code that states that campaign activities must conform to applicable local and state laws.
It is a misdemeanor for a person under the
itage of 21 to possess, consume or distribute
alcohol.
Paula Zimmermann, Arlington Heights,
ill., junior, said McIntosh was holding the
beer for her. She also said that she was a
minor and that McIntosh gave her beers that
"If you believe there is a violation of the law, you need to contact the police." he said
she handed out.
Robertson said the commission should not have the authority to deal with the issue.
"I also know that everyone was drinking that night."
John Robertson, Lawrence graduate student and a member of the Facts coalition, said he was troubled by the allegations.
"We have the testimony of a person who is at least indirectly involved with Impact," he said. "I know who I believe, but then I've been working closely with them for a while."
In another complaint filed, Curt Wingearman, commission chairperson, alleged that Facts committed a major violation by displaying Facts campaign posters in cars.
McIntosh said he thought his freedom of speech was being violated by the order.
Weingearn said he was concerned that Facts members did not attempt to take down the signs after they were told to do so.
The elections commission is scheduled to continue hearings at 5 p.m. today in the Kansas Union.
The commission will address the major complaints against Impact after it is finished hearing those filed against Facts. It will hear major complaints against both coalitions last.
Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said there had been 15 to 25 minor complaints filed against Impact and 70 to 90 minor complaints filed against Facts.
2
Tuesday, April 16, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
SUNSHINE
TODAY
Sunny
HI:77°
LO:47°
59/44
72/31
68/51
86/64
59/44
69/45
67/43
72/31
68/51
86/64
85/69
69/45
67/43
85/69
Today's Forecas
Sunny and warm continuing through the week. Cooler with rain expected by the weekend. High 77/ Low 47.
Salina
74/48
KC
Dodge City
78/45
72/52
Wichita
79/53
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
3-day Forecast
Wednesday - Partly cloudy.
High 76/ Low 44.
Thursday - Cloudy and warm High 74/ Low 41.
Friday - Partly cloudy with increasing clouds. High 69/ Low 45
forecast by Mike Schwerl
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 16, 1991
Campus/Area
3
Finney creates project to find solutions
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A new partnership was introduced at the Statehouse yesterday.
Gov. Joan Finney and Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Board of Regents, will work together on a project called "Creating Tomorrow."
The $50,000 to $75,000 project will be financed exclusively through private industry and will focus on developing solutions to social, educational
and economic problems in Kansas.
The solutions would then be integ- nated into state policy by the Legis- lature
"We can rely on the reservoir of talent at Regents institutions, as well as other colleges and community institutions." Mr. Finney cited bated debate," Finney said. "These faculties will draw upon the state's vast individual and group expertise
Koplik will appoint six task forces to address as many problem areas, which he outlined. These areas are education, health care, social issues, economic development, telecommunications and quality of life.
Finney said that by increasing the high school graduation rate from 82.5 percent to 90 percent, the state could achieve a higher economic growth of more than $109 million.
said. "This project will only be successful if we are able to tap into the network of talent in Kansas that resides throughout the state."
"The essence of our collaboration will be formed around a nucleus of Regents-faculty participation," he
Kopik added that although the task forces mainly would be made up of university faculty and organizational leaders from throughout the state, anyone who wished to share ideas with a task force would be free to do so.
Finney, who originally was going to wait until the end of the session in line 4, has been asked to
from across the state for the project persuaded her to implement it immediately.
She also promised that the plan would produce results and not be a repeat of similar, unsuccessful projects enacted by past governors.
"It will not be a duplication of past efforts," she said. "But we will use the resources of the past. They will not be wasted. I want to see progress from the task forces in seven weeks."
PENNESOLA
Joan Finney
Universities' health educators assemble
College health advisers exchange ideas;
College health advisers exchange ideas; next year's conference will be here
By Army French
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
Health educators from five Big Eight schools came together last week to share ideas about how to improve their programs.
The first Big Eight Health Education Conference was Thursday and Friday in Manhattan. It now will be an annual event.
The conference was organized by Janine Demo, coordinator of the health education department at Watkins Memorial Health Center, and director of the health education department at Kansas State University.
Demo said she and Burke had exchanged ideas about health education before and then began to wonder if universities in the region were doing
Health education directors from the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University and Iowa State University also attended. Letters were sent to all Big Eight schools, she said.
"We got together and talked about health education on college campuses," Demo said. "I found out we have a pretty good system. Our peer adviser program is very strong compared to other Big Eight schools."
Jim Strobi, director of Watkins,
said that he was pleased with the
results of the conference but that because of cost not all of Watkins' departments would be able to attend such conferences.
"I'm very delighted. It looks like we're right on track," he said. "Education is a different concept that needs to feed on others' ideas."
To help each other with ideas, the participants of the conference brought information packets about their own departments. Demo said.
"We all learned from each other by sharing suggestions," she said. "We're all in the same boat together, with somebody needy what we do?"
One thing Demo said all the participants wanted to do was get students more involved with health education
"Student involvement is very important in health education." Demo said. "You've got to keep in touch with the students."
"I think it's really great they're offering an alternative" she said.
A non-alcohol bar in K-State's student union also caught Demo's attention. She said she hoped that the same thing could be done at KU because it allowed students to have a drink in their dorm room, or regular bar but without the alcohol.
next year's conference is planned
for April and will be at KU, Demi
toil.
100
Michelle L. My
William Vivian, Lawrence senior, does push-ups for the Marine Corps team in the KROT quadathalon. Teams from the Navy,
Army, Air Force and Marines did push-ups, sit-ups, pun-ups,
standing broad jumps and a three-mile run yesterday.
KU ROTC branches battle in quadathalon
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The best of the best.
In the Armed Forces, the best is determined by pitting muscle against muscle.
The first KU ROTC quadathalon championship was conducted yesterday and determined who was the best of the best.
The most physically fit cadets from the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine branches of KU ROTC competed at Allen Field House.
Capt. Jeff Wolf, professor of military science who organized the event, said the winning team would receive a traveling trophy that stated "The Best of the Best."
"It'll give whomever wins bragging rights for a year," he said.
Marines get the bragging rights this year The Marine cadets proved to be the best of the best.
Maj. Steve Johnson, professor of military science, said Army ROTC organized most of the event
tion " he said
Johnson said the most stringent exercise from each service was chosen for the competition. Navy st-ups, Army push-ups, Marine pull-ups. Air Force standing broad knees were used to determine cadet fitness.
"We were looking for ways to
camaraderie in the
services at www.jayp.com.
Six cadets and one alternate from each branch of the service competed in the quadathalon.
because we're doing exercises from other branches that I'm not used to," he said.
Mike Schlotterback, Mankato junior, competed for Air Force ROTC.
Capt. Shannon Butler, Naval professor, and Col. Jim Phillips. Air Force professor, competed against the Army as a graduate for the title of best of the professors.
"I can think of 3,001 things I would rather be doing right now." McGhaa said jokingly before the competition.
"This is harder than I expected
Butler, who said she just wanted to survive the competition, won the professorial quadathalon.
Students Against Hunger sponsors awareness week
Kansan staff writer
By Jonathan Plummer
The war that begins today will not cause death. It will try to stop it.
Tomorrow and Thursday, there will be a multi-media display outside
S six events will mark War On Hunger Week, sponsored by Students Against Hunger. The events will begin today with a table in front of Boise Hall, where the group will hand out information about world hunger.
Jay Cooper, president of Students Against Hunger, said the exhibit included oil paintings, charcoal oil paintings and wax sculptures at the Lawrence and Kansas City areas.
"There is a series of three or four pictures taken of Lawrence shack dwellings on the East side," he said. "I think he's like Appalachia, but it right here."
Although hunger was a topic of world concern in a few years ago, criticism and public displeasure
had largely forgotten the 40,000 people who starved daily.
"There are always a preponderance of people who are almost defensive when you try to inform them," he said, "which is really annoying.
"I don't think you can change people who are selfish in nature in one week, but if there are people who are not selfish at the venue to give, maybe we can help."
The week's other events will include:
A petition-signing and selling of T-shirts and daisies in front of Wescue Hall all week. The petition calls for the United States to use its power in the United Nations to gain univer-
sity influence of the conventions on the rights of children. The U.N. bills calls for all nations to respect the rights of children.
- The Hunger Olympics will take place at 2 p.m. Thursday in front of Fraser Hall. Living groups and campus organizations will sponsor participants, and proceeds will go to local
charities.
A 24 team softball tournament will take place Saturday and Sunday at the Recreational Services softball field. Both boys and individuals are still available.
- There will be a five- and 10-kilometer run Sunday, with T-shirts and other prizes for winners.
The week will conclude with a dinner at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center on Sunday. When participants pay $2, they will be placed randomly in a First, Second or Third World group.
The percentage of people chosen to be in each world and the food they are served is meant to represent the plight of people of that economic position.
For example, the 70 percent in the Third World will eat rice and water, while the 10 percent in the First will have a large meat and vegetable plate. The 20 percent in the Second World will eat meat soup.
Gays and lesbians could dispel myths by coming out of closet, speaker says
By Patricia Rojas Kansan staff writer
When people question Lynn Shepddd about the ring she wears, she does not give them the roundabout
"I am gay, and the woman I live with and I exchanged rings," she once told a passenger during an airplane flight.
"The color goes off their face," she said in describing the reactions her honest response often triggers, or helps to consciousness and they are fine."
Sheppold, a resident of Los Angeles and executive director of National Coming Out Day, told an audience of about 70 people last night at the Kansas Union that gays and lesbians could improve their community's acceptance of them by telling the truth about who they were.
Her speech was part of a program Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is sponsoring for Gay and Lesbian Week, which began Sunday night.
Oct. 11 is National Coming Out Day in Washington DC. It march in Washington DC. C/o William H. Perry, Inc.
600,000 people gathered to demand equal rights for gays and lesbians.
Shepodd said the myth attributed to gay people frightened heterosexuals. She said many people viewed homosexuals as oversexual and irresponsible.
"We are irresponsible," she said, satirizing the view that some heterosexuals have about homosexuals. "We chose to be this way. I mean, who in the right way of mind would choose to be a pervert?"
Shepold also said that people were afraid that homosexuals would flaunt their sexual orientation.
To get rid of these myths, it is important for gays and lesbians to come out of the closet, she said. Heterosexuals often have these views because they think they do not know any homosexuals.
Shepodd said 25 million gays and lesbians lived in the United States.
als to communicate with their local politicians, Shepold said.
"It is mathematically impossible for someone not to know a gay or lesbian person," she said.
"We encourage elected officials to forget about us when we forget to come to them," she said. "They think we live everywhere else but in their own places." And the people who believe all the myths about gay and lesbian people.
It is also important for homosexu-
She said homosexuals had the ability to make a significant difference in society because they were part of social, cultural and ethnic groups.
Mike Sullivan, co-director of GLSOK, said that about 2,500 people at the University of Kansas were gay or lesbian. Of those, about 20 percent had come out of the closet.
Sullivan said it was important for the gays and lesbians on campus to build relationships and let others know their identity.
"We would be much more powerful if we could end some of the myths," he said. "If people could see that we're just like anyone else."
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4
Tuesday, April 16, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wolf Creek Plant
Incompetent nuclear power operators risk safety of all area residents; public should be informed
T the possibility of a nuclear disaster in Kansas came too close to reality because of gross incompetence within a nuclear power plant.
More than one-third of a group of 22 operators failed to pass a licensing test last year at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant. Federal regulators considered closing Wolf Creek, which is near Burlington.
The federal test administered last fall proved that Wolf Creek had the worst results in a 14-state region. Operators at the plant had a failure rate higher than the national average for the year ending in September 1990, federal officials said.
Five of eight employees who failed the initial test were retested by the company with federal supervision and passed. They are back at their jobs now. Federal regulators decided last week to allow the company to continue to operate.
How long Wolf Creek operated with incept employees and what kind of nuclear risks were allowed to mount are uncertain. But any risk should have been evaluated carefully long ago.
The public would never have known about the results of the federal test if it were not for the inquiries of a local newspaper.
The exposure of Wolf Creek's negligence displays the sad truth about the plant's standards of employment and ethics. The company should require employees to be tested at least twice a year. These results should be made available to the public.
The federal regulators, who are scheduled to inspect Wolf Creek again in August, should continue to keep a watchful eye on the company. If such gross inadequacies are uncovered again, more direct and punitive action should be taken.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
Peace negotiations
Middle East talks must begin with compromise
Since the modern state of Israel was created by the United Nations in 1947, the Middle East has been racked by instability and violence. Today, an opportunity for lasting peace could be within reach in the Israel and the Arab nations choose to seize it.
In the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War, the Palestinian question again has surfaced. This time, Israel has agreed to peace talks, but with very specific conditions that could jeopardize any meaningful progress.
The United States and the Soviet Union must participate in the talks. For that to happen, the Soviet Union must re-establish full diplomatic ties with Israel, a minor sticking point.
The United States and Israel have agreed that the Palestine Liberation Organization would not be allowed to take part in the talks, but residents of the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip would be represented.
A plan created in May 1989 calls for Israel to discuss limited autonomy for the occupied regions, the most important aspect of the negotiations. But if such an agreement is reached, final negotiations would be delayed for three years. Unfortunately, improved relations could deteriorate in that time, negating any progress.
Restoration of autonomy, although limited, should begin immediately but should be restored incrementally.
The Israelis also are hedging on U.N. resolution 242, which calls for Israel to withdraw from territory taken in war. But Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy said
that the resolution was open to interpretation and that interpretations could be discussed only at the end of the peace talks.
For any negotiations to be successful, the meaning of the U.N. resolution must be clear and agreed to at the beginning of the talks. Any disagreement at the end of the talks on such a basic tenet of negotiation could destroy any hope of peace in the region.
And there is already in-fighting among Israeli leaders about who will take part in the talks. Levy said that Israel would prefer to negotiate with a joint Palestinian-Jordanian delegation but would meet with an independent Palestinian team.
However, Housing Minister Ariel Sharon said Israel would not meet with an independent
Until Israeli leaders can resolve disputes among themselves, no progress can be made.
The talk of peace between Israelis and Palestinians is good to hear, but no sincere effort has been made to gain that peace. On the surface, the current plan for peace talks appears to be a genuine step toward peace. But there is no foundation for the talks yet.
No Arab nations have agreed to take part in peace talks. Israel refuses to recognize U.N. resolution 242. And Israel has yet to decide to whom they will talk, except for the United States and the Soviet Union — two nations that have nothing to do with achieving lasting peace in the region
Israelis and Arabs are solely responsible for sculpting peace. And neither appears ready to begin carving away their differences.
Rod Griffin for the editorial board
MKHELY
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NOW NEEDED : SMART FOOD.
Society should decide what to do about police brutality
Police brutality is a hot current topic that a certain segment of this society does not want to discuss.
When I asked about Black police violence upon white civilians he quickly responded, "It would never be tolerated." It can be safely said that this is a reflection of the major impact this country's police departments
So, for more than 80 percent of this campus's population, you can rest safely and soundly tonight because you do not have to worry. The Big Blue is on your side. However, for a smaller campus percentage, but a larger one, it might sleep with one eye open or maybe not even sleep at all. For you never know when you'll be the next Rodney King. For you innocent or ignorant, oh so
Recently, I was talking with a St. Louis police officer of 16 years. He spoke very nonchalantly about the double standards of racism that exist within the police department. He said he never could have imagined or would have believed the things that go on in the police department before an officer took becoming part of the system to be responsible for internalize the harsh truth that the system is not fair and for some, it just does not work.
Unfortunately, the "some" orch which it does not work, African-Americans, includes this officer. He said that he has to constantly tell new African-American officers, "that badge doesn't cover your butt." One of the biggest problems, he sees is white police violence upon Black civilians, which he strongly believes that nothing is being done to eliminate and he believes there will never be anything done.
YOSHUA SINGER
Staff columnist
Ardra Tippett
gently naive, sincerely concerned or shallowly unconcerned, and you alightly liberals who have Black friends but cannot recall who Rodney King is — even though the name sounds really familiar.
King is the African-American man who was pulled over by Los Angeles' finest for a suspected traffic violation and was nearly beaten to death with night sticks by four white police officers. Can you believe it? Nice, big white men with badges who are supposed to protect everyone, the men your teachers told you in grade school were your friends. There's just one thing your grammar school teacher left an, ever so necessary qualifying statement. "Only if you're white, boys and girls."
Now the Rodney King incident is one of those things this society likes to cover up or swears in an exaggeration. Heaven forbid the officer would do such a thing, he's our friend. This kind of self-absorption was what was on our side. It's all on tape
The citizens of L.A. even had the audacity to have a support rally for the L.A. police chief. They were holding signs that read, "We feel safe
No one can deny it this time, but they can try and qualify and justify it, and by golly, that is exactly what the police officer and the white citizens and their others and sisters all over this great land of opportunity are trying to do.
with you," "We love you." and "We need you." The entire audience was white
I feel like I am in Soweto, South Africa, Tianjann Square, China, a Palestinian in Israel or simply and sadly enough, just an African-American in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Detroit, Chicago, St Louis or Kansas City, all of which are in the good old city. I have been raised, educated and educated in a society where I have to constantly be on guard and fear for my life.
Heaven forbid I give birth to a son, all my fears are instantly quadruple. Please don't patronize and be belittle my might by saying you understand if you are not African American, because there is no possible way you can feel my pain, there is no way you can hurt me, say you feel bad when you read this and then put the paper down and forget who Rodney King is.
Each time that video scene is flashed across a news program I see my father, my brother, my old high school classmates and my present college colleagues I feel a mother's choke on my breath because I want to have a son, but I am scared to the point of frenzy.
As we discussed, I feel right now. I have the right to discuss issues that affect you and me. I have a right to expect you to do something to change the situations you cause directly, indirectly or by association, ones you agitate or just allow to exist.
It is also only fair that I execute
change 'by any means necessary' if
it is possible.
Ardra Tippett is a St. Louis senor, majoring in African studies.
Commencement organizers should find indoor location in case of rain
"C commencement is one of the most important events in the life of the
events in the life of the University and in yours as a student. This tradition provides a special occasion for students with their families and friends to commemorate the accomplishments of their academic programs," reads the commencement letter mailed to this year's graduating seniors.
A.
Despite the above declaration, the University Commencement Committee does not deem graduation important enough to warrant some type of alternative plan in the case of inclement weather. This year, if it is raining at 5 p.m. on May 19, commencement will be canceled. Not postponed, not moved indoors, but canceled. Those graduating may
Juli Watkins
Staff columnist
pick up their diplomas in Strong Hall. Talk about going out with a whimper.
After spending four years working toward my degree, I find this repulsive, inexcusable and cheap on the part of the Commencement Committee. The class of 1991, as well as every class before it, has worked hard for four or more years and put a stake in the institution. We deserve a graduation ceremony.
canceled in KU's history. In 1928, 1943, 1972 and 1981, inclement weather moved commencement indoors. Most recently, in 1981, the graduation ceremonies were moved to Allen Field House. This year's commencement booklet states that the field house will not be used for commencement exercises in the case of bad weather.
KU Information Services has no answer. The Commencement Committee would not return my phone calls for a week. It is difficult to determine if they are, but if they cannot be made aware, they cannot be that pressing.
If it is a problem of expenses, why isn't the class '91 consulted? A certainly has the potential mind power to come up with some sort of
The class of 1991, as well as every class before it, has worked hard for four or more years and put a lot of money into this institution. We deserve a graduation ceremony.
Commencement never has been
fundraiser.
The cost to open the field house for three hours could not possibly exceed $5,000, and if each senior contributed the bill, the bill would be more than paid.
It cannot be a problem of numbers. Although approximately 5,300 students graduate each year, only 3,500 actually make the jump to college and can hold nearly 16,000 people for basketball games, it can surely accommodate 3,500 gra
duating seniors and their families
Some of those families will travel many miles to see their loved ones graduate. But if it is raining at 5 p.m., there will be nothing. Not only will these families have come all the way to Lawrence for nothing, they probably would not have been aware of the possibility of cancellation because the University failed to make it clear.
This proclamation is buried in the
booklet accompanying the letter, and has probably gone largely unnoticed. The possibility of cancellation is not mentioned anywhere in the letter, and most students are probably not aware of it. Canceling commencement is a pretty big move, and the decision should have been more public. Not only is it a bad decision that would affect a lot of people, but it was not brought to the attention of those it affects directly.
If it is a problem of money, numbers or whatever, the members of the class should have been addressed a month before the month before commencement.
Perhaps we could have developed a more creative solution.
KANSAN STAFF
- Juli Watkins is a Praire Village senior majoring in journalism.
by David Rosenfield
CHRIS SIRON
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
Sketch
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 Jennifer Reynolds, Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Sollin Production mgrs. Rich Harshbarger.
Sports. Ann Sommerlater Kate Stader
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gai Embinder
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Christy Hahs
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Name should be typed, double-space and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNIE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and carnations. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 113 Staffer-Fin Hall.
you know, you really SHOULDNT USE THE EXPRESSION, "GAGE."
I SHOULDN'T?
NOW ADAYS, IT'S CONSIDERED TO BE DEMEANING AND SEXIST.
I'M GOING TO HAVE TO START KEEPING A LIST OF ALL THE WORDS I SHOULDN'T USE...
AFTER ALL, I WOULDN'T WANT TO OFFEND ANYONE.
AND WHILE I'M AT IT,
I'm going to start a list of all the books I SHOULDN'T READ...
ALL THE IDEAS THAT I SHOULDN'T THINK ABOUT...
AND ALL THE PEOPLE THAT I SHOULDN'T ASSOCIATE WITH...
GREAT IDEA; HUM?
you know, you really SHOULDN'T BE SO OBNOXIOUSLY SARCASTIC!
I SHOULDN'T?
I'LL WRITE THAT DOWN...
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 16, 1991
5
On campus
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have a "Vigil for Unity" at 9:30 a.m. at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
KU KWellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Office of Foreign Student Service will conduct a "Practical Training for Foreign Students" workshop at 1 room, Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor the lecture "Food Labels: Reading the Fine Print" at 1:30 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will sponsor a gay and lesbian graduate student lecture at 3:30 p.m.
at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
- KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
- Christian Science Organization will meet at 6 p.m. Call 749-5602 for the location.
- KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at the southwest lobby in the Burge Union.
- KU Chess Club will meet at 7 tonight at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
- Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove D in the Kansas union.
- Voice will meet at 7 tonight at 1204
- Dread Ave.
(The CLASS Award) - established by the class of 1987 as a citation for leadership and achievement in Student Services. It was designed to honor a full time professional staff member in the Division of Student Affairs.
Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union and are due by 4:00 p.m., April 22nd. Activity cards may be inquiries for the CASE Airport.
(The CLASS Award)
Only sitters can turn in nominations for the CL.
WHO CAN BE NOMINATED?
Division of Student Affairs
Dept. of Student Housing Division of Student Affairs Kansas and Burge Unions
Dept. of Educational Services
Dept. of Student Life
- Admissions
- Student Financial Aid
- New Student Orientation
- Student Records
- Systems Development
- University Counseling Center
- University Placement Center
- Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
* Foreign Student Services
* Minority Affairs
* Student Assistance Center
* Organizations and Activities Center
* University Information Center
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The University Daily Kansan is now hiring account executives and managers at all levels for the summer and fall Business Staffs.
Applications are available at the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Experience the real world of advertising and work for one of the top college newspapers in the nation.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Jewish Film Festival
"Sophie's Choice"
April 16 & 17
7:00 p.m.
There are still some things
we have yet to imagine
SOPHIE'S
CHOICE
Isaac in America:
"Isaac Basheus Singer"
@ "The Cafeteria"
April 10, 7:00 p.m.
April 20, 4:00 p.m.
A. M. B. H.
All showtimes $2.00 Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union Presented by: SVA & Hillel
--students on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office;
student tickets available at the SUA Box, Kansas
Union; all seats reserved; public $15 & 12, KU and
K-12 students $7.50 & $6, senior citizens and other
students $14 & $11; to charge by phone, call
911.846.3982.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents the
[Treat Yourself!]
D
Miami City Ballet
Edward Villella, Artistic Director A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
"...dances with expansiveness, wit, and speed... make it look easy and fun."
The Boston Globe
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 24, 1991
Hoch Auditorium
Partially funded by the Mid-America Alliance through the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Art, additional support provided by the KU Department of Public Awareness, the Waleboy School, and the KU Endowment Association.
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners:
Hallmark Cards, Inc., Payless ShonSource, and Saddle Mae.
{Step Out for Great Entertainment.}
6
Tuesday, April 16, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Elections for 1991-'92 sophomore, junior, and senior class officers
All applications must be turned in to the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union.
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Elections will be held Monday, April 29,and Tuesday, April 30. From 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.
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Kansan staff report
KU professor to visit Marshall University
A KU professor, one of five finalists for the position of president at Marshall University in Huntington, W. Va., and campus visit today and tomorrow.
Three other candidates made their visits last weekend. he said.
The search committee will meet April 23 and make its recommenda-
Under new management!
H. George Frederickson, Edwin O.
Stene distinguished professor of pub-
University Daily Kansan recognized with 1991 National Trendsetter award
Kansan staff report
lence in college newspaper business programs.
The Trendsetter is a national award that recognizes innovation, leadership and professional excel-
tion to the University of West Virginia Board of Trustees. Mitchell said three candidates would be recommended.
He said the recommended candidates would be invited for interviews by the Board of Trustees before a decision would be made.
Police report
The University Daily Kansan was presented with the 1991 National Trendsetter award during the College Newspaper Business and Advertising Managers annual meeting Saturday in San Antonio, Texas.
Other awards included second place for its classified section, second place for run-of-paper promotion, third place for training manuals, and National Sales Representative of the Year, which went to Christy Hahs, Kansan staff member.
A KU student's car window was broken between 2 and 6 a.m. yesterday in the 2000 block of Kasidol Drive. Lawrence police reported a snakekin bookbag and its contents valued together at $445 were taken. Damage to the window was $150
A KU student's unlocked car was entered between 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 10:30 a.m. Sunday in the 1100 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
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The University of Kansas COMMENCEMENT
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Caps, Gowns & Hoods STARTING NOW
All participants, including faculty, doctorate, law, master's and bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns, and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26. To ensure proper fit and availability of regalia, participants are asked to visit the order center IN PERSON.
Out of town commencement participants unable to visit the campus order center may reserve regalia by following the instructions in the graduation mailing.
Nation/World
7
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 16, 1991
World briefs
Sikveren, Turkey
Kurdish refugees leave Iraq
Kursey yesterday began moving thousands of ill and starving Iraqi Kurds from this mountainous border settlement to camps farther inside the country where they would be closer to relief supplies.
Reporterors on Iraq's border with Iran and Turkey said that thousands of refugees continue to flee from the country.
"Iraq is my homeland. I was born there and I want to die there," said Dia Sindi, a 17-year-old Kurd in this tent city of 160,000 refugees. "If they kill Saddam, I will go back."
Iraq, meanwhile, claimed that thousands of the refugees had begun to return home. But a Turkish official said the Kurdish refugees were "unlikely" to reach their destination and that their number could soon reach 700,000.
The European Community agreed yesterday to end sanctions on imports of iron, steel and gold coins from South Africa, the last remaining member state,ading bloc on Pretoria's white-led government
Luxembourg
South African effort rewarded
The EC, however, will continue to observe the U.N. bans on sports events with South Africa as well as U.N. embargoes on arms and crude oil from the country.
The foreign ministers of the 12 Western European nations said President F.W. de Klerk should be rewarded for his efforts to end the country's policy of racial segregation.
In Cape Town, South Africa, de Klerk called the community's action positive and encouraging.
Washington
Railroad unions may strike
President Bush tried to budge deadlocked freight railroads and their unions yesterday, saying a nationwide strike threatened for midnight tonight could severely disrupt the economy. But no progress was reported at the bargaining table.
Also yesterday, as part of the Bush administration's efforts to head off a strike, Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner met with U.S. officials in Washington to dispute over wages, health care and work rules.
Meanwhile, negotiations wore on toward tonight's midnight deadline, when a federally authorized strike by the nation's 235,000 freight line workers are free to follow through on their promise to strike.
From The Associated Press
Iranian letter accuses Iraq of violating cease-fire pact
UNITED NATIONS — Iran yesterday accused an Iraqi brigade of driving nearly two miles into its territory and said violations of the 3-year-old cease-fire between the longtime enemies were becoming more frequent and serious.
The Associated Press
Iranian ambassador Kakal Kharrazi, in a letter to the U.N. Secretary-General, said an Iraqi brigade crossed the international border Sunday and drove into Iranian territory near the town of Ghasr-e-Shirin, about 108 miles northeast of Baghdad.
The letter called for immediate withdrawal of all Iraqi forces and said the Iraqi government was best advised to find a solution other than the use of external enemy to race up with its internal turmoil.
There was no immediate Iraqi comment on the claim. Iraqi troops have pursued Kurdish rebels and refugees into the mountains in the general area mentioned in the Iranian letter.
Iraqi violations of the cease-fire in the eight-year war between Iraq and Iran, which ended in 1988, were becoming increasingly more serious and, in fact, quite dangerous, the Iranian letter said.
In the past three weeks, the Iranian envoy said, Iraq had shelled Iranian territory, concentrated Iraqi soldiers at international borders and extended support and encouragement to certain elements to launch military operations against Iran from Iraqi territory.
Iraq accused Iranian soldiers of abducting nine Iraqi soldiers and shooting at another in the town of Badrah on April 9. Iraq said that the Iranians later withdrew.
Officials criticize student claim of school admissions inequality
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — School officials yesterday criticized a student's published claim that African-Americans enrolled at Georgetown University's law school were less qualified than whites and said a faculty and student panel would review the matter. †
She noted that the author, Timothy Maguire, worked in the admissions office last year under a condition that he would maintain the confidentiality of information he saw there
The article in the Georgetown Law Weekly was "a misleading mix of opinion and data." It has caused considerable pain and anger in this community," law school dean Jidree Hearn wrote.
"Georgetown is striving to achieve Black student representation proportional to their presence in the nation's general population," Maguire wrote. "Since . . . only about 10 percent of its 9,500 students . . . are black, it is unsurprising that accepted Black and white students are also dramatically unequal."
Areen responded in a letter released from her office to the article published last week in the student newspaper by Maguire, a third-year student. He wrote that white students accepted at the school had significantly higher test scores than their African-American counterparts.
Magüire's comments have caused a stir on campus, in part because officials have confirmed that he worked part-time last year in the school's computer access to confidential information about applicants.
Law school representative Adrienne Kuehne
mann said the matter was under review by a panel of faculty and student members, with authority to recommend sanctions against Maguire, whose class is scheduled to graduate this spring.
One university official, who asked not to be named, said the panel had the authority to recommend sanctions including expulsion or delaying Maguire's graduation date.
Magure could not be reached for comment Telephone calls to the Georgetown Law Weekly, which published his article, were not returned
In his article, Maguire said his findings were based on a "random sampling" of student records.
He noted that among Law School Admission Test scores of African-American students who were accepted to the school, most scored below the median of 36 out of 50.
"The average white accepted student's LSAT score was 43. Of the 100 sampled white students accepted to our school's three-year program, none scored less than a 38 on the LSAT." he wrote.
A coalition of Georgetown law students has called for the author's circumcision over the article
called for the author's expulsion over the article. In his article, Maguire wrote, "The biggest problem (facing law schools) is that in every area and at every level of postsecondary education. Black achievements are far inferior to those of whites."
"The student is within his right to express his opinion," wrote Aereen.
"The tone, thrust and content of the letter are contrary to the entire spirit and policy of the law center on admissions," she wrote.
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8
Tuesday, April 16. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Retired professor still seeking answers
His 40 years of research on illness has been used worldwide
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Now that David Paretsky has retired, he can get down to work.
Gone are the graduate students who worked alongside the professor of microbiology. Gone are the grants that funded pioneer research in biochemistry
But Paretsky remains. A sink full of dirty beakers and test tubes reminds him that nobody else will rinse the glassware, prepare the Petri dishes, document data — all of the mundane chores that inevitably come with running a world-renowned research laboratory.
"If I have to have clean glassware," he said throwing his hands in the air to emphasize his point, "I wash glassware."
Don't get Parettsky wrong, though.
He's not complaining.
"For 40 years I was telling other people what to do," said the former chairperson of the department of microbiology. "These people were here for a while, and we were having all of the fun. Now I do it myself, and that's marvelous."
Paretsky's fun may lead some day to a vaccine for Q fever. His research into the biochemical changes caused by Q fever, an illness resembling biomware's Disease, has been used as a tool by immunologists all over the world.
Solving the Q-fever puzzle
Nearly 40 years of studying Q fever has made Paretsky one of the foremost authorities on the pathobiology of the disease. His laboratory is one of the few in the world devoted strictly to the biological changes caused by Q fever, a rickettsial disease.
"I refer to it as the Paretsky school of rickettsia," said James Akagi, chairperson of the department of microbiology.
"Before, everyone was asking about the cause of the disease, and how does one become immune to the disease. He came in and said, 'Let's do some biochemistry and find out what causes this disease does and how the body responds.'"
The Q-fever bacterium, first discovered in 1935 in Queensland, Australia, causes symptoms similar to influenza, including a dry cough, a
fatty liver and an infection of the heart that can lead to heart failure. Infection can be caused by inhaling dust contaminated with the bacteria or consuming contaminated milk or food.
Paretsky compares the continuum of his Q-fever research to a set of wooden Russian dolls: Just as the opening of each doll reveals another smaller doll, new theories are waiting to be discovered inside old ones.
David Paretsky, retired professor of microbiology, still conducts lab research in Haworth Hall.
"It's been a lot of fun for me," he said. "If you like to do crossword puzzles, chess problems, figure out what goes on in George Bush's head — you know, things like that — then it's an enjoyable problem."
It's a compelling problem, too. New theories and unanswered questions are what keep him coming back for years. He's also he officially retired in May 1989.
"There is always a new frontier, new things coming up that he would like to keep going." Akagi said. "I hope he works on and on and on. I don't know what he would do if he suddenly cut out from his research."
But Paretsky, a biochemist at heart, may never have developed an interest in Q fever had it not been for the late Cate Downs, a fellow KU microbiologist who asked him to collaborate with her on some Q-fever research.
"She was straight immunology and pathogenesis, and I was straight biochemistry," he said. "So she asked me one day if I could do XYZ for her. I thought it was something that would take a week of my time."
Today Paretsky carries on that research, and although he insists he is not interested in developing a vaccine for Q fever, his biochemical findings have helped immunologists learn more about the disease.
"Someone out there who really is interested in preparing some kind of vaccine or agent that will inhibit tumor formation can say, 'Oh wait, maybe this has something to do with it,'." he said.
"So ultimately they're inter-
terredous which is beautiful. It's so
beautiful."
A tight circle of friends
That was 1955.
The advent of Paretsky's Q-few research coincided with his appointment to department chairperson in 1956. Today, much of the KU department of microbiology on the seventh floor of Haworth Hall is testimony to the 20 years Paretsky served as chairperson, years he calls his best times.
"A lot of the current reputation of the department goes back to the leadership he provided," said Del Shankel, professor of microbiology who, hired by Paretsky in 1959, served a stint as acting chancellor and now is interim executive vice chancellor. "He was responsible for hiring the majority of the people who are in the department."
Paretsky, however, takes pride in some of his more modest achievements, such as the laboratories themselves, as designed with the student in mind.
THE DOCTOR
IS
OUT
"Look at the lab," he said in his office, an offshoot of the much larger laboratory. "I'm in here and they're in there, and there is no barrier that separates us. We talk about things. We have lunch together."
The camaraderie within the department goes deeper than research and studies. From KU basketball games to late-night poker colleagues and students are a tight circle of friends.
Shankel said it was just as well that the stakes in their poker games were never high because Paretsky was not a deft gambler.
"Dave was usually a contributor rather than a winner." he said.
He might never have won a bet on the Jayhawks either, but that has not prevented his success.
Once a "mean handball player" among the rest of the faculty, Parettskay said he now kept in shape by walking his Doberman pinscher, Stosh (Polish for Stanley), on his Eudora farm.
"He would try to get into the football games or the basketball games all of the time on a student ticket," Akagi said. "Finally age caught up with him, and he couldn't do that anymore."
"Or vice versa," he said. "We have
a good walk. I tell him my problems, and he gives me his reactions."
Philip Meining/KANSAN
Teaching creative thought
Stacked to the ceiling in Paretsky's office are science books that date as far back as his undergraduate days at City College in New York. Nestled in a corner, however, is this semester's Western Civilization literature.
"It doesn't matter what the discipline is — the creative thought is the creative thought," he said. "The top scientist is no more capable of the creative thinking than a humanitarian." One of Thomas Mann's books could be every bit as
Once a week, the scientist turns humanist as a volunteer discussion leader for honors Western Civilization. Discussing the Western world's greatest thinkers is not so different from his scientific experiments, he insists.
important as the development of the transistor."
But Paretsky's decision to be a volunteer discussion leader was not without ulterior motives.
"You want other people to believe like you do," he said, grinning.
"I've heard people say, 'Gosh, he can take a subject that's really complicated and bring it right down to their level,'" Akagi said. "But it's not that, because what he does is he raises people up to his level and challenges them."
Developing their own creative thought is what Paretsky tries to encourage in his students, both within and outside of microbiology.
Akagi speaks from first hand experience. He first met Paretsky in 1951 as a graduate student in his laboratory. Hired as a professor in 1956, he later succeeded Paretsky as chairperson of the department of microbiology in 1976.
Paretsky, who now occasionally teaches introductory microbiology and advanced physiology, a graduate course, said that teaching students was just as important as his research.
"If teaching ended up to be a thankless chore, a burden to justify your existence and that's it, where would the researchers of tomorrow come from?" he said. "There has to be a balance."
Today, many of the graduate students who worked with Paretsky have gone to other universities to explore new aspects of Q fever.
Meanwhile, Paretsky holds down the fort back at the KU laboratory where it all began. And that suits him just fine.
"Some people like to travel; some people like to garden," he said. "I don't, I like what I'm doing."
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 16, 1991
9
Jayhawks on verge of taking Big Eight title
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
An avalanche start in the Big Eight Conference race title has left the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams with their eyes on the prize.
MAYO MAYO
"With three matches to go, we're in good position," Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said. "For now, it's up to us to compete."
After sweeping Nebraska and Iowa State during the weekend, the women's team has a 4-0 record in the Big Eight with 29 championship points. The men are 3-0 with 22 points.
In the Big Eight tournament at the end of the year, all the teams' No. 1 singles players compete against each other on their home court to earn eight points for their team.
The Jayhawks earn a championship point with each singles and doubles match won during league play.
The points earned decreases by one for each according to the order of finish. The second place finisher has three points, the third earns six and so on.
The No. 2 through No. 8 singles
players follow the same format
The last time the men won the Big Eight was 1988. The women have not. Critically, they are.
However, both teams expect to add nine championship points to their total today when they play host to the Allen Field House tennis courts.
"They're very non-competitive in this conference, but it's not their fault." Perelman explained. "Their athletic department has decided to de-emphasize tennis. They have no scholarships."
Page Goins, Tulsa, Okla., junior, practices at the Allen Field House tennis courts. The men's and women's tennis teams will play Missouri at 1 p.m. today.
The men's and women's doubles teams will play on the six field house courts at t.p.m. with singles matches afterward.
Javhawk Notes:
In the recent Volo TennisCollege team rankings, the Kansas men's team is ranked 15th. Kansas senior Craig Wiley shares the 52nd ranking with Virginia Commonwealth's Luciano D'Andrea. Wiley and senior Chris Walker are
get a chance to avenge her lone conference loss to Oklahoma State's Caroline Delisle on Saturday when the Cowgirls visit Lawrence.
ranked seventh in doubles
Phelps ends 20 years of coaching with Irish
The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Six weeks after ending one of his worst seasons at Notre Dame, Digger Phelps ended college basketball coaching career.
Phelps ended months of speculation yesterday when he announced his departure from Notre Dame after 20 years of coaching the Irish to some memorable victories but never to a national championship.
"For the last two decades it has never been a job," Phelps said at a news conference on campus. "Every day, even with the ups and downs, like Christmas Day, where you opened up the present you wanted most."
Last season was anything but a present. The Irish, hit by a rash of injuries, fell to 12-20. He was Phelp's worst season since Notre Dame went 6-20 in 1971-72, his first season with the Irish.
Phelps, who led Notre Dame to 14 NCAA tournament appearances but reached the Final Four only in 1978, offered no regrets and gave no indication that the pressures of a losing season drove him to sten down.
"It's time to move into the next decade," said the 49-year-old Phelps.
adding that he would not take another Division I coaching job but was leaving open his NBA options.
The search for a successor has not begun officially, said associate athletic director Roger Valderesi, but it is expected that Xavier's Pete Gilenan, a former assistant under Phils, will become a leading candidate. Seton Hook and his son Duke's Mike Krzewzki already have said they are not interested.
"If there is any interest in Pete Gillen, I'm sure not Dame will use the proper channels and contact me first." Xavier athletic director Jeff Eppert are planning for next season with Pete Gillen as our basketball coach.
The Rev. E. William Beauchamp, Notre Dame's vice president for athletics, said in a statement, "Over the years his teams have provided lasting moments, which the university's alumni and fans will long remember."
Phelps, who had a 393-197 record at Notre Dame and a 419-200 head coaching record including one season at Fordham, said his immediate plans were to spend more time on his hobby of painting.
Phelps' son Rick, sports editor of
the university of Toledo student newspaper, the Collegian, yesterday wrote that his father said 10 years ago that he did not plan to be coaching at the age of 50 because there were other things that he wanted to do in life.
Phelps turns 50 July 4. His son wrote that he planned to spend time with a soon-to-be-born first grandchild.
Phelps leaves with more wins and losses than any other Irish basketball coach.
In 1999-91, the Irish opened with two victories but then dropped seven in a row. Hobbled with injuries, Notre Dame took on a schedule that included 11 games against ranked teams, seven against Top 10 teams. As the losses mounted, Phelps was regularly booed at home games.
Four-day Kansas Relays marks 66th year of event
"It was tough breaks, one right after another," said guard Tim Singleton as the season drew to a close. In Phelps' first season, Notre Dame suffered its most humiliating loss: 49-29 to Indiana. But he quickly revived the program and two seasons later, in 1974. Notre Dame broke UCLA's 88-game NCAA-record winning streak with a 71-70 victory.
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
When the gun sounds at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium, the 66th Annual Kansas Relays will begin.
The first event will be the Jim Bausch Decathlon, a two-day event that begins at 10 a.m. with the 100-meter dash.
The women's heptathlon also gets
with the 100-meter hurdles at 10:30.
The decathlon and heptathlon will continue through the afternoon. Final events for the two competitions will begin at 10 a.m. Thursday, concluding with the men's 1,500-meter run at 5:05 p.m.
John Brandt, professor of speech and hearing, will start the decathlon and bentathlon for the 19th year.
Brandt said he started many races
during the track season but looked forward to the relays.
"I am an old track guy, and this is my way of giving something back," he said.
The remaining events will begin at 8 a.m. Friday and Saturday. A 10,000-meter road race, open to anyone who registers, will begin on 7 April in Memorial Stadium. The racers will be divided into six are categories.
Kansas Relays manager David Kaiser said he expected more than 2,600 athletes to participate in the four-day meet.
High school athletes representing nearly 100 schools in Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Colorado will participate in the relays. Kaiser said that many of the athletes were state champions in their events.
better and they are entering with higher marks," he said. "It has pushed the whole field up."
More than 40 universities and colleges will be represented at the NCAA golf championship rival's Nebraska, K-State, Missouri and the Iowa State women's team.
"The high schools are running
Kaiser said that almost every event would have at least one exemplary athlete. More than 50 collegiate teams will be available on status will compete at the relays.
"With all these people coming in, the level of competition is going to be awesome," he said.
He attributed the higher level of competition to the fact that the Olympic trials were coming up.
"This is one of the first meets where you can qualify for the trials," he said.
Boston Marathon winner beats injury
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Ibrahim Hussein thought an injury that forced him to drop out of last year's Boston Marathon after 20 miles might end his outstanding career. Yesterday, he resurrected it.
In his first marathon since last year's disappointment, the Kenyan won the Boston race in a slow but steady 2 hours, 11 minutes, 6 seconds. That was 16 seconds ahead of runner-up Abebe Mekonnen of Ethiopia.
Hussein, 32, first won the race in 1988, but was fourth in 1989 when Mekonnen won. He suffered an injury to his left Achilles' tendon last year.
haven't competed at all. I had an Achilles problem. I thought my career was over," he said yesterday. He took four months off on his doctor's advice then resumed training.
'Since I ran here last year, I
"Not competing a lot helped me a lot, because I felt strong." he said. "I didn't expect to win this time because I have not competed in a long time. I wanted to prove to myself that I am still competitive and can still win."
Mekonnen tried to compete with Douglas Wakihari of Kenya, the pre-race favorite. By the time he arrived, he had not have it on this day, it was too late.
Hussein, who stayed with the lead
pack throughout the race before pulling away, was too far ahead for Mekonnen to catch up to him.
"He didn't go with the first group because he thought that Wakihiuri was in good shape." Mekonen's interpreter said. "Wakihiuri was the favorite, and he wants to watch him and go with him.
"Everybody knew where they were going to finish," he said. "I'm the only one who didn't believe what the
"He (Mekonen) blames himself." Hussein joked that runners read writers' predictions for the outcome of the race in the newspapers and did not have to wait until it actually ended.
press wrote, and that's why I won."
Hussein won the Honolulu Marathon in 1985, 1986 and 1987. The last victory came just six weeks after he captured the New York City Marathon in 1984 and won victory in 1988 and a second place finish at Honolulu in December 1989.
The winning time was much slower than Hussein's personal best of 2:08:43 when he beat Juma Ikangaa of Tanzania by one second in the closest Boston Marathon in history.
"I was the wolf her fusself"
"I was the reader self," he added.
"I was praying for somebody to come and run with me to push the pace."
Vikings kicker Igwebuike given acquittal
The Associated Press
"Finally I got a chance to tell my side of the story in court — what the truth was," the teary-eyed NFL kicker said outside the court while puffing a victory cigar. "When your body somebody else hands ... I was in hell."
TAMPA, Fla. - Minnesota Vikings kicker Donald Inglewike was acquired yesterday of masterminding a failed effort to smuggle more than $1 million worth of heroin from native Nigeria to the United States.
Igweubiwe, 32, threw both fists in the air and broke into tears, hugging his attorney as the verdict was announced.
He said he planned to go back to
He could have faced up to 120 years in a federal prison and $6 million in fines if convicted of conspiracy and drug importation.
Assistant U. Attorney Todd Foster refused to comment on the verdict, as did the 12 jurors, who had days before clearing the defendant.
Defense attorney Frank Winkles said contradictions and the use of unreliable informants undermined the prosecution's case.
Minnesota and train for next season.
"I want to kick again. I'm going back to play." said tiwuhebk
"Finally in the end, when everything was said and done, the government's case was so full of contradictions." Winkles said. "The type of they were relying on nobody would rely on people like that."
The verdict followed a two-week trial that focused on the relationship between Igwebuke and two Nigerian officials who were guilty to their roles in the scheme.
Softball victories keep streak alive
Kansan sportswriter
By Lana Smith
The Kansas softball team faces Creighton at 4 p.m. today in Omaha, Neb.
The Jayhawks are on a six-game winning streak after defeating Washburn, Oklahoma and Kearney State last week.
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said that the team needed to get as many victories as it could so that the Jayhawks would have a good seeding in the Big Eight Conference tournament in May.
Freshman catcher Monica Gormley said that the Jayhawks' goal was to win the Big Eight tournament, and in the meantime Kansas must work to blow away every team it plays.
The Jayhawks started two-a-day practices yesterday despite their victories against Oklahoma and Arkansas State during the weekend.
Haack said that 'the two-a-days were started because he was not pleased with Kansas' hitting. He also said the team seemed to lack
the enthusiasm to win.
Junior shortstop Christy Arter, burn was named the Big Eight player of the week after going 14 for 20 with 10 runs scored and 9 assists as in many attempts against Oklahoma and Kearney State.
Arterburn's performance raised her average to .636.
Freshman pitcher Stephani Williams was named the Big Eight pitcher of the week.
She went 3-0, including two victories against Oklahoma during the weekend. One of Williams' victories was a no-hitter, as she faced one batter over the minimum.
In 19 innings last week, she allowed only six hits, had 15 strikeouts and no earned runs.
The Jayhawks (26-9) are looking to lengthen their six-game winning, streak today against Creighton (23-15).
Men's soccer club earns third title
Bv Rick C. Honish
For the third year in a row, the Kansas men's soccer club has won the Big Eight Conference tournament.
Kansas won its third title in a grueling game against Neb-
bula. Stalker Watery
Kansan sportswriter
It was the fifth game in two days for Kansas, and goalie Scott Schaffer said fatigue became a factor in the game.
"From my spot in the goal, I could see both teams' legs going out," he said. "I got worried for a white that I have enough energy to pull through."
Regulation time ended with the score knotted at zero, and the first of 24 minutes was taken.
Senior Mark Plakorus said that his fear of defeat subsided about four minutes into the first overtime period.
Nebraska attempted to score on an eight-yard free kick, but Kansas blocked the attempt and won the game.
"We finally scored on a goal by Marc Moreano," he said. "I thought we would win after that."
Schaffer attributed Kansas' victory to the number of shots on goal.
But Kansas was not in the clear yet.
Nebraska had one shot left during the second endzone. Plakorus said,
Shaffer said the team got the burst of energy it needed to win from Mitsubishi.
"We had about nine shots to Nebraska's five," he said. "Our shots were being taken from further out, too."
Sports briefs
"We took that momentum and pulled it out," he said.
Prior to the championship game, Kansas had faced Colorado, K-State, Iowa State and Missouri.
With the score tied at zero and with only about five minutes remaining, junior Chris Robertson found a passage through the defense and knocked in the winning goal for Kansas.
In the semifinal game against Missouri, Kansas faced elimination late in the game.
Kansas will wrap up its season this weekend at Wichita State, where it will play in a 22-team tournament.
Jayhawks to take swing at Emporia State tonight
The Kansas baseball team, fresh off a record-setting 28-3 pasting of Graceland College on Sunday, plays host to the Emporia State Hornetts at 7 tonight at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Kansas travels to Creighton tomorrow and to Oklahoma for a four-game Big Eight series this weekend.
The Jayhawks, 25-17 overall and 6-6 in the Big Eight Conference, have won four straight and complete a five-game home stand tonight.
The Jayhawks are in four place in the Big Eight and trail the third-seeded St. Louis. The hona State, 6-2, and Missouri, 8-4, are in first and second place respic-
The status of Kansas catcher Garry Schmidt and first baseman Nie Jmierie is uncertain for tonight's and tomorrow's games.
Giants' Kevin Mitchell suspended for two games
tively.
Both players are expected to play against Oklahoma.
Niemeyer twisted an ankle in Saturday's game against Hiddim-Simmons University. Schmidt pulled a hamstring and the Jayhawks out of Graceland.
The suspension is set to begin today, when the Giants play Los Angeles. Mitchell could delay the commission by filing an appeal with Appeal.
day for his role in a brawl April 10 at San Diego.
NEW YORK — Kevin Mitchell of the San Francisco Giants was suspended for two games and fined an additional $1 million. The League president Bill Wester-
"We're going to make a decision in the morning," said Mitchell's agent, Joe Srobе.
Mitchell, whose five home runs lead the major leagues, was brushed back by Padres pitcher Bruce Hurst in the fourth inning of the April 10 game after hitting a home run in his first at-bat. Mitchell was restrained from going after Hurley following the brushback pitch but charged the mound when the next pitch bounced and hit him in the foot.
From staff and wire reports
10
Tuesday, April 16, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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EAX EXAMS! Improve memory and recall.
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B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair business. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and acadience. Shop with 5 VISA, Mastercard & Discover cards accepted. EXTRA MONEY-Mailing Business Brochures from home. HSR self-addressed stamped business envelope: DEC MCB Domestic Income: 160 Lakeside Dr Ste 391, Riverside AZ
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Real Estate
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*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes sense of *Western Civil* makes sense to use! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Booksstore.
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WHEN YOU CARE ENOUGH TO SEND IN JEST: When the relationship has ended or feelings gone astray, send that certain someone a message to make their day. Will deliver now 841-567
120 Announcements
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Futures
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BATTERING can be emotional or physical WTCS Campus Support Group for battered women Monday night 7:00pm. Call 841 6807 for location and info.
Hillel
בְּלִן
Events of the Week
Jewish Film Festival
April 16-20
Woodruff Auditorium
Tuesday & Wednesday
April 16 & 17
Sophie's Choice
7:00 p.m.
Thursday. April 18
Babystarter washer own that vehicle. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday Iust Friday 3 kicks 8.9 and 8.6 for kids 7-10. Tuesday 3 kicks 8.9, break. Overland Park home area 1004 and Mall Call Nany Orrick 872-875-875 for 31 and 841-783-875
Isaac in America
& the Cafeteria
7:00 p.m.
Dr. David Vital
"ZIONISM:
Jewish Survival and the State of Israel"
7:30 p.m. Centennial Rm.
Kansas Union
Saturday, April 20
Isaac in America & The Cafeteria 4:00 p.m.
Haydalah Under the Stars
Cookout, campfire, & singing
Clinton Lake
Meet at Hillel House
4:30 p.m.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach: swimming, canning, sailing watergym,iking waterpolo, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, maintenance, Salary $1000 more and add $186. Mark Searpee, 768 Milda, Nfd.
For rides and more information call 864-3948
**College Money, Private Scholarships.**
You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's first University 1901 (COL
Museum) - 620-567-3466; Institute 1901 (BOK)
Joilo Mpom 640-8281-1883 - 800-879-845.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
SPRING into HEALTH with MESSAGE! Recover
message from Brace! Call Brace! Message
call Brace! Call Brace! Message
Rainbows and DeMollays welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice. Free confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters or AU Info 844-3066. Sponsored by GLOSK
Kansas University, Kansas Union hiring for April 15, 30, 31 and 22. Several shifts available at $4.28 per hour. Will pay cash day following employment. Food service experience helpful. Must follow code. Come to Kansas Union Personnel level. Level for shift schedules and to apply EOE.
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER! There anytime with ARHITCH (r) for $10 from the East Coast? $229 from the Midwest (when there's no AHRITCH) 7 days at 4% Groupon ARHITCH r 212-864-2000.
Suffering from abortion? Write Hearts Restored,
Box 94, Grinneil, KS 67738 Confidential
response/material will follow
130 Entertainment
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
Lawrence Info Center, content oriented BBS,
841-2752, N, 1
COLORADO ROCKIES SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT-SUMMER camp for disabled children and adults hiring counselors/attendees
Rocky Mountain Village at (309) 569-2331
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
64-25 Arv. Convenient store clerk. Phillips 66 in DeSoto Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 385-3033
BLAJ HARRY'S Pato Bar and Grill is looking for energetic people for all positions. Great back great times, great incentives for those deserving. Nice rooms at 813-838-1062 for information and appointments.
DEAN OF STUDENT SCHOOL
12月复试,recruit recruitment, admissions, enrollment, financial aid, medical aid, faculty advising, student services, transfer education, student conduct, student government, student activities; member of Administrative Council. Postsecondary education, graduate studies. Administrative affairs, master's degree in venues required; community college experience and education preferred. Send letter of application to Donald E. Guild, president; Swain County College, Box 1137, Liberal, KS 67905-1137.
Editor / Research Assistant, KU Graduate Student Council. Applicant should have strong research background and ability to conduct research. Responsible for writing, soliciting and editing articles, layout, paste up, and soliciting advertising. Responds to campus communication calls. Facility communications. Must be KU student, graduate informed about issues strong research background. Applicant must attend appointment beginning August 1, 1991. $500 per month. Application deadline April 20, 1991 at 10 a.m. Email resume to the appropriate references to Graduate Student Council, 424 Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66043.
EXECUTIVE_COORDINATOR KU Graduate Student Council. Applicant should be knowledgeable of campus academic programs and University governance structure, and will be required to complete a graduate development by the Graduate Executive Committee. Must be KU graduate student, with several years experience at KU preferred. 50% graduate coursework completed in U.S. from 1.191. Submit resume and names of three references to Graduate Student Council. #KU Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
FUNDRAISE! - We're looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would like to make $500-$1,500 for one week marketing project on campus. Must be organized and willing to travel.
Fun & Exciting-Plus you can make $10/hour waitressing. Must start part-time now 18 yrs and up. Apply 1:30pm to 9:00am at Mississippi College
HAVE THE NUMBER OF ALI FIVE LIFE! Camp Ebc Lake is looking for men and women to be the most important person in a kid life for 8 weeks. We ask you to offer us a job. You may contact our camp representatives Ben (841-7651) or get in touch with the Avondale Axle Harbor,盐城 10350 9149 7651.
Excellent income opportunity. Flexible hours Perfect summer or part-time job. Training provid. Call 362-2547 for interview
Kusca & Burge Union Food Service catering team needs a part-time person to work with very flexible hours as needed. Including some weekends but no nights. 10-35 hours some weeks. Starting at 47.5 per hour. No fringe benefits. Must have health insurance and or cheese tape with an articulated touch. must be able to standard health sanitary and personal hygiene requirements. Apply in person.
NAMIES-Immediate positions on the East
Sentinel Expansion Team.
Salaries plus benefit, year commitment. Call
(212) 357-9000.
Kansas City Peabody office, levels 1 ... 5.
Lake of the Oarses Summer Employment. The office provides training for waitresses, waiters, cooks, hosts, and hostesses. Excellent salary and tips. Great working conditions, some food furnished. Apply while you are available. Contact Frank Bratcher (314) 856-2797.
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs No experience necessary. 1-800-695-2789
Parttime summer job available for men and women! Earn $5-50 per hour as a local tutor, or $75-$120 per hour as a teacher. Perfect job for those interested in keeping physical学 up this summer. No experience necessary. Send resume to Physical Education Personality, April 20 from 8:30 am-11:00 am only at 60th Washington, KCMO. Flexible hours are required. Trained in transportation and a greater Kansas City residence for the summer a maid. Identification number.
Need person to show apartments, answer phones and general office work. Full time in summer or as part-time. Work with staff to be work study eligible. Call Mary Pat at 841-6003. Part-time and full-time employment. Apply in person M-10 10:00am-3:00pm. Alvaram Racquet Positions N-50. Position Tenus Pro Sho'ar Bar.
PRESCHOOL HELP WANTED Substitute and
Child Development or early childhood
Development
Looking for a few key people who are interested in making lot of $$$$
Professional couple wishes to hire babysitter for summer. Monday-Friday: 8-04 noon; ppm. Excellent working conditions including access to swimming pool, gymnasium, classroom class. Salary commensurate with qualification. Please call 841-3126 after 6-00 days; anytime weekends or low hours on machine
divided interests in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday projects at a major racing facility in New York City. The staff includes dealers, sellers, uppers, hostesses, gate attendants, and parking personnel. If interested apply at Manhatten.
842-2863
Summer help- Local Mobil needs guys needg and gats to pack and load. Pay is above average with lots of overtime. Apply in person at Coleman American Motor, 431 N. Iowa
Textbook Clerks: KU Bookstores. Part time $4.50 per hour, position could possibly last until Sept 16, 1991. Must be able to work weekdays between the school days. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods, verifiable work attendance at previous employers, be responsible for applying to have interest or knowledge of books. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Level. 5.
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Wanted ENGINEERING student with mechanical and home maintenance skills. Flexible working hours: 842 8546 or 843 3777, Roger White.
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PRIVATE OFFICE
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Overland Park
PRIVATE OFFICE
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The City of Oaklanda will be accepting applications for pool manager. Applications can be up at the City Hall, 600 Downey In Oaklanda 8:45am to 10:30am, Monday-Friday.
Driven Education offered Drift Milwaukee Driving
Driver, serving KU students for 20 years,
driver's license obtainable, transportation provided.
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225 Professional Services
Warehouse and light industrial work. Reliable people needed with phone and car. Kansas City area. PBC Temps, 816-746-4900
16 East 13th 842-1133
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1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
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235 Typing Services
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E. 9th Street
821-374-0600
Thesis & Dissertations
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305 For Sale
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300s
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Bicycle for sale. Red Hatauva, 23 in. 12-speed, condition k225, 78-84-163, leave message.
Venmo drafting machine Good condition, orig. $2,500 call OM F Mali B-84, 764-1.
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Bicycle for sale. Red Helmet 460 Silver Anniversary bikes. Red Helmet 460 Silver Anniversary bikes. Grave kit beautiful Terry B41 845-257
Moving. Storage and trash boxes. Large quantities of discount prices. Small quantities. Walks welcome. Call 443-8111 Ask for sales/service department.
MT. BIKE, 'Giant', 38 cm; black, DeereXT, ex-
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$750 jeep. Jason Jasmin, 1948-1968. Overland Park
Kenwood amps and equalizer, "8" subwoofer
Bazakos, JVC amp. Best offer. Call David,
95-4027
NEW REALEIGH BREW WITH SCHWINN 9100
PUMP (INCLUDES UGAS) $120 841-94-16
one way ticket, KCI to DFM on May 15th, $130
also Call Kelli. 8641170
Paintball guns and equipment, cheap RPG books:
gurps, Traveller, etc. modem, Aquaria and
lilters, 84-611).
340 Auto Sales
Technics single CD player, excellent condition,
comes with extended warranty, $130, leave
message, 841-1697
1986+* Toyota Supra black with gray leather,
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499.3220
1982 Blue Back LeSabre, AC, new brakes, good
1982 blue Black Leaf键盘, AC new brakes, good condition $125 or best after Call 8217153
1985 BWM 31in, 4 DHR, 62.900 miles, sunroof,
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Message letter is nee
(hail Damage) Hot Red Cougar Convertible,
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black hard fall option 16.900 TLPI 885-8581
Hail Damage `Hot red cam Convertible`
(990) Plymouth Laser RS, automatic; A/C factory
perfect blue, SK inks, perfect condition.
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perfect blue, SK inks, perfect condition.
Seniors and grad students' Ford's college grad
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call vehicle fill. 483-2900.
360 Miscellaneous
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awrence Glass Tinting Special rates for
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41 7019
370 Want to Buy
家园
400s Real Estate
Wanted TD - 65-80 and down Records and tapes $2.00 and down Top dollar for collections Alley Cat CDs 71 Massachusetts 165-0122
405 For Rent
1 BR1 available immediately. Becky, 841-9277,
887-7034, MWF 841-4341
1 2 3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842 8971/843-560
1 bedroom apt available for summer sublease.
Close to campus: $285/no. 941-4535.
1 or 2 for summer sublease. Great location, nice
or 1 for summer sublease. Great location, nice,
spacious, pool, AC, DW, DW Rent negotiable.
Please leave message #M65_2027
2 Bdr apt available August Walk to KU or downtown. Wood floor, washer/dryer hookups. Water paid no. $440/mo 814-1074
2 bedroom apt, summer sublease, Bradford
Square, available May 19th, Pay only June and
July. No deposit required. Option for fall lease
kdq/461, kdq/852
2 br kit available in new building of West Hills
cabin, ceiling fan, kitchen appliance, cabinets,
walk in closet, energy efficient gas heat. Great location
near campus 108 Enter. Hd 4600/mi. No pets.
3 bedroom 2/1 bath townhouse for summer sublease at Surprise Village. Available mid-May. No rent until June 1 840 per month. 840-990. 3 studio apt at rent at 25% on NO. No pets.
4 BH apt for summer sublease 2. bath/W, DW, DR.
ac microwave, food court, tennis courts, on bus route
Sunrise Village Call Kim: 865-0235, leave message
6 bedroom house at 2381 Massachusetts and 5 bedroom house at 1240 Iowa and 5 bedroom house at 78 Arkansas Bk 841-3232
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 18th Ohio (new construction) and 26th Capitol (new construction) in two apartments, 11th & 18th Avenue (new construction) 2 BR-1 bath, 3 BR-2-bath, all with washers/dryers from Memorial Hall.
- 314 Michigan 8plex, 1 yr old-1 BR-3 BR-2
bath | with washer/dryer
- 541 Michigan, Squares. 3px; ytle -1. BHR -3- BR 2-1
* 641 Michigan Square, apartments. 641 Colorado,
2 BHR -1 bath and 3 BHR -2 bath. Great prices.
Call today. First Management 798-156. Open house every Saturday from 18:35 at Brandon
Square, Colorado 641-City. Offer Monday M-F.
You are concerned about the environment?
Oceanive lives saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower House, 145 Tennessee. 709-6721 or 814-9184.
Available June or August Efficiency 1 bedroom
pairs in nice older houses. Walk to KU
or downtown. 825 and no. 841-1794
Available June 18th then the fall term or August
furnished FURNISHED 2 floor b2mpr w/ balcony in private home. Ideal for couple or 2 women.
Supports 2 adults with disabilities, deposit and references required. No pets. Nominal preferred $20 plus $0 water and electricity. Moisture 0% after 48 h. If no answer call after
Available June 1, option for full- 4 bedroom apartment with loft. In Orchard Cottages. Spacious, beautifully furnished, pool on bus line. Extra furniture free: 841-145.
Cheap summer sublease! $160 for large room in duplex. Chris, 842-7543 evenings.
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
800-415-015e. Call 843-2116
Available immediately. Large 1 bedroom apt. for rent. 1 block from Union. Must see. Call 841-3797 or 800-6019. Leave message.
会
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it advertise to "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, gender, race, age, 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.
Joseph has been part of KU since 1919. Come join long tradition of cooperative living that is equally responsible, environmentally conscious, and easy on the pocketbook Sunflower House.
Tom campus at 1419 and 1423 bedrooms 862-7444
Excellent Location. 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom apt in 4pix, dahlshawer, WD hospital, CA, no phone line. i 4008 i 4001 I 4119 Ohio I 4622-8422
Delightful summer sublease. 2 or 1 bed. May August. Dates neg. air-conditioned. Beautifully fern. close to campus downtown Very quiet. Walking distance. Penthouse. 1 bedroom. Luxury for 2-4.
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water paint $23 per month. Available 8am-5pm each day. Some with utilities paid. Cedar fans, mini blinds, private parking, laundry facilities. Just one block from the hotel.
Female for summer sublease. Cue to campus resale.
deposit $1, utilities, rent negotiable 843-296-9
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice nookown. $250 includes spacious own bedroom. washer/dryer, and much more! May Call Ann (evenings best): 814-454-8
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 bdmr townhouse /wage;
garden 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer承包 3012 $/utilitiy. Kents k84f62f*
GREAT NLEASE 2 BF w/ microwave. May rent paid Close to campus. Call us 843-9412. Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water账 $300.吗叫 843-2116.
Great location. Quire and close to campus 2 bedroom apartment with sunporch. CA, wood floors, no pets. Available June 1, $380, at 1801 Mississippi. Call 842-4242.
Female non-smoker wanted for summer sublease at Orchard Corners. Call Cristin at 864-1462
HK He MU. students-move in 1 and receive 'y'舍 on your rent for 2 months 'Studios, and 2 bedroom apartments.' Heat and water paid "Across from KM U. Med. Center. Rainbow Tower
Hey? KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and hire $2 off your rent for 2 months. *Studios, and 2 beamer aps.* *Heat and water pay.* *Access Center, Rainbow Tower Apts 813-931-863*
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms at Sunflower House stay open 365 days a year and is a great place to make friends 1406 University 794/687 or www.sunflower.com
Leasing now for Fall or Summer. 2 bR apL for a 41-lex tenure. CA DW. Close to Campus. Street parking. Low Utilities. Call 842.8744. Ask for Tracy or Leave message.
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF THIS SUMMER. 2 ft. furnished, opt. for fall, May pcd, cable pdl. summer 84-472
Lorinar Townhomes, 3811 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru May, July or for 12 months. 841-7843-8443
e. spacious 3 bdr duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, central air, W/D wardrobe, garage, low utilities. Avail in June. $450/mo. No pets. 843-288-769
Mackenzie Place Apcs: 3 bdrm lux apt apt,
leaving for August 19, 12 months washer, dryer,
microwave oven, fan 2cks, 2 keys, year lease,
no fees, weekdays: 4733/4734, 4773/4774, and
weekends. 8421/8423 daytime
Nice studio at 1022 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts Water paid. 843-5727.
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two-bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including a stainless steel oven and blinds. Low utilities, pool and bus quiet. Route complex. $150,000. SPANISH CREAT CAMPART
New leasing and 2 bedrooms at a southbridge Plaza Apts. 1 bedroom; $27.5 bedrooms start at $35. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen new carpet. Call 842-1168.
new leasing for fall semester, 2 and 1 bedroom
Apes west Aspen West $45 for bedroom, $837 for
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camp.
Call 042-1669 or 048-1839
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. For rent to serious grade school students, upperclass students or KU employees. One BR furnished. No pets, no doggies. Water费 $280/mo. 841-383-6 after 6 PM.
Poolside 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Summer sublease available June 1. On bus route. Call for info. 842-8459
Remodeled Apartments in older home near KU
841-6254.
Spill Yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apartment.
W/D, DW, Microwave. Sublease $395. Call
865-3837.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 1008 Mississippi Water, gas, cable paid-$300.00; 841-6822
SUBLEASE at HAMNER PLACE, Furnished one bedroom. From mid-May to December Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386 tpm-11p.
SUBLET I to room 31 r/stown. Avail early May 12 to July $13/mo + utilities. Will negotiate. No dep. Extra incentive. Please call 842-7335 Kerrie.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 BR, 11r. Rent and rent
negotiations close to campus. 865-0720
Boardwalk
apartments
1 & 2 Bedrooms Showing Units Daily 9 - 6 842-4444
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- Laundry room - 50ft
- Laundry room- 50$ \phi$
W&D
- Unfurnished with appliances
Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 16, 1991
11
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
* Fenced pool area with Tanning Dark & Barbwe
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
- Low Security Deposit
Call about our Summer Special
630 Michigan 749-7279
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michan 749-7297
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
SW
Swan Management
- Gazebo
- Gravstone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F. 1-p.m.
Sat, 11-3 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
WOODWAY
**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 bedrooms $600
- office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
**HOURS:**
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
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
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Visit Meadowbrook Apis Wide range of GREAT
Wide range of GREAT studios, 1, 2 & 3 BRD. apis
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes among a peaceful country
Lighted Tennis Courts
Two Pools
- Laundry facilities
Laundry facilities in each building
Carports / Garages
Playgrounds Water Reid
Free Basic Cable
- Experienced Professi
Maintenance
MON-FRI 8-5:30
SAT 8-5
SUN 1-4
842-4200
It's Time to Step Up to
MEADOWBOOK
KU Bus Stops
Experienced Professional
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Orchard Corners,
14/8drm available, furnished, bus route,
89-2056 person Call 843 928
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beginning May 1 or June
July 31. Four bedroom townhouse in Survive
Village, 865-606. No deposit necessary.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Spacious four bedroom, two townhouse, 2 available bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms. One bathroom, dishwasher, trash compactor, cable, storage, low room, pools, tennis courts, great location 865-496
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 bedroom, garage, AC
2021 Heather塘. 841-9707
SUMMER SULEASE: 3 bedrooms, 2 full bath apartment. Air conditioned, washday/dryer, off street parking, dishwasher, microwave. Great walkout. Walk to RU or downtown. By Joe's
--wise living move.
YUANXIANG HIGH SCHOOL
Sunrise Apts.
Colos
• 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
Changes (Vill.)
Tools
Vill. & Terr.
• Luxurious Town Home
& Apartment Living
• On Bus Route
Close to Campus
2 Bdrm. at Vill.
9th & Michigan
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill
Sunrise Place
Sunrise Terrace 10th& Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily 411287 8418400
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
Sat.- Sun. 1-4
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
--wise living move.
ABCs of NAISMITH.
Affordable Living
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Better quality living
We have our own computer center, Dining 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
- water & trash paid
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- large rooms & closets
- plush carpets
- for Summer & Fall
- central air & gas heat
- Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
- refreshing pool
843-6446
2166 W 26
Double Take
Now that you've read it
(thanks again)
Recycle it!
THANKS!!
Sullease. Three bedroom apartment close to campus Available May 15 We will pay May rent! 865-2597
SUMMER SUBLEASE 4 bedroom house 1315
N.H. $190 mo neg. Cool house Swell location
Call 842-4735
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D Call 814-764. Hert $55.00 mo
Sublease av. June 1, 2 br. ceiling fan, economical
help with rent. 865-0967 or 841-1092
Sublease two bedroom on May 15, Aug 15 $44 per
Sublease - Starts May Non-smoker , bfrmk $160 plus $'_{t} elect. Fully furnished. 842,750. leave message
*月 79-268 and/or 82-304, ask for Jennifer*
Sublease *3 birmouth townhouse from mid May or*
*June 1 to July 29* $1ₙ bireath. fireplace $50ₙ mo¹
utilities. On base route 79-3407
Summer and Fall tournment. Furnished rooms with
outdoor pool, sauna, grill, and tiki bar.
1 tidk from KU with of street parking No.
2 tidk from KU with of street parking No.
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom gates. tblk from KU with of street parking, no pets. 841-500
Summer lease with option to renew avail mid
mor. Beautiful 2.1 bdrm tbrm G:D, W:D M
mor. Excellent location on campus. Summer
Sublease. Studio at Murphy budg great
hawaii. Excellent location on campus Call
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment
Dishwasher, balcony, pool $150/mo Leave
message: 865-261.
Summer sublease. Unfurished 2 bedroom apt 2 beds from campus on Ohio. 865-807
Now leasing
spacious & comfortable
1991
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
TRAILRIDGE
-3 Pools
-Tennis courts
(on apartments)
-on KU bus route
2500 W.6th 843-7333
MASTERCRAFT
749-0445·1310 Kentucky
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
OFFERS
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
842-4455
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass
SUNDANCE
841-5255 • 7th & Florida
749-4226·15th & Kasold
SO,WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?
OH IT DOESN'T Matter TO
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fell!!
ORCHARD CORNERS
Volleyball Court
Rocketball Court
- Basketball Court
CAMPUS PLACE
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Volleyball Court
TANGLEWOOD
Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
$355 - $425
- On Bus Route
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun 13-7
842-5111
Sat. 10- 4 p.m. Sun.12- 4 p.m
1301 W. 24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus rout studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
Apple Lane Apartments
---
2111 Kasold 843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
JN
Summer sublet. Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
near Holidome, patio, distwasher, W/D, AC
$375/month. Call 749-4823
Summer sublease. Furnished one bedroom apt, pool at complex, water paid $255. Call Amy 865-3637.
Close to KU bus route
IT DOESN'T REALLY Matter THAT
MUCH TO ME, EITHER
Summer sublease: Spacios 2 bedroom apt at Northwinds. 3 barks of north 6 on Michigan W/D. hookups. Brand new. $75/month plus lifetime Call 841-9605.
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt-close to campus Two to four people 841-2268.
Campus 1940 or two people, 64-224.
Summer subbase with option for fall. 3 bedroom
Summer sublease. Nice one BR furnished apt
14th & 8th, Call Lee, 8604308
Summer sublease with option for fall. 3 bedroom.
$650.00. Water, gas paid. 841-4708.
Summer sublease. 2 BR apartment. Great location.
Rent quotable. Call 843-8390.
Summer sublease. Really nice studio ant. water
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
super location, great pool. Call 749-0213.
IT DOESN'T REALLY MATTER THAT MUCH TO ME, EITHER.
WELL, I DON'T REALLY KNOW OF ANYTHING THAT'S GOING ON TONIGHT.
an option to renew. Clean a bedroom apartment located on south side of town near grocery store, eat-out restaurant, workout room, weight room, and pool available. Ideal for summer vacations. For summer sessions. If interested, call 798-2898.
Summer sublease. 2 BR apartment. Great location.
Rent not applicable. Call 837-6590.
Summer sublease. Available May 15-Aug 15 with an option to renew. Clean 2 bedroom apartment
Summer sublease. Large 2 bedroom available in May. $175 each. Negotiable. Call: 841-9137 for information.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
Summer sublease 4 bedroom house. Close to campus #106 call Mac or Greg, 474-618. HUGE. HUGE studio for summer sublease. May rent paid $25/month #168-618 after spam.
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom townhome. Sunrise Village. Pool, microwave. $185 each negotiable. 792-2493.
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Summer sublease with possibility for fall. 4 bedroom house, wood floors, close campus. 1011 E. 79th St., Houston. (561) 238-3700.
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Summer sublease start in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or by dk 146 Tennessee
by Tom Avery
THIS IS GETTING MONOTONOUS.
DO, WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?
TOM AARONSON, YORK, NY
SWEET SUBLEASE'
April Rent Free-Female roommate needed immediately. Share 3 bedroom duplex-W/D; microwave, dishwasher, air conditioned, garage. Phone (844) 652-1074, Call Lisa. 844-358, leave-message
2 BR apt 1 block off campus, 2 floors, study area, water paid. Call 865-2690 and leave message. Best apartment in Lawrence.
THIRTY SECONDS from lauradani. Summer subbase, furnished 3 bedroom. Bath? Waved cabin, A/C, dishwasher, near campus, on bus route. 865-0588
Students women: Want to live in a non-sexist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills. Try Sunlower House. Learn practical alternative. 140 Tennessee; 749-8071 or 811-8448
430 Roommate Wanted
Wanted. Female roommate non-smoker to share
2 bedroom room, on bus route. Call 842-3956
April rent paid. Female roommate wanted immediately. Share three bedroom. Orchard Carson $10.90 per month plus 5 * utilities. On bus route. Call Amanda, 814-4479.
A roommate needed for summer sublease. On bus route, nice apt. $150 a month plus utilities. 843-4780
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626
Female, Room for summer (and Fall?). Share kitchen and bath. Clean. 1300 block Ohio, $129.
749-2793.
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share
2 BR apt at Northwinds. Own room. Brand new.
$187.50 /mo plus 2' utilities. 842.3371
Bob Coleman 7001384 needed for 4 burns 2 bathroom apat. at Orchard Corners. Starting Aug.
91. Call Shannon. 749-4797
Female, non-bachelor roommate needed for Fall.
Share 18车 trailer, brower w/d, w/central
seat. Have a bed, bathroom, $240/mo plus $40
$260/mon plan v₄ utilities. Prefer stud room.
Resident of Ainsley, Amette. 64411 3413,
749 7267 127
Female roommate need to share a four bedroom apartment in Orchard Corners. $132.00 a month plus 1' utilities. 749-5430.
Roommate wanted: House bordering campus.
non-smoker, clean, responsible. Rent: $250.00
total. Call Richard at 749-2564
Help! Roommate needed immediately for
spacious apartment two blocks from campus.
H47 50, utilities off, off street parking. $32-0730.
Melanie
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Male roommate needed. Duplex W. S. part of
male room. Big deal on rent. Robert, 842-4225.
one female roommate needed for 4 bdm
bathroom apt at Orchard Corners. Start Aug.
10.
- Policy
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer; furnished 4 brm. $180/month.
749-5678
Sublet for summerRoommate for Fall. Nice place GREAT LOCATION 842-9994
sanitary roommates will be furnished for a weekend stay on Aug. 19, starting August 19. Call Bisha of Susan at 841-4378. Two roommates need to share three bedrooms in the tiny house for summer. Close to campus.
Summer Sublease - 1 to 2 people (male or female) to share need 3 bedroom / 2 room at OCHRIAN CORNES POOL, A/C, cable, on bus route 845/858 months plus 14 units. Call Nancy 841-237-8696.
Summer sublease: Two roommates needed
Large furnished apartment $160. mo * u utilities
1310 Kentucky Near campus 843.2229
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No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
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.
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No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising Blind box ads: please add $4.00 service charge. Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisement*
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Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Post MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad
checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Dailly Kansan.
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
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26-30 5.30 7.90 11.00 16.70
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Classifications
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 370 want to buy
110 business personalis 205 helped 340 auto sales 405 for rent
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wi
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U.S. Postal Service
19 ISA掩蔽IHail Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Knights of the Round Table ©
In a barbarian faux pas that quickly cost him his life, Garth is caught drinking his gruel with pinky fingers extended.
12
Tuesday, April 16, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
C
O
COUPONS
---
Drs. Pohl & Dobbins 831 Vermont
FREE CONTACTS*
One pair of disposable contacts to present lens wearer
FREE SOLUTION*
B & L Renu
CLASSES
Free U.E. and /& Sunint
coating on old
prescription glasses
(with exam & coupon)
* WITH COUPONS
S
Dr. Charles Pohl 841-2866
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing BARYSHNIKOV
EXPIRES 5/31/91
Dr. Kent Dobbins 843-5665
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing BARYSHNIKOV Body & Dance Wear 15% off with coupon Exp.4/29/0
- 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 •
• . . . . .
Fanning with massage or body lining session
at RELAX A CISE
XANADU DESIGN
24291 10104
842-6555
with any permanence in colour,
hi-lite or style; with
matrix
expires 6.1.91
Fantastic Sam's
the Original Family Haircutters
$6.95
Precision Hair Cut
by a professionally trained stylist
Reg. $9.00 (styling extra)
Border Bandido
SCOUT
"You don't have to pay offer expires 4-29-91 23rd & Louisiana 749-196
a lot to look good!"
Buy 1 Taco Bar
At the Regular Price
And receive a Free
Refillable drink!
offer expires 4-28-91
ROCK IMPORT CDs
25% OFF
The best selection in Lawrence
Good with coupon thru 04/19/91
*Not valid with other offers or sale merchandise
pires 4-15-91
1528 W. 23rd
--not valid with any other discounts
1000 Mess. St. Suite B, Open Sundays, & weekdays until 7:00
KIEF'S CDS RECORDS
AUDIO/VIDEO
24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS
1st street graphics
642-TEES
733 Mass.
24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 842-1544
1st street graphics
942 TEES
733 Mass
TEAM SPECIAL?
Tank tops with FREE
6" lettering only $6.99!
ONLY $2.27
1/4 lb. Hamburger,
Quickie Q's, &
16 oz. Soft Drink
·701 W. 23rd Street
Numbers & Greek letters available.
Custom screen printing with no art or set-up charges.
NCAA Final Four Shirts in four designs.
New Canvas shirt photos on photos on jeans, sweatshirts and caps.
VIDEO BIZ
VIDEO BIZ.
HAMBURGERS
Quickies
FRIES & DRINKS
SM
Limit four per coupon*Void with any other offer*Expires 4/29/91
9th & Iowa
2 Video Tapes and VCR One Night Re
--not valid with any other discounts
1000 Mess. St. Suite B, Open Sundays, & weekdays until 7:00
$5.99 EXP. 4/30/91
Only $3.99!
- 3 video tapes
- 2 days
OMI CONR
* 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
$3.00 OFF
$3.00 OFF
jiffy lube*
14 POINT SERVICE
INCLUDING OR AND THE CHANGE OF
LUBRICATION OR CHASSIS, SAFETY CHECKS
AND THE FINISHING TUCKING
Offer expires 4 29-91
914 W 23rd #0557
50¢ Bowling
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 50¢ game during open bowling.
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---
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1. 下列说法正确的是 ( )
THE UNIVERSITY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 133
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Defense policy fought by universities
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
KU officials wanting a change in the Department of Defense policy discriminating against gays and lesbians have been waiting for a national surge of support from other institutions.
Having received information from two Midwest universities, officials say it appears support may be growing.
Frances Ingemann, chairperson of the University Senate Executive
Committee, has received word from the University of Nebraska in Lincoln and Washington University in St. Louis about efforts in calling for a change in the Department of Defense policy.
"It ites look as if campuses around the Midwest, as well as the rest of the country, are becoming aware of the issue," she said.
Ingemann said the momentum seemed to be snowballing into a national movement
Academic Senate, a faculty body, stated that if the discriminatory policy was not changed by Jan. 1, 1993, the body will urge the chancellor to renegotiate the contracts with the three branches of the military operating ROTC programs at the university.
At Nebraska, a resolution by its
Ingemann said this would include not giving ROTC instructors faculty status and not allowing credit for the courses.
The action taken by Washington University is similar to what KU did
last semester. A committee made up of Washington faculty and students announced the Department of Defense and called for a national change.
But Nebraska's deadline and call for a renegotiation of the contracts are actions KU has not taken, Ingemann said.
She said that Nebraska's initiative seemed to show that it supported training at the school but that it did not be associated with discrimination.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said he was encouraged by the news from other schools
"It's nice to see other universities are taking the same kind of approaches we are." he said.
Shankel said he was not sure what the Nebraska chancellor's response to Mr. Browder was.
Pat Warren, Student Executive Committee chairperson, said he also was encouraged by the prospects of a joint Big Eight effort against the discrimination
But Nebraska's deadline was not realistic, Warren said.
"I don't think setting a deadline that soon is really a good thing," he said.
Warren said that unless the policy was changed by an executive order from President Bush, the change would be slow in coming. He saw 1994 or 1955 as realistic deadlines.
Rail employees strike for first time in decade
"It's going to take two or three things something like this moving," he said. "It
Congress seeks swift resolution
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON A coast-to-coast rail strike was set for this morning after last ditch contract talks with the company. Its unions broke off yesterday night.
As many as 250,000 workers were expected to walk off their jobs this morning in the first nationwide rail strike in nearly a decade. Such a walkout could strand passengers stop the flow of one-third of U.S. goods and idle as many as a half-million non-railroad workers.
"We do not apologize to anyone for what we have to do," Mac Fleming, president of the 55,000-member Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, said after the midnight bargaining deadline expired
Talks broke off even before the federal imposed cooling off period on the plant.
Fleming said he had ordered his workers to go on strike at approx-
White House press secretary Martin Fitzwater said the Bush administration was prepared to work with Congress on speedy legislation to impose a settlement and end the strike.
Congressional leaders had refused to enact legislation to stop a strike before it started, but yesterday, meeting behind closed doors, said that if a walkout occurred, they would infringe legislation to resolve the dispute.
"My feeling is that, given the nature of the economy, it is important to act in a timely fashion," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, chairperson of the Senate Education and Labor Committee.
Hones content that the railroads have not offered high enough pay for their employees.
National rail strike hits
Nation's 235,000 freight line workers strike in dispute about wages, benefits.
What the issues are
What the issues are
Eleven unions have
been negotiating
separately with
railroads over wages,
job security, health
benefits
What rail workers earn
---
What rail workers earn
Average salary, 1989: $39,742
Executives $60,233
Engineers, others on train
347,094
Dispatchers, others not on train
$37.355
Administrators
$25,311
Maintenance (for rail lines)
$33,547
Maintenance (for equipment)
$33,256
SOURCE: Association of American Railroads, United Transportation Union
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
A four-day rail strike in 1982 effectively shut down the nation's rail system and stalled passenger trains around the country.
freezes of the past. Management argues that railroad workers' salaries are already higher than most other industrial employees.
الشعراء
Hamed Ghazali leads about 120 Muslims in prayer at a service at the Burge Union marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
Muslims celebrate end of Ramadan
By Patricia Roias
Kansan staff writer
Facing Mecca, local Muslims said their morning prayers yesterday, the last day of Ramadan.
About 120 Muslims gathered in the morning at the Burge Union to celebrate 'Eid Al-Fetr, the feast celebrate the breaking of fasting.
'Eid Al-Fetr marks the end of Ramadan, a month-long period of daytime fasting and extra prayers.
Hamed Ghazali, president of the Muslim Student Association, said fasting was a way of becoming
aware of other people's needs.
"When you do not eat and you do not drink, you start to feel like hungry people feel, like deprived people feel," Ghazali said. "And then you will be more inclined to help them."
He said Ramadan helped bring the Muslim community closer. During this period Muslims practice self-control.
"We are supposed not to utter a bad word while we are fasting." Ghazali said. "To be nice to other people, to be helpful."
In the last days of Ramadan, every Muslim contributes with the Zakah, an amount of food or money to be distributed among the needy.
This year in Lawrence, members of the Muslim community contributed at least $7 each, Ghazali said. Parents are supposed to pay this amount themselves and each of their children, regardless of the child's age.
"It's a pleasure for the Muslims to have this day," Ghazali said after the prayers. "At the same time, we should not forget the suffering of all those who are suffering. All over the world, Muslims are suffering."
Participants in yesterday's 'Eid Al-Fetr were careful not to overlook their fellow Muslims who were less fortunate.
He made specific reference to Muslims in Iraq and Kashmir, a region in northwest India. He acknowledged the suffering of those who had lost friends and relatives in the Persian Gulf War and other conflicts around the world.
Allies will assist Kurdish refugees
The Associated Press
CHINGTON
PRESIDENT
President Bush said yesterday that allied military forces would create encampments within northern Iraq as
greatly expanded and more ambitious relief effort for tens of thousands of Kurds fleeing from Saddam Hussein's forces.
'The most important thing is to get Saddam Hussein out of there.'
-George Bush See story page 7
At a White House news conference, Bush said relief supplies would be provided for the Kurds, tens of thousands of whom are caught in a man's land attempting to flee Iraq for Turkey and Iran.
He said that responsibility for the refugee sites would be turned over as soon as possible to the United Nations and emphasized that the United
States had no intention of occupying territory in Iraq.
At the same time, the president renewed his statement that U.S. forces would not become involved in domestic Iraqi turmoil.
vided at these temporary sites." Bush said. He said he appreciated that Kurds would otherwise fear for their safety in Iraq.
Relief workers and the State Department said that up to 1,000 refugees may be dying of exposure, dehydration and dysentery along the Turkish border daily.
Bush did not describe how U.S. and other forces would set up the environment.
Turkey said there were 600,000 Iraqi refugees — most of them Kurds — on its border, 400,000 of them inside Turkey. Iran said close to 1 million of Iraq's 4 million Kurds crossed its border.
"Adequate security will be pro-
Coalition complaint hearings continue
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate Elections Commission continued to hear complaints last night against the two coalitions that ran for Student Senate and election, at the time it would take to complete the hearings.
In an agreement reached by Facts, Impact and the commission, between 10 and 25 minor violation complains against Impact were dropped, and between 25 and 35 against Facts were dropped. In a third context to complaints that Tom Poer, elections commissioner, verified as minor violations.
Facts pleaded no contest to 55 minor violations, and Impact pleaded no contest to 10.
The commission also heard four major complaints filed against Facts and one filed against
Greg Hughes and Pat Warren filed a complaint that Facts used fraudulent information about
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith, then Senate candidates, on one of its fliers.
Hughes, Associated Students of Kansas campus director, said that McIntosh had not been involved with Senate for three years and that Smith was not in the Rock or University Council, as was printed on a flier.
David Hardy, commission member, said he would be hesitant to consider such information as fraudulent, given the serious nature of the word "fraud."
Warren, Senate executive committee chairperson, said Smith had been elected to University Council for next year but had not attended a meeting yet.
McIntosh said that he had been involved in Senate for three years but that during his first semester he resigned from the Senate finance committee for grade considerations.
Smith said he had written letters to Topela lobbying for ASK and considered his actions
involvement
Curt Wearinger, commission chairperson, filed a complaint against Facts for its campaign budget
According to election rules, coalitions must submit a budget of intended expenditures.
McIntosh said the definition of the word "intended" was debatable.
The commission also heard a complaint, filed by Weingarner, against Facts regarding the use of "table tents," pyramid-shaped campaign advertisements that Facts members used on campus.
According to the complaint, a Facts member was informed by a commission representative that the tents had to be removed within 45 minutes because they were not allowed by election rules, but they were not removed until several hours later.
McIntosh said he had made sure that the tents were removed as soon as he found out they needed
Police arrest students after anonymous tip
By Rick C. Honish
Charges include misdemeanor theft
Kansan staff writer
Two people were arrested and 18 notices to appear in court were issued after KU police received an anonymous tip last week from the crimestopper's Hot Line about a stolen credit card.
Joseph D. Hegeman, Stillwil freshman, was charged yesterday with using false identification and misrepresentation, which was released on his own recognition.
Meredith B. Goldstein, St. Louis freshman, was arrested last Wednesday. He was charged with burglary, dealing in false identification cards, misdemeanor theft and nine counts of unlawful use of a credit card. He, too, was released on his own recognizance.
He said officers recovered various supplies from Goldstein that were used to process the fake IDs,
KU police Lt. John Mullens said Hegeman had been using a false ID to rent videotapes that he then tried to sell.
Goldstein also had been manufacturing fake Missouri driver's licenses, Mullens said.
Mullens said Goldstein had been a part of the videotape crimes with Hegeman. He said Goldstein had been using a stolen credit card to buy compact discs that he tried to sell door-to-door.
Mullens said officers recovered various supplies from Goldstein that were used to process fake IDs.
including cameras, several pictures that were ready for processing and a list of people that the fake IDs had been made for.
"We are still trying to track down the board they used," Mullens said.
As of 1 p.m. yesterday, 18 notices to appear in court for attempting to obtain or possessing evidence that bills had been issued. Mullens said.
Mullens said KU police would probably issue four or five more
Mullens said Goldstein could face a maximum penalty of five to 10 years in jail and a $10,000 fee for the burglary charge, and another five years and a $10,000 fine for dealing in false IDs.
KU police records showed that so far, two KU students had been contacted about possession of false IDs.
Hegeman could face a maximum penalty of five to 10 years in jail and a $10,000 fine, Mullens said.
V
}
2
Wednesday, April 17. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI: 78°
LO: 56°
61/43
67/46
62/43
65/37
66/53
87/70
83/70
Today's Forecast
Southerly winds and increasing humidity bring a chance of showers late this afternoon and into the evening.
Salina
70/50
KC
Dodge City
78/48
77/54
Wichita
79/56
[U Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300]
3-day Forecast
Thursday - Another chance or showers. High 68/ Low 52.
Saturday - Sunny and mild High 67/ Low 48.
Friday - Partly cloudy and cooler. High 66/Low 50.
forecast by Rodney Price Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansen (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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Reggae Late Nite
featuring
Dickinson
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$300 PRIME-TIMER SHOW *
SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME
Cry Out & Interface
Sat., April 20th • 9:30pm-3am
at the Outhouse
54 at the gate. All ages
NEW JACK CITY (R)
5:10, 7:25, 9:45
THE FIVE HEARTBEATS (R)
5:00, 7:15, 9:35
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
HOME ALONE (PG)
4:50, 7:00, 9:25
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
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MARRYING MAN (R)
SAT, SUN 2:30
EVERY 5:00, 7:10, 9:45
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SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
CINEMA TWIN
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NINIA TITLE (PTS.) 8:10, 7:30, 9:15
REVERSOR OF
(FORTUNE) 8:10, SAT 3:00, 7:30
EVS 8:10, 7:30, 9:15
The Jayhawk Discount Card
- Pyramid Pizza
Save
*Pyramid Pizza*
*Burger King*
*Kief's Records*
*K. U. Bookstores*
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at
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* Yello Sub
* Glass Onion
* European Tan, Health and Hair Salon
* Pool Room
Free Tax Advice
Legal Services
for Students
Legal Services Available Free with Valid KU ID Appointment Necessary
148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
A CAVALRY MAN
VIDEO SING ALONG 7 to 10 p.m.
LaserKaraoke-
5 to 7:30 Complimentary hors d'oeuvres
世家树
RumTree
75¢ Draws
WEDNESDAY
200 McDonald Drive Lawrence, Kansas (913) 841-7077
Holiday Inn
200 McDonald Drive
---
Evening Guy Special! $4.95
--a lot to look good!" 749-1976
Fantastic Sam's the original Family Hatchers
Precision Hair Cut
By a professionally trained stylist
Mon - Thru 6 pm - 8 pm
offer expires 4.25.91
Precision Hair Cut
23rd & Louisiana
(you don't have to pay
--benefit the Big Brother-Big Sister program of Douglas County and the Miami Project, which conducts research to help find a cure for paralysis. The tournament will conclude with the men's championship game Saturday at the intramural fields behind Robinson Center.
You don't have to pay
port
Sudden death score
Pi Kappa Alpha goalie Ryan Barker, Littleton, Colo., sophomore, attempts to stop a shot during a sudden death shootout against the Phi Kappa Theta team. Phi Kappa Theta defeated Pi Kappa Alpha in the first round of the Pielzo Cup soccer tournament yesterday. The tournament of fraternity and sorority teams will
Ron Klein/KANSAN
On campus
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have a "Wear Blue Jeans if You're Lesbian or Gay Day" picnic at noon on the east lawn of Wesco
■ KU Wellness Center will have a
"Stress Management" workshop at
the center.
Study Abroad will have an informational meeting at 1:30 p.m. at 203
KU Study Abroad in French-speaking countries will have an informational session at 3 p.m. at 2055 Wescoe Hall.
- United Nations Association of
Philadelphia
30 p.m. at the Adams Atlanta Center
- Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have a gay and lesbian graduate student lecture at 3:30 p.m. at the Pine Room in the kansas
- KU Study Abroad in Spanish-
speaking countries will have an informa-
tional session at 4 p.m. at 3040
Wescoe Hall
at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Environs will meet at p.m. at the Jawahrak University in the Kansas Union Building.
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson
■ Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 p.m. in the Adams Alumni Center
KU Flying Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 2002 Learned Hall.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have a performance art show at 8 p.m. at the Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall.
■ The passenger window on a KU student's car was broken between 6 p.m. and 8:30 a.m. Monday in Lawrence Drive. Lawrence police reported
SELL IT FAST IN THE DAILY KANSAN
Police report
@
XXX
VIDEO
Must be 21. I.D. Required
1420 W. 23rd St. *843-9200*
Club 21 Calendar April 19th -28th
A television valued at $399 was taken between 1 and 10:30 a.m. Monday through an open window at a law office in Indianapolis. Ohio State, Lawrence county reported.
1st Prize $50, 2nd Prize $25,
Friday April 19th - Featuring African European Reggae, Sala, Sat, April 20th - Featuring African European Reggae, Sala, Soca, Soul Sun, April 21st - Featuring Blues Tues., April 215- Lip sync Contest
A parking meter was dug up and taken between Friday afternoon and Monday morning from the parking碾 Robinson Center, KU police reported.
Last day, Tuesday 23rd
Friday, Thursday
3rd Prize Free Membership
All interested candidates please
call 823-0393 between 7 p.m. - 9 p.m.
Saturday, April 27th-Top40's Sunday. April 28th-Blues
Sunday, April 28th-Blues
Friday April 26th- Live Band "Cry Out" Come check em out.
"Cry Out" Come check'em out. They are great!!
Sunday, April 28th - blues
Opens 7:30p.m.-2:00a.m.
Student & Youth Travel
WAY
TO GO
FOR LESS!
(across from the Courthouse)
106 North Park
.ROUNDTRIPS!
7 DAY LENINGRAD/
MOSCOW TOUR from $775
* Flightways from
Low Cost One Way Fares on Request
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Eralas Passes 1.0, Cards, Tours
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*Depart IDWU*
72041/2 MELROSE AVE.
OS ANGELES, CA 90046
1-800-777-0112 (LA)
213-937-5781
STA
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STATRAVEL
120 OFFICES WORLDWIDE
Call for an appointment today!
842-8822
- Cap and Gown photographs
Herb's STUDIO
- Resume photographs
KU Senior Special!!!
Malls Shopping Center
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
•Complete Auto Repair
•Machine Shop Service
•Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
- Senior Portraits
Mon Th 9:30-9:00 Sat 9:30-12 p.m.
an optical dispensary
VISIONS
Hours
- Eyeglass Repair
806 Mossachusetts 841-7421
10-5.30 M,T,W/F/10-3 SAT
2-8 THUR
- Sunglasses
- Contact Lenses
- Bollé
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WEDDINGS, Ltd.
5:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
Closed Monday
9 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Tues. until 8:00 p.m.
Sat. 10:00 a.m. - 5:00
Sun. 10:00 a.m. - 5:00
1410 Kasolo, Orchard Corners
Lawrence, KS 66049
842.0056
'I am the boss of our business'
In-stock prom and party formals
SALE - 25% Off
All jewelry
Other accessories:
50% Off selected shoe styles
(Formal and casual) Seamless lines of Shop for Custom Things
The CLASS Award established by the class of 1987 as a citation for
(The CLASS Award)
(1987) established by the class of 1987 as a citation for
leadership and achievement, and served as a full time
professional staff member in the Division of Student Affairs.
Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities
Kennedy Center for Public Affairs, 2000 W. 34th St., New York, NY 10017.
Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union and are due by 4:00 p.m., April 22nd.
WHO CAN BE NOMINATED? Division of Student Affairs
Dept. of Student Housing
Division of Student Affairs
Kansas and Burge Unions
Dept. of Educational Services
- Admissions
- Admissions
- Student Financial Aid
Student Health Services
- Student Financial Aid
- New Student Orientation
- New Student Orientation
- Student Records
- Student Records
- Systems Development
- Systems Development
- University Counseling Center
- University Counseling Center
- University Placement Center
Dept. of Student Life
- Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
- Foreign Student Services
- Minority Affairs
- Student Assistance Center
- Organizations and Activities Center
- University Information Center
$$$$$$$$$$$$$
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
3
Ribbons fade, but war support goes on
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The few yellow ribbons that are still on campus have faded.
The pro-troop rallies and peace protests have ceased.
With most of the gulf-war hape game, the community has returned to its roots.
For those who still have friends and relatives stationed in the Persian Gulf, the fighting may be over, but the waiting continues.
Scott Rutherford, Fort Riley
junior, is one of those who commutes to New York City.
Rutherford's father is currently stationed in southern Iraq. His mother is in Germany waiting for her husband to return.
"I get letters from my father about once a week now," he said. "The letters are about two weeks old, and the letters are less frequent, so sometimes it's pretty confusing."
Rutherford said he expected his father to be transferred back to Germany in late June or early July. He does not know when his parents will be transferred back to the United States.
Brady Hughes, Rock Springs, Wyo. junior, also is waiting for family to come back from the war.
His older brother, Matt Hughes, is a bomb expert for the Army. He has been disarming Seacons missiles since his retirement to the Gulf last November.
"I don't know exactly when he will come back, but it may be in June." Huey spoke.
Brady Hughs, who served in the Army for four years, said he wished he could have gone to war with his brother.
One of Hughes' instructors in Army ROTC, Capt. Virgil Woolridge, also is still in the gulf.
Maj. Steve Johnson, professor of
military science, said Woolridge was deployed to Saudi Arabia in late January with the 1st Infantry Division.
"In his last letter, he said he didn't know when he would be re-deployed." Johnson said "But there is a chance he will return in mid-
Johnson said two reservists enrolled in the ROTC program also were called to the gulf. They have not returned to U.S. soil either.
David Laebert, Paola senior, said
a good friend who was in the
midst of a death.
Luebbert reservist John Noltnemeyer was a KU student when he was called to serve in January. He is working at a prisoner-of-war camp
"He was supposed to be in a wedding in August with me," he said. "But we're still trying to figure out if he back in time for the wedding."
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Support groups will remain intact
Kansan staff writer
Dwayne DeSylvia, Windsor, Colo., senior, co-founded Support Our Soldiers in January along with the troops in Iraq and in the soldiers serving in the war effort.
With U.S. involvement in the Persian Gulf winding down, some campus and area groups are left with little to do.
"We're still a registered campus group, but we haven't really done anything for a while," said Cayla, Salina junior.
Caylor said that although the group did not have anything planned for the near future, the soldiers were there in an event that recognized soldiers who
"If the city throws a parade, we definitely will be there," he said.
served in the war.
Even though the group has no plans for the rest of the semester, it does for next year.
"They want us to help recognize the soldiers who were in the gulf," he said.
Caylor, who was in the Navy for three years, said the Athletic Department had asked Support Our Soldiers to help plan a half-time ceremony during a football game this fall.
The plans include having a band play at half time and possibly having military airplanes fly by the stadium.
Janice Nesler-Loux, founder of
Kansans in support, said the local soldier-support group also did not have any activities planned for the rest of the semester.
"We aren't having more rallies because most of the guys are home now," she said. "Right now we're just laying low."
Voice, a campus peace group, has changed direction but has not slowed down.
Last month, the group decided to focus on issues such as the effect of the Persian Gulf War on the environment and violence against Arabs.
Scott MacWilliams, Lawrence senior, said at a Voice meeting last month. "The really hard part of the peace movement starts now."
Forum urges more Indian recruitment
Kansan staff writer
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
Not only is KU recruitment of American Indians a problem, but the retention of the students once they left was forgotten, panelists said last night
At a forum sponsored by University Scholarship Halls for Ethnic Studies, about 25 people gathered to discuss the importance of American Indians in the Lawrence area.
The speakers were Ann Weick,
dean of social welfare, Cavely
Smith, president of Native American
Student Association, and Teri Martin,
a liaison between Haskell Indian
College and the KU office of
admissions.
Smith said that when he graduated from Haskell he was puzzled that KU did not significantly recruit him or other Haskell students to stay in Lawrence and continue their schooling.
Weick said American Indian students who attended KU often had to fend off the attack.
“When we have students capable of going to any university in America, I ask, ‘Why isn't KU on the bandwagon to recruit these students?’” he said. “He asked cultural diversity, and sometimes I am afraid it's just about numbers.”
Smith said he began to question whether he wanted to attend KU and whose students in his class say American Indian cultures offered nothing to society.
"What happens when people get here is an area that a lot of people need to look at," she said. "Providing ongoing support, making sure they are satisfied, providing the opportunity for social exchange is a very critical point."
"If one person says something like that, you wonder how many other students don't know." he said.
Martin said that American Indian students might not take the first step in initiating friendships with students from outside their culture and that other students should reach out to them.
"Because of connotations of the community or stigmas placed on them, the Native American student was often a great greet student," she said.
"There is a need for education with every culture. If we can facilitate the teaching of other cultures in the University, then the first thing you should do is to color it, it's going to be a face of someone you may want to meet."
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
DUA5
Lawrence police and emergency personnel prepare to lift Matt Roberts, Overland Park freshman, onto a backboard near 1008 Emery Road after he lost control of his motorcycle. Roberts was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he received more than 20 stitches in his leg before being released. Roberts was the second motorist within a week to lose control of his vehicle on the winding stretch of Emery Road south of Ninth Street.
Motorcycle accident
LAKELAND
Bill Resnick and Jennifer Ansley, Lawrence seniors, participate in a candlelight vigil in front of City Hall as part of GALA Week.
Anti-gay violence is rising, speaker says
She does. But her job is also to anecdotally reconstruct who the victims were.
By Lara Gold
Woman sees society as source of abuse
Kansan staff writer
"People are so numbed by statistics; "she said.
Suzanne Pharr sometimes thinks that she spends her days only counting bullets in dead bodies.
"Violence against women is connected to violence against gay men and lesbians," she said to about 70 people at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union as part of Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week.
Statistics show that biased crimes against women, lesbians and gays are rising sharply, said Pharr, who founded an organization that monitors bias-related violence.
She said that incidents of racism, anti-Semitism, ageism and sexism also were increasing.
"We as lesbians and gay men live with the constant threat of violence against us." Pharr said.
She said, however, that women had been conditioned since birth to accept violence as part of a society that was controlled by white heterosexual males.
"Gay men are hated because they are seen as women or being like women," she said.
A lesbian woman is even more hated and prone to be attacked, because she can live independently of men. Pharr said.
"There is so much permission to hate women," she said. "Violence against women comes directly from men's power and control."
But her work shows that the connection of violence against gay men and women goes deeper.
Women and gay men are often brutally killed, she said.
She described the similarities between killings as "overkill," where the victim was not stabbed once but doomed to times or was severely mutilated.
"We have found striking similarities in the way women and gay men are killed," she said.
"Gay men are devalued in the same way lesbians and heterosexual women are," she said.
107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120
She said visibility was the key to combating the violence.
"We need to use our portion of strategy to be queerer than queer," she said. "The more visible we are as lesbians and gay men, the more we threaten white heterosexual male power and control."
Lori Irving, Lawrence graduate student should be the status quo should be challenged
"I think we are brought up not to question the power structure," she said.
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4
Wednesday, April 17, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police video needed
Cameras in police cars will protect civil rights and save police departments court time, money
Something good can result from the March 3 beating of Rodney King, an unarmed Los Angeles motorist who repeatedly was kicked, clubbed and shocked with an electronic stun gun by police.
About 50 police departments in the United States have purchased 2-inch-square cameras to install in police cars. The systems cost about $7,300 each and include cameras mounted between the mirror and windshield of the patrol cars. The camera is connected to a recorder in the trunk.
The officers' speech is recorded through microphones worn by the officers. The camera indicates the date, time, police department, car number, officers' numbers, speed of the patrol car, speed of cars tracked by the radar unit and whether the lights or siren are being used.
Nothing but good can result if police departments invest in these video systems.
Most importantly, the cameras will diminish incidents of police brutality and make police officers accountable for their actions.
Civil liberties groups have praised the video systems, as long as they are kept on at all times. Privacy rights may be an issue because citizens may be filmed without their knowledge, but no cases have come up yet.
A secondary benefit, one that will appeal to law enforcement agencies, is that the cameras would lessen the amount of time police officers spend in court.
With the new technology, an officer can rewind the tape and show traffic violators why they were pulled over. This luxury will reduce the number of contested tickets and keep police out of courts and on the streets where they belong.
The tapes also could be offered as evidence in court as police officers' defense against damage lawsuits.
Police departments must study the benefits of installing the video camera systems. The expense of doing so is minimal compared to the gains in civil liberties that can and need to be achieved.
Debbie Myers for the editorial board
Ozone depletion
Government must take problem more seriously
The Environmental Protection Agency recently announced that the ozone layer over the United States is disappearing at more than twice the rate it first thought.
The loss since 1978 has been about 5 percent, which means that 10 percent more ultraviolet light now reaches the Earth's surface. This means that in the next 50 years, about 12 million U.S. citizens will get skin cancer from too much ultraviolet light.
About 200,000 people will die from skin cancer, nearly 20 times more than previously estimated.
The government has taken several steps to reduce chlorofluorocarbons, which are the primary chemicals destroying the ozone layer. However, as the problem becomes worse, the White House seems to be taking a wait-and-see attitude.
Last June, more than 90 countries agreed to ban CFCs entirely by the year 2000. In 1987, 24 nations agreed to cut the production of CFCs in half by the year 2000. Also last year, President Bush pledged $25 million to help underdeveloped countries replace CFCs with safe, but more expensive, chemicals.
These decisions were made before the EPA released the new figures on the rate of ozone depletion. White House critics now warn against acting too quickly on this news. They warn that environmentalists are becoming
too pessimistic.
And just last month, Chrysler chairperson Lee Iacocca met with President Bush to ask for lower auto emission standards. He said strict environmental regulations were hurting the automobile industry. Bush officials said they would consider the request.
Perhaps the government hopes environmental problems will disappear. Unfortunately, ozone depletion is going to get worse. CFCs remain in the atmosphere for decades, so decreasing them will take years to have a positive effect. And lowering emission standards would only destroy one of the few regulations helping the environment in the short-term.
These latest findings should force the government to step up plans to deal with environmental hazards. Instead, it is skeptical of the findings.
William Reilly, administrator of the EPA, said the EPA would continue to increase efforts to find CFC substitutes.
But in the meantime, the White House must take the issue more seriously. A good start would be to acknowledge the extent of the problem.
Editorials reflect the opinion of the University Daily 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 signed author.
The least the government could do is to continue to enforce regulations it has already set, despite the pleas from the auto industry.
The time of wait and see has long passed.
Melanie Botts 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.
MARIELY Chicago Tribune
WORSE THAN NOTHING...
IT'S SURPLUS NOTHING.
U.S. AID
TO HUNGARIAN
REBELS
1956
WE'RE
ROOTIN'
FOR YOU
TO KURDS
- 1991 - RUSH
9. 10
Few people are laughing about the links in the S & L failures
So have you heard the one about the savings and loan sugar daddies, the contrast and the Central Intelligence Agency? No?
It's not real funny, so not many people are telling it.
I think by now everyone has heard the S & L routine, a real-life version of Abbott and Costello's "Who's on first?" We've just begun to bust our gats on that one when in comes the new twist. The jokers telling this knee-slapper are reporters for the Houston Post named Brewton and Seay. Since the beginning of last year, they've been filing stories (picked up by Joel Bleifuss of In These Times) about the connections between former CIA operatives, organized crime, failed savings and loans and the Iran-contra scandal. What cards!
Their new twist lends to the comedy of a peculiar Three Stooges quality. Congress and the Justice Department are Larry and Mo arguing bases, while our venerable execu- tors his sons and his former colleague Clare will vide the eyepoking, nose-pinching and face-speaking Curly.
Tim Hamilton
Staff columnist
Basically, the Post weaves together an enigmatic tale that suggests possible links between the CIA and organized crime in the failure of 22 thrifts, of which 16 are in Texas. Many names associated with the Iran-contra scandal pop up. The Post began its investigation when Houston's Mainland Savings Association failed because of loans to a group of New York apartment syndicators. The U.S. General Accounting Office later notified Brewton that two men were charged with racketeering and fraud in connection with deposits made in Mainland. As luck would have it, one of the racketeers, Martin Schwimmer, lived across his Long
Island street from one of the apartment syndicators, Howard Pulver.
A tip regarding a San Diego lawsuit later linked the other solicitor, Mario Renda, with Herman K. Beeble Sr., who reportedly has ties with the Marcelo crime family in New Orleans, and various failed Texas S& Ls. A 1985 report of the federal comproller listed Beeble as having control or influence over 12 national banks. Perhaps most important among them was three blocks from the White House, the Palmer National Bank of Washington, D.C. Financed by Beeble Sr., this bank had four accounts of the National Endowment for the Preservation of Liberty, which helped launder money for Ollie North and the contrast. Palmer was co-founded by Stefan Halper, the son of a former CIA deputy director, member of Bush 1980 presidential campaign, former deputy director of the State Department's Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs during Reagan's first term. He also headed North's Defense Fund.
Finally, after Brewton had exposed a large pattern of "more" circumstantial evidence alleging Mafia and CIA involvement, his theory was corroborated by two men. Lloyd Monroe, former prosecutor with the department's organized crime strike, and Brenneke, self-proclaimed CIA operative, went on record alleging the suspected collision.
Brenneke attracted Justice
Department attention when his testimony at the trial of Heinrich Rupp, another CIA agent indicted for bank fraud, included information that incriminated George Bush, William Casey and Donald Gregg in the alledged host-for-hospitals deal that delayed release of the 52 Americans until after the 1980 election in order to damage Curtis's chances.
The Justice Department brought Brenneke up on charges of making false statements last May in Portland, Ore. He was acquitted. A key witness for defense was West Point graduate William Norrpur, one of 17 charged in the $2 billion sales to Iran. Norrpur testified that he knew Brenneke worked for Air America, a company in the 1960s. Rupp testified for Air America same time. The Houston Post also reported that a 1957 ID card showed Rupp to be a vice president and pilot for Global International Airways.
This airline is thought to be the same as Global International Airlines, which is owned by Farhad Azima, whose family had ties with the shah and who owned the failed Indian Springs State Bank of Kansas City, Kan. Indian Springs is the first place that the feeds caught up with Benda, who has ties not only to Dhaka but also to Khashoggi, the Saudi arms dealer implicated in the arms shipments to Iran.
The Post also reported that the plane that flew 23 tons of spare parts to Iran was owned by RACE Aviation, by owning by Azima and his wife.
I'm sure once it comes out in the wash we'll all laugh our way to the bank. If there still is one.
Tim Hamilton is a Lawrence student in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Graduation cancellation
Rock Chalk Jayhawk, KU! Tradition is the University of Kansas' claim to excellence. One of the most cherished traditions at KU is the infamous walk down the hill on graduation day. The sun is shining, that band is playing "Pomp and Circumstance," students are in their ceps and gowns. Amateur photographers line the route as thousands of family members, friends and faculty from all over the country gather in
the celebration of one of life's most respected accomplishments — graduation. The recognition for all of the students who put in one of studies is well deserved.
According to this year's commencement guide, if it is raining on graduation day at 1 p.m., the procession will start at 5:30 p.m. if the weather clears. However, if it is still raining, the procession will be canceled. Allen Field House will not be used for commencement exercises.
No graduation ceremonies! Is this fair after all of the years of sacrifice, dedication, commitment, determination and hard work? We, as graduates, will have no formal recognition for our achievement. None of our family members will be able to see us achieve this goal in our lives. A
school that promotes tradition has taken one of the most cherished traditions away from us.
When questioning this change, I was informed by the chancellor's office that it would cost too much money to set up Allen Field House as an alternative commencement site. What about all of the money spent by students to reach this point in our academic careers? What about all of the money spent on buying graduation announcements? What about the money spent to buy a cap and gown to wear on graduation day? Rain or shine, the University owes us a graduation ceremony.
In an academic setting, you would think the great minds on the Commencement Committee could have used any of the money we spent for
'From a school that claims to value tradition, I feel robbed of college's most important tradition!'
tution and fees during the past four or five years? Where does the money we spent to rent the plastic caps and gowns go? The chancellor's office also says that Allen Field House is too small to hold graduation ceremonies up in the schools and hold separate ceremonies in different locations?
Of course, the people on the Commencement Committee have already had their chance to be recognized for their contributions. The people already had their chance to shine in
the spotlight for their great achievement. What does it matter to them that for the first time in commencement history our graduation ceremony could be canceled? I wonder if people who are considering coming to KU would still come if they knew that after four or five long, hard years they might not have a graduation?
From a school that claims to value tradition, I feel robbed of college's most important tradition! I pray that it doesn't rain. I would hate for my relatives to travel from afar, only to sit in the car and drive around the Campanile on my graduation day.
Shundrekia Smith Kansas City, Mo., senior
Thanks from U.S.S.R.
I hoped to run a doctor program in education at KU, but I don't have currency. Perhaps with your help I'll be able to train an assistant or ship some other source of aid.
In October 1990, I was a guest of your precious state as a member of the Soviet delegation. Surely I still have unforgettable impressions. Your university is great. Many people in this country do envy me because I saw Kawas.
Best wishes.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNEILI
RICH CORNELL
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
I would like to wish all your readers happiness and success.
TOM EBLEN
Editors
Business staff
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
EJANNE HINES
Sales and marketing advises
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
Editors
News. Melissa Matthies Campus sales mgr. Sophie Whabe
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 Muser
Pam Sollier Production mgrs. Rich Harshbarger
Sports. Ann Somers Marketing director. Katie Studer
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Embark
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chrissy Hats
Features. Jill Harmington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Great columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kausan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kausan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flin Hall.
Loco Locals
WELCOME BACK TO "LOVE
CONNECTION"... KATY'S
GOING TO TELL US ABOUT-
EXCUSE ME CHUCK,
BUT THERE'S NO
REASON TO GO OVER
THIS DATE...
A man is sitting in a chair. He is wearing glasses and has a watch on his wrist. He is holding a book in his hands. There is a door behind him.
HE'S NOTHING LIKE THE
GUY I'M LOOKING FOR.
I WANT SOMEONE WHO
ISSIN. WEARS HATS ... IS
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BUT I'M MOVING TO EUROPE
TOMORROW.
3
MARCH 19TH
4/12
WHAT CHA
WATCHING?
NOTHING
Nurlan Uteshev
Uralsk, U.S.S.R.
by Tom Michaud
CLICK
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
5
C13 C13
Roof repair
Ron Klein/KANSAN
Jerry Howard, frame and body technician for Laird Noller Ford-Lincoln-Mercury-Mazda, 23rd and Alabama streets, installs a new roof on a 1989 Mazda 323 to replace one damaged by hail in a recent storm. Chuck Kramer, new car and truck manager, said that the dealership gave estimates for more than 500 hall-damaged cars after the storm and that the bodyshop would repair more than 100 cars. Kramer estimated that the dealership would be busy repairing the cars until January 1992.
Service aids students in debt
Counselors analyze spending, expenses By Katie Chisman
Kansan staff writer
When students get into financial trouble from credit cards, loans or just everyday spending, there is a place they can go to receive counseling about how to get out of debt.
Eldon Gill, consumer credit counselor, works with students and evaluates their spending habits to find where the problems lie.
"We work with people who are having trouble paying their bills," he said. "Whether it's because of not budgeting right, a medical emergency that set them back or a loan problem, we'll help them."
Gill, who works for Consumer Credit Counseling Service, a private nonprofit organization based in New York, on Tuesday and Thursday.
The service charges a one-time fee of $20 for counseling sessions. However, if students cannot pay, alternative payment plans can be arranged.
During counseling sessions, the client's monthly living expenses are evaluated to find how much money is being spent.
"We look at every aspect of spending from medical expenses to magazine subscriptions." he said
Gill said credit counselors enrol- eraged students to plan ahead for expenses they knew they would incur
"Our main concern is to help people budget and try to find ways that they can work themselves out of it. We also just need to change their lifestyles."
Gill said that an increasing number of students were coming to receive counseling for the debts they had accumulated.
"A lot of students get in over their heads," he said. "One out of every 10 students I see is in trouble because of credit cards."
"A good rule of thumb is don't put an onion on it that you can't pay in full.
Gill said it was important for
students to have a clean credit record because in most professions it is likely that credit records will be checked when applying for jobs.
He said that a bad debt stayed on a person's record for seven years after it was paid off.
"If you can't make the full payment, contact the creditors and tell them you can't pay and at least try to pay off the finance charge, which is two percent of the outstanding balance," he said. "That usually keeps from turning the debt over to a collection agency."
Jerry Rogers, KU director of financial aid, said it was easy for students who recently had graduated to get into debt because of the expenses they faced after graduation.
"Pretty close to one out of three students has some kind of a loan they have to pay back when they get out of college," he said. "A lot of people helpless and ditch out of paying, and he is now they get themselves in trouble."
For more information, call the Topeka office at 1-234-0217.
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Environment threatens rivers
Endangered rivers targeted by conservationist group
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Colorado, upper Mississippi, Columbia and Snake rivers were among the 10 "most endangered" U.S. rivers targeted yesterday by a conservation group that lobbies Congress for federal waterway protection.
749-4324
"The problems affecting these rivers are symbolic of problems facing other rivers that are being treated as sewers, industrial backyards and generation stations," Kevin Coyle, president of American Rivers, said.
The Colorado River in Arizona heads the nonprofit group's sixth annual list of rivers most endangered by hydroelectric dams, mining operations, pollution and land development.
A river is considered for the most endangered list based on its significance, the degree of threat to its waters and the imminence of the threat, Coyle said.
Rivers on the group's 1991 list include the Alsek and Tatsenshonii rivers in Alaska; the American
in California; the Penobscot in Maine; the Susquehanna in Pennsylvania; the upper Mississippi in the upper Midwest; the Columbia and Snake in the Pacific Northwest; Gunnison in Colorado; the Passaic in New Jersey and the New in North Carolina.
The group listed 15 "threatened rivers" in 12 states. They include the Arkansas River and Suwanee River.
The Colorado River, which helped carve the Grand Canyon, is threatened by the Glenn Canyon Dam 16 miles upstream from the Grand Canyon National Park, Coyle said.
The wide fluctuations in river flows through the dam have damaged fragile beaches and vegetation in the canyon, habitat for the endangered humpback whale, and archaeological sites and river recreation, he said.
American Rivers uses its annual list as a priority sheet for its efforts to lobby Congress.
Oregon's Klamath River topped the list of endangered rivers last year, but now appears on the list of 15 threatened rivers because state officials have denied a permit necessary to proceed with construction of a water diversion project proposed near Klamath Falls, Ore.
White smoke filled the skies over south Lawrence yesterday as a controlled fire burned 180 acres of the Baker University Wetlands, between Louisiana Street and Haskell Avenue.
Controlled wetlands fire burns in south Lawrence Kansan staff report
Jan Boyd, wife of Roger Boyd who is director of natural areas for Baker University, said sections of the wetlands were burned every year in control woody vegetation not native to the prairie.
Encroachment of wood trees, bushes and shrubs from nearby acreage have forced maintenance personnel to burn the area annually. Finally, the area was burned every third year.
Yesterday's fire completed a three-week project of burning at the wetlands.
Although the Wakarusa Fire Department and the Douglas County Sheriff's Office were informed of the fire, the burning was kept in control by 10 Baker University students.
Informal Rush
Attention Freshman, Sophomore and Junior males interested in Fraternity life. There will be a short informational meeting regarding Spring Informal Rush (April 27-28).
Meeting:
Sunday April 21,2:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium,
KS Union
Any questions... call IFC office, 864-3559
Spring 1991
Nurturing Tradition, Fostering Change
A
Tuesday, April 23,1991
8:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
Women's Recognition Program
Reception following in the Malott Room, Kansas Union Sponsored by Commission on the Status of Women
Going to Kansas City, Kansas City here I Come.
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Planning on attending KU Medical Center next semester? Cambridge West Apartments are only a short walk from KU Medical Center.
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Congratulations to all of the fraternities and sororities that participated in
JAYHAWK JOG
KU
5- and 10-kilometer Race 8 a.m., Saturday, April 27 Campus West (Nichols Hall)
STUDENTS AND ALUMNI
AYHAWK JOG
Register at our Wescoe Beach booth on April 17 or 18 and get a FREE T-SHIRT!
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Sponsored by the KU Alumni Association and the Student Alumni Association
$10/students $12/non-students
Prison will be awarded first, second, and third-place whiners in eight age categories.
Prison reputation requested. Call the KIJ Alumni Association 844-7400, for details.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
7
World briefs
Warsaw, Poland
Poland opens stock exchange
Poland took another step on the road to a market economy yesterday by opening its first stock exchange since 1939 - on the top floor of the old Communist Party headquarters.
When the session was over, four of the five employees in the privatized companies had risen and one was done with it.
"This is a historical moment, no exaggeration," Privatization Minister Janusz Lewandowski told more than 200 guests on the transaction floor.
Lewandowski said he hoped at least three more former state-owned companies would offer stock to the public next month.
Johannesburg, S. Africa
Winnie Mandela testifies at trial
Winnie Mandela, testifying yesterday in her trial for the first time, said she was hundreds of miles away when four youths were allegedly abducted and beaten at her home.
Mandela said she left her Soweto home for two nights in late December 1988, when the crimes allegedly occurred, to meet with people in the city. Brandfort about setting up a soup kitchen.
The wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela gave brief, flat answers to her questions.
"I was so outraged at such false and serious allegations," she said of the charges against her.
Palm Beach, Fla.
Kennedys' absences questioned
Police said yesterday that they wanted to know why detectives were unable to talk to the Kennedy family soon after an alleged sexual assault at their beachfront estate.
Detectives made a number of visits, including one soon after they first received the rape report about 2 p.m. on March 30, police representative Craig Gunkel said.
Each time, they were told members of the Kennedy family weren't there.
"The detective bureau did go up to the Kennedy mansion a short time after we got the report of the alleged sexual battery," Gunkel said. "The police department is looking into why themselves of the Kennedy home did not make themselves available to police detectives at that time."
From The Associated Press
Bush says he will help if Saddam leaves Iraq
WASHINGTON — President Bush said yesterday that he was willing to consider giving Saddam Hussein safe passage to a third country if that's what it would take to remove him from power in Iraq.
The Associated Press
At the same time, Bush said former President Nixon's suggestion that the CIA assassinate the Iraqi leader is unfounded.
Asked about his wife's suggestion Monday that Saddam Hussein should be tried and hanged for war crimes, Bush said. "I seldom differ with my brother and I don't know that I would differ with her here."
If offered a chance to broker a deal that would allow Saddam "to live a happy life forever more in some third country, with all kinds of conditions never to go back and brutalize his people again, I'd
"I might be willing to say, so far as our pressing charges, we'd be willing to get him out.
"We want him out of there so badly, and I think it's so important to the tranquility of Iraq that under that condition we might.
have to think about it," Bush said.
“But his crimes — do I think he's guilty of war crimes?” The environmental terror. The rape and pillage of Kuwait. What he's done to his own people. I would think there'd be plenty of grounds under which he would be prosecuted for war crimes,” Bush said.
But he said he knew of no negotiations to lure Saddam from power.
Asked about the idea of putting out a CIA contract on the Iraqi dictator, Bush said flatly, "I think that's unacceptable, and I'm not sure that's exactly what President Nixon said, either."
Death row inmates' rights cut
Supreme Court decision curtails ability to appeal
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, in a ruling that could hasten many executions, yesterday cut back on the rights of death row inmates to make repeated appeals of their convictions.
6-3 ruling in a case from Georgia was denounced by the dissenters as a drastic curtailment of free speech.
The court rejected arguments by death row inmate Warren McCleskey that Georgia officials violated his rights when they failed to give him a written statement from the inmate to whom McCleskey allegedly confessed the 1978 slaying of an Atlanta police officer.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the court, said McClesky's failure to raise the issue during an earlier appeal in 1981 disqualified him from trying to use it in subsequent appeals.
The only exception to the new restrictions are those rare instances in which the defendant can show he is probably innocent of the crime, Kennedy said.
Kennedy said the burden was on defendants in such cases to prove they had good reason for not raising the issue initially and that their failure to prejudice their ability to defend themselves.
He said the new rules "should curtail the abusive petitions that in recent years have threatened to
undermine the integrity of the habeas corpus process."
process.
In other action, the court:
In other action, the court:
■ Ruled that states may tax cable television operators without having to levy the same tax on all other news media.
■ Ruled that lawyers who represent themselves in successful civil rights lawsuits cannot collect attorney fees from the losing side.
A proposal in Congress to limit habeas corpus petitions was introduced after a special study committee appointed by Chief Justice William Reed recommended time limits on death row appeals.
Habeas corpus is the system that permits convicted defendants to appeal to the federal courts for help when they claim their constitutional rights have been violated.
Justice Thurgood Marshall, in a dissenting opinion, said the court had tossed aside established proofs of innocence.
McCleskey's murder conviction was overturned in 1989 by a federal judge who ruled that the state had violated his rights in obtaining his confession to Offie Evans, a fellow prison inmate.
But the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the conviction, ruling McLeskey forfeited his right to challenge the constitutionality of the confession by failing to raise the issue in 1981
McCleskey's lawyers said they lacked evidence to challenge the confession until 1987, when they obtained Evans' written statement after the Georgetown Court ordered police records were made public.
Elections for 1991'92 sophomore, junior, and senior class officers
Elections will be held
Monday, April 29,and Tuesday, April 30 From 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.
BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS ELECTION
by Friday, April 19, at 4:00 p.m.
BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS ELECTION
All applications must be turned in to the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union,
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Wednesday, April 17, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Husband-and-wife hiring gains prominence at KU
STATE
856
Work stress is less with spouse present
By Sarah Davis Kansan staff writer
Every morning, as most spouses go their separate ways to put in a full day's work, some head in the same direction.
Howard and Beverly Sypher are a husband and wife who work together as associate professors in communication studies at KU.
Husband-and-wife teaching teams are becoming more common at the university.
"I think you're going to see it more and more," she said. "I don't think it's going to go away."
Sypher has worked in the same department with her husband, Howard, also an associate professor of education studies, for two-and-a-half years.
"We've been very fortunate because timing has been on our side, and we both pursued academic careers at the same time," she said. "It's a bonus to find someone you want to spend your life with who is interested in the same academic pursuits."
Both agreed that there were several benefits to working with one's spouse, such as a built-in understand-support of the other person's problems.
"I think it's great because you never have this problem of never knowing what the other person does." Howard Sypher said.
Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt, a married couple teaching in the department of political science, agreed.
"There's a lot that can be difficult and stressful about being a professor, and it helps when your spouse is someone who can understand how you're feeling," said Gerner, who first met and worked with her husband at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill.
Schrodt agreed but said that it was harder to get away from office problems because both partners worked in the same area.
A common problem that many couples expressed was that colleagues often expect a spouse to be the partner and is what he or she is doing.
His wife said it was important that each partner be looked at as an individual.
"People forget that we're different people," Schrodt said.
"Each person has his or her own separate professional identity." Gerner said. "You just have to keep stressing to people that your personal link is outside the office. It can be a little inbred — you have to work harder to have a life out of the office."
Jan Sheldon, associate professor of law and human development and
family life, commutes to work each day with her husband, James Sherman, whom she met at KU.
"I really enjoy it," she said, mentioning that she and her husband usually ate lunch together. "It gives us time to not only see each other, but to talk about issues, and that's really important to us."
Her husband, a professor of human development and family life, said that although working with his wife was no different than working with his daughter, he enjoyed being able to see her during the day to talk about ideas.
Howard Sypher said he could not have asked for a better arrangement than to work with his spouse.
"I used to think it wouldn't work," he said. "But in the last four or five years, we've come to realize that in many cases we could do the best things we could be done."
All the money in the world can't make things perfect. . .
The Power To Be Your Best At KU.
Prices subject to availability. Offer open to students enrolled in six 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 credit card only. The bookstore already been applied on computer purchases. Other restrictions may apply.
- Macintosh Classic
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
9
Bronchitis flares up at KU
Watkins sees up to 15 cases each day
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Bronchitis has been making its appearance at KU for the last few weeks. As many as 10 to 15 students a day have visited Watkins Memorial Health Center because of the illness.
"I've seen a fair amount," said Lawrence Magee, physician at Watkins. "Most ones we see are mild to moderate cases."
Bronchitis is an inflammation of the bronchial tubes. Some of the symptoms are coughing, discolored chest, and shortness of breath. Marge said
An acute case of bronchitis is usually characterized by a sudden
onset caused by an infection, viral or bacterial, or an irritation, sometimes from chemicals in the air. It usually is easy to cure and often does not require treatment because it will clear up by itself.
A chronic case is due to constant irritation, most commonly from smoking. But chronic cases are common for the college-age group, hsc
"Usually, these respond very well to antibiotics." Magee said. "Some cases of bronchitis don't need antibiotics. It will go away by itself."
John Baughman, pharmacist at Watkins, said there had been an increase in the number of students getting medication for bronchitis.
Humidifying agents and antibiotics are two possible treatments prescribed by physicians, he said.
"Usually, they will treat it symptomatically." Baughman said.
Magee said it usually took 10 to 15 days for recovery from bronchitis. But it is possible for it to be transferred to others.
"It depends on how worn down you are." he said.
"I think the virus or the bacteria that caused it is contagious," he said. "Usually, it's passed through the air."
But it is possible to be near someone with bronchitis and not contract it. Magee said.
It can be contracted through the membranes in the nose and eyes, he said. If the virus is passed, the recipient may not have the same symptoms as the person, originally infected.
City officials deliver on pledge
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night granted a local plastics firm a tax abatement, giving newly elected leaders the power to put campaign promises to action.
The commissioners, who during the election touted the city's tax-abatement policy as an important tool to retain local companies, took over the role of Packer Plastics Inc., 2330 Packer Road, a 50 percent tax abatement.
Packer Plastics officials intend to apply the abatement to $4 million worth of new equipment for several new product lines, including recyclable plastics. The $4 million will
come from $6.3 million in industrial revenue bonds, which the commission also approved.
City manager Mike Wilden said that because the bonds would mature in five years instead of the standard tenor, cement also would expire in five years.
Packer Plastics officials told the commission that a tax abatement would allow the company to retain 150 jobs.
The commission initially approved Packer Plasties' tax abatement request at a public hearing March 19, making dayay's vote little more popular.
However, commissioner Bob Schulte said the decision indicated
that there would be little disagreement among commissioner on taxation.
"There's a very positive feeling on the commission about economic growth," he said. "The new tax-abatement policy is going to address that retention is something that's very important to the economy."
Commissioner John Nlandbian also said it was important to adhere to previous policies until the commission agreed on a new abatement plan.
"We have some decisions that have been made already until we have reviewed our tax-abatement policy." he said.
54 students to receive scholarships
Bv Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
At least 54 students will be $1,000
richer next school year.
Two outstanding students will be chosen from each of the 27 departments in the humanities and social sciences. Harley S. Nelson Family Scholarship.
J. Michael Young, director of the honors program, which coordinates the scholarship process, said that last year only 24 students were awarded the prize. Because more money is available in the scholarships' second year, more people will be chosen.
Young said the scholarships, which
are awarded toward tuition, were quite an honor.
"It means you were selected as the best major in your department," he said. "The main point is that these students will be given on excellence not need."
He said each department announced the scholarship contest and encouraged students who would be juniors and seniors next year to apply. Faculty within the department also can nominate students.
Young said faculty in each department determined the best candidates in terms of their own criteria. But a graduate course has a grade point average overall and a 3.5
in their major.
Stan Lombardo, chairperson of the department of classics, is on the committee that chooses the winner in his department. He said the award was beneficial because it highlighted students who had proved themselves in the academic field.
"We're very glad to have these awards," he said. "We looked at who the better students were. It's strictly their scholastic achievements."
Young said he planned to make a booklet about the student winners and present it to the Nelson family so it would know who the money had
Be environmentally conscious!
Celebrate
EARTH
DAY '91
Monday
April 22
• Enter the Nerf Bowling Contest in the Kansas Union Lobby to receive free tokens to the Jaybowl.
• Donate $1 to have a tree planted for you. Get a free button!
• Bring a cup or squeeze bottle to Union Square, The Hawk's Nest or the Hawk Stop for 25¢ refills on soda or coffee.
• Drop off your recyclable Kansas or
• Enjoy a special Tunes At Noon
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10
Wednesday, April 17, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
11
Students to study Italian villas
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Ten students are planning to take a brief, but educational, trip to Italy this summer to enrich their knowl- ment through a KU summer program.
The program, offered through the School of Architecture and Urban Design, is a four-week course in June. Students will gain practical knowledge in the reconstruction of villas in rural Italy.
Chip Houser, who went last year as a student and who will be the program's teaching assistant this summer, said the students rehabilitated Tuscan farmhouses that were constructed using very old techniques.
They will work at the Castello di Spannocchia, an area described by the school's literature as containing crumbling, rough-stone buildings in overgrown fields, and wooded hillsides with a nearby castle.
"Through the work the students do and the short trips they take, they get an understanding about how almost
"It combines the tourist view of things with a deep sense of understanding how things really work in this part of the world."
all buildings in Italy are constructed." Houser said.
Aspects of the program include heavy work, such as knocking down and reconstructing retaining walls, and creating new designs for existing structures and sketched studies of local architecture.
This summer students will work on a free-staining retaining wall used to terrace the landscape to make it agriculturally usable.
Houser said Italy provided a clear and consistent architectural heritage that had developed for more than thousands of years.
"It's a fantastic way to learn basic architectural concepts" he said.
But the students learn more than just architecture.
"It's like coming to America and being dropped in the middle of life, but we are here when time we're there we'll probably never see a single tourist."
Harris Stone, professor of architecture and urban design who was the coordinator for last year's program, said his program was popular with students.
ordget Bogan, Rolla, Mo., senior,
said she originally had planned to
take part in the program last summer.
She decided to work and go this summer.
"I'm going to learn about construction of older Italian buildings and to learn about Italian architecture and culture," she said.
This year, students in the program are taking an introductory Italian course.
Maria Angelietti, the teaching assistant for the Italian class, said she thought the students would travel to teaching Italian before they went overseas.
"We are their guests," she said. "We should make an effort to learn some of their language. Knowing just how to speak will make you can make such a difference."
Houser said the program cost students $2,500 to $3,000.
Ozone being depleted faster than predicted
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The loss of the earth's protective ozone layer is probably even worse than shown in recent satellite observations, a leading researcher told Congress.
F. Sherwood Rowland, co-author of the 1974 study that disclosed that chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, were damaging the ozone layer, said the total wintertime loss over Canada and the northern United States since 1969 could be estimated at about 10 percent.
Rowland, a chemistry professor at the University of California at Irvine, told the Senate Subcommittee on Science, Technology and Space that ozone destruction began before 1970 that the satellite measurements began.
The EPA said the result could be an additional 200,000 deaths from skin cancer in the United States in the next 50 years.
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And it's from Apple-designed so now you can get everything out of a Macintosh computer that Apple built into it. Not just the power to look your best. The power to be your best.*
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©1991 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the apple logo, Macintosh, StyleWriter and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
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Co-sponsored by the Department of Political Science
and the University of Kansas Hillel
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Wednesday, April 17, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Do you have a news story idea? Call 864-4810
The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions of:
- Treasurer
- Administrative Assistant
- Student Executive Committee Chairman
- Executive Secretary
- A.S.K. Director
- Community Service Coordinator
Applications available at the Student Senate Office, 410 KS Union Deadline: April 19, 5:00 p.m.
???'s...Contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710
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KU students survey Lawrence
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By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
KU students have been climbing walls and taking measurements of some Lawrence buildings to prepare for a future survey they are producing for a class.
Architecture students in Introduction to Historic Preservation are compiling historical records about buildings that are 80 years old or older.
David Benjamin, Lawrence graduate student who teaches the class, said the students were examining five sites in Lawrence, including two houses in the 900 and 1000 blocks of Tennessee and Ohio streets.
"We didn't know it, but the people who live in that area are trying to get on the state register of historic places," he said. "Our reports will help them do it faster."
Other sites students are studying are a barn, a bank and a former motel.
While in class, students learn to research potential historic sites and preserve preservation techniques.
Benjamin said the class would submit their reports to the city and the state.
"One copy will go to the Kansas Collection at the Spencer Research Library for people doing research on the history of buildings in
Lawrence," he said.
"We're doing something that will benefit not only the students and University, but the Lawrence community as well."
The students report information such as the original owner, the construction date and the style of the building.
Benjamin said that while researching the bank building at Eighth and Massachusetts streets, which was thought to be a reproduction, a student discovered that the building was the original bank.
"The original vault is still there," he said. "The original brick was just covered up by marble walls."
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
A
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday after the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefended Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "The guy who did it will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The uglly side of tennis, if indeed we
know that it is evident in the No. 2
bounds match
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hat battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7,
6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Kansas saures Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and seniors Rafael Rafael Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
set for a singles victory
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker prefer to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taunt Hank and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside of the building and into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "I guess they are telling me names. I guess it is their frustration those guys when they lose every
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers, Renee Raychaudhie, Page Golens and Laura Hagemann and freshmen victorious in singles competition.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhui, No. 2 Bowers and Goines and No. 3 Buffy and Neil Pelz. Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field hockey game. On both days the women play at 4 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarshin
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has already been working on the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Riley manager, said that several independent athletes had come to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to meet with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of $18.10^{34}$.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, where his indoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
---
Jeff Gross returns a serve against
defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions Williams and Bobb as possible candida The Associated Press
Back to the Future
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digger Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center and on 393 games, didn't lack for space.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment, who are the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kanean sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday but I didn't think it would tonight."
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every innings but the third and sixth.
Attitudes b1
By Lana Smith
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree the Kansas should have won.
Kansan sportswriti
"They had a few bad rounds, at those will kill you every time Johnson said. "They were just n't going to keep the ball in play very well."
After Kansas shot 321 in the sit
round, Johnson said she told the tea
to relax and have fun.
"Everyone has a tendency to ta it too seriously," Johnson said.
Spring Fashion 1991
I will not use my name in the article. If you are interested in the story, please contact me directly.
THE JOY OF MARRYING IN THE PARK
an advertising supplement to The University Daily Kansan April 17,1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
CARLTON
Bv Mark Spencer
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday afternoon at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
Kansan sportswriter
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight offense to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he stepped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"they did an x-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "I think I should have been a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there was also evident in the No.2 doubles.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taut Tank and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the room. He turned into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots ane put us down 4-1 early," Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it frustrating for those guys when they lose every
Kansas萨斯 Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and junioriors Rafael Rauf Paul Garvin and Han polished off the Tiger opponents in straight sets.
set for a singles victory
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers, Renee Rayehaudhuri, Page Golens and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
Rayachaudhuri's match, like nearly the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhui, No. 2 McCain and Goms and No. 3 Buffy McMullen and Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma State at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m., and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college in the 66th Annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has made. The Relays once had the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relas."
Kaiser, 'a self proclaimed "rookie" Riley manager, said that several independent athletes need to be excited to the excitement of the Rivals.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to compete with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas's freshman sensation Heber Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·103⁴.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, his outdoors season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relaxs.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
Jeff Gross returns a serve again defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions Williams and Bob as possible candid The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, and upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center, on 383 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Dhiplex Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment and the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hogglund-Maupin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 65 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Dingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bri
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all players would agree that I should have been a leader.
By Lana Smith Kansan sportswriter
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time." Johnson said. "They were just not consistent enough to keepeping in play, very well."
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kane brothers developed how attitudes can affect a game.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first
assault, his obsolete said she told the team to relay
the ball down.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
Spring Sale!
JAMES F. BLAKE
PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Sale!
Spring has sprung at Weaver's. You'll find all the season's best and brightest on sale, including fashions pictured:
- $27.99 The Hang Ten 100% Cotton Romper, green or black in sizes S, M, or L. Regularly $35.00
- $12.99 Malu Malu's 100% Rayon one-Pocket Tee, a rainbow of colors in sizes S, M, or L.Regularly $18.00
- $35.99 Star City Clothing's 100% Cotton Fly-Front, Front Pleated, Pocketed and Belted Skirt in sizes 5-13. Regularly $45.00
- $23.99 and Down Pier Connection's 100% Cotton Shirts, assorted prints and solids in sizes S-XL. Regularly $25-30
- $27.99 Levi's Dockers 100% Cotton Twill Khakis.
WeaverS
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Rozanne Campobasso Special Sections Manager Brent Maycock
Special thanks to:
Tom Eblen Butch Porter
Jeanne Hines Amy Hawley
Carole Rich Lucy Joo
Mindi Lund Russ Hancock
Dallas Dolan Susan Stoven...
Special Sections Editor
Votographers
Contributing photog.
Vanessa Finley
Jim Midkiff
Special thanks to:
Tom Eblen
Jeanne Hines
Carole Rich
Mindi Lund
Dallas Dolan
Contributing photographers Vanessa Finley Julie Sabin Ron Klein Jim Midiff Keith Thorpe
Price Riverfront
Biltwell Gitano
Westport Ltd. Harve Benard
Adolfo Ballard's
and to these Lawrence retailers:
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza:
On the cover...
The Loft Harper's
Seifert's Easton's
Campbell's Saffee's
Mr. Guy Weaver's
Men's spring fashions by Mister Guy, Polo, and Trafalgar, and women's spring fashions by Breeches, Mister Guy, and Cricket are available now at Mister Guy, 920 Massachusetts. Cover models: Kristine Ross and Mike Martin Cover photo by: Keith Thorpe
By Blaine Kimrev
Her long, untamed red hair flowed down onto her loose-fitting cotton shirt. Beneath the坦 billows of the buttdown lay a mystery. Was she wearing pink, purple, black . . . something lace perhaps? From her electric array of lingerie, it was hard to guess.
Faded denim cutoffs and bare feet, she could have been a college student of the '60s. Kely Harmon, Lawrence freshman, however, is a student of the '90s, and she has the underwear to prove it - 150 pieces to be precise.
"I can't go shopping anymore because I spend all my money at Victoria's Secret," she said, her freckled cheeks turning a slight crimson.
From silk teddies to satin bustiers, Harmon has them all. Although possessing a greater variety of underwear than could have been obtainable in the '60s, Harmon said that her newer purchases did, nevertheless, reflect the fashions of that decade.
This trend is not unique to Harmon's lingerie. The Birkenstocks and Guatemalen clothing predominant on campus are not the only the indication of '90s fashion mirroring '60s fashion. Women's underwear also is following the same trend.
"I started collecting underwear when I was a sophomore in high school." Harmon said. "I've spent thousands of dollars on the stuff. My tastes, however.
2 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
have become much more liberal."
Bending over the edge of her bed, she picked up a pair of bikini bottoms.
"I got these awesome crushed rea velvet underwear from Victoria's Secret," she said. "they've got a real '60s flair."
The owners of Undercover, a lingerie store in Lawrence, also have noticed a return to the '60s
"We're selling flower power lingerie," said Linda Randall, co-owner of the store. "The vivid floral prints against black backgrounds are very popular right now. We've sold out."
"Fashion is cyclical. It usually jumps every 30 years. Eighties underwear fashion reflected the '50s; the '90s reflects the '60s."
Longer bras, push-up bras, girdles and stockings were all back in. Randall said.
Although a devout purchaser of the newest lingerie styles, Harmon said she believed that lingerie stores could be becoming too liberal.
"I went to a Kansas City store my junior year in high school," Harmon said. "I was trying on this red push-up bra, and this lady comes up behind me."
"She started pushing up on me, trying to show me how to wear the bra. I couldn't believe it," she said.
Perhaps the underwear of today is a precursor to the rebirth of the avant garde of the '60s. Beware Undercover, Victoria's Secret, Frederick's of Hollywood. . . the times, they are a changin'. Burning bras could be next.
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
ALEXANDER ROSS
By Mark Spencer
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday in the Allen Field House tennis courts.
Kansan sportswriter
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an x-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture." Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "I was shocked that he will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker预定 to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taint Hank and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the building into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots an- put us down 4-1 early," Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and junior Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
set for a singles victory
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhury, Page Goin and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhour. No. 2 Miles and Goins and No. 3 Buffy Miles and Joy Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming concise conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Reflags headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has built. The relays will sit at the stature the Relays once had
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Resy manager, said that several independent athletes could add to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to serve with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³⁴.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, organized by his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
---
Jeff Gross returns a serve against defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions Williams and Bobby as possible candidate The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Dipple Ghepels was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The huge Monogram Room, and upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletics and Convocation Center on son 393 games, didn't lack for space.
The long walls were lined with w-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
Kansan sportswrite
in the second half, Matt faceoff offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 2-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not willing to play the ball, keeping the ball in play very well."
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bri
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kananaskis answered how化高了 attitudes can affect a game.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Fashion goes back in time
By Jennifer Bach
It may be time for our generation to stop sneezing at our parents' old clothes and start trying them on. You know the clothes - the bell-bottomed, psychedelic, striped and even polyester ones shoved way in the back of mom's and dad's closet. The clothes that our generation has been gawking and laughing at for years.
Now it's our parents' generation's turn to laugh, or at least say they told us so, because to the disgust of some, and the joy of others, the old styles from the '50s, '60s and '70s are back.
Take a casual stroll around the campus and see for yourself if it sounds doubtful. Check out the bright floral patterns, on many of the outfits, the stripes, the polka dots, the psychedelics, the tent dresses, Birkensocks, the long skirts and short skirts, the saddle shoes and the feared bell bottoms.
This fashion blast from the past is not so overwhelming that the campus resembles a scene from the movie "Grease," but it is there, and it seems to be growing more popular every day.
Girls all around are wearing long skirts that reach their
ankles, not quite poodle ones yet, but long, with white scrunched up socks and white Keds. It is a look that slightly resembles Sandra Dee.
Guys, while they are not sporting the white T-shirt and black leather jacket look, are rolling up their pants and jeans and wearing white socks and loafers. Sound familiar? It should. James Dean wore the same thing in "Rebel Without a Cause" in 1955.
Saddle shoes also have made a comeback. Guys and girls alike are wearing them with all kinds of outfits.
Todd Stubbe, New York junior, has two pairs, one black and white and the other black and brown.
"I feel old-fashioned when I wear the white ones," he said. They are summary, but no more comfortable than other shoes. But it was something that was different."
Tie-dye and Birkenstocks have been back for awhile, and they've lasted. Although not everyone appreciates the Woodstock generation look,
Although the fashion seems to predominantly represent the '50s, there is also a splash of the '60s and '70s thrown in.
there are a lot of the casual earthy clothes worn with the fashionable home-made beaded and braided jewelry and headbands on students all across campus.
As for the styles of the 70s, jeans have yet to return to bell bottoms, but slacks have already made the switch. There are many new stylish pants that now swirl widely at the base of people's legs as they walk.
Many students turned green at the thought of jeans billowing out at the ankle, but many liked and even owned a pair of the bell-bottomed slacks.
Monica Meyer, Schomberg sophomore, said she hated the bell-bottomed jeans look, but liked the way a lot of the old fashions have been modified.
"The pants have a '90s look similar to the '60s, but they have their own '90s style," she said. "I think everything is a little modified."
Donna Van Meter, a saleswoman at The Jones Store in Bannister Mall, said she noticed a switch back to an older style of dress and thought that the wearing of older styles might have some symbolic meaning.
"It's definitely coming back, no doubt about it." Van Meter
said. "There are the psychedelic leggings, baby doll tops and the platter collar in dresses. Swimmers cover-ups are coming back. The wider, brighter more tropical ties for men are back. They're also trying to bring the mood ring back.
"Yes, it has shifted back in time. I think people are scared of where the world is going and they're trying to stop it."
And much to people's surprise, even the shiny polyester shirts, like the ones John Travolta displayed in "Saturday Night Fever" are here again.
However, there are students who feel that this old-fashioned wave is not simply a copycat image of the past.
"It makes me mad that it is treated like a throwback," Kelly Marks, Derby junior, said. "We aren't stealing from the past. We have the ability to look back, and we've adopted stuff from the past. People are looking for their own uniqueness, not trying to copy them."
Colleen McKinney, Lorenex freshman, said some people took this old-fashioned look to the extremes. Although she said she thought the style was fun, she understood how other people
might not like it.
McKinney said that when she was in high school, she would never have worn some of her mother's old clothes, but that now she wore some of the ones her mom didn't get rid of.
"It's sogarish to look at a lot of people probably don't think it's very tasteful," she said. "College kids have been dressing this way for a long time. I guess it's just going into the mainstream now. I don't think it'll die, the colors are really great and bright."
"I wish she hadn't gotten rid of them," she said. "They would be a real find in a vintage store now."
Stephanie Bloyd, Wichita freshman, said that she liked the returning look, but thought it might die out soon.
"It's new for our generation," Bloyd said.
"I think it will get old, too. Well, it's already old, but it might get boring. I hope it's not the only fashion that will come back."
So the next time you catch yourself making fun of your mom's and dad's old outfits, stop and try them on. You may find you're wearing the latest fashion.
SPRING CLASSICS
MISTER GUY
A tradition of good taste at KU
MISTER GUY
MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 Mass.
842-2700
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6:00, Thurs. 'til 8:30, Sun. 12-5
TOMMY WILSON
A tradition of good taste at KU MISTER GUY MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
PAPA AND KAYE
Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
ALEXANDER MCKENNY
By Mark Spencer Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday afternoon at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's coach Scott Pereman said. "I don't know if he will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hat battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
set for a singles victory
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Tucker, however, continued to taut Hank and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the hive, and she then into the surrounding chain-link fence.
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. And they had names, names, names I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuri, of No. 2 Bowers and Goins and No. 3 Buffy Peltz. Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college during the 66th Annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and on the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has approved. The Relays are installed at the stature the Relays once had
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relas."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes added to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to experience with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas freshman sensation Heber Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·1034.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, his off-the-road season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
This document contains confidential information that is protected by the Federal Information Security Act of 2005. Any use, distribution, or disclosure of this material without permission is prohibited. Do not reproduce or distribute the content without written permission from the copyright holder.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against
defended Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions Williams and Bobb as possible candidat The Associated Press
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, same public relations staff, and priests.
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center on 393 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digger Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball队 trapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornet's last night at Hogwain Mound Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 61 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornetts, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bri
By Lana Smith
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that all the players would
Kansan sportswriter
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "they were just not sure what they were keeping the ball in play very well."
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kan- ters moved forward, howzed how azimuth attitude plays a game.
Spring has sprung...
LizC
ORT
photo by Jim Midkiff
Liz Claiborne sportswear, always a sure shot for spring is waiting for you at Saffee's, 922 Massachusetts St.
1983
Now at The Loft, 742 Massachusetts St., Cambridge Sports Club fashions, featuring sportswear for all occasions this spring.
A. K. 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.
photo by Vanessa Finley
Clothing for every occasion in one location from Adolfo, Gitano, Ballard's, Harve Benarden, Biltwell, and Westport Ltd. at The Laurence Riverfront Plaza. photo by Ron Klein
4 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
BROOKLYN
GIRLS
CLUB
Floral rompers and short sets by "Just Class" from Harper's, 853 Massachusetts St., will make spring brighter this year.
photo by Keith Thorpe
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
MERCY MEYER
By Mark Spencer
Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday afternoon at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture. "Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "He told me he was going to be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed he was also evident in the No. 2 doubles.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Tucker, however, continued to taint Hank and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the compound, who fell into the surrounding chain-link fence.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early," Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Fauel and Paul Garvin and Han polished of their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
set for a singles victory
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers, Renee Raychaudhier, Page Golens and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other."
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly
others, lasted just over 25
minutes.
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuri. No. 2 Bowers and Goins and No. 3 Buffy Mowrs and Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming conclure conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Washington on Sunday at the field house courts. In both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college through the 60th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has ordered them as soon as possible to the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Riley managers, said that several independent athletes added to the excitement of the Relys.
Ed Kamenski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to meet with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18-103⁴.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, his clean outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relaxs.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
---
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said
Jeff Gross returns a serve against defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions1 Williams and Bobby as possible candidat The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digger Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, the public relations staff and priests.
The huge Monogram Room, and upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center with over 393 games, didn't lack for space.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball队 rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoguelm-Maurin Stadium.
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring in every inning but the third and sixth.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 65 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
Attitudes bri
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kanahani team was recognized how attitudes can affect a game.
By Lana Smith Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
in Lawrence fashions!
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not ready to be the best keeping the ball in play very well."
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
photo by Julie Sabin
ALEXANDER FERGUSSON
Menswear by Boston Prepatory, British Khaki, and River City Trading is now available for Spring at Easton's, 839 Massachusetts St.
WENDY COHEN
I am so proud of you. I will always be there for you. I am very happy to see you here. I am also very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you. I am very happy to see you.
Look your best this spring in fashions by DB Design, Kasper, and Sunny Leigh, now at Seifert's, 821 Massachusetts St.
photo by Keith Thorpe
Mary Jane and Richard
This spring, look for sportswear by Bentley Arbuckle, Ruff Hewn, Nautica, and more at Campbell's, 941 Massachusetts St.
photo by Vanessa Finlev
Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
5
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
JACKSON
By Mark Spencer
Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday after the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"they did an X-ray on Rhin and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "If he broke his knee, will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7,
6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taut Taun and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the restaurant into the surrounding chain-link fences.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early," Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
set for a singles victory
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhiem, Page Goins and Chris Bowersmann and freshmen Chris Bowers and we were victories in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuiro, No. 2 Bowlers and Goins and No. 3 Buffy Bowers and Goins. Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field for a singles match. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has worked on. He has insured the stature the Relays once had
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes had been sent to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to experience with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All- Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of $18.10^{3}$.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, a season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
Questions Williams and Bobb as possible candidate The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center with 393 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Dipple Ghelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment to public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
in its second Pearl Harbor nor offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emoryia State Hornets last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team that he was ready to play.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 65 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bri
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kansers have been humiliated how attitudes can affect a game.
they had a new bad round, and those will kill you every time." Johnson said. He were just not telling. They were keeping the ball in play very well."
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that
Haircuts take on a more natural look
By Cathy Garrard
Environmental awareness is going to people's heads.
Whether it be shown through donning a more carefree coifire, or through the increase of environmentally-safe hair products, the trends in the hair-fashion world are mirroring the nation's current environmental issues.
Jim Grines, owner of Headmasters Salon, 803 Vermont St., said that the natural and healthy look would be the predominant hair trend for the spring.
"The fashion trends for hair are attuned to the country's environmental concerns." Grines said. "This spring the fashion trend seems to be going right along with the environmental movements in the United States.
"We're seeing the influence of the '60s, which means healthy, shiny hair that is in good condition. Softer looks and natural, healthy hair follows along with people trying to live more natural and healthy lives
in general."
Hairstylists don't agree on the long and short of it this spring. Marty Olson, a stylist at Do's Deluxe, 809 1/2 Massachusetts St. said the short Demi Moore-cap cut is the latest trend. Olson and Grines agreed about as well on the straight versus curly issue. Apparently, healthy and natural looks are more important than donning hair with a certain length or amount of curl.
The growing concerns with recycling and lab animal testing also have made a big impact on the hair industry in recent months, Grines said.
"More and more products are now being labeled for recycling, and many more are also being promoted to be safe for the environment," Grines said. "We only sell products created without animal testing in recyclable containers."
Headmasters is not the only hair salon that has felt the environmental influence in recent months.
W. 23rd St., said many people came in asking about safe and healthy hair products.
"People are definitely becoming environmentally aware," she said. "A lot of people ask which products are bad for the environment. They want to buy the products that are the safest."
Jennifer Steffen, a sales clerk at The Beauty Warehouse, 520
Cindy Kirkland, North Kansas City. Mo., sophomore, said she tried to be conscientious of the hair products she chose.
"I look for hair spray that comes in a pump rather than an aerosol can that can hurt the ozone," she said. "Pumps aren't as wasteful. You don't spray as much into the air."
Shannon Hull, Olathe junior, said she carried her environmental concerns over into the selection of her hair products as well.
"It's really useless to be using things that are bad for the environment," Hull said. "There are enough things that are causing harm, we might as well do something good for the earth in any way we can."
By Aimee Brainard
Swimsuits are less revealing
Picture yourself walking on the beach, wearing your brand-new, skimpy bikini. Now picture yourself out of style. This year, more is better in swimsuits.
Spring is here, and once again it is time to buy the dreaded swimsuit. According to Lawrence shops, here's what's hot and what's not for this swimsuit season.
Jennifer Turner, assistant manager of Seifert's, 821 Massachusetts St., said that swimmist styles were actually covering more this year.
"People are getting more active, and that really shows with the new styles," she said. "There are more high-waisted bikinis and a lot more one-piece suits this year. Prints are really popular, too. Big, bright, wild prints are selling with the college crowd."
Most of the other retailers in Lawrence seem to agree. Cristi Boyer and Cassie Ligendahl, who work at Harper's Fashion, 835 Massachusetts St., said that neon really sold well.
"The women now like more
fabric on the hips, and not so thin in places." Boyer said. "The scuba-looking swimsuits have really sold the best so far. We also have sold a lot of bikinis, particularly neon ones, since right before spring break."
"The shorts are still longer, almost knee length, and are almost all done in bright colors." Wondrack said. "Flower prints, however, are not selling. Solids are pretty popular, but swimsuits are about the only thing in a floral print that I can't sell."
Men's swimsuits, however, are not changing quite as much. Wally Wondrack, associate manager of Easton's Fine Clothiers, 839 Massachusetts St., said that this year's styles in men's swimsuits was pretty similar to last year.
As hemlines are said to move with the economy, swimsuits styles seem to also move because of some outside force. Whether it is the generation gap closing in, opinions becoming less liberal or just the flow of the tides, change comes. Prepare for it, shop now, and perhaps you won't just be imagining yourself on that golden beach by the sea.
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6 Bank to the Future / University, Daily, Kansan / April 17, 1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
ALEXANDRA
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he trapped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture." Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "I was worried, but he will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4. might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Jeffsen seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rafael Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennesi after being calmed by Perelman.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Tucker, however, continued to taint Han and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the building into the surrounding chain-link fence.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
set for a singles victory.
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Rayheaudhui, Page Golns and Laura Hagemann and freshmen Cyril Kotz and Victoria vicious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1
Hamers and Raychaudhurst, No.
2 Makers and Goinns and No. 3 Buffy
Mowers and Peltz, Pelz added
straight-set victories.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
In coming concure conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and OKC North on Sunday field house courts. On both day fields the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college in the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day, David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has insisted that Relay 12 be the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes had come to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to competition with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas freshman sensation Heatner Berlin.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All- Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18.1034.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500 meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see games in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
---
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those young kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. They were just not sure. "They here are keeping the ball in play very well."
Questions 1 Williams and Bobby as possible candidate The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department and the public relations staff and priests.
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center with 393 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Diggle Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
the dean of the law school, where
Two-game
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kangaroo team is calibrated how attitudes can affect a game.
Bv Mark Spencei
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball队 rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hogwain-Munford Stadium.
Kansan sportswriter
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
Attitudes bril
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Sportswear turns away from neons
Bv Chris Moeser
Sportswear this spring is returning to traditional colors and styles, and turning away from the bright neons and fluorescent colors of the past few years.
"College kids are going back to the basics this year," said Butch Logan, manager of Jock's Nitch Inc., 840 Massachusetts St. "Two years ago, neons were as hot as they could be, but trends go in cycles. Too many people were wearing it."
Logan said he expected darker colors such as hunter green and purple to do well this spring.
"Any darker jewel or eartl
tones are going to be big this spring;" he said.
Tim McBride, owner of Prime Time Sports, 711 W. 23rd St., agreed that neons were not as popular this year, but added that traditional bright colors, such as red and blue, still would sell well.
"Bright colors are still in, but fluorescent colors are not as hot," he said.
The trend towards darker colors is evident in the types of team sportswear that people are buying. Teams with dark colors, particularly black, are extremely popular. Clothing featuring the Los Angeles Raiders, Los Angeles Kings and the Atlanta
Falcons have sold well so far this spring.
"Anything with the Raiders on it is really popular." MrMcBride said. "It is the No. 1 selling licensing item."
Van Schaffer, employee at The Athlete's Foot, 942 Massachusetts St., said the trend towards black and dark colors in sportswear was sometimes more powerful than tradition.
"Even if black is not in the team colors, it well sell," he said. "If we had a black cap that had Kansas on it, it would sell."
Schaffer said that the trend this year in styles of sportwear was similar to that of the past two years. He said cotton was
The one exception to cotton is nylon. Nylon jackets and shorts are particularly popular for jogging.
generally the fabric of choice in spring sportswear. Cotton T-shirts and sweatshirts were especially popular, he said.
"This year, people are wearing long, loose, baggy shorts - usually Umbro or Nike. The layered look, wearing a pair of shorts under a pair of shorts, is in," he said.
Schaffer said that Nike's Michael Jordan line of sportswear was as popular as ever.
"The Jordan shirts and shorts are popular, even though they
are expensive," he said.
Trends in spring clothing for golf and tennis are closely linked to prices.
Bev Smith, an employee of the Alvamar Country Club Pro Shop, said that people were looking for cheaper, more casual clothing for golf and tennis.
"People are buying things to use with other things," she said. "You used to see only collared shirts for golf and tennis. Now there is a real surge in T-shirts."
Smith said the reason for the shift in popular styles in golf and tennis clothing was that most people were looking for sportswear that was more casual and less expensive.
Baseball hats serve as more than spirit items
By Derek Nolen
Baseball season is here and it's time to pull out your baseball hats and show you team spirit.
What was once a way for diehard fans to show team spirit has become a big industry. People these days wear baseball hats everywhere.
The biggest seller this year is the fitted baseball hat. The hats
This time, however, everyone has been wearing their baseball hats a bit early.
come in different sizes which are made to fit different people with different size heads. The hats carry logs ranging from baseball teams, colleges, football teams and fraternity names.
"It's definitely a big industry," said Matt Gowen, an
The Jock's Nitch, 840 Massachusetts St. has about 85 different hats hanging on its walls. Most of the major university and professional baseball teams are represented.
employee at the store. "We sell about 40 hats a week. The college hats are by far our largest seller, especially the two-tone hats."
It is hard these days to walk around a college campus and not see someone wearing a baseball hat.
Chris Leonardi, Lawrence senior, said he liked to wear hats because it made getting ready for class easier. He said he didn't have to worry. He could just
put the hat on.
The new hat craze also might have something to do with the new sport look in fashion.
"It used to be that no one would go into a bar with anything less than an Izod or a Polon on," said Tim Christian, St. Louis senior. "These days, a hat is considered fashionable. People are dressing more relaxed when they go out."
Scott Florez, Topeka junior, said he thought people were
wearing the hats as more of a statement.
"I have never really thought of hats as a piece of an outfit," he said. "I think most people are wearing them to show who they are rooting for."
There may be no answer to how the hat craze got started. However, you can be fairly certain that as long as guys are lazy in the morning, or want to show their team spirit, baseball hats will be around.
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Headmasters
Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17. 1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
BUTT 1982
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight against the 5-0 to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday in the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "The right toe will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The uglly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the Nike game.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hat battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6.7, 6.2, 6.4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to tauren Hunt and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside of the compound and into the surrounding chain-link fence.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
set for a singles victory
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers,
Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins
and Laura Hagemann and freshmen
were victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhier. No. 2 Gaines and Goinis and No. 3 Buffy Milley. Miss Pelly added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day." David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has created an RELAYS model to the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, 'a self proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes add to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to witness with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All- Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³%.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, has been his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,300-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those young kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against defeatedles 6-1, 6-0.
Questions 1 Williams and Bobby as possible candidate
The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digest Phelpa was flanked by his family, and not of Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish
The huge Monogram Room, and upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center over 380 games, didn't lack for space.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, and public relations staff and priests.
Something that never goes out of
Fli wcRnR r dJ aah ba
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoghland-Maupin Stadium.
"I like these games," Kansas
Dave Dainberg said. "I'
thought it might happen on Sunday,
but I didn't think it would tonight."
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes brin
s g B
n K b i
S c b t r n a
c t w g S c n
Bv Lana Smith
After finishing fourth at the Azalea, Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C. during the weekend, the Kansai team decided how attitudes can affect a game.
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
Kansan sportswriter
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not used to it. We kept the ball in play very well."
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
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Please read the spirit chapter statement carefully and plan your approach to develop ideas. Be prepared for all types of feedback, including questions from the department. This has never been the case.
A single project will have much to gain from this team and the function it can perform for the department. We need to define our problems carefully and plan thoughtfully for the best possible solutions.
Page 3
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8 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
Sports
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
TENNIS
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
11 was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday after the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
"They did an X-ray on Rhinia and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perealman said. "The bone is very fragile, will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No 2 doubles match
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hat battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taunt Han and Buth and even antagonized a spectator outside inside the building into the surrounding chain-link fence
set for a singles victory
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every match 0-0."
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and junior Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hammers and Raychaudhuri, No. 2 Bowers and Goins and No. 3 Buffy Bowers and Joy Pelz added straight-sett victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and play at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college with the 60th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has started using the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes add to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to experience with a mark of 241 feet. inch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·103}$
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, and played a season long season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see him games in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 000 elementary students in the stands.
---
"Having those young kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against M defeated Lesie 6-1, 6-0.
tyle. Macintosh.
Macintosh Hsi
Questions li Williams and Bobby as possible candidates The Associated Press
The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center with 383 rooms, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digest Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wisher and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment, to the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Title Edit Go Format Sheet Graph Script Window
graph
Media Inserts
spreadsheet
A B
Time 100.00
Time 213.00
Newbook 175.00
75.00
Newbook 191.50
8
Time 244.30
Newbook 213.00
75.00
Newbook 249.00
13
Time 340.54
Newbook 213.00
75.00
Newbook 349.75
18
Newbook 349.75
Newbook 349.75
19
Newbook 144.46
Newbook 144.46
20
Revenues
MY Newbook US News Revenues
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graph
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Revenues
ME Newsweek US News Inventures
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoedland-Mauin Stadium.
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every innings but the third and sixth.
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Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 65 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
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Attitudes bring
By Lana Smith
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C. during the weekend, the Kan-chen teams have learned that attitude can affect a game.
By Linda Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not ready to play the game, keeping the ball in play very well."
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
Pe the t of M sas third Ka the J one dly
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Back to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
9
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
Joe Tennant
By Mark Spencer Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight against the Tigers to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture." Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "He has a lot of work to do, will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the Nike Shox.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hat battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7,
6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker prefer to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Jeffs seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rafei and Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
Tucker, however, continued to taut Hant and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the hallway into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said.
"Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every match."
set for a singles victory.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhun, No. 2 Bowery and Gorns and No. 3 Buffy Mowers and Gorns, Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Alabama State on Saturday and Oklahoma State on Sunday for house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 60th annual Kansas Relief.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has received approval from the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" RELays manager, said that several independent athletes added to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to receive a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18-1034.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
---
Jeff Gross returns a serve against M defeated Lei 5-1, 6-0.
Questions li Williams and Bobby as possible candidates
The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center with over 393 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digest Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
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Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball队 trapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornet's last night at Hoglund-Maupain Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jahyahs 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every innning but the third and sixth.
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After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C. during the weekend, the Kansai soccer team decided how暖阳 can attitude play a game.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time." Johnson said. "They were just not able to play well, keeping the ball in play very well."
Cosmetics try to keep up with fashion fads
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun
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Steven Spielberg is influencing us once again.
No, it isn't a new film, but actually an old idea. His action-adventure fantasy film of a few years ago, "Back to the Future," seems to have become a reality for the women of today.
To look in magazines, one would think they were trapped in a machine lost somewhere in the past. Bell-bottoms and bold colors are once again the rage. The permanent is out and the flip is back in.
The cosmetics industry also is keeping in step with these backward spiraling trends.
Celestie Campbell, owner of Merle Norman Cosmetic Studio, Ninth and New Hampshire streets, said that everything she saw in the spring and summer magazines seemed to follow either a natural look or the '60s look.
"This year, it's either one extreme or the other," Campbell said. "That's what's so fun. Trends will go in spurts throughout the year, but there
The '60s were generally characterized by bold prints and bright colors in clothing, while make-up tended to be very basic or non-existent. Campbell said that pink, then, was a nice synthesis of the two because its lighter shades helped attain that natural feel while its darker shades could be considered bold.
She said that variations in skin tone were not an issue of concern with pink. Pink is just in, she said, for women of all ages.
Ginger Wilkins, Mary Kay Cosmetics representative, agreed with Campbell that the natural look was the newest trend in make-up. Many of their new colors even reflect this natural inspiration with colors such as cornflower blue and mushroom.
Wilkins said, however, that the influence for this trend, at least in the university setting, stemmed from the cycling and fitness craze that has arisen. Women are looking for simple
ways to look healthy, as well as to feel healthy.
Both women pointed out that the natural look did not necessarily constitute the hippie style, basic skin look. Natural means a tendency toward more earthy tones such as browns, peaches, pinks and reds. They give the illusion of having no make-up while the wearer is able to enhance their appearance.
"I do what I like," said Julie Montgomery, Wichita sophomore. "Some of those looks aren't good for anyone. Especially not for college students."
Montgomery said she preferred the "made-up natural look" in which one chose cosmetics containing the natural tints. She said that the styles presented in magazines on models really weren't realistic for the average woman.
"I see the influences, but most don't try to reproduce those looks," she said. "The standards for what is attractive have changed so it is not so big of a deal when women try to create their own look."
Accessories come in several styles
If you want to be in style this spring, forget loading your purse with a thousand items useful only in an emergency. Forget slinging your life on your shoulder. The size for handbags this spring won't hold it all.
The new handbags are a throwback to an earlier style.
"They're called Jackie Kennedy bags, and they have a smaller handle, and no shoulder strap," said Tina Robert, accessories department manager at J.C. Penney, 1801 W. 23rd St.'s a grandma-type bag, because of the handles and the more traditional size.
A more structured handbag detailed with studs and beads appears at J.C. Penney, she said. "We're going back to a more basic purse, instead of something really huge or the very small evening bags," said Jill Legler, manager of Sunflower International Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St. "Something you can use, but not carry your whole life in."
Legler said her store has had to order more standard-sized purses to keep up with demand. Leslie Johnson, owner of the Loft, 742 Massachusetts St.,
agreed that handbags with a shorter handle and a more boxy shape were coming back in style.
Handbags and belts are still in mainly basic colors; black, white and navy, along with the brown and tan of natural leather.
In other accessories, any color goes. Wilder colors and designs show up for earrings, bracelets, headbands and scarves.
At J.C. Penney, headbands in bright colors and patterns are a hot item. Earrings in electric orange, purple and green, some in geometric shapes, can be found in several stores.
Big bracelets and earrings are still in style, she said.
Tie-dye prints in bright colors are very in, and can be found at The Etc. Shop, 732 Massachusetts St., said Grady Affolter, manager at the store.
"We also have silkscreen print scarves in bright colors," he said. "The blues, oranges and purples are in style."
Legler said that is there was a '60s revival, it was mainly in the cut of clothing.
"In Lawrence, the '60s never went out of style."
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10 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
N. M. NORTHUMBERG
By Mark Spencer Kensan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
Kansan sportswriter
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture." Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perleman said, "He was in shock, and there will be a bone deep damage."
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hatt battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6,7, 6,2, 6,4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman
Tucker, however, continued to taint Hau and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the compound into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early," Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every match 9-0."
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniorators Rafael Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
set for a singles victory
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins and Laura Hagemann and freshmen were victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhier. No. 2 Harms and Gonds and No. 3 Burfy McLane and Pelz. Pelz added straight-sett victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college during the 60th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has issued an official notice to the stature the Relays once bad.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Rレス manager, said that several independent athletes had come to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kemanski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to赛 with a mark of 341 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³%.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, then began his outdoor season by going away the field in the 1,000-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see games in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against M defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions li Williams and Bobby as possible candidate
The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center on 303 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Diggle Phelps was flanked by his family, and not at Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment to public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswrite
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Holgund-Mauin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 65 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bring
By Lana Smith
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
Kansan sportswriter
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not enough." "the they were keeping the ball in play or very well."
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kane brothers learned how attitude can affect a game.
Anti-fit jeans are latest fashion rage
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
If you can never see to find a pair of jeans that fit, this could be your year.
P. April Hubbel
Why? Because one of this year's popular jean styles is the anti-fit jeans, according to employees of some local jean stores.
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Anti-fit jeans are just that. They are cut so large that they aren't supposed to fit.
Beth Gould, a sales assistant at King of Jeans, 740 Massachusetts St., said that while some people wore belts with this style, others simply wore them as they were.
"The look is jeans pulled down to your hips," she said.
"I think Guess has been here long enough," she said. "People are tired of seeing those triangles."
The most popular color of jeans, according to Gould, is bleached sky blue.
Gould added that it was also popular to roll the jeans up at the ends.
She said the popular brands at her store included Levi's, Pepe and Girbeau, while the once-popular brand, Guess, seemed to be declining in popularity.
Curtis Keyes, team leader at Brass Buckle, 805 Massachusetts St., agreed that the anti-fit jean was a popular style. He also included Pepe and Girbeau as popular brands.
But, in his opinion, the trendy colors were dark blue, black and acid-washed, as well as some other unusual style.
"One popular pair has paint splashed on them," he said.
Unlike Gould and Keyes, Earl Reineman, vice president of Weaver's Department Store, 901 Massachusetts St., said he didn't consider the anti-fit to be a popular style. He said he thought most people preferred a relaxed fit.
"The anti-fit is trying to become popular, but I don't think it will," he said. "It's cut so large that it doesn't tailor to a normal human body."
Reineman also said there seemed to be a movement away from the acid-washed look toward a soft, pre-worn look.
Of course, if the anti-fit jean look isn't for you, there is the problem of finding a pair that fits. Gould and Keyes had some advice for people trying to find that perfect pair.
"Go to a store that's got a wide selection and ask a qualified person to help you." Gould said. "You've got to ask questions. You can't just go in and ask for a size seven. You could wear a seven in one pair and a nine in another. There are so many variations that make them fit."
"Have an open mind," Keyes said. "Try on some things you think you will hate. One of them might be the pair that fits."
If you're not shopping at
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Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
11
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
JANE
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhinia and it showed no fracture. "Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said his team was confident it will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hatt battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Kangel, Paul Garvin and Han polish his Tiger opponents in straight sets.
Tucker, however, continued to tauan Hank and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the arena, throwing a ball into the surrounding chainlink fence.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guys start calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
set for a singles victory
"I told them from the start to give
this team respect and play them hard."
he said. "I was hoping it
would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers,
Renee Raychaudhury, Page Goin
and Laura Hagemann and freshmen
were victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other."
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuri, No. 2 Bowers and Gorns and No. 3 Buffy Bowers and Pelz added straight-set victories.
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
Walker one of three
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has built the relays into the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, à self-proclaimed "rookie" Riley managers, said that several independent athletes had to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Karminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to meet a show with a mark of 241 feet. Lunch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Beerlin Berlin.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³⁴.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, then began his outdoor season by going away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relaxs.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays." Kaiser said.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against M defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions li Williams and Bobby as possible candidates
The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center on the 398 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digger Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-games
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball队 trapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hogland-Maurin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Davin Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jahayhs struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bring
sevē
binjīn
Binjīn
Kaen
kanee
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After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C. during the weekend, the Kan- tarors have responded how attitude can affect a game.
By Lana Smith Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time." Johnson said. "They were just not good enough to keep the playing in ball very well."
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team
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Protection, fashion fulfilled by sunglasses
When the shaded lens was invented, its purpose was one of function, keeping out the glare. People began to realize the importance of sunglasses as a fashion accessory several years later, but now people are realizing their importance again as eye protection.
"I wear them to block out the sun's rays," said Christine Tan, Olathe sophomore, "but also for the sex appeal."
Sunglasses come in many different styles and colors, and they have a price range to match. Many people are satisfied with the standard rubber-framed neon models or the glasses found in most convenience stores, usually selling for less than $10. But to the discerning shades-man or shades-woman, finding that perfect style is worth the extra price.
"If you've got the money, Gargoyles are the way to go." said Travis Berkley, Morill junior.
These popular "Terminator" wraparound glasses are often seen worn by snow skiers for their wide-angle eye protection. But at $88 for a pair of blue Gargoyles at Visions Optical, 806 Massachusetts St., many students are forced to choose between the ski trip and the sunglasses.
Sunglass styles have weathered time to remain almost completely unchanged since they became popular many years ago. Fads come and go, like the "John
Several different versions of the Wayfarer can be found, with price tags nearing those of the Gargoyles. The standard tortoise-shell Ray-Ban Wayfarer, made by Bausch and Lomb, costs $59.95 at the Etc. Shop 732 Massachusetts St.
Ruth Mosher, optician at Mosher Optical, 15th and Kasold streets, said that the law required that all sunglass lenses be shatterproof, and she recommended that consumers checked to make sure they had an ultraviolet protection coating. Ultraviolet rays are the most harmful to eves.
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The "Wayfarer" style was popularized years ago, but still enjoys the success as possibly the most popular style today. The plastic-framed shades usually have dark lenses and are popular on the beach or on the go.
"I wear contacts, and they tend to amplify the light," said John Howard, Goddard sophomore.
Lennon" round frames of a few years back, but the old standards keep coming back to the forefront of the consumer's eyewear collection.
"They don't distort at all," he said
Howard said he wore Wayfarers because of their quality.
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12 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav April 17. 1991
Sports
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
LAKESIDE
By Mark Spencer
Korean sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "I can't believe he will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hatt battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6.7, 6.2, 6.4 might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taint Hant and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the compound, which into the surrounding chain-link fence.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and junior Rafael Rafael Paul Garvin and Han polished off Tiger opponents in straight sets.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every match 0-0."
set for a singles victory
The women team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers, Renee Raychaudhier, Page Goinas and Laura Hagemann and freshmen victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuri, no. 2 Bowers and Goalie and No. 3 Buffy Peltz and Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college with the 60th annual Kansas Relays.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has already submitted the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Rails manager, said that several independent athletes had to the excitement of the Rails.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to meet with a mark of 241 feet. Lunch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18-10³.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, which he outdoled his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
---
Jeff Gross returns a serve against M defeated Lesie 6-1, 6-0.
The Associated Press
Questions li Williams and Bobby as possible candidates
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center atrium on 393 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digest Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-games
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By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bring
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C. during the weekend, the Kanterschechter team has noticed how attitude can affect a game.
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not going to hurt the ball, keeping the ball in play very well."
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
Men's clothing reflects past fads
By Jeff Meesev
If you are finding it difficult to get outside and enjoy the weather, perhaps you can wear it on a tie instead.
Scenic ties, depicting beachgoers and golfers among others, are the latest rage in men's neckwear.
"People are getting away from paisley," said Jason Flack, clerk at The Etc. Shop, 732 Massachusetts St. "Ties with geometric and scenic designs in the retro-40s style are popular this season."
In both width and design, a flashback to the 1940s is evident, especially with geometric ties, reminiscent of Cubist creations.
The widths will tower around 3 1/2 inches, said Chris Hurt, manager of Mister Guv, 920 Massachusetts St.
"If yours is four inches or three inches wide, you won't be laughed at" he said.
You also won't be laughed at this spring if you are wearing the earth tones, primarily dark browns, blue and greens, a continuation of the back-to-the-earth trend. But the available gamut of colors, from purple, hot pink and peach to burnt orange and olive proves just about any color is acceptable during the spring.
"In the last two years, olive has been a very big color. Khaki is also big," said Lofty Abdullah, manager of Britches
In shorts this is especially evident.
Corner, 843 Massachusetts St. "Walking shorts in the earth tones that are longer length and roomy are big sellers too."
Twill fabric is also popular for shorts, primarily because of its versatility.
"Shorts with bright stripes and floral patterns will be seen." Hurt said.
"Especially colors like peach, light blue and mint."
"Denim shorts also are popular," said Craig Randle, manager of Hunters Ltd., 919 Massachusetts St.
Apart from plain khaki pants, a closet staple, pants are being stocked in patterns such as window panes and plaids. Hurt said. The window panes are actually rectangles with thin, colored borders. They come in both large and small rectangles and the patterns seen in navy blue and off-white on a natural linen fabric.
"Linen is popular in spring because it is light weight." Hurt said. "The pants are full cut, especially in the back of the thigh."
The patterned look also will be seen in button-down oxford shirts, which also come in the window pane pattern. Other types of popular oxford include oversized button-downs with large front pockets.
"The oversized, oxford cloth shirts can be used for weekends and for work," Abdullah said.
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Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991 13
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
BENELLIER
By Mark Spencer
11 was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday after the Allen Field House tennis courts.
Kansan sportswriter
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an x-ray on Rhin and it showed no fracture. "Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "If he falls, you will be a bone seen done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman
Tucker, however, continued to taut Tain and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the house. They into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots ano put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han poli- ters in Tiger opponents in straight sets.
set for a singles victory
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers,
Renee Yaseha raydhauchen, Page Gams,
and Laura Hagemann and freshmen
victorious in singles copitation.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuri, No. 2 Bowers and Coins and No. 3 Buffy and Coincard, Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma State at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m., and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college for the 60th annual Kansas Relays.
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process. Kaiser has installed the relays in the stature the Relays once had.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relay managers, said that several independent athletes added to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kemanski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to practice with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heber Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All-Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³%.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see them in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
---
Jeff Gross returns a serve against M defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions li Williams and Bobby as possible candidates
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digger Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center on 383 rooms, didn't lack for space.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department and those public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 61 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
i" seve getti Bing Ja naam Kam Karen schen M m battip tries nets, a 4+6 he catl candle him meg goin Schnike
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C. during the weekend, the Kan-erange team has learned how attitude can affect a game.
Attitudes bring
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
By Lana Smith Kansan sportswriter
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time." Johnson said. "They were just not on the ball." He kept the ball in play very well.
BRITCHES CORNER
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
CITY OF BEL AIR
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
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Catalogs make shopping for clothing easier for students
By Stephanie Patrick
Nicole Wasson is able to avoid busy department stores and push salespeople as she shops at home by just pushing a few buttons on her telephone.
The Lenexa freshman is one of the many college students now turning to catalogs to get the merchandise they want.
For Wasson, catalogs offer good quality merchandise and convenience. She uses catalogs like J. Crew and Clifford Williams to shop for clothing.
"All these products do lend themselves to the needs of college students," said Oak Atkinson, marketer of new acquisitions for J. Crew.
Wasson said she spent about $50 every three or four months on catalog purchases and admitted her catalog purchases have increased since she entered college.
One of the leading catalogs trying to gain the attention of college students is J, Crew, which specializes in casual clothing for men and women.
"I have my own means of credit now," she said. "It's just easier to get what I want."
Although Atkinson would not
Students with credit or a little extra money to spend are exactly who the marketers of the leading catalogs are trying to reach.
Harmon said she spent about $2,000 a year shopping for clothes in catalogs like Lands' End and Victoria's Secret.
"Granted it's a little more expensive, but you are paying for quality," she said.
Poster distribution requires the catalog company to use an outside agency to help with distribution. These agencies usually recruit college students to display the posters around campus, Atkinson said.
The college market also can provide unique problems for catalog companies, according to Catherine Hartnett, media assistant for L.L. Bean.
It is the variety of clothing styles that appeals to Kelly Harmon, Lawrence freshman. Through catalogs, she is able to get the east coast styles that she cannot find in Midwestern department stores.
Direct mail also requires the use of outside agencies. Atkinson said these agencies often use college directories to get addresses and information about potential customers. Through this process the companies are able to target students who would be interested in their product.
Despite this problem, many students do shop from L.L. Bean and other catalogs.
"We don't prospect college students because addresses change so frequently," she said.
comment on how J. Crew handled its marketing, she said the two most common types of marketing used by catalog companies were poster distribution and direct mail.
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14 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
Pete
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
it was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday after the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture." Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Peterson said he will be a bone scan done tomorrow. "It will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6,7-6,2-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker pre-ferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taint Hant and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the compound where they into the surrounding chain-link fence.
Kansas senior Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and junior judges Rafael Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
set for a singles victory
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers,
Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins
and Hagemann and freshmen
Chris Bowden are victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhour. No. 2 Mews and Gouins and No. 3 Buffy Mille Mee and Pelz Added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
finalists for scholarship
Walker one of three
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college to the 66th Annual Kansas Relays.
"They have been lit up all day." David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lift up Monday afternoon.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has completed. The Relay's stature the Relays once bad.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relays."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes had added to the excitement of the Relays.
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to serve with a mark of 241 feet, inch.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas 'freshman sensation Heather Berlin.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All- Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·1034.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, and played a season long day season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relaws.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see him games in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays," Kaiser said.
THE BROOKLYN COUNTY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS AND BOYS IN THE NORTH DISTRICT OF NEW YORK.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against Miss defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
Questions lin Williams and Bobby C as possible candidates
The Associated Press
Pleist listen
SOUTHBEND, END — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digger Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center Playhouse, 393 games, didn't lack for space.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic department, the public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Two-game
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hogland-Mauin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
Attitudes bring
"The seven getting Bingh Jayl number Kansae been in the Schmi Mah batting trips nets, a 4-for He catche him Mah going Schmic night a
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kaniers helped how attitudes can affect a game.
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that Kansas should have won.
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
By Linda Smith
Kansan sportswriter
"As a we've be think we and will
By Lana Smith
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not careful, the players were keeping the ball in play very well."
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round. Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
Johnsne might be Jayhawl Big Eig which is 'If ar
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Model scout always on the lookout for talent
Bv Stephanie Patrick
Wanted: A young woman with an "Interesting look" or classic beauty. The applicant will be willing to travel and work long hours with little sleep. An ability to handle rejection on a daily basis is required.
While this description may not sound glamorous, it is exactly what model scout Laurie Wood looks for when searching for potential female models.
Wood, overland Park senior, began her career during her junior year in high school. While preparing modeling portfolios for her friends, Wood always was finding potential models and referring them to modeling agencies.
After an internship in Los Angeles with well-known photographer Harbor Ritts fell through, Wood decided to try and establish herself as a professional model scout.
According to Wood, potential models can be found anywhere. She has searched through grocery stores, malls and classes looking for models.
She is now the only model scout in the Midwest for Foto Expo, which is based in Los Angeles.
After the initial approach, Wood said she tried to look at as many candid shots of a person as possible just to see how they photographed. It is at this time that Wood will arrange for a professional photographer to take a few pictures for the agencies.
Wood said she usually found three or four women out of the 40 that she would take to this step. She said she had found six women on the University of Kansas campus.
One potential model Wood found was Kimberly Warfield, Wichita freshman.
Warfield said she always had received compliments on her looks and believed she would like to try modeling.
"I have just always wanted to do it," Warfield said. "I would lie to be the first black cover girl for Maybella."
Wood, who works with several of the biggest agencies like Ford and Elite, said that if an agency is interested in a woman it would usually ask for a face to face interview.
If signed, most models will start in Europe where they can gain the necessary experience and tearsheets needed to model in the more competitive United States market, Wood said.
“There are tons of magazines and photographers in Europe,” Wood said. "The is a lot more work to be had over there."
Although working in Europe might sound glamorous, Wood said many women could not handle being so far away from home.
"A lot of girls get disillusioned and come home right away," she said. "It can be lonely. There is so much rejection. You have to be emotionally strong."
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Back to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991 15
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
TENNIS
By Mark Spencer
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their underfated Big Eight to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
it was a case of the good, the bad, and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday in the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Bout's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
Kansan sportswriter
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "If you broke your foot, will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed there is one, was also evident in the No. 2 doubles match
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Han battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6,7-6,2-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Kansas senators Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and seniors Rafael Rafael Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
set for a singles victory
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Perelman.
Tucker, however, continued to taut Han and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the building into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early," Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hamers, Renee Raychaudhuri, Page Goins and Lara Hagemann and freshmen Barbara Borson were victorious in singles competition.
Ryachaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the match thinking they were like any other team."
The Kansas doubles team of No. 1
Hamers and Raychaudhour, No. 2
Bowers and Goinns and No. 3 Buffy
Pelz and Felix Pelz added straight-set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college through the 66th annual Kansas Relays.
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lift up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
The Relays begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has made to ensure they operate properly, the stature the Relays once had.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relaxs."
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Relays manager, said that several independent athletes would add to the excitement of the
Ed Kaminski of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to meet with a mark of 241 feet, 1 inch.
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 166-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' fresh
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, and another season blowing away the field in the 1,600 meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see games in front of the home crowd.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
Jeff Gross returns a serve against Missouri defeated Lees 6-1, 6-0.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the
Questions ling Williams and Bobby Cren as possible candidates for
The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athlete and Convocation Center for 393 games, doesn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Digest Phelix was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment of the public relations staff and priests.
Phelps' wif listen.
But Phell were at the country. Rosenthal meeting in William Be for athletic
So Terry daughters, Jennifer. sa
the dean of the law school, where
The timi ammunition he was pus ball team adviser.
Two-game sco
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hogund-Maupin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every inning but the third and sixth.
"The ke seven in tl getting int Bingham sa
Jayhawk numerous Kansas ca beem especially in the plac Schmidt
Mahon e batting. 571 trips to the nets, Mahor a 4-for-5 per
Attitudes bring d
He said, catcher. I 'n while he's r
Mahon sigh going back Schmidt ret night at Okl
By Lana Smith
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kan-ler team helped how often attitudes can affect a game.
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not careful, keeping the ball in play very well."
Kansan sportswriter
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously." Johnson said.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team to relax and have fun.
Pennsylvani the tournai of Mississippi saas finishes third place.
Kansas j
the Jayhaw
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Johnson s be a might be a Jayhawks a Big Eight which is Ap "If anyth
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16 Bank to the Future / University Daily Kansan / April 17, 1991
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 17, 1991
13
Tennis teams snag 9-0 sweep
TENNIS
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Jeff Gross returns a serve against Missouri's David Leslie. Gross defeated Leslie 6-1, 6-0.
By Mark Spencer Kansan sportswriter
It was a case of the good, the bad and the ugly for the Kansas tennis teams against Missouri yesterday at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The good was that both teams drilled the Tigers 9-0. The women extended their undefeated Big Eight Conference record to 5-0, and the men improved to 4-0.
The bad was an injury to Kansas freshman Rhain Buth's left leg when he tripped during the No. 2 doubles match.
"They did an X-ray on Rhain and it showed no fracture," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perleman said. "They said the fracture will be a bone scan done tomorrow."
The ugly side of tennis, if indeed the ball was also evident in the No 2 doubles game.
Buth and Kansas junior Pat Hat battled Missouri's Ryan Tucker and Robert Rogers. The final score, 6-7, 6-2, 6-4, might indicate a competitive match, but more was involved than that.
Missouri's Rogers and Tucker preferred to taunt the Kansas duo more than play tennis. Han and Tucker exchanged words early, but Han concentrated his efforts towards tennis after being calmed by Pereiman.
Tucker, however, continued to taint Hant and Buth and even antagonized a spectator standing outside the restaurant into the surrounding chain-link fence.
"They were hitting some shots and put us down 4-1 early." Han said. "Then, the guy starts calling me names. I guess it gets frustrating for those guys when they lose every match 9-0."
Han said the verbal taunting came as no surprise to him.
"Teams have been taking some shots at us," he said. "We took a lot of abuse at Nebraska. I guess if they hit them, we would beat them, they'll beat us some other way."
As evidenced on the court, the Tigers plainly could not beat the Javahawks with the racquet.
Kansas senior Chris Walker was the only Jayahawk pushed to a third
set for a singles victory
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, and juniors Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and Han polished off their Tiger opponents in straight sets.
The women's team took an equally productive but less eventful course through the Missouri lineup in its 9-0 victory.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' domination of the overmatched Tigers.
"I told them from the start to give this team respect and play them hard," he said. "I was hoping it would turn out this way, and it did."
Kansas juniors Eveline Hammers, Renee Raychaudhury, Page Golns and Laura Hagemann and freshmen from several colleges were victorious in singles competition.
Raychaudhuri's match, like nearly all the others, lasted just over 25 minutes.
She said, "We all went into the thinking they were like any other, but we were."
The Kansas doubles teams of No. 1 Hamers and Raychaudhuri. No. 2 Bowers and Goins and No. 3 Buffy and Jasmin Pelz added straight set victories.
In coming crucial conference confrontations, both tennis teams play Oklahoma State on Saturday and Oklahoma on Sunday at the field house courts. On both days the women play at 9 a.m. and the men play at 2 p.m.
Walker one of three finalists for scholarship
Kansas senior Chris Walker, the No. 2 singles player on the men's tennis team, has been chosen as one of the top four players by Bayers Post-Graduate Scholarship.
The Byers scholarship is awarded annually to a senior varsity athlete who plans to further his or her studies. The objective of an undergraduate degree.
The nationwide field of candidates includes every sport before the three finalists are chosen.
Questions linger over Phelps resignation
Williams and Bobby Cremins cited as possible candidates for position
The Associated Press
The huge Monogram Room, an upstairs banquet hall in the Joyce Athlete and Convocation Center from 393 games, didn't lack for space.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Did he jump or was he pushed? Diggle Phelps was flanked by his family, and not by Notre Dame officials, when he announced his retirement after 20 years as coach of the Fighting Irish.
The long walls were lined with well-wishers and the curious: friends and coaches from the athletic depart- ment here make public relations staff and priests.
The dean of the law school, where
Phelps' wife, Terry, teaches, came to listen.
But Phelps' two immediate bosses were at the farthest corners of the country. Athletic director Dick Rosenthal was attending an NCAA tournament in Atlanta, E. William Beauchamp, vice president for athletics, was in Alaska.
So Terry Phelps, and the coach's daughters, Karen Phelps Moyer and Jennifer, sat at his side.
The timing and symbolism gave ammunition to those who argue that he was pushed out, said the basket-knife him's former academic adviser.
"The Knight Commission report
just came out a week or 10 days ago, and they talked about how won-loss records should not be a reason to fire the coach," Michael A. DeCisco said.words that appears to be of the reasons or Phelis decision to leave, he said.
"It reinforces the people who think he was fired rather than retired," DeCico said.
The commission report, issued March 19, sharply criticized universities that give short shrift to graduates and fire coaches for losing
The chairperson of the commission, former Notre Dame president the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, asked that his commissioner the question in his own backyard.
Beauchamp's statement was more generous. The disappointing 12-20 season of 1990-91 would be overshadowed by his dozen 20-victory seasons, 14 NCAA appearances and several dramatic upsets, he said.
"I told myself when I retired from here that I was not going to secondguess the management," he said.
"Above all, there are 54, soon to be 66, graduated student-athletes every scholarship athlete who has completed four years under Digger," he said.
The list of possible successors to Phelps includes Xavier coach Pete Gillen, a former Phelps assistant who said he was happy in Cincinnati.
Other names popping up include Roy Williams of Kansas; Southern Methodist coach John Shumate, a former player and assistant under Chelps; George Raveling of Southern Bobby Cremins of Georgia Tech.
'Hawks work on stature of Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
All three phone lines in the Kansas Relays headquarters were lit up Monday afternoon.
"They have been lit up all day," David Kaiser, Relays manager, said.
Kaiser was answering the phones and taking registrations from high school and college with the 66th Annual Kansas Relays.
The rekeys begin today and are the end result of a seven-month planning process Kaiser has undertaken in an effort to regain the stature the Relays once had.
Kaiser, a self-proclaimed "rookie" Roles manager, said that several independent athletes would add to the excitement of the
Ed Kammans of the New York Athletic Club is the favorite in the men's javelin. He comes to match with a mark of 241 feet. Lunch.
"We started working on this in September," he said. "I think it could be the second coming of the Kansas Relaws."
On the women's side, Laverne Eave from the Bahamas is entered in the javelin with a throw of 214.
The Kansas record for women's javelin is 16-10, a mark that may be challenged by Kansas' freshman sensation Heather Berlin. Berlin has had consistent marks in the high 150's and recorded her personal best of 162-4 in late March.
The pole vault will feature not
only Kansas All-American Pat Manson, but five former Kansas All- Americans as well. One of those is Jeff Buckingham, the owner of the Kansas outdoor vault record of 18·10³⁴.
A throw of 223-8 is the high mark for favored John Billingsley of the Stars and Stripes track club in the hammer.
Kansas freshman Michael Cox is another athlete who Kaiser said should add to the excitement. Cox competed in the Junior World Cross Country Championships, then began his outdoor season by blowing away the field in the 1,500-meter run last week in Nebraska.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the Jayhawks were looking forward to the Relays.
Kaiser said that in an effort to get more fans in Memorial Stadium, he sent letters to elementary schools in surrounding communities inviting students to the Relays.
He said the teams had not altered their training for the meet, but that he expected to see games in front of the home crowd.
He said he hoped to have nearly 500 elementary students in the stands.
"Having those younger kids will add to the excitement and put some more youth back into the Relays." Kaiser said.
If the Relays can avoid its legendary rainy weather jinx, Kaiser said the switches and high voltage circuits be the right formula for success.
Foreman predicts miracles for fight
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — George Foreman has a new definition for the word “miracle.”
"What is a miracle?" asked Foreman at a news conference yesterday.
A miracle is someone who eats too much and fights for the heavyweight championship at the age of 42, the self-proclaimed, 250-pound cheese-burger champion said. A miracle is what Foreman predicts will happen when he challenges Evander Holyfield for boxing's most important title.
Foreman, an evangelist, sees the unbeaten Holyfield's role in the fight as destiny.
"He was born so I could get my chance to become heavyweight champion of the world," said Foreman, who won the title with a second-round knockout of Joe Frazier in 1973. He lost it on an eight-round knockout to Muhammad Ali in 1974 and then retired from 1977 to 1987.
Hollyfield, who was 10 at the time, watched on closed-circuit television as Foreman beat Frazier.
"Joe Frazier's style was just cut out for Foreman," the 28-year-old Hollyfield said.
Foreman predicted that he would knock out Holyfield in two rounds.
Frazier's style was to attack. Foreman knocked him down six times.
Frazier's style was to attack. Foreman knocked him down six times. Foreman is different now, says Holvield.
"Foreman was a lot longer then and threw a lot more punches. Today, he doesn't throw a lot of punches," the champ said.
There's no question that Foreman still punches hard. He has scored 23 knockouts in winning all 24 of his comeback fights.
The revenue from pay-per-view and closed-circuit television, foreign television rights and the live gate will clearly make it the first $100 million event in history, said co-promoter Bob Arum.
Two-game scoring blast propels baseball team to big wins
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
in its second Pearl Harbor-like offensive attack in three days, the Kansas baseball team rapped 26 hits en route to a 22-0 mauling of the Emporia State Hornets last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Last night's statistics and those from Sunday's 28-3 Kansas victory against Graceland College give the Jayhawks 50 runs, 56 hits and no fielding errors in their last two games.
"I like these games," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I thought it might happen on Sunday, but I didn't think it would tonight."
Jayhawk hitting stars have been numerous the last two games, but Kansas catcher Kent Mahon has been especially noteworthy, playing in the place of the injured Garry Schmidt.
"The key tonight was scoring seven in the first two innings and getting into their bullpen early," Bingham said.
The Jayhawks struck often and severely against the Hornets, scoring runs in every innings but the third and sixth.
Mahon entered last night's game batting .571 with four hits in six trips to the plate. Against the Horizon, he runs three runs with a 4-for-3 performance.
He said that there was no pressure on him and that he hoped Bingham might consider him if a left-hander obtained from the bench later in the year.
7
Kansas right-hander Curtis Schmidt improved his record to 44 for the year, and right-hander Jim Linder does not allow a hit in the last two innings.
Mahon said he had no problem going back to the bench when Schmidt returns to the line-up Friday night at Oklahoma.
Kansas right-hander Eric Stonei-
pier struck out the side in the sixth
and seventh innings in relief of
Schmidt.
Three Jayhawk pitchers combined to limit the Hornets to only five hits while striking out 12.
"Coach has always been on me to concentrate for nine innings, so that what's it. Tried to do when I was out there." Stonecipie said.
Kansas outfielder Darrul Monroe dives back to second base after rounding it on a single to left field.
Attitudes bring down golf team in tournament
After finishing fourth at the Azalea Festival Tournament in Hampstead, N.C., during the weekend, the Kansai National High School how attitudes can affect a game.
Bv Lana Smith
Kansas coach Sarah Johnson said that all the players would agree that
Kansan sportswriter
"They had a few bad rounds, and those will kill you every time," Johnson said. "They were just not willing to play the ball, keeping the ball in play very well."
"Everyone has a tendency to take it too seriously," Johnson said.
After Kansas shot 321 in the first round, Johnson said she told the team
Kansas junior Laura Myers said the Jayhaws probably could have done better in the tournament, especially since he had played the course last year.
Pennsylvania State University won the tournament, and the University of Mississippi finished second. Kansas University broke behind third-place Iowa State.
“As a team, we played better than we've been playing, but I still don't think we've played as well as we can and will play.” Myers said.
Johnson said the loss to Iowa State might be a motivating factor for the Jayhawks as they prepared for the NCAA vice tournament, which is April 29-30.
"With golf, from week to week it changes, and a lot of it is attitudes." Myers said. "Whoever is fired up will win."
Myers said that whoever went into the Big Eight tournament with the most enthusiasm would probably win.
"If anything, that has them fired
She said that she would be practicing hard in the next two weeks before the tournament and trying to keep her attitude positive.
Johnson said she wanted the Jayhawks to become more consistent in
their ball-striking before the Big Eight tournament. She also said she wanted to help them with their course management.
"Sometimes I see them get in situations when their decisions aren't the best," Johnson said.
"If we had played to our potential, I think we could have placed higher," she said.
Kansas freshman Holly Reynolds said the competition at the Azalea tournament was not the toughest the Jaehwaks had faced.
Back at home, Johnson said that the Jayhawks would be using the next two weeks to get ready for the conference tournament.
The Associated Press
Boston homers sock it to KC
Darwin, signed as a free agent for $11.8 million over four years, retired 16 straight batters after walking with two outs in the second innning.
BOSTON — Tom Brunanksy, Wade Boggs and Mike Marshall hit solo homers as Boston ended a 22-inning scoring drought, beating Kansas City
Mike Macfarlane ended the streak with a single off the left-field wall to start the eighth. Stillwell then hit his first homer into the Boston bollin in
Danny Darwin (1-1) got his first American League victory in five years. He allowed five hits, including Kurt Stillwell's two-run homer in the eighth, struck out seven and walked one in 72 innings.
right-center.
Darwin got the next two batters, but was lifted in favor of Tony Fossas after Kevin Seitzer's ground single to the buckets pitched the nath for his first save.
The Red Sox, blanked twice by Cleveland and winner of just one game in six starts since beating Toronto in the season opener, jumped in for the first inning with a pair of unearned win of Kevin Aperi (1-1).
With two outs, Mike Greenwell singled to right and took second as Stilwell fumbled Marshall's ball for an even play. Brunasyk nudged with RRI singles.
With two outs in the third, Brunansky hit his first homer of the season.
14
Wednesdav. April 17. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Senate considers riverboat betting
Bill would legalize riverboat gambling
Bv Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
If riverboat gambling had been legal in Kansas in the early 1800s, Lewis and Clark might have steered their canoe west into Kansas instead of continuing down the Missouri River.
Two hundred years later, some Kansas legislators and businessmen want to give people the opportunity Lewis and Clark never had — to board a riverboat and throw die, a bullet into a mine. The arm or simp a wheel for money.
A bill that was approved by the Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee last week would make riverboat gambling legal in Kansas.
Proponents of the bill worry that Missouri legislators will pass a similar measure and壁 travel tourism dollars if the bill does not become law.
"It's going to be done by Kansas or Missouri, and I think we want to control it," said State Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge. "They're probably still smarting from the fact they have a race track and they don't."
doll.
H.L. Bassett, director of the Kansas City, Kan., Convention and Visitors Bureau, said that the recession made approval of the bill especially important.
"Our chief concern, as a major player in the largest Midwest city where we work, lose taxes, jobs, capital investment and other economic development
opportunities to neighboring Missouri,” he said. “This legislation provides yet another opportunity for schools to lead when it is critically needed.”
Not every community in Kansas sees the bill necessary for economic growth, however.
Gary Toebben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said the city did not have plans to ban gambling if the bill was approved.
"Lawrence just doesn't seem like the kind of community to get excited about the possibility of gambling." But she is pretty far removed from us. "
Even if the bill passes through the Senate when legislators return for the wrap-up session next week, State Rep Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, would not get out of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee.
But the Rev. Richard Taylor, president of Kansans for Life at its best', said he strongly opposed the bill.
"I don't feel strongly about it one way or another," she said. "I've just heard that there's very little chance of that bill passing. On issues concerning things like gambling, the House tends to be conservative."
"The issue is not economic development, revenue or travel and tourism," he said. "Gambling is payment for a chance to steal wealth from the market. The issue is more people losing money to gambling operators."
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FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
tental and Sales 712 Mat
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS New design, quick delivery. Order now. It's Your Party. 1601 KI 23rd. 749-3453
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Civ. makes sense to use it. Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Booksstore.
Not just for Biker Babes anymore!
The ETC. Shop
739 Mass 843-0611
Events of the Week
Jewish Film Festival
April 16-20
Woodruff Auditorium
Hillel
לַכָּה
Make a SPECTACLE of yourself.
Ete. Shop
Sunglasses
Wednesday, April 17
Sophie's Choice
7:00 p.m.
The Etc. Shop
SUNGLASSES
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fisheries-
Society Board. Over 8,000 openings. No experience
required. Requires a Master's degree or board; Over 8,000 openings. No experience
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Mass. 843-0611
BATTERING can be emotional or physical
BATTERING can be emotional or physical
Women Monday night eight 7am Call 814-6987 for
Women Monday night eight 7am Call 814-6987 for
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Thursday, April 18
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called returned by counselors). Headquarters (841-2345) or KU Info 843-359. Sponsored by
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Finest! Since 1981 COLLEGE MONEY, Private Scholarship Box 1801, Mc A640201, 1-801-4739-6758.
Thursday, April 18
Isaac in America
& The Cafeteria
7:00 p.m.
Dr. David Vital
"ZIONISM:
Jewish Survival and
the State of Israel"
7:30 p.m. Centennial Rm.
Kansas Union
Saturday, April 20
Isaac in America
& The Cafeteria
4:00 p.m.
Havdalah Under the Stars
Cookout, campfire, & singing
Clinton Lake
Meet at Hillel House
4:30 p.m.
For rides and more information
call 684.3948
120 Announcements
Johnny's Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda
$*ALL REMAINING BOOKS-$*
Final weeks of guitting business at the book店 In, in Quantrill Fn e Market. All hardcover books $*-no exceptions*. Friday-Sunday 10-5
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER!
there are anything with ARBIRTHCH (to $60 for hire from Airbnb or the Midwest (when available) Reported in 2014 and Let Go! (when available) (Rt 3812 2000 2000)
PREPAREING FOR FINAL EXAMS
WORKSHOP Uses team management, using technology to help students cope with test anxiety and tool-taking in preparation for the final exam. FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Program.
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Receive from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage therapy at 841-9623 - go fly a kite
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115
Suffering from abortion! Write Hearts Restored.
Box 94, Grinnell, KS #7138. Confidential
resource material will follow
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 814-235 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
Taco Sale When: Fri April 19 Where: Lawrence
Indian United Methodist Church. 21st & Haskell
St. Time: 4:7pm
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
(841) 7752-8 N J
www.lawrence.info
130 Entertainment
140 Lost-Found
Found Friday 4/12 about 7pm in Fraser. One pair black sunglasses. Call Kevin to describe 864 1348
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Assistant needed to work full time in Chiropractic, Dental and Occupational job. Job description includes: to insurance billing therapies and other office duties Call 740-3000 to 7pm for instructions
$42.5hr. Convenient store clerk. Phillips 66 in DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience necessary. 385-3033
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, canning, sailing, waterplaying, gymnastics, scuba diving, campfire, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $100 or more; add Rd. Mab. Marten, 1765 Maple, Nid.
Baby surrender must have own vehicle. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through 2 kids 8.5 and 9.5 hours. Tuesday through 5 break, Overland Park home-area 1000 and Mall Call Nurse OY29-829-751 for 3 and 481-833
BAJA HARRY'S Pati Bar and Grill is looking for great roles for all positions. Great buck, great times, great incentives for those deserving, and appointments 103-381-1926 for information and appointments.
Catering Department, Kansas Uim hiring for positions including Food Service Manager (42$/hr), Will pay cash daily following employment. Food service experience helpful. Must have 5 yrs of related experience in office. Level 3 for shift schedules and to apply online.
12-month contract; supervise and direct recruitment, admissions, enrollment, financial aid, scholarships, on-campus housing, guidance servery, student services (teaching, government student, student activities); member of national professional experience in student, academic or administrative affairs, master's degree in education; student services required; community college experience and education preferred. Send letter of application to United States Department of Education. Donald E. Guild; president; Sekondy County College Group 1157, Laliburton, KS 67906-1137.
COLORADO ROCKIES SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT-SUMmer camp for disabled children and adult adults hire counsellors/attendants
Rocky Mountain Village at (803) 969-2333
Editor/Research Assistant KU Graduate Student Council. Applicant should have strong research background. Must be proficient in Responsible for writing, soliciting and editing articles, layout, page-autot, andsolishing advertising materials. Must have communication skills. Must be KU student, graduate informed about graduate course requirements. Graduate course enrollment must appointment beginning August 1, 1991. Salary $850 per month. Application deadline April 26, 1991 at 11am. References to Graduate Student Council. 424 Kansas University, Union of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 73501.
EXECUTIVE COORDINATOR KU Graduate Student Council. Applicant should be knowledgeable of the academic programs offered by the University, responsible for coordination of programs developed by the Graduate Executive Committee, and competent to experience at KU领先 50%, graduate assistance salary $700 per month. Begin Junior Fellowship in Research or reference to Graduate Students council. 428 Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence,KS. An equal opportunity employer.
Lake of the Garks Summer Employment. The Barge Floating Restaurant is accepting applications for waitresses, waiters, cooks, hosts, and hostesses. Excellent salary and tips. Great working condition, some food furnished. Apply with your resume. Contact Frank Bachelors (314) 365-7887
Mary Foster at Mazzie's Pizza at 20th & Iowa is
providing pizza for $10 per person per week. Must have reliable transportation,
current insurance and a good driving record.
Earn $40/week + commission | Tips don't
delay.
DUNRAIHER~ We're looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would like to make $500-$1,000 for a one week marketing project right on campus. Must be organized and have social media accounts.
Excellent pay processing hand-made items for
a job.
641-900-6211 Start immediately!
641-900-6210
HAVE THE SUMMER OF A LIFE TIME! Camp Echo Lake is looking for men and women to be the most important person in a kid's life for 5 weeks. We'll be offering this opportunity a offer why not give us a call. You may contact our campus representative Beni (941-7653) or get in touch by clicking on the Avenue Hardale Town. 10630 (9:51am) 472-5838
Full-time Summer Work: You are looking for a job that's exciting, challenging and rewarding? Work with other college students and see another country. Great money Call 1-800-628-4988
Kansas & Burge Urge Food Service catering department needs a part-time person to work very flexible hours as needed. including some weekends but no nights. 10:35 am some weeks. Must be experienced in arranging salad, meat and/or cheese trays with an artistic touch. Must be able to standard health sanitation and hygiene practices. Kansas Union Personnel Office level 5, EOE.
NANNIES-Immediate positions. in the East
Marine Division. Req. Master's degree or
salaries plus benefits. 1 year commitment Call
Jim Hare (303) 827-6495.
Need money fast? Make up to $1250 a day for
military photograph. No experience necessary
Need person to show apartments, answer phones and general office work. Full time in summer employment or study abroad. Need work study eligible. Call Mary Fat at 841-6003 PRESCHOOL HELP WANTED SUBSTitute and after school now. Also summer part and full time positions available. Send resume to juniors and seniors only Sunshine Ave. 842. 7223 Professional couple wishes to hire baby babysitter for summer Monday-Friday 8:00-6:00 excellent pool. Some flexibility on hours if you have summer class. Salary commensurate with qualification. Please leave your details anytime weekends or leave message on machine. RACING ENTHUSIASTS: We need outgoing in individuals interested in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday at Topika. Positions include ticket takers, ticket sellers, ushers, hostesses, gate attendants, and teachers. If interested apply at Man Power, 211 East 8th
Sitter needed for summer for 19 yr old boy
Room and board provided
249-830-3988
Looking for a few key people who are interested in making alot of $$$$ 842-2863
SUMMER-FALL PART-TIME JOB as personal care attendant for disabled, retired KI staff member in family setting. Seeking mature, bright women with a bachelor's degree, afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU vacations a plus good job for OT, PT, OR, or MS. Must have experience in students or persons with like interests. Relevant car and phone required. U.S. citizenship desired. Some lifting. Call 424-6120 between eight-9pm.
SUMMER JOB. Mature student to care for 2 children. Must have car, excellent references. Full-time preferred Leawood. (913) 341-9431
SUMMER-Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counselors in WSL, Tennis, Arts & Music. Gymnastics Upper Glassman theater Asst. Gymnastics Upper Glassman preferred Call Arane ASAP 180-443-628
Summer help: Local moving company needs heats
with labs of temperature. Apply in person at Caleban
with labs of temperature. Apply in person at Caleban
Summer Jobs Outdoors Over 7,000 Openings 'No'
Work at 484 North Park Boulevard
For Free Details. Sullivan, NJ 1E. Fwoyy
Telemarketing: Mon-Thur, 6-9pm Call Mon-Thur
6-9pm, 841-1289
**Bookclerk Tickets** KU Bookstores. Part time $4.25 per hour, position could possibly last until spring 11. Applicants must be able to work 8 hours of am 8pm and 5pm. Weekends are scheduled. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods of standing, have a valid employment and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant to have interest or knowledge of books. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office-Level 3
WATER-SKI COUNSELORS Boy's camp in Mountains Maine, West WI. Good summer camp for kids with facilities with kids to must have children &
The City of Oaklandas will be accepting applications for pool manager. Applications can be picked up at the City Hall, 6021 Davies in Oaklandas Kaitlin 8:30am (e) noon, Monday-Friday.
Wanted ENGINEERING student with
experience in working on new
business works: 842-846-384 or 842-847-589
WRITER WANTED Pend need words, word need them. Write a fiction novel about environmental. New writer-Human interest. Environmental. New writer-Human interest.
225 Professional Services
TRAVEL CENTER
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Make Plans Now!
TRAVEL CENTER
- Lowest air fares
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Lowest possible rates to Europe
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & Alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROFL
SAVE THE EARTH! Recycle this paper in front of Wescoe Hall in the big blue bin.
to get you home.
- Lowest possible
rates to Europe.
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
Resumes
• Professional Writing
• Cover Letters
• Laser Printing
Transcriptions
Man: 842-4619 upstairs (lot 200)
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
Driver Education offered in Midwinter Driving school, served K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
16 East 13th 842-1133
Thesis & Dissertations
Government photo, passports, immigration,
departures, travel documents
HAWK color. Call Tom Swens 249-1811
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ogden City Attorney's Services
Overland Park
Southern Hills Center
1601 W. 23rd M-F 9-5:30; Sat. 9:30-2
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
- World wide
- World wide travel information.
LOWEST FARES
841-7117
235 Typing Services
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716.
Thesis & Assertions
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street
841-6900
**1. Wearoman W Word Processing.** Former editor transforms your scrubbed into accurately spelled letters and rewrites them with letter quality type. 842-2803, days or evening.
I doubled per table space page. Rush job no problem. I worked on 9 pages in a day. Accurately typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25 double space page. Call to 10 a.m - 6 p.m
A- Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana
pipiens. Give your words the professional
appearance they deserve ☑ 842-7385
www.a-typingServices.8149.5924
Term papers, theses, notices by p.m.
Domus's room, calls to Domus.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes applications, laminar paper Labs
printer.
THA 8.5m m.pm F-5.8m m.pm 842.744
FAST ACCUMULATION TYPED 10.4 per page.
Includes CPU and DLR anywhere in city limits
also attached to Projects also handled.
Call Mae at Mcal 842.744
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible jpul. Phil 842 6256
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 9271 Mass. 841.1071
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call 842-3203
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionsaires. Call
Key Works. 842-8307
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
16 foot Hobie Catamaran. New condition! Trailer with sail tube, lots of extras. $5500. 841-5914-leave message
1996 Trek 700 Mountain Bike. 27" aluminum, excellent condition $52.99 new. $40.99 old. 85-986 CHIEP plane map KC1 to College Station, Texas or to Houston April 36. For more info see www.trekkings.com.
FOR SALE : Hamilton Dr hydraulic Durapack,
org $250,000 $500,000 obo Call M-F 8:39 841-7641
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tens cannon clothing, wet weather gear,
boots, hiking shoes, gloves,
ARHARTK WORKWEAR Mon-Sat 9:15-
47:27 AM St. Marys Surplus Sales, St. Marys,
Riverside Careers, battery Garage kept
new brakes, battery Garage kept
Beautiful Terry, 841-287.
Honda Elite Moped 50cc. 70 miles, almost new
968. Call/Enquire 12.40 am. 965-8977.
GAMES
Nintendo-Atari Sega-Turbo Grafx
HUGE $$$ Savings
Over Store Price!
Imagewriter--Compatible printer for any Macntoh computer. 5 months old, accessories included. $225 firm. 749-4201.
MT BIKE, "Giant"; 58 cm, black, Decor XT, extras; mileage like Mowel. Like Worth $100, ask prices.
WITH BLEACH - BLUE
NATIONAL LEAGHIB BIKE WITH SCHMITZ 50 PUMP (INCLUDES GUARD) $256. 892-914-916
Moving, moving and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walks welcome. Call 843-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
Paintball guns and equipment, cheap RPG books:
gurps, Traveler, etc. modem, Aquaria and filters.
841-0312
Latest releases, Game Systems.
YAKIMA GT bike sled-complete. $45.10 o.b.o.
843-8731
340 Auto Sales
Hail Damage! Hot red Cougar Convertible,
classic, Call Chris, 842-7543 evenings.
Specially designed for cougar owners.
4 Sale '85 Celica GT, PS, PB, AC, am/fm cass.
Good condition $3500 o.b.o. Call 864-2874
1982 Blue Buck LeSabre, AC, new brakes, good condition, $1200 or best offer. Bate 84-7215-71
Call Video Direct 913-539-1144 for Free Catalog!
1981 Chevettl. New radiator, water pump, fan and battery. Great college car. Only $850. Call 749-3759
1. **Toyota Supra** black, with gray headlights.
2. **Yokohama** snowmobiles 61K miles $11,000 841-775.
3. **Plymouth Laser RS**, automatic A/C/Factory player, 15K miles, perfect condition.
4. **Mercedes-Benz** S500, 250
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.
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
1985 BMW 318i, 4 DR, 62,000 miles, sunroof
store, AC, cruise, $8,300 o.b.o. Call 841-1876
leave on phone.
360 Miscellaneous
Lawrence Glass Tinting Special rates for students. Call anytime, 7am to 10pm. 737 E. 22nd.
841.7019
Wanted: CD' s-$6.00 and down Records and
tickets $2.00 and down. Top dollar for collections:
Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts. 855-0122
On TVs, VC's jewelry, stereo, musical in-
tractors, cameras and more. We honor
Visa/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn &
Vision 104 W. B 749-1719.
HOMES
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! For rent or buy
$275/mo. 842-9136
10 am to 6 pm
room available for summer sublease
Crested, $255/mo #4-355
1 BR port available immediately. Becky. 841-9277,
842-7543, MWF 841-4341.
1 bedroom apartment available June 1st. Option for fall wood floors, oriental rug, washer/dryer, private entrance. Must see: 865-9008
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842/871/843/1601
2 Bdrg apt available August. Walk to KU or downstairs. Wood floor, washer/dryer hookups. Water paid. No penns $440./km 841-1074
1 or 2 females for summer sublease. Great location, nice, spacious, pool, AC, DW, MW, Rent! Please leave message 865-3879
2 bp apt available in new building of West Hills ap for June 1. Great ask with microwave, with a built-in dishwasher, energy efficient gas heat. Great location near campus. 100 Emere Hd #4600 no Petz
3 studio apt, for rent starting at $205.00. No pets.
Call 749-7568
4 BH apt for summer sublease 2, bath W, DW AC, microwave, water courts, bus on routes. Sunrise Village Call Kim, 865-0625, leave message.
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 718th Ohio (new construction) and 2 BR (Formerly Villa Capri) on 2nd Floor. $459,000 new construction; 2B-1 bath, 2B-2 bath, with washers/dryers | Access from Memorial Chapel
- 541 Michigan. Byplex, 8-1 yr. old - 3-BR - 2B bath. All with washer/dryer. Floor mat. Bath and 3 - BR - 2 bath. Great prices. Call today First Management 749-1568. Open house every Saturday from 12 a.m to Bradford House, 401 Colorado # C-1 Office房 Mon-Fri 8-4.
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower House, 1484 Terreton, 240471 or 141441.
Available June or August. Efficiency 1 bedroom apts in nice older houses. Walk to KU or downtown. ZB2S and no. Pnets. 814-1074
Available June 15th thru the fall term or August 17, FURNISHED 2nd floor 2farm w/ bacetyl in private home. Ideal for couple or 2 women. Wash and dry clothes. Deposit and references required. No pets. Nonsmoker preferred. 424 plus *x* water and electricity. #43-6700 after 2 fırsat. I no answer call after.
Available June 3 bdr house 1200 block Vermont.
Wood floors, window A/C/awrer, drylockers,
off street parking, dishwasher. 14 mo. lease.
$645/mo. No pets. B41-1074
Available June 1, option for half a bedroom apartment with left in Orchard Spaces. Beautifully furnished, pool, on bus route. Extra furniture free. 841-1445
Available immediately. Large 1 bedroom apt. for rent. 1 block from Union. Must see. Call 841-5797 or 865-0010. Leave message.
Cheaper summer showers! $160 for large room in duplex. Chris, 842-7543 evenings
Jeek out Berkeley Plats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300-415/ms. Call 845-2116
Delightful summer subasee. 2 or 1 bed. May August dates, neq. airconditioned. Beautifully furn, close to campus, downtown. Very reasonable rent. $150/month. Inroom. Inroom
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people) Clean and efficient, large deck.843-3861
EMERY PLACE
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and
water heating, two bedroom, one month. Available summe-
rally and far large, eight room baths. Some
with utilities paid. Cadding fans, mini blinds,
private parking, laundry facilities. Just one block
of land with a pool.
Excellent Location 1, block to amusement, 2 bedroom in 4+ queues, dishwasher, WD lookup, CA no, pets, available 1床. $80. At 1341 Ohio Call 842-4242
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 room btwown house / garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer subscription. $120 is utilities. Kerr. 845-602-662
Female for summer sublease. Close to campus
Fully furnished. Owner room and bath. No security
deposit. 1/2 utilities, rent negotiable. 843 2498
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice townhome. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! May Call Me (avennings best!) 814-5436
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. April 17, 1991
15
Nice, spacious 3 bdr duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, central air, W/D hookup, garage, low utilities. Avail. in June. $450/mo. No pets. 845-2888
Nice studio at 1023 Kentucky campus im-
mature students KU and Massachusetts.
water aid 843.579
ho hill to climb Large 1 bedroom at 11th
Louisiana. Central air, laundry facilities,
maintenance staff Avail May or June through
Aug. 245. Call Bess, 865-3276
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apts at Southridge Plaza Apts. 1, bedroom $23, 2 rooms start at $335, 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1660
Now leasing for fall semester. 1 and 2 bedroom cabins, two bedrooms, ceiling fans, water pump, Walk to campground. Telling water faucet water paid Walt to camper
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, national origin, or an intention, to make a 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 kinds advertised in this newspaper can be on an equal opportunity basis.
Female, Room for summer (and Fall!) Share kitchen and bath Clean 100 block Ohio $129
GREAT SUBLEASE B: call w microwave. May rent paid close to Campus. Bw call 845-3412
Great location for KU and downtown Studio apt with ear and water pad. $90.mm. Call 845.2116.
Brown Building 10902 North Carolina Avenue Greenwich Village close to library 2 bedroom apartment with sunporch CA, wood floors, no pets. Available June 1. $380 at 1801 Mississippi. Call 842 42424
Hey KU MED students-move in *2* weeks, and receive *1* off your rent for 2 months. *6* Studios, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments: *Heat and water paid* Med Center, Med. Center, Rainbow Tower Apts. 913-813-8933
Hey! KU Med students. Move in June 1 and receive 1 of my rent for 2 months . *Studiol.* 1, Studiol. 2, Heat and water paid. *Acts* from KU Med Center Hanlow Power Apts. 913-831-9063
House share 2. BR hire, yard. $187.50/mi 414 Minnesota. Call 843-8438
**International Students.** Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stays open 385 days a year and is a great place to friend. 14984. Tennessee 7469/8141 or 8144/8148
Lorimar Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brent
available. now 2-6 bedrooms. Lease thru
May. July or for 12 months at 843-7849-8434.
VOLUNTEER THIS SUMMER!
MBR 2 metrified up for May. Pad, cd ad.
all summer. 843-7849-8434.
- Leasing now for Fall or Summer. 2 hpt. air,
4+ 16x lease month, CA, DW. Close to Campus,
off street parking, Low Utilities. Call 842 8784
Ask for Tracy or Leave message
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apks. lbk from KU with of street parking, no pets. 841-500
Sublease: Three bedroom apartment close to campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 865-2597
Need a place during summer school?
Economical 2 be available in quiet apart
room with balcony or terrace.
Sublease 3 berm downstairs from Mid May or
June 1 to July 29, hath. fireplace, $500 (m). -
$750 (f.). - $150 (s).
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bldm from KU with off street parking. No pets. B4:500-560
Summer sublet: Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
near Holidone, patio, dishwasher, W/D, AC
$375/month. Call 749-4823
Summer lease with option to renew avail mid-
week, DW v. very nice. Rent $40. Call 842-3522.
Summer Sublease: Studio ap Murphy bed, Great
bed. Excellent location on campus. Call
842-3522.
Summer Sublease 2' bedroom apartment
Dishwasher, halfway, pool $500/mo Leave
to room
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $50.2 2 bedroom
bedroom for $50.2 Heather Valley Valley
A81-4T7
A81-4T7
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 bedroom apt at northwinds 5 blocks north of north 6 on Michigan W/D hookups. Brand new. $75/month plus utilities. Call 841-6655.
campus. Two to four people. 841-2288
Summer sublease with option for fall. 3 bedroom
800.00 W. Wines are paid. 841.2288
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt-close to campus. Two to four people. 841-2268
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR super location, great pool. Call 749-6213.
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt, water
and basic cable paid. Pool and laundry facilities.
$310/mo. Call 749-4235.
Summer sublease. A clean, updated iBed apartment located on south side of town near grocery store, located on south side of town near grocery store, room, weight room, and pool available. Ideal for anyone needing a place to stay for summer vacations. Located in the city center.
---
meadowbrook
Lighted Tennis Courts
True Books
Wide range of GREAT studios, 1, 2 & 3 dbrm, apts. 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes among a peaceful country
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom townhouse with 2 bathrooms. $185.00 per month, *4* utilities. 841.2823
Visit Meadowbrook Apts
Spoil Yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apartment. W/D, DW, Microwave. Sublease $99. Call 865-3837.
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic
841-8400) House daily
SUBLEASE at HAMNERV PLACE. Furnished one bedroom. From mid May to December. Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386 10pm-11pm.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi Water, gas, cable paid-$300.00 841-862-96
Laundry facilities
SUBLET 2 rooms in 3t her house. Avail early
may to end July 18 mo+ - utils. Will negotiate.
No dep Extra incentive Please call 842-7333
Kerrie
in each building Carports / Garages
Part25
Carports / Garages
Free Basic Cable
Playgrounds Water Bod
or 25 is now pre-leasing to your apartment for the fall. We feature some of the largest & most spacious 1 BR 748 sq ft.
2 BR 1,083 sq ft.
2 BR 2, bath 1,044 sq ft.
• fully equipped kitchens
• Central air
• Backyard bayer bookups
• 2 Pools
• 2 Laundry rooms
• KI HU stops
• and much more!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 58th Apt 943
1241 S 60th Apt 943
- Experienced Profession
Maintenance
MON-FRI 8:5:30
SAT 8-5
SUN 1-4
842-4200
It's Time to Step Up to
MEADOWROOK
WOODWAY
ATTEMPTS
AIRMORE 11
ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas boiler central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini bins
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $355, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across Harder's)
HOURS:
4:00:60 Tues - Fri
9:00:12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for app
SUMMER SUBLAGE. Spacious four bedroom, two townhouse, 3 available bedrooms, 2 full baths. Kitchen with dishwasher, trash compactor, cable, storage, low utilities. 3 room, tennis courts, great location
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
SUMMER SULEBASE 2 B, 1R, 1B: rent and furnishings negotiable. Close to Campus. 865-0738
SUMMER SULEBASE: Orchard Corners, 14/2bm furnished, furnished bus route, 14/2bm furnished, furnished bus route
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliable
Georgetown Apartments
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Close to KU bus route
Call about our Summer Special
630 Michigan 749-7279
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Apple Lane Apartments
No pets
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Water paid
Offering Luxury 2 BR
Affordable Travel:
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt, Inc
Boardwalk
- Clean & well maintained
apartments
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
842-4444
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
APPLE
2111 Kasold 843-4300
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
- Water & trash paid
Qulet studio
- Unfurnished with
524 Frontier
- 2 on-site bus stops
--heat & water p (on account)
- Walk to grocery
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
S
Pool
Free enable
Special
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
Sat. 11:3 p.m.
- Swan Management
- Gravstone
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Now leasing for summer & fall
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, garage, AC
2012 Heatherburn, B41-9707.
TRAILRIDGEAPTS
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 3 bedroom, 2 full bath apartment. Air conditioned, washer/dryer, floor parking dishwasher, microwave. Great kitchen. KU or downtown. By Joe's Donuts! 8427.7888
1&2 BR apts -tennis courts
2&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 4 bedroom house. 1351
N.I. H440 mm neg. coal House. Sweil location
N.I. H440 mm neg. coal House. Sweil location
- plush carpets
South Pointe APARTMENTS
SUMMER SURSELE: Beginning May 1 or June
1 July-31 Fall. Four bureaux in Sunrise
and Tacoma do not need reservation.
No deposit required.
1 & 2 Bedrooms
for Summer & Fall
- large rooms & closets
- water & trash paid
- Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
- central air & gas heat
--the move now!
MONTEREY
WATER CITY
- Studios
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Luxurious Town Hom
& Apartment Living
- Free Cause Tail and Pen
• Luxurious Town Home
- Close to Campus
& Apartment Living On Rue Route
Sunrise Place
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
Enlarged to Show Texture
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
--the move now!
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Set Sun 1.4
COMPETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
OPEN DAILY
1-5 P.M.
MASTERCRAFT
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
HANOVER PLACE
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-5255 • 7th & Florida
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
841-1429·1145 Louisiana
TANGLEWOOD
9th & Avalon 842-3040
CAMPUS PLACE
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
HEY, ADDY!
HAPPY 21ST
BIRTHDAY! YOU
LOOK GOOD FOR
BEING SO OLD!
THANKS, PEACHES
SIGH...
WHY
ARE
YOU SO
SAD,
ADDY?
ADDISON, DEAR!
WE'RE HERE!
OH GOD, NO!
IT'S YOUR
PARENTS!
ORCHARD CORNERS
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location at a superior price 2 baskets room 531-847-6044 WD Call
Sublease two bedroom apt with WD Call 841-7465 $33.00 mo
Summer sublease Large 2 bedroom available in May $175 each. Negotiate Call 841-9173 for more information.
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom townhome. Sunrise Village. Pool, microwave. $185 each negotiable. 749-2493.
Summer sublease with possibility for fall 4 bedroom house, wood floors, close to campus. 1011 Alabama. 843-1435.
749-4226 • 15th & Kasoki
Summer sublease 4 bedroom house. Close to campus 10m呼;Call Mon or Greg, 476-493. HUGE. HUGE studio for summer sublease. Availa mid-May. May rent paid $25/month.
by Brian Gunning
Summer sublease启动 in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278
Summer sublease. Spacious 3 bdm; new kitchen, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups, good price. 842-4633
Summer subside with use for bed. I失调 in large, beautiful home. Close to campus. Prefer non-smoking upperclassman or grad student.
710.0/m call. Maill (855) 362-922
Summer subsuite. Roommate wanted April free.
Basicly everything provided. Copy, nice. Buy
route $10 plus utilities. Call 841-8314 or 842-4735.
Leave message.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-8671 or drop by 496 Tennessee
2 BR appl. 1 block off campus, 2 floors, study area, water paid. Call 865-2000 and leave message. Best apartment in Lawrence.
Two story 3 bedroom older home in good condition near dawntown and bus route. Original wood work throughout. 4 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, $474/month plus utilities. $474 deposit, 12 month lease. Available June 1. No pets. Non-smokers on holiday. Call (800) 256-1999.
**Students women. Want to live in a non-existive environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Skullworth! Against the influence of 140 Temperature 799-807 or 841-0484
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.
- Great social events
- Computer Center
* Great social events
- Free utilities
- Computer Center
- "Dine Anytime"
Wise up and make
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 831-8599
Sublease av. June 1, 2 br, celing faom, economical, with rent:惠盋 865-0992 or 881-1942
Sublease two bedroom apt May 15-Aug 15 $345 per month
748-2891 or 882-3492 ask mo
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!!
- Voleyball Court
- Ballpark Court
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- On Bus Route
- 3 Hot Tubs
THE FAR SIDE
$355 - $425
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
1301 W.24th
Models Open Daily
Mon.- Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-12 p.m.
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
430 Roommate Wanted
Call now for summer sublease. Female room mate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 812-3626.
April Rent Free-Female roommate needed immediately. 3 share Bed duplex-W/D; microwave, dishwasher, air conditioned garage. Guest Room: Call Lisa. 841-358, leave message 841-358, leave message
A roommate needs for summer sublease. On bus
route, nice apt. $150 a month plus utilities.
0213 847-9561
Female, non-white roommate need for Fearl
% share of 10 trailer, own bedroom, w/d central
water & heat. Req. Fearl's $25,000 plus $12,
$10,000 plus $5 utilities. Prefer student
or upperclassman. Annex #843413 (3)
515-967-8780
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share
2 BAG at Northlands. Owner room. Brand new
$87.50 mo plus $2 utilities. 842.3571.
Female roommate wanted for summer! **one bedroom in house.** Share kitchen and bath. May rent FREE $215 mow + 3 suites. 1/7-1/3. Located on 13th Vermont. Kill 865-4831.
Female roommate needed to share a four
bedroom apartment in Orchard Corners $132.90
month plus 4* utilities 749-540.
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month.
749-5678
Male roommate needed. Duplex W.S. part of
town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robert. 842-4252
One female roommate needed for 4 bmrd in
bathroom apt at Orchard C席. Starting Aug.
10.
Help! Roommate needed immediately for
spacious apartment two blocks from campus
$475.90, utilities off, off street parking. $32-0730.
Melanie
Female roommate summer sublease Own bedroom, close to campus, non-smoker. $250 month, 2 utilities. 865-3822
Quet. non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. 91. Large apartment, furniture. D, W, summer storage. 841-3309.
Roommate wanted: House bordering campus, non-smoker, clean, responsible. Rent: $252.00
Call: Richard T487-2564
Roommate wanted for fall, preferably nonmushroomized,机配 to mid late twinties. Apartment has all conveniences. 5 minute walk to kitchen, 40 minutes to parking. Call at 841-0137 or 864-3720 days.
Roommate needed. $150 a month. No util. No lease required. Call 832-1438 after 6:00 pm
Subset for summer/Roommate for Fall. Nice place GREAT LOCATION 842-9994
seeded to share 2 bedrooms/2 bath at ORCHARD CONERN. Pool, A/C, cable, on his route. Room with a large bathroom. Summer suite two. Roomies needed Large furnished apartment. $100./sq. 19 utilities.
Summer sublease Option to take over lease in
land. Bran new 2 br. One female roommate
wanted $180/month. Call Jal Lynn, 841-149
Wanted: Female roommate non-smoke to share
Wanted. Female roommate non-smoker to share
2 bedroom room, on bus route. Call 842-215-193
By GARY LARSON
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
4. 17
"C'mon, c'mon! You two quit circling the table and just sit down!"
16
Wednesday, April 17, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
You've Got It All At Dillons!
V
from Our Meat Dept...
Farmland Jumbo Meat Franks 16 oz. Lower Salt And Fat
BUY ONE GET ONE FREE!
FREE!
HOMBORGHIN TRANS
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from our Deli...
from our Seafood Shoppe...
from our Deli...
8 Piece Cut Up
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Caffeine free diet Coke Sprite diet Coke Coca-Cola CLASSIC
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Coca-Cola Classic, Diet, Caffeine Free Diet or Sprite And Selected Coca-Cola Products 12 Pack - 12 oz. Cans $289
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TWO MEATFRO
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Red Baron Microwave Deep Dish Singles Pizza
12 oz. Supreme, Sausage,
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Pacific Light HEARTY WHEAT Wheat
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from our Flower Shop...
Bud Vase Arrangement
Price will vary depending on the flowers. You may have a carnation, pixie carnation, daisy or a rose.
$999 To $1299
TRY DILLON'S AUTHENTIC
C
HOT CHINESE FOOD TO GO
CHINESE KITCHEN!
Located in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence.
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.)
BBQ Pork Fried Rice Quart Serving
BBQ Pork Fried Rice Quart Serving $349
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$579
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...
Available This Weekend
HYDER DRAGAL
THE MARTYRIS SISTER
THE HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTOR
THE LAW GENIUS
THE UNITED STATES ARMORY
MANKED DEATH
THE WAY OF THE DEAD
"Marked For Death"
John Hatcher is a retired Drug Enforcement agent who returns to his suburban neighborhood to find that it has turned into a drug war zone. When he kills a member of the gang, they target his family for death. With the help of an old army buddy, they take on the drug gang.
"Till They're Home Again."
Dillons FOOD STORES
Ad Prices Effective April 17-23, 1991.
Lawrence Dillon Stores Only.
Limit Rights Reserved.
KANSAN
VOL.101,No.134
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Time will tell effect of rail strike
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
The nationwide railroad strike that began yesterday morning is bound to have a significant impact on Lawrence companies if it lasts more than a few days, some local merchants say.
Last night Congress passed a bill establishing an emergency board to clear the disputes and impose a settlement in 65 days.
The bill requires both the unions and railroads to follow the recommendations of the emergency board to reach an agreement by themselves.
President Bush signed the bill early this morning.
Justin Hill, vice president of the Lawrence Paper Co., 2801 Lakeview Road, said all of the company's paper came in by train.
Lawrence Paper Co. receives
Bush signs bill establishing emergency board to mediate and resolve dispute within 65 days
about five rail-car shipments of paper roll stock daily. Hill said. Because the company has some roll strike has not affected the business value.
But the supply in reserve will not last more than two or three weeks, Hill said.
"In some isolated grades of paper, we would be hurting in a matter of days," he said.
He said the company probably would start shipping in some raw material by truck if the railroads still not operating in about two weeks.
Eric Walther, director of corporate benefits at Packer Plastics Inc. .2330
NEWS:864-4810
"We do have an option of trucking in some of the goods, but it's more efficient than a rail," he said. "We could handle as much a two-or three-day strike."
Packer Road, said most of the company's raw material came by train.
Walther said that if the strike lasted more than three days, there would be a reduction in the company's operations.
He said the company did not yet have a plan to deal with a possible long-term railroad strike.
Paul Thompson, international vice president of the United Transportation Union's office in Kansas City, Kan., said the United Transportation
Union represented four workers from the Lawrence railroad station, 413 E. 7th St.
There are about 100 Lawrence residents who work in the railroad industry, either locally or in the Kansas City area. he said
Thompson said he had no guess as to how long the strike would last.
He said the union was waiting to see the results of Congress's media训
Mike Bush, Lawrence resident, is among the railroad employees affected by the strike. Bush works for the Railway, Kan., for the Saft Feira Railway.
He said that railroad employees
had been making wage concessions for the past 12 years and that now the companies were asking for health benefit cuts.
"We still have a decent health package," Bush said. "But we want to keep it. We want to be able to have that protection for our families."
He said railroad employees were often transporting materials, such as industrial chemicals and fertilizers, to their health if exposure occurred.
"Safety has to fit in somewhere," Bush said.
He said he did not think the railroad strike would last long, but he was pessimistic about the results for employees.
"Railroad companies will not negotiate in good faith with the workers, hoping that Congress will put us right where we are." Definitely that is what will happen.
Kansas lawmakers urge strike legislation
PETER RICHARD
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Kansas lawmakers said yesterday they supported Congress's quick passage of legislation to end a national rail strike because a long disruption of freight routes is forcing waste and other industries in the state.
"The American people can't afford to have Congress go on strike too, in the face of a national emergency," Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole said in a speech on the chamber floor. "The rail industry has now shut down and we will very soon see the economic economy if we don't act now."
Both Dole and Rep. Jim Slattery, D-2nd District, said they expected
lawmakers to fashion the strike legislation around recommendations from a presidential emergency board, which issued a report in January for addressing major issues in the dispute.
"Now is the time for decisions," said Slattery, who serves on the House committee writing the strike-ending legislation.
Slattery said one of the most diffi- cult issues involved agreements on train-crew size. Unions contend rail proposals could cost 30,000 jobs. Dole said agriculture would be hit hard by a lengthy rail strike.
"This is the time of year when fabric is shipped for spring planting.
'The rail industry has now shut down, and we will very soon see the shutdown of the American economy if we don't act now.'
Bob Dole Senate Minority Leader
Senate Minority Leader
Congress avoid strike legislation that would hurt efforts in Kansas to find short-line companies to take over rail lines proposed for abandonment.
He expressed concerns that Congress might try to revamp current regulatory procedures in rail law for dealing with labor contracts when track is abandoned or sold. Slattery said he wanted to continue current provisions governing how the Interstate Commerce Commission dealt with labor protections in abandonments and short line purchases.
The issue of rail abandonments is important in Kansas because the Santa Fe Railway is considering the construction about 700 miles of track in Kansas.
Industry braced for rail strike
Goods shipped
Percent of goods shipped by rail (industries most affected by strike shown in parentheses)
Transportation 67%
equipment(Automotive)
equipment (Automotive)
Pulp, paper products(Paper) 60%
Lumber, wood products(Building) 53%
Chemicals 53%
Food products
Stone, clay. glass products
Major railroads affected*
Percent of U.S. rail freight
carried, 1989
32%
Burlington Northern 22.9%
Union Pacific 18.0%
CSX Corp. 14.5%
Norfolk Southern 9.9%
Santa Fe 8.2%
Conrail 8.1%
Southern Pacific 6.8%
Chicago and
Northern Western 2.7%
Illinois Central 1.7%
Kansas City Southern 1.1%
Kansas City Southern 1.1%
Annual revenue over $93.5 million; they are over 20% of all sales.
SOURCE: Association of American Railroads
Knight-Ridder Tribune New
Forces try to help Kurds keep dogs of war at bay
Hunger, cold and disease continue to thin ranks of those who have fled Iraq after Hussein moved to quash rebellion
The Associated Press
SIKVEREN, Turkey — Bedraggled Kurdish痒害 yesterday cheered the arrival of U.S. ground troops, who began scouting sites in northern Iraq for Western-supervised camps. But hunger, disease and cold took an ever-mounting toll of lives.
About 800,000 Kurds have fled Iraq for the safety of Turkey and its border, and nearly 1.5 million of Iraq's 4 million Kurds have sought safety in Iran and along its frontier, according to the latest estimates.
They began fleeing Iraq after Saddam Hussein's forces moved to crush them.
In the south, where Shiite Muslims also rebelled against Saddam's rule, 71,000 Shia troops fled to Iran. About a third of the population in a border zone in southern Iraq
U. S. forces yesterday completed their withdrawal from all of southern Iraq except the border zone. The remaining 18,000 troops will protect and feed the refugees until effective alternatives are found. U.S. military
The Pentagon said U.S. soldiers in northern Iraq would set up five or six
campins in an area of relatively flat terrain. They will be protected and run by U.S., British and French forces.
Once the sites are identified, construction of the tent camps will begin, and the hundreds of thousands of refugees will be encouraged to travel to the camp. The camps could be ready to provide food and medical aid within two weeks.
Pentagon representative Pete Williams said he could not estimate how many U.S. troops would be involved if the attackers capped that it would be at least 5,000.
At Isikveren, U.S. supply helicopters droned steadily above the camp yesterday. But the choppers were having trouble delivering aid because scores of refugee children swarmed below when they tried to
Williams also said a quick reaction force of U.S. Army and Marine Corps troops would be established at an undisclosed location in Turkey to power in the event that Iraq troopers to interfere with the relief effort
"They won't come in because the kids rush them," said Army Sgt.
Scott Grimm of Coquille, Ore., 31, a.
engineer. He said the military had
ordered a supply of concertina wire
that could block off the
landing zone.
The U.S. Turkish base at Incirik is coordinating the relief effort. Capt. Marcelle Adams, a representative at the refugees' aid of aid to the refugees were continuing.
U. S. BISH and French transport airplanes have dropped more than 1,500 tons of food, blankets and tents to the Gaza border country since April 7, she said.
Near the U.S. helicopter drop zone at Iskerven, there was a grim reminder that help was coming too late for many. A group of Kurds in northern Syria, the victim of the grueling exodus from Iraq and the harsh conditions in Turkey.
The makeshift cemetery was filled with about 150 horizontal mounds of sticky brown mud topped with stones. Most of the graves were less than 3 feet tall.
"There are many babies," said Gunn, the army sergeant. "We saw 16 in the front."
▶ See Nation/World Briefs Page 7
Oliver M.
End of the road
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
An 18-wheel tractor trailer, owned by Builders Transport, crashed through the barriers at Sixth and Iowa streets at 11:30 last night. The driver apparently thought the road continued to the T-intersection, Lawrence police said. Peter Houston, a supervisor for the Douglas County Ambulance Service paramedics, said the driver was treated at the scene and was in stable condition.
'Dike noir' show entertains with mix of poetry, stories
Holly Hughes asked members of the audience whether they ever wondered if the worst were true.
By Benjamin W. Allen
Lesbian performer combines personal tales, observations
Kansan staff writer
Hughes, a combination actress,
performance artist and irreverent
comedian, appeared last night as
part of Gay and Lesbian Awareness
week in Downs auditorium at
Dvche Hall.
"That would mean the feminists and the born-agains are both right." she said.
Hughes, whose performance has been described as "dike noir," entertained a standing-room-only crowd of more than 220.
She created a collage of stories, poetry and candid asides for the
audience as she discussed lesbian experiences.
Her narrative often contained played-out conversations with her mother, and her demeanor kept the audience entertained. The stories were fictional or factual.
Her range of outrageous humor and sometimes emotion-packed drama kept the audience entertained for an hour and a half.
One of her stories began with her re-enacting dinners she and her mother ate at a Danny's restaurant amidst the smell of fresh Formica. Her mother asked her if she liked boys or girls or both.
"I leaned forward," she said,
"my nipples grazing the rampin-a-basket, and I said, "I like
both " "
She said the waitress overheard and brought her both the shrimp sauce and the tartar sauce.
In the midst of her performance, Hughes said, "If you came to see lies, you're out of luck."
In several asides to the audience, Hughes talked about the federal government and its attitude toward financing gay and lesbian art through National Endowment for the Arts grants.
Last year, Hughes lost an NEA grant after her work was deemed perverse.
Hughes recently was given another NEA grant.
After evaluating facts about Facts election commission fines coalition
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie
The Student Senate Elections Commission decided to restrict its penalties mostly to monetary fines, although it decided that major violations were committed by the Facts coalition.
Major violations are punishable by removal from office and a permanent bar from Senate.
The commission decided that members of Facts had committed three major violations during the campaign regarding its budget submission, use of 'table tents' and a pattern of minor violations.
"We haven't worked out the specifics, but the appeals process will
definitely be used," he said.
Facts, however, plans to appeal
Sacks' case. Facts from Paukak,
Sacks'代表ative.
Facts was fined $150 for about 60 minor violations and $103 for major violation.
The commission fined Facts $253 and Impact coalition $20
Appeals of the commission's ruling are sent to the University Judiciary, as is required by the University code.
In addition to its monetary fines, the Facts coalition is required to submit a report to the commission by April 26 that includes suggestions about how the election next year could be conducted more smoothly, said Curt Weingarner, commission chairperson.
The commission also fined Jason McIntosh, presidential candidate for Facts, $10 for being in violation of a state law while he was campaigning.
Mlmtosh, 20, said he was on camp after the Kansas-North Carolina game March 30 and was carrying beer. His statement was made in response to a charge that he was guilty to gain votes by giving beer to students.
The Facts coalition decided to drop its major violation charges of harassment and slander against Impact. In a letter to the commission, McIntosh said he did not want to appear in continuing with the allegations.
He said he had handed out beer only to people he knew that night.
"Student elections are designed to benefit the University community and all students, not to provide an individual running for office." he said.
As a result, the only major charge against Impact, which the commission filed, was that it had committed a pattern of minor violations.
Common minor violators were more than one campaign poster on a bulletin board and attaching two copies to together as one poster.
Upon deliberation, the commission decided that impact had not committed.
The commission certified the seats won by members of Impact and tentatively certified the seats won by the winning the completion of the penalties.
2
Thursday, April 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI: 75°
LO: 56°
63/39
59/45
59/39
57/38
66/52
86/64
83/69
Today's Forecast| 3-day Forecast
Southerly winds bring warm and muggy conditions today. A chance of showers late this afternoon and into the evening.
Salina 75/55 KC
Dodge City 73/55
75/56 Wichita 76/57
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Friday - Partly cloudy and chance of rain. High 70/ Low 50
Saturday - Seasonal conditions. High 67/ Low 48.
Sunday - Partly cloudy and mild. High 66/ Low 45.
forecast by Greg Zamiranga
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USFS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-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 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
MARRYING MAN (R) SAT. SUN 2:30
FIVES 5:00, 7:30, 9:45
HILLCREST
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Aztec artist aids HALO fund-raiser
By Lara Gold
Making silver jewelry is in Austreberto Basilio's blood.
Kansan staff writer
University of K
three generations of his fami$_{1}$ work out of their home in Acapulco, Mexico, making original Aztec silver jewelry.
"It's an activity that fills me with pride," he said, standing in front of a booth in the Kansas Union, displaying his work.
This week, he is sharing the pride his art brings him with the Hispanic American Leadership Organization. Twenty percent of the money he makes selling the jewelry will go to HALO's Hispanic Heritage Month next year.
Louie Lopez, HALO president, said HALO sponsored Basilio so he could sell his jewelry at the University of Kansas.
Austereboro Basilio tends a jewelry display in the lobby of the Kansas Union. Basilio travels the country selling family-made jewelry.
"We are helping him, and he is helping us," Lopez said.
Lopez said the designs and the intricate detail of the jewelry reflected Hispanic culture and heritage.
Bassilio travels about six months a year to college campuses, selling his jewelry and helping out Hispanic organizations.
"I look for Hispanic people where I go because I get economic support as well as moral support." he said. "I help me raise the children and help me because it helps my family."
He said he enjoyed selling his original jewelry on college campuses because he thought college students appreciated it more.
For Basilo and his family, the jewelry they make is affordable
artwork.
Bassilo does not think that artwork should be only for the wealthy.
With so many colorful and shiny designs on display, customers may have a hard time deciding between bracelets, broaches, necklaces and bracelets.
Melanie Huerter, Kansas City,
Kan., senior, could not make up her
mind which bracelet to buy. She
wanted a simple necklace with
minutes trying on different designs.
"It's very ethnic," she said. "It means more than picking something out at a mall."
Crabapple trees in place by commencement
Kansan staff report
Four crabapple trees in front of Watson Library were removed yesterday because of extensive damage them during a wind storm March 28.
The wind split the base of some trees, making repair impossible. Parts of the trees were removed
immediately after the storm for safety reasons.
Jim Mathes, director of landscaping, said that the University of Kansas was hoping to replace the trees before commencement, May 19.
"They're really important trees," he said. "They serve as the focal point for the library, and they frame
the entry way to the library."
Mathes said the University planned to get another four crabapple trees to replace the ones that were removed. They will cost about $400.
He said the trees would be ground up to be used as mulch in the flower beds on campus.
Marion Montgomery
The Intercollegiate Studies Institute proudly presents acclaimed critic, poet, and novelist
100
in a public Lecture Tuesday, April 23rd, 8:00pm in the Jahawk Room of the Kansas Union:
"Flannery O'Connor's Sacramental Vision"
Author of numerous critical books and articles, novels, and volumes of poetry. Mongomery's interests in philosophy and intellectual history inform his exploration of the important juncture of ideas and literature.
The Lecture is Free and Open to the Public.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 18, 1991
Campus/Area
3
Legislators discuss possible education budget
State financing for KU could decrease by $3 million next year
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
Area legislators yesterday sent a message as black and white as their audience's coffee and cream; there either will be a tax increase or further budget cuts and a $159-million property tax increase.
State Reps, Betty Jo Charlton, D Lawrence; John Solbach, D Lawrence; Sandy Paeger, R
Lawrence and State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, took part in the Eggs and Issues" forum yesterday at Bridge Lake酒店, 701 Massachusetts St.
The four legislators answered questions concerning a variety of issues from about 65 people who attended the breakfast sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
The discussion focused on the proposed budgets for education, social services and state employee salaries. But the legislators emphasized the need for tax increase to fulfill almost $138 million in slated increased spending.
"If we don't raise taxes, we will have to go back and cut budgets a 4 or 5 percent across the board." Winter said. "Property taxes will increase
While the Legislature approved $130 million in increases for various programs, it increased the Board of directors budget by less than 1 percent.
as well "
Although the fiscal 1992 Regents budget reflects an overall 0.2 percent increase compared to the actual 1991 budget, the increase is $20 million by a Senate committee.
Those cuts amount to a $3 million decrease in the University of Kansas'
present financing. Both KU and the Regents system could face even deeper cuts if a tax measure is not approved up-session that begins Wednesday.
The House had restored $16 million to the Regents budget that was later deleted by the Senate. Praeger said she would be part of a House-led bipartisan coalition that would fight for restoration of the $16 million while it is in a conference committee during the wrap-up session.
Solbach said that although a tax increase would be painful to the state in the short run, it would provide future strength.
"If it's going to hurt us in the long
range, I won't take that
approach," he said.
Although KU's overall budget would show a decrease, Winter said that a separate appropriation bill that has not yet been passed would increase faculty and administration salaries by 2.5 percent.
100
Dam repairs
Dale Jarrett signals to have a batter board raised on the Bowersock Dam across the Kansas River while Eric Erickson waits to brace the board in place. Jarrett and Erickson, both employees of Bowersock Mills and Power Co. worked yesterday to put back into place boards that were pushed over by recent rains. The boards are used to raise the level of the river for generating electricity with hydroelectric turbines.
McDonald's cuts the garbage
Restaurants introduce revamped packaging plan aimed at reducing trash By Katie Chipman Kangan staff writer
Jerry Guffrey, supervisor of the two Lawrence restaurants, said the restaurants had quit using polystyrene to seal the bowls and used a plastic paper wrap instead.
Some parts of the plan already have been put into action by local MCHC.
McDonald's restaurants have launched an environmental plan that has the potential of eliminating four-fifths of the garbage they generate.
The restaurant is looking for suitable packaging for breakfast food, which still uses polystyrene packaging, he said.
Guffey said that McDonald's restaurants were use unbleached bags for carryout meals and that most of their paper products, such as napkins, paper towels and carryout trays, were produced from recycled paper.
"We now use bags for Happy Meals instead of the paper board we were using."
McDonald's is experimenting with reusable coffee mugs and pump-style dispensers for ketchup, mustard and dressing of the plan to reduce waste output.
Bob Hamilton, regional environmental coordinator, said 83 percent of McDonald's restaurants in the United States recycled corrugated cardboard, which was used to transport food.
McDonald's to cut trash 80%
Highlights of a plan by McDonald's and Environmental Defense Fund to cut back on waste at the company's 8,500 U.S. restaurants (they produce a total of more than 2 million pounds of trash daily):
TAPE MACHINE
Paper products: Replace polystyrene packaging with paper wrapping; convert to unbleached paper bags and unbleached Big Mac wrappers; 21% smaller napkins
**Reuse:** Test reusable lids for salads; test refillable coffee mugs and pump-style dispensers for condiments instead of individual packets; test reusable coffee filters
K
Recycling: Make changes in composition in all packaging materials to increase recycling options, find alternatives to the current wax coatings on meat shipping boxes
Composting: Begin tests for composting organic and paper waste
"Corrugated cardboard represents about 40 percent of our waste." Hamilton said.
However, the two Lawrence restaurants have not been able to do this yet because there are no services available.
Hamilton said that McDonald's had been working with the city and that a program was being organized so that, by summer, the Lawrence restaurants would be able to participate.
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/MARTY WESTMAN
McDonald's also is experimenting with composting in 10 stores in New England.
McDonald's has set a goal of completing its environmental plan within two years.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Book drive to benefit University of Costa Rica
By Jonathan Plummer
"We're trying to compose items like egg shells, coffee grounds and food scraps." Hamilton said. "Food waste is 34 percent of our waste."
Kansan staff writer
Cavitt saw the need for books when she went to Costa Rica as part of the University of Kansas study abroad program.
Cavitt, Stilwell graduate student, is coordinating a book drive for the University of Costa Rica. Books for this year's book drive are Strong Hall rotunda until April 4.
Even if the bookstore does not want your books at the end of the semester, Roberta Cavitt knows some people who do.
"The University of Costa Rica is 50 years old," she said, "and I'm not saying that the books in the library are old, but some of them were really old."
airline as well as the national airline of Costa Rica would donate shipping for the books.
She has been in contact with the Costa Rican national airline and hopes to send a load of books with the airplane that study abroad students take to the country in February, she said.
Cavitt said she hoped a domestic
"We're trying to do this basically on a budget of zero," she said. "This may seem a backward way to do this, but it's when everything else is in place."
Cavitt said that books in English would be just as helpful to the students in Costa Rica as books in French, and the students there knew both languages.
"Many students take a special course in English," she said.
"because if you are in engineering,
for example, there are going to be
books and magazines with informa-
tion that they can do a professional
that are only in English."
She said that she had heard of Costa Rican students borrowing books from KU students and photocopying the entire book.
Cherie Sale, library associate in the School of Business, said the session filled 60 boxes of books it was willing to donate, whatever organization wanted them.
"They are old editions, duplicate editions or, in some cases, books we simply didn't have space for," she said.
"We will give them to whoever
wants them and whoever can come
get them.
Time, not accuracy, given priority in reappraisal effort
Kansan staff writer
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Efforts to correct problems in the county reappraisal program have not only created new ones but also have revealed some of the sources of previous mistakes.
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said yesterday that, faced with a choice between accuracy and timeliness, the ap-pocalypse may have been insignificant notices on deadline rather than miss it by accessing previous property appraisals manually.
Because appraised property values from 1989 and 1990 are on a separate file in the Douglas County Courthouse's mainframe computer system, county appraisers were able to call up the information to help determine the 1991 appraisals. McKenzie said.
Partly to blame is the appraisal computer software, McKenzie said. Several features of the program are not conductive to the system, which operates from a mainframe.
"Many of the problems that we are having are peculiar to the five large counties with which we live."
"Even as of today we're still trying to get it," he said.
The other counties are Johnson, Wyandotte, Sedgewick and Shawnee.
Meanwhile, Douglas County officials have
decided to terminate the extended-hour telephone service for property owners with questions or complaints about their notices. The appraiser's office, which still handles calls from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. last week expanded its office to the weekend weekly evenings and Saturday mornings.
Mekenzie said that the increased intake of telephone calls had produced an overwhelm.
"It's just to move the mountains of paperwork generated from this," he said. "It's just a physical impossibility for the staff to continue it."
Since taxpayers received their appraisal notices April 6, the appraiser's office has handled more than 3,000 complaints and scheduled 950 appeals hearings, McKenzie said. The appraiser's office has settled 870 complaints without appeals already.
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The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions of:
- Treasurer
- Administrative Assistant
- Student Executive Committee Chairman
- Executive Secretary
- A.S.K. Director
- Community Service Coordinator
Applications available at the Student Senate Office, 410 KS Union Deadline: April 19, 5:00 p.m. ???'s...Contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710
4
Thursdav. April 18. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Schools need money
Study shows that U.S. spends less on education than two-thirds of world's advanced countries
In many inner-city schools, education has taken a backseat to safety. Students attend classes where there are bars on the windows and armed guards patrol the halls.
When schools regress to this level, it is a sure indication that education in the United States is failing.
In fact, the United States spends just 5.1 percent of its gross national product on education. It spends less than two-thirds of the world's most advanced countries, according to a recent study by the American Federation of Teachers.
Although the United States is often considered a world leader, it falls far short in the area of education. It is sad that such a wealthy nation invests so little in future generations.
For example, in addition to less financing, U.S. school children spend fewer days in class than those in most other developed nations. If the government keeps education
on the back burner, other countries will continue to surpass the United States in technology.
Democrats took the first steps to reverse the trend this month when the House and Senate pushed for greater spending for education. And President Bush's current proposal to improve education holds some promise.
Bush's four-part plan focuses on improving schools, basing federal aid on the improvement of national test scores and the expansion of adult education programs. The plan also suggests allowing parents to choose the school their children attend and coordinating local, state and federal services, such as child nutrition and employment help for parents.
It is about time the government made an effort to invest more in education. But this is only the beginning. With a lot of work and cooperation between Congress and the president, maybe the United States can move from 10th to first place in education financing.
Stacy Smith for the editorial board
State is suffering
Legislative procrastination increases problems
once again, the Kansas Legislature has dug itself into a hole.
Lawmakers, who are in recess until Wednesday, have a scheduled three-day wrap up session left before the 1991 session ends.
The most difficult issues in the state — property tax, state welfare and education — have vet to be addressed.
One would think that the 1991 legislators would have learned a lesson about procrastination on difficult issues from the 1990 legislative session.
Many Kansans were furious when that session ended. The Legislature made no laws to amend what many voters felt were unfair property taxes. Lawmakers left higher education twisting in the wind by reneging on a state commitment to assist financing for the third year of the Margin of Excellence. And, because Social and Rehabilitation Services' budget was so tight, enough money for adequate resources for state foster care, nursing homes, welfare and children's programs was not provided.
Since lawmakers put off difficult issues to the end of the 1990 session, many legislators blamed their hasty decisions on the fact that they were not able to come to an agreement in such a short time.
Legislators participating in the 1991 session
want to take the easy way out again. If there is not enough time to decide on some of these electorally devastating decisions, such as increasing sales and income taxes, representatives can pass the buck and secure their political positions.
Education, property taxes and social welfare cannot be ignored by the Legislature any more. When the state continues yearly to underfinance social welfare because they do not have the time to lay out a feasible and well-financed plan, one more child in Kansas goes without a much-needed meal provided by the state.
If the state does not have the money to provide for all of the programs it needs, than legislators must propose some form of a tax increase for Kansans, even if it jeopardizes their re-election.
It is time for the Kansas Legislature to get some backbone and address the most important state problems at the beginning of the session. This way, representatives have plenty of time to come to an agreement on whether new policy is needed and plenty of time to take the credit or the blame for the state's welfare.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
■ Editorials reflect the opinion of the University Daily 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 signed author.
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.
KUSSAIN
THE KURDS?
YOU'RE NOT PART OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER
LEATHER AND THE KURDS DAG-KARBIT
Food Barn strike carries deeper significance than just economics
O stensibly, the motive behind the Food Barn strike boils down to simple economics: the strikers refuse to take any more wage or benefit reductions.
After deeper investigation, one learns that strikers such as Mike Simmons, a meat cutter, constitute the real backbone of the strike. Simmons' attitude elucidates the larger principles at work behind the picket lines, fliers and rallies. The bulwark among these is a dedication to fairness and loyalty to one's coworkers.
Simmons js a 41 year-old husband and father of two. His parents owned a small grocery店 in Vermillon, where he got his start in the grocery
He started working for Food Barn about 13 years ago, two weeks after his son was born. The grocery store he had been working for in Topeka was small and independently owned. Simmons was on salary and was putting in at least 60 hours a week on the average. He took a couple of days off when Daniel was born; this angered the management. So he quit and went to work for Food Barn. Why is Simmons striking?
"I'm a big, big fan of labor unions," said Simmons. "When I first went to work for Food Barn, the union established my wages and benefits just for walking through the door. By switching to Food Barn, and as a result of the union there, I immediately began making twice as much money with tons more benefits than I had been making at the independent grocer I had been working at."
Food Barn is a Kansas Missouri grocery chain with 47 stores. Three years ago, the chain underwent some major changes and executive management changed.
David E.
Kinnamon
Guest columnist
The incipient executive officer, Dave Wilson, called for solidarity and outlined his plan for a bold internal reorganization of the workforce wage and benefit reductions.
The benefits reduced were items such as vacation time, sick pay and received weekly hours. The union sanguinely accepted the changes and the new contracts. The store-level and executive-level management received pay increases, however.
Last year Dick Wilson olearly announced that his first three years at the helm had wrought consecutive financial losses for the chain and that to save Food Barn, the workers would have to accept more wage and benefit reductions. That was the final straw for many longtime employees.
The employees felt the management wanted too much sacrifice from them. The employees resented what they were doing, and a attitude on the part of the higher-ups.
"Why would a company in the red give the management $30,000 and $40,000 bonuses last year?" said Sheila Ward, former seafood manager and current Lawrence strike captain.
Most of the store-level managers refused to participate in the strike, opting instead to keep working and resign from the union. The store manager was also a brand manager not unionized, as prescribed by the company bylaws.
"I would not have respected myself if I had crossed the picket line. You don't go along for the ride and bail
out when it gets tough. I wanted my children to understand what I was doing and why I was doing it. The bottom line is human dignity." Simmons said.
Deciding to go on strike, for Simmons, was a particularly intrepid decision. He was a total of four times the need to seek the sole income-provider in his family.
The financial onus has not been as severe as it could have been — so far. Simmons and all the other strikers receive $60 a week from the union. In addition, they have their strike assessment funds available to them; he believes they did not able to accumulate in less than a year's time amounts to a picayune level. And the barrel is beginning to run dry.
"We're in the fifth week. I have to find other employment. Eventually, I will find another job. For now, whatever it comes to me, I'll make sure the statement at the beginning that if I had to sell my house, I would." Simmons said.
Even after he finds a new job, he says, "Whatever time I can devote to the picket, I'll continue to do that."
Simmons has a lot of answers. To him, the strike never needed to occur, if the management had been successful and more human resource-oriented.
Until the Food Barn management is willing to agree to reform and keep a more open ear to the voice of the common worker, you'll find Mike Simmons, along with two or three co-strikers, patiently and resolutely standing in front of the grocery store at 23rd and Iowa streets, wearing a sign and sincerely asking pedestrians for their support.
■ David E. Kinnamon is an Overland Park junior majoring in journalism, English and history.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Should we help Kurds?
I was a little concerned about Jeff Listerman's column in the April 10 edition of the Kansan about U.S. support of Kurdish rebels. No one can deny that the slaughter of the Kurds is an atrocity, but I am confused as to what he believes the U.S. should do about it. He stated that he opposed the use of direct military force in order to insure their safety. However, I don't understand how that is
possible.
What concerned me the most was his naive approach to international politics. Certainly, from a ceramic major's point of view, he might feel a moral obligation to the Kurds since their current predicament is indirectly the result of U.S. actions. I don't believe Listerman, not unlike many Americans, truly understands the ugly facts of war and its consequences. It's easy to say in retrospect that the U.S. should have gone further in destroying the Iraqi military, but I am not going to go into a long disertation about power vacuums. The point is moot.
I wonder whether Listerman has as much compassion for the 700,000 refugees who have fled Liberia during its long civil war and whether he
thinks the United States should take action to stop that conflict as well. If we are going to preach from the high moral ground, would this not be proper? Also, what should we do the next time Soviet tanks roll through the streets of Vilnius or nerve gas is used against protesters in Tblisi? Or should we only concern ourselves with nations that can't fight back? The point being, once you start directly intervening in the internal affairs of nations, where is the line drawn and are you willing to take responsibility for the possible outcomes?
The Kurds are not unique in their plight. The reason people such as the Kurds are persecuted is when the Kurdish tribes have been empires, it was done in such a way as
to insure strife, repression and continual poverty in many parts of the world. Until the international community decides to address this issue in the very serious manner which it deserves, things such as the slaughter of animals should continue. Paps this should be the focus of the "New World Order."
Louis H. Lietzen Lawrence resident
'Penzance' is a triumph
What an exciting production of Gilbert and Sullivan's masterpiece, "The Pirates of Penzance," presented by University Theatre and the music and dance department.
The close attention paid to detail in voice, movement, costumes and set brought joyfully into being, with intellectual rigor and sweeping panache, those overarching concepts Gilbert and Sullivan invite us to consider as we discover the beach of the soul, tide and time waiting for no man as foam laces over sand, and beauties raise pirates up into pilots, we explore ourselves.
That deep sounding of the soul that may eventually transform pirates into pilots has been set out in lyrical andlexandrines by Edmond Rostant and exquisitely filmed in "Cyran de
Bergerac," being shown this month at Liberty Hall. What a happy coincidence that during a single week we could celebrate in our University stadium the nationally recognized triumph of our student athletes, be dazzled by high-minded folderol whose footprints the foam of art sweeps, with panache, clean, and discover, through Cyrano and Raguneau, art in tartlettes and ache in panache.
for the entire cast of "The Pirates of Penzance," a resounding rendition of the stop-stopping anthem: "Hail Poetry!"
J. Theodore Johnson, Jr.
Professor of French and Humanities
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
by David Rosenfield
Editor
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
MINDI LUND Retail sales manager
Business staff
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
MINDI LUND
Editors Business salam
News...Melanie Matthes Campus sales mgr...Sophi Wehbe
Editorial...Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr..Garcia Drensch
Planning...Holy Neuman National sales mgr..Jennifer Claxton
Campus...Jennifer Reynolds Co-op sales mgr..Cristhus Messer
Pam Solner Production mgrs...Rich Harshbarger
Sports...Ann Sommerlal Kite Stader
Photography...Kaith Thorpe Marketing director...Gail Embinter
Graphics...Melissa Unterberg Creative director...Cristy Hahs
Features...Jill Harrington Classified manager...Kim Crowder
Sketch
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 Kassan
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
852060
The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newsroom, 113 Staffer Flint Hall.
MY BROTHERS ARE THROWING
A PARTY AND THEY WANT
YOU TO JOIN THEM!
THEY EVEN SENT YOU
AN INVITATION...
TELL THE BROTHERS
I'D LOVE TO COME,
BUT I'M BUSY WITH
MY SCHOOL WORK.
MY BROTHERS ARE THROWING A PARTY AND THEY WANT YOU TO JOIN THEM!
THEY EVEN SENT YOU AN INVITATION...
TELL THE BROTHERS I’D LOVE TO COME, BUT I’M BUSY WITH MY SCHOOLWORK.
YOU’RE REALLY FRUSTRATING, YOU KNOW THAT?
IT’S A WONDER THAT I DON’t STRANGLE YOU!
WHY CAN’T YOU AT LEAST TRY TO GET OUT AND MEET SOME NEW AND INTERESTING PEOPLE?
MY BROTHERS ARE THROWING A PARTY AND THEY WANT YOU TO JOIN THEM!
THEY EVEN SENT YOU AN INVITATION...
TELL THE BROTHERS I'D LOVE TO COME, BUT I'M BUSY WITH MY SCHOOLWORK.
YOU'RE REALLY FRUSTRATING, YOU KNOW THAT?
IT'S A WONDER THAT I DON'T STRangle you!
WHY CAN'T YOU AT LEAST TRY TO GET OUT AND MEET SOME NEW AND INTERESTING PEOPLE?
WELL, I'M JUST AFRAID THAT IF I GO TO THIS ONE PARTY, THEN I'LL FEEL OBLIGATED TO GO TO ANOTHER ONE...
AND ANOTHER... AND ANOTHER...
AND THEN WHERE WILL I BE?
AMONG FRIENDS.
PWEW
YOU'RE REALLY
FRUSTRATING,
YOU KNOW THAT?
IT'S A WONDER THAT I
DONT STRANGLE YOU!
WHY CAN'T YOU AT LEAST
TRY TO GET OUT AND
MEET SOME NEW AND
INTERESTING PEOPLE?
I am a teacher. I can help you with anything you need.
WELL, I'M JUST AFRAID THAT IF I GO TO THIS ONE PARTY,
THEN I'LL FEEL OBLIGATED TO GO TO ANOTHER ONE...
AND ANOTHER... AND ANOTHER...
AND THEN WHERE WILL I BE?
A man is sitting on a chair. He has his arms raised and his eyes are wide open. A woman stands behind him, looking at him. She has long hair and is wearing a large hat. They are in front of a cityscape with buildings and trees. There is a speech bubble above them that says, "What do you see?"
...
AMONG
FRIENDS.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 18, 1991
5
Canterbury House will celebrate
Holy Eucharist at noon at Danforth
On campus
■ KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Nihon Club will meet at 1 p.m. at Alceve B in the Kansas Union
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have a "Gay and Lesbian Graduate Student Lecture Series" at 3:45 p.m. Pine Room in the Kansas University
- Deborah Gordon, Stanford University, will present the 1991 Michener Lecture, "Flexibility and the Foraging Ecology of Seed-Eating Ants at
3:30 p.m. at 1005 Haworth.
■ Amnesty International will have a letter-writing session at 4 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
KU Triathletes will meet for a group bike ride at 4 p.m. in front of Wescoc Hall.
Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas University
KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
Latin American Solidarity will have a rice and beans dinner at 6
p. m. at Ecunecial Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
- Psi Chi will meet at 6:30 p.m. at 547 Fraser.
Baptist Student Union will have a Bible study at 6:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center.
KU Christian Science Student
p.m. m p.m.
Always C in the Kansas University
Native American Student Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
Champions Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, the Native American Student
Police report
Association and the department of psychology will sponsor a GALA lecture at 7 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Kansas Union.
credit cards were taken from a KU student's unlocked residence hall room between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, KU police reported. The items were valued at $1,505.
at Above D in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30
p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Democrats will meet at 8 p.m. at Alceve D in the Kansas Union.
KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
■ Jayhawk Audubon Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Lawrence Presbyterian Manor, 15th Street and Kasold Drive.
Draft counseling is available by appointment by calling 843-4933.
by two people who concealed the items in bags and left between 4 and 5 p.m. Tuesday from the Riverfront Plaza, Lawrence police reported.
Correction
A Page 1 photo caption in Monday's Kansan was incorrect. Mike Hyble, Baxter, Iowa, senior, beat Jon Oler, Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore, in Saturday's "Run for Your Life" race.
- Seventeen KU students were charged yesterday and Tuesday with having or attempting to purchase false identification, KU police reported.
- Jewelry and a wallet containing
Clothes valued at $515 were taken
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Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union and are due by 4:00 p.m., April 22nd. Only seniors can turn in nominations for the CLASS Award
Kansas and Burge Unions
Student Health Services
Dept. of Student Housing
Dept. of Educational Services
- Admissions
- Student Financial Aid
- New Student Orientation
- Student Records
- Systems Development
- University Counseling Center
- University Placement Center
Dept. of Student Life
- Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
* Foreign Student Services
* Minority Affairs
- Student Assistance Center
* Organizations and Activities Center
* University Information Center
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6
Thursday, April 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Mandela states police created false evidence
Wife of ANC leader testifies in kidnapping trial
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Winnie MANDESA pointed a finger at police when she testified yesterday that she believed false evidence had been used to implicate her in the shaping and assault of youth tests.
State Prosecutor Jan Swanpewel started his cross-examination by asking Mandela whether she was saying she was presented against her was fabricated.
"Yes," the wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela responded.
Winnie Mandela added later, "There is clear evidence the interest of the police was to bring us into this court."
But in response to repeated questions, she could not say who fabricated such evidence or why they would do so.
Nelson Mandela, who was in prison or anti-government activity when the crimes allegedly occurred, accompanied his wife to court vester-
day and listened to the proceedings for about 29 minutes.
The trial could have wide-ranging political ramifications, coming at a time when the government is trying to woo Black leaders into formal negotiations on a new constitution eliminating white-minority rule.
Mandela has many admirers among the more militant ANC members, and her husband might find it too difficult to government if his wife is convicted
Mandela, 56, and co-defendants Xolisa Falati and John Morgan pleaded not guilty Feb. 11 to eight counts of kidnapping and assault. Prosecutors contend that they abducted four young Black men by the themat in Mandela's Speyhome home. The state says the four were abducted because they were believed to be homosexuals or police spies.
Mandela has said she was trying to protect the youths from homosexual abuse at the Methodist Church home where they lived. She has testified
that she was 200 miles away in the town of Brandfort when the alleged crime occurred.
One of the four young men, Stompe Seipei, was later killed. Mandela's former bodyguard, Jerry Thiem, was convicted last year of the killing.
Asked who could have fabricated evidence against her, Mandela responded, "I am not in a position to answer that."
Mandela declined the prosecutor's challenge to say police did not fabricate the evidence. She said they apparently alerted the media to a 4 a.m. raid on her home during their investigation.
Asked why she waited until the start of her trial, which was more than two years after the alleged crime, to offer the alibi that she was far from home at the time, Mandela said she was acting on her lawyers' instructions.
She said she did not tell the news media about her visit to Brandfort because reporters did not ask.
Unhappy face-lift patient shoots doctor, self after radical surgery
The Associated Press
BELLEVUE, Wash. — A woman,
unhappy with her face shot and
killed the doctor who performed
their surgery and then killed
herself, police said.
Beryl Challis, 60, had been complaining of pain from facial surgery, which Selwyn A Cohen and his months ago, police said Tuesday.
Challis had an appointment Monday with Cohen at his private clinic. She left after the meeting, but after the staff had gone home
she returned and shot the surgeon several times, police said.
Challis then went home and shot herself with the same pistol, Lt. Steve Bourgette said.
Both Cohen, 41, and Challis suffered 38-caliber gunshot wounds, police said. Police recovered a 38-caliber handgun Challis purchased last month.
"We're still investigating, but it is apparent that a number of people knew she was dissatisfied," Bourgette said.
Challis' husband, Albert Challis, said his wife had been in a lot of pain since the surgery.
"I guess she couldn't take it," he said. "As time went by, the pain became more intense. It was all over her face and head. She had a knife in her mouth. It wasn't what she should have had. It wasn't what she asked for."
Julianne Deneboh, Cohen's surgical nurse, said Chailis appeared to be suffering from depression but made any attacks against the doctor.
Federal mediator takes new terms to striking Food Barn employees
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Food Barn Stores Inc. asked a federal mediator to take a new contract offer to United Food and Commercial Union Workers yesterday, but the union said it would recommend that its employees reject it.
Union members from areas outside Kansas City are scheduled to vote on the proposal Saturday morning, while the remainder are to vote Sunday morning, union spokesperson Judy Gordon said.
P. A. Rawalt, Food Barn vice president for human resources, was out of
town last night and could not be reached for comment.
The two sides have met four times since the strike began March 3, when the union rejected a company proposal for a new three-year contract requiring $27 million in wage and benefits concessions.
Schlotzsky's
Sandwiches • Soups • Salads
$1.00 off
Sunday Special Every Sunday get any sandwich with chips & a medium drink
843-7002 23rd & Louisiana
Celebration of Cultures Festival
Saturday April 20th
11:00 a.m.-6 p.m.
8th & Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence, Kansas
Opening Ceremony at 12:00 noon
CELEBRATION OF CULTURES
LAWRENCE 1
Sponsored by:
The Celebration of Cultures Corp. is a non-profit organization dedicated to celebrating the ethnic and cultural diversity in Lawrence and Douglas County.
The City of Lawrence • The Ethel & Raymond F. Rice Foundation • Kansas Arts Commission • Kansas Committee for the Humanities • Downtown Lawrence • Celebration of Cultures Corn.
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Sat. April 20th 9am-1pm
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The sorority with the highest attendance wins 40% OFF a ONE YEAR membership for the ENTIRE
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 18, 1991
7
Nation/World briefs
United Nations
Iraq agrees to Kurd shelters
Iraq is willing to let the United Nations set up sheltered camps throughout the country for Kurds and Shilites who fear for their safety, officials said today.
U. N. representative Nadia Younes said an announcement was imminent concerning the establishment of the reception centers for the refugees. The representative said U.N. Secretary-General Javier De Cuellar, in Paris, said the Iraqis were interested in this U.N. action.
"We shall continue to work in order to find a solution to the problems of the Kurds and also of the Shites, who feel at the present time threatened," she quoted him as saying.
London
Iraq may have received parts
The United States allowed Jordan to receive military spare parts until just before the Persian Gulf War despite intelligence reports that said they were on them to Iraq, a newspaper said today.
The U.S. shipments included diesel engine components for armored vehicles and electronic testing equipment, reported the Financial Times, which present U.S. government officials as its sources.
In Washington, White House representative
represents the department's dispute in delegation
telling reporters. "It didn't help."
Jordan sided with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in the war launched by the United States and its allies in January to drive Iraq occupying forces from Kuwait, which Saddam invaded Aug. 2.
Washington
Oregon AIDS scare disputed
The Red Cross in Portland, Ore., inadvertently distributed blood that tested positive for AIDS and hepatitis B, according to a federal report on yesterday but switched disputed by state officials.
Shortly after the report was released by members of Congress, Red Cross officials in Oregon issued a statement assuring the public that there was no risk of any patient infection.
Dave Fleming, deputy state epidemiologist for the Oregon Health Division, said the Food and Drug Administration had reached an erroneous conclusion in interpreting a Red Cross report.
However, Wendy Horwitz, representative for one of the companies she released the report, said that there were "less than 100 people."
She has done many of these inspections," said Horwitz, press secretary for Rep. Ron Wyden, D-Ore "This blood wasn't retested, and it was released."
From The Associated Press
House passes '92 budget, ignoring Bush slash plan
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The House yesterday approved a Democratic-written $1.46 trillion 1992 budget that rejects President Bush's plan to slash Medicare and other benefit programs.
By a vote of 261-163, the lawmakers adopted a spending plan that shifts billions of dollars Bush wanted to spend for science and law enforcement to education and other social programs. It also ignores the president's renewed call for a cut in the capital-gains tax rate.
Across Capitol Hill, the Senate Budget Committee voted 11-10 to adopt a similar plan drafted largely by panel chairperson James Sasser, D-Teen.
Just one Democrat, Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota, joined the committee's nine Republicans to oppose the blueprint. Conrad said the nearly $290 billion deficit the plan contained was too high.
Many of the Republicans opposed the plan
because they said it could ease the way for future
insurance in the Social Security payroll tax.
Minutes before approving the Democratic budget, the House voted 335-89 to reject the president's proposal. Only 89 Republicans voted for Bush's budget, while 74 GOP members joined the 609 voting Democrats in opposing it. The lone Democrat in the 2018 Sanders' of Vermont, also opposed Bush's budget.
Democrats said that despite similarities between
thems and their allies, the thers helped to the nation's press.
The House Democratic budget and the plan Bush unveiled in February are more alike than differ-
Bound by last fall's deficit-reduction agreement, they both hold domestic spending, excluding benefit programs such as Medicare, to $211 billion in the first year and $831 billion of that total, mostly to social programs.
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Five years after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the Soviet Union has identified more than 500,000 people contaminated by radiiation and treated medical care to 300,000 a year, officials said recently.
Disagreement over death tolls marks Chernobyl anniversary
But officials continued to insist that only 32 people had died as a direct result of the explosion.
Many Soviet and Western researchers dispute the official death toll, which has not changed in three years. They assert that at least 500 people, including 234 cancer and other illnesses caused by the accident.
The officials also contended there was no danger of further radiation leaking from the plant, although they conceived the cement-and-steel sarugis encasing the reactor needed strengthening.
Despite the international skepticism, high-ranking Soviet health and energy officials stuck to the official number yesterday at a news conference in Moscow on the anniversary of the world's worst nuclear accident.
Sweden
Baltic Sea
Tallinn
Riga
N
Angelina Guskova, a Chemokin specialist at the Health Ministry's institute of Biophysics, said two people died immediately in the explosion, one from radiation and the other from injuries. An addition to that list is the death of another radiation within three months of the accident, and two more have died in the past five years, she said.
Guskova has the casual toll from radiation at 21 and the total number of Chernobyl deaths at 29.
Guskoslav put the casualty Ion iron radiation at 31 and the total number of Cnemobyl deaths at 32. Vladimir Chermusenko, scientific director of the 20-mile evacuation zone around the plant, charged in a recent British television interview that the disaster had claimed more than 7,000 lives.
Sweden
Ballic Sea
Tallinn
Riga
Moscow
Fifth anniversary of nuclear disaster
Soviet Union
Poland
Chernobyl
Kiev
Romania
0 200
Miles
Map area
Black Sea
Kiev
Romania
0 200
Miles
Map area
Black Sea
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
Guskova said 7,000 was a reasonable estimate of the total number of people in the stricken areas who had died of all causes in the past five years. The same number would have been expected to die regardless of the accident, she said.
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Tonight,4/19 From New York City Great Zydeco Featuring Lucky Seven with special guest Ricky Dean
Friday 4/19 From Austin Texas' next guitar legend Ian Moore and Moments Notice with special guest Killdevil Blues
Saturday,4/20 From LA National People's Gang with special guest Zoom
Coming Events
4/24 The Connells
4/26 Uncle Tupelo
Members & Guests welcome
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive, You're About To Get An Education.
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8
Thursday, April 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
KU offices resort to cost-cutting as supplies dwindle at year's end
Kansan staff writer
As the fiscal year is winding down at KU,
there are some of the offices in the office at Sirofyu.
With the lack of money, some offices have resorted to cost-cutting measures.
The University governance office is doing its part by limiting the number of photocopies Executive Committee and Universities are sending to reducing the type size of copied documents.
The situation was discussed at Tuesday's SenXe meeting as a continuing problem for the team.
"We are trying to not have any extra copies, said Frances Ingemann, chairperson."
Ingemann said that governance members had been informed that they would receive a $10,000 settlement.
would be expected to file them and bring them to meetings.
"It does create some problems," she said,
"because sometimes you can't locate a door."
Members sometimes forget to bring documents to meetings, she said.
To cut costs, type size of copies has been reduced in the governance office so that two normal-sized pages will fit on one 8½-by-11 inch page, Ingemann said. Unfortunately, with the small print, she said it was sometimes difficult to read and mark revisions.
Some documents are no longer distributed but are available on request in the government.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, told SenEx members at the meeting that the problem of supplies and financing was a problem campus-wide.
"Every other office is suffering from the
same dilemma you are," he said.
Shankel said changes in budgetary allotments to offices could not be made until after the Legislature had acted on the matter of financing.
Dave Shulenburger, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that at the end of the budgetary year, individual concerns concerned about staying within their budgets.
He said there was some concern earlier in the year about, possible cutbacks in financing. But the habit of cutting copies and resources is normal.
"You try to live within your budget," Shulen burger said.
Jim Carothers, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the shortages this year were not any greater than they had been in the past.
The Associated Press
Recession and Medicaid place severe strain on state budgets
WASHINGTON — States are in the worst financial shape in a decade, the nation's governors said yesterday in a report that blames most of the problems on the recession and federally ordered increases in Medicaid spending.
Soaring health costs and declining revenues are forcing many states to cut budgets or raise taxes, the National Gov. announcement said in its annual fiscal state survey.
Ray Scheppach, executive director of the association, said the outlook would remain bleak for many states even after the recession ended because of spiraling health care costs, growing prison populations and a decline in environmental and children's programs.
Twenty-six states are raising taxes by $10.3 billion, Scheppach said. That tax increase is the largest since the group
began conducting its survey in 1978.
The governors' group said 29 states had trimmed more than $8 billion out of this year's budget.
Financial stress has caused states to shrink their year-end budget surpluses, which weaken their safeguard against future difficulties or possible recessions.
Total state spending increased annually throughout the 1980s, averaging 8.3 percent. Spending increase projections are based on current this year and 4.8 percent in fiscal 1992.
Thirty-seven states will spend more on Medicaid this year than originally budgeted, the study said. Medicaid provides health care to the poor, with costs shared by the federal and state governments.
Until the Medicaid program is brought under control, state budgets are likely to be underfunded.
- R.W. McClure 842-7504
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE BROADWAY UNION
EARTH DAY '91
Monday, April 22 Kansas & Burge Unions Earth Day Open House
Kansas & Burge Unions
Earth Day Open House
SUA activities:
DUNK TANK 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
dunk your favorite KU people!
outside Kansas Union
50¢ for 1 throw, $1 for 3
MAKE-YOUR-OWN FREE
JEWELRY & GOD'S EYES
10a.m.-2p. Ms. Ku. Union lobby
FREE PLANT RAFFLE
10a.m.-2p. Ms. Ku. Union lobby
drawing at 3 p.m.-5 winners
EARTH PHOTOS $2 each
picture yourself as the earth!
10a.m.-2p. outside Ku Union
Also, environmental product ideas,
takes at noon, and more!
THE JAZZHAUS
926 $ ^{1/2} $ Massachusetts
749-3320
Thursday April 18 Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam
Friday & Saturday April 19 & 20 from Los Angeles The Wild Cards
The Wild Cards aren't just "cool cats in flashy threads," they're a band teetering on the cutting edge, mixing an addicting concoction of swing, jazz, rock 'n' roll, funk and r&b with an energetic, jittery flair and cool that has made them one of the premier club bands in Southern California.
With a sound that's gaining in popularity as a truly original blend of various musical influences, The Wild Cards' live show sizzles and blasts with nonstop energy.
Their appeal is so "crossover" that this collection of talented musicians and songwriters has shared the stage with everyone from The Blasters and The Paladins to John Mayall, John Hiatt, and The Neville Brothers. More recently, The Wild Cards have been featured with Tower Power and Level 42.
Always extremely infectious and very danceable, The Wild Cards' music is complemented by one of the most stunningly (but oh, so tasteful!) visual stage shows.
Whenever there's not a band on stage, THE JAZZHUA plays the BEST in recorded jazz, blues, reggae and rock.
Special Jazz Show Wednesday April 24
DRINK SPECIALS
Every Mon. & Wed.
50¢ draws
$2.50 Pitchers
from New York City The Either/Orchestra
"ZIONISM: Jewish Survival and the State of Israel"
Dr. David Vital
Internationally recognized Historian, Political Scientist and Author
Professor of Political Science at Tel Aviv University, Israel Visiting Professor of History at Northwestern University
Thursday, April 18 7:30 p.m.- Centennial Room Kansas Union
Co-sponsored by the Department of Political Science and the University of Kansas Hillel
Be
N
L
to
f
• B
to U
• F
environmentally conscious!
Celebrate
EARTH DAY '91
Monday April 22
- Enter the Nerf Bowling Contest in the Kansas Union Lobby to receive free tokens to the Jaybowl.
- Donate $1 to have a tree planted for you. Get a free button!
- Bring a cup or squeeze bottle to Union Square, The Hawk's Nest or the Hawk Stop for 25c refills on soda or coffee.
- Drop off your recyclables in the Kansas or Burge Union lobby.
- Enjoy a special Tunes At Noon Concert!
THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS OPEN HOUSE
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 18, 1991
9
Writing more than 100 letters a week, Lawrence woman wins military hearts
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
When Rheba Wales says she likes to write letters, she really means it.
The 58-year-old Lawrence resident writes more than 100 letters a week, mostly to service members still stationed in the Persian Gulf.
"I started writing, and it sort of ran in a really big job," she said.
Wales, who used to be a letter carrier, said she had a list in her computer of more than 200 names and addresses of service members stationed everywhere, from on ships in the Persian Gulf to with troops in Iraq. She personalizes each letter she writes.
In September, Wales started writing to "any service member," and service members started writing her back. She also got names and addresses from friends whose children were in prison or on probation, and service members serving in the gulf that were printed in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World.
A few months ago, she sent more than 300 letters and handwritten post cards to the troops in one week.
"I told them in the first letters I sent that it didn't matter if they wrote me back or not," she said. "I
told them to write their families before they write me.
"If they don't write back, I just go ahead and write them anyway."
Wales, who spends about $120 a month on postage, said she also regularly wrote to more than 40 shut-ins.
"I started writing after I hurt my back in 1976," she said. "If I didn't find something to occupy my time, I would have gone crazy."
In December, Wales saw Stuff Sgt. Bill Matthews' name in the newspapers and on television.
Matthias said it was good to receive word from a Lawrence resident. Matthias was born and reared in Lawrence and had been in the gulf Coast Awareness.
"She was one of my regular pen pals," he said. "It really picked up my morale when I got letters from her."
Matthias said he and Wales exchanged letters more than a dozen times before Matthias came back to Lawrence and met his pen pal at a coming home party.
"She was exactly like I expected from her letters," he said. "She's a smile."
HOLLY HOWARD
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
Rheba Wales, Lawrence resident, displays a jacket with more than 100 buttons honoring troops serving in the Persian Gulf.
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BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS ELECTION
Elections for 1991-'92 sophomore, junior, and senior class officers
All applications must be turned in to the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union, by Friday, April 19, at 4:00 p.m.
Elections will be held Monday, April 29, and Tuesday, April 30 From 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.
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10
Thursday, April 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
VISIONS an optical dispensary
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Summer math workshops at KU will help elementary, secondary teachers improve math teaching
By Sarah Davis Kansan staff writer
Kansas teachers will participate in workshops this summer at KU to enhance the quality of mathematics classes being taught in schools.
Two workshops will be offered. Mathematics with manipulatives, a one-week workshop, is for those who teach kindergarten through sixth grade. Kansas Mathematics Workshop for Secondary Teachers, a four-week program, will involve teachers in seventh through 12th grades.
Josef Dorfmeister, professor of mathematics, is co-director of the secondary workshop and director of the elementary workshop.
He said that all teachers should go through these types of workbooks.
"This is an operation that is designed for teachers," he said. "We want to help teachers to become familiar with applications of mathematics and new topics of math. We
want them to get a little additional background."
Three instructors from the University of Kansas, Lawrence High School and Shawnee Mission Northwest High School will teach 22 teach secondary workshop. It will take place from June 17 to July 12 in Kansas City.
The secondary workshop is in its third year. In the past, topics have included discrete math, geometry and history of math. This year, the workshop will concentrate on statistics with an emphasis on application.
"These texts now show up in the new school textbooks," he said. "And we want to help teachers get ready for this."
Dorfmeister said the topics were being discussed because they were both relevant to the group.
Teachers also will be exposed to business representatives. A seminar by a Marion Merrrell Dow Inc. official and a tentative trip to Wichita to tour
the Boeing Commercial Airplane facilities are planned.
The elementary workshops are new this year and emphasize manipulatives, which are hands-on activit- tious such as using blocks to learn math.
About 40 grade school teachers plan to participate in the workshop.
Four KU professors and seven elementary teachers from Lawrence schools will be teaching topics such as measurement and patterns and relationships.
Jan Dicker, a first- and second-grade teacher at Grant Elementary School in Lawrence, said she was looking forward to the new ideas in math that she would help teach.
"The most important thing is there is a real movement away from having kids work in workbooks," she said. "Young children are now taught in an activity-based, concrete modeling environment."
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Take advantage of exceptional savings being offered on Macintosh computers only at the KU Bookstores Computer Store now through May 16th. Take a Macintosh computer home with you over the summer and become a Macintosh expert. When you come back in the fall you will be working like a pro!
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Features
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 18. 1991
11
over the
rapelling
edge...
Kansas rappellers descend buildings, not mountains
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
magine jumping off the top of a five- story building.
After climbing more than 60 stairs to the roof, you step onto the edge of the building. You turn around so that the heels of your feet are touching the ground and that is keeping you on the building as your balance.
Your legs are shaking. Your palms are sweating.
Your mouth is so dry that your tongue keeps sticking.
Your hands are sizzling.
You look over the edge and suddenly five stories seems like five miles. The people at the bottom look like ants running on the solid ground below. Then you lean back and you are gone, over the
Some people would say it is suicidal. Other people would say it is fun
Rappelling, the act of descending a steep height from a rope secured at the top, is an increasingly popular sport done alone or in combination with rock climbing.
In Kansas, rappelling usually means scaling down the side of a building. Elsewhere, rappelling usually means going over the edge of cliffs and mountains.
Greg Daniels, Kansas City, Mo., senior, has known how to rappel for eight years. He first learned to rappel on the sides of buildings in Springfield, Mo.
The highest height Daniels said he had ever rappelled from was a 120-foot drop.
He said his favorite place to climb and rappel was in the mountains in Colorado.
"Rappelling is pretty fun," he said. "It's good for people, who are just getting started climbing."
Daniels said he mostly rappelled when he was rock climbing.
Daniels joined the Kansas City Climbing Club two months ago to get more experience climbing and rappelling. The club is the nearest group for Lawrence residents who want to climb and canel.
Bob Allison, Kansas City Climbing Club president, said knowing how to rappel was essential for
"Rappelling is a quick way for a climber to get down from where they just climbed to," he said.
Allison said the club offered a class twice a year that taught rappelling alongside climbing.
There is no charge for the class but Allison said only members of the climbing club could attend.
Club meetings are held the first Tuesday of each month to discuss trips. The club travels one weekend of each month from March to November to climb and rappel.
On other Tuesdays, the club has access to a climbing and rappelling wall in Kansas City. Mo
Allison said the club had about 50 members, five of whom are from Lawrence.
For those who already know how to rappel,
sunflower 804 Massachusetts St. offers the equipment
for aerial work. (312) 655-9978.
Sunflower sells the rope that leads you as you go down, the figure-ring eight that provides the resistance that keeps you from falling too fast and the webbed harness that holds you as you descent.
Dan Hughes, Sunflower employee, said the store did most of the rappelling gear business in the spring.
"We do have a good number of people coming through here who are rappelling," he said. "About half want to learn, and about half already know how to rappel."
Hughes said he rappelled 40 to 50 times a year. He usually rappels off of rocks, walls or cliffs.
"You can rappel just about anywhere you can jump off of," he said. "I’ve don’t off the old Theta
"It's quite a rush to sit back on the rope and go down."
Last week, members of KU ROTC from the Army and Marine divisions and ROTC members from Washburn University practiced rappelling from the Fire Station No. 2 training tower at 1941 Haskell. About 90 cadets rappelled off the tower's one-story and five-story drops.
Another way to learn rappelling is to join the military.
Arne Suit, the Army ROTC cadet officer in charge of the ROTC roppalling exercise last week, said the first time he rappelled was four years ago with the ROTC when he was a freshman.
"the hardest part is getting over the edge — especially if you're afraid of heights," he said.
The ROTC usually rappels once each semester. They practice rappelling on a wall inside the Military Science Building before going out and rappelling down the entire side of a building.
"The only way to get hurt is to hook up," he said. "If that's wrong, then you go down real fast."
WILD
I WANNA
BE A DJ
CONTEST
HOW TO ENTER:
Send us a letter with 10 songs you'd play on KJHK. The writers with the 3 most creative play lists will each be given supreme command of the air-waves one Monday night from 8-9pm
Send your entry to:
"I WANNA BE A DJ"
KJHK
2051-A Dole
(use contact info if needed)
KJHX FM
the Sound Alternative 90.7
OMA Performing Arts Series
Zuohuang Chen Maestro
Wichita Symphony
Brian Lewis Soloist
3rd&Hickory Ottawa,Kansas
FRIDAY,APRIL26 8:00P.M.
OTTAWAMUNICIPALAUDITORIUM
KICKETS: $13.00 and $8.00
Available in Ottawa at Buter's Music, Beyond Video,
and at the OMA Box Office (12:30 - 5:30 p.m. M-F).
VISA & MasterCard accepted - Group Rates available
Produced locally by Kansas State Bank & Ottawa University
Partially funded by the Caroline E. Hewitt Trust for the Humanities
My Language is English, but I can use it.
Mr. Lewis' appearance has been underwritten by the Kansas Cultural Trust
This program is presented in part by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
CROSS-CUT
JUST 20 MINUTES SOUTH ON RTE. 59
Arnie Sult, Lenexa senior, rappels down the wall of the Fire Station No. 2 training tower in Lawrence.
Tacos Tacos Tacos
ALL YOU CAN EAT
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Giant Margaritas $2
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Lawrence, KS
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April
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ALL YOU CAN EAT
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Giant Margaritas $2
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Lawrence, KS
(913)841-7077
Thursday RumTree
April
26 & 27
Live No
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9-1
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 Subways now only $3-$8
15 E. 8th (Between Mass & New Hampshire in Downtown Lawrence)
THE
UNDERGROUND
MUSIC EXCHANGE
THE UNDERGROUND MUSIC EXCHANGE
BUY - SELL - TRADE
New and Used CDs, Records & Tapes
Tapestries, Incense. Posters, Tie Dye
3 Records or Tapes $10
CDs S8
15 E. 8th
Subways now only $3.$8
(Between Mass & New Hampshire in Downtown Lawrence)
12
Thursday. April 18. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Vegetarianism complete with proteins
Bv Amy Francis
Jennifer Gilbert is careful about what she eat. She reads the labels on foods in grocery stores and sometimes what is in the food at restaurants
Kansan staff writer
She is not on a diet; she is a vegetarian.
"I've been a vegetarian for a year and a half," said Gilbert, Manhattan senior "Becoming a vegetarian, you have to learn a lot. You really want to do it right." The real danger of Priesting is he may be cautious about getting every day."
A recent suggestion by the U.S. Department of Agriculture put meat in a lower need category than breads, vegetables and fruits.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said, "If you're not working to really seriously plan your diet, then you're better right off eating a little bit of meat. You cannot just eliminate protein from your diet."
Ann Chapman, registered dietitian for Watkins, said U.S. citizens tended to eat too much meat.
Only four to six ounces of protein are needed daily for the average person.
Yockey agreed but said meat itself was not as bad as some people thought.
"Red meat is not a problem when consumed in moderation," he said.
"Meat has been around since the beginning of time. Eggs have been around since the beginning of time. Meats and meat since the beginning of time.
"I'm not against vegetarianism. You can be a healthy vegetarian."
Vegetarianism also has been around for a long time because people have not eaten meat for religious and other reasons, he said.
But students should be careful if they decide to eliminate meat from their diets, because they need to find a source of protein, he said.
Chapman, said that it was not difficult to be a vegetarian if people ate dairy products and eggs, which provide protein, but that if those eliminated it would be more difficult to get the necessary amount of protein.
"I think they need to know how to blend the foods to get a complete protein," she said.
To get a complete protein, certain combinations of foods are required, she said. A complete protein is one that contains all essential amino acids.
For example, grains and legumes, legumes and nuts or seeds, and vegetables and legumes form complete proteins. They must be eaten at the same time to get the complete protein, she said.
Harvest of meatless menus leaves vegetarians with no bones to pick
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
A wide variety of options awaits the diner who wishes to eat out but not to eat meat. The combination of more health-conscious eating and the variety of cultures represented by students at KU has created a demand for meatless dishes.
"Any college town will have a large, diverse mix of people," said Brooks Hanson, owner of Sweetgrass Downtown Restaurant. "They do it well. St. Lawrence is a big melling pot for a lot of different cultures."
Although Sweetgrass does not offer only vegetarian food, it keeps the vegetarian in mind. One of the three to four daily specials is meatless, and some items on the menu are meatless, Hanson said.
One vegetarian option within walking distance from the KU campus is the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
Rachel Abrams, manager of the Glass Onion, said, "We're alternative healthy food. We really try to
be conscientious about what we offer."
Most of the items available at the Glass Onion, such as chili and soups, contain no meat or meat products. Because of the only meals offered, she said.
Chuck Magerl, owner of the Free State Brewing Co., 636 Massachusetts St., said a sense of adventure in eating foods from different cultures was one reason they were trying meatless items.
A vegetarian view influences the menu, he said.
"I was primarily vegetarian in my diet choices, so I was aware that there are numerous tasty dishes without meat," he said.
Pywacket, 10 E. 9th St., also offers different types of meatless dishes that usually might not be found in the Midwest.
Mike Horan, an employee of Pywacket's, said tofu and tempeh were two items in some of the dishes at Pywacket's. Tofu is made of bean curd, and tempeh is a fermented soybean product from the Asian culture.
All members of the University Community invited to:
An open forum on Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues in our Community
Tuesday, April 23
7:00 p.m.
Pioneer Room, Burge Union
Sponsored by The Gay & Lesbian Concerns Study Committee
---
---
864-SHOW
10
864-SHOW
Bowie
FLATLINERS
Some lines shouldn't be crossed.
friday & saturday april19 & 20 at 7:00 & 9:30 pm
sunday april 21 at 2:00 pm
tickets $2.50, available at SUA box office, level 4, kansas uni
...
First Annual Kansas University SPRING POW WOW
Saturday, April 20th 1991 Hoch Auditorium
Head Northern Drum: Little Soldiers, Mayetta, KS
Master of Ceremony: Archie Mason Jr., Tulsa, OK Arena Director: Perry Aunko, Oklahoma City, OK Head Man Dancer: Russell Blackbird, Lawrence, KS Head Lady Dancer: Cindy Le Clere, Mayetta, Ks Head Southern Drum: Title Six, Carnegeie, KS
FREE General Public Admission Head Staff
Head Staff
Program
Program
2p.m.-5p.m. Gourd Dancing
5p.m.-6p.m. Supper Break
6p.m.-7p.m. Specials/Give aways
7:30p.m.-12p.m. Midnight Parade in and Pow Wow funded by the University of Kansas Student Senate, SUA, and Native American Student Association
BENCHWARMERS
BENCHWARMERS
BREWING
Supports the Kansas Relays!
Cry Out
Live Thursday night
$1 Chicago-style Hot Dogs
75¢ Draws
Southern Hills Mall
1601 W. 23rd St.
"The best guidebook for the independent budget traveler." --Chicago Tribune
LET'S GO TRAVEL GUIDES 1991
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1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 18, 1991
Sports
13
Reputable pole vaulters return to Relays
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
A crowd-pleaser at the Kansas Relays always has been the polevault competition, and this year's should be no exception.
Not only will the current Kansas squad be competing in this week's 66th version of the Relays, but four vaulters from the Jayhawk past will be soaring over the bar as well.
Cedric Fullard, Jeff Buckingham,
Chris Boban and Scott Huffman
will take their past and present
the runway at Saturday's
pole vault.
- Fullard has held the Kansas Relays vault record since 1989 when he cleared $18\%$.
Buckingham has held the Kansas outdoor record since 1983 when he cleared $18.10^2$ at the Lawrence Invitational. He was also a four-time All-American and Big Eight Conference champion.
Bohan won the Big Eight indoor championship in 1987 after clearing 18.3+1.
- Huffman was ranked fourth in the United States and 11th in the world on the 1990 Track and Field
News outdoor list. A two-time All-American at KU, Huffman has held the Kansas Alumni meet vault record since 1988 when he cleared $16^{4/4}$.
The world record in pole vaulting was set by Serguej Bunkpe of the Stetsenbrouwer School.
Huffman said that the new world record did not intimidate him
"I have not ruled out 20 feet as an impossible goal," he said.
Huffman added that the facilities at Kansas coupled with the right conditions would make the Kansas an ideal place to break that barrier
Huffman has competed against Bupka in post-college competitions around the world and said that he could achieve a higher level than other vaulters.
Kansas senior All-American Pat Manson agreed with Huffman.
"Bupka's record gives us a greater incentive to inum hiher." he said
Manson has won five Big Eight titles and holds the indoor record of in
Manson said he was a little behind what he wanted to accomplish this year but not so far that he could not catch up.
KANSAS
KANSAS RELAYS
1744
GATORADE
Today's Events
Morning Session
Time Events
10:00 Men's 110 Meter Hurdles
10:50 Men's Discus Throw
11:30 Women's Long Jump
Afternoon Session
Time Events
12:45 Men's Pole Vault
12:45 Men's Bill Penny Hammer Throw
1:20 Women's Javelin Throw
3:10 Women's 800 Meter Run
3:15 Men's Javelin Throw
4:30 Men's Invitational Hammer Throw
5:05 Men's 1,500 Meter Run
Yesterday's Results
| Women's Hepatiblon |
|---|
| Entrance | Total | 200m Height | High jump | 100m Out | 200m Lead |
|---|
| Daphne Saunders | (3080) | 15.66 | 1.68 | 11.30 | 25.48 |
| Hartley Saunders | | (750) | (830) | (015) | (879) |
| Jarry Sebels | (3028) | 14.56 | 1.59 | 10.02 | 25.16 |
| South University | | (901) | (724) | (531) | (872) |
| Daphne Saunders | (3002) | 14.96 | 1.68 | 10.17 | 26.15 |
| Hartley University | | (847) | (830) | (511) | (780) |
**Men's excavation**
**Entrant** **Total** **10mm Doors** **Long Jump** **Short Put** **High Jump** **400m Fields**
Steve Fitz **(410)** **11.24** **7.32** **13.99** **2.06** **49.94**
Unlumberth **(808)** **891** **728** **859** **817**
John Deedrick **(816)** **10.91** **6.96** **12.72** **1.91** **51.2**
Karuna Kate University **(881)** **804** **650** **723** **758**
Mike Bailey **(3701)** **11.71** **6.75** **11.16** **2.06** **98.82**
University of Nebraska **(709)** **755** **556** **889** **824**
Kansas decathlete Sean Jacobson competes on the first day of the Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium
Big Eight race puzzles coach
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Big Eight Conference baseball title race perplexes Kansas coach Dave Bingham somewhat.
At the halfway point, the Jayhawks are in sole possession of fourth place with a 6-6 conference record after splitting four games with Kansas State, sweeping Nebraska and being swept by Oklahoma State.
However, the Jayhawks have six conference victories, the same number league-leading Oklahoma State has, and only four games separate last place Nebraska from the first-place Cowboys.
Parity has made the league unpredictable, but Bingham said he thought he had drafted the best he could for passers to follow the rest of the season.
"We've just got to go out ready to play the game. Bingham said. We have a lot of room."
The Jayhawks will be looking to control the third-place Oklahoma Sooners in a crucial four-game series tomorrow in tomorrow night in Norman, Okla.
As perplexing as the rest of the Big eight plate appears, the past confer-
Baseball
boggling to Bingham and the Jayhawks.
"The thing that makes me damn mad is that we lost to Oklahoma State." Bingham said. They're not running away, they're at it and our coaching staff realizes it."
Those less-than-fond memories have been buried in the wake of a recent hot streak in which the Jay-Z band performed offensive records. Bingham said
Even if Kansas fails to win the conference outright, all is not lost. The Jayhawks are in good position to claim one of the spots reserved for the top four league finishers in the Big Eight tournament in Oklahoma
"The growth in this league has been so great," Bingham said. "It used to be Oklahoma State could count on going to Kansas, Kansas Iowa State and Nebraska and walk right through them. Not any more."
Kansas has not been to the postseason tournament since 1981, but a more competitive league has increased the team's odds.
Creighton wins 21-3, snaps Javhawk streak
The Creighton Bluejays defeated the Kansas Jayhawks baseball team 21-3 yesterday afternoon in Omaha, Neb., snapping the Jayhawks five-game winning streak.
Kansas, 26-18 overall and 6-6 in the Big Eight Conference, will begin a four-game conference series against the Oklahoma Sooners in Norman tomorrow night.
Bingham said the Jayhawks had made significant strides in confidence in the last week, especially because the team had been winning without injured heavy hitters Jeff Niemier and Garry Schmidt.
The Jayhawks travel to Wichita State Tuesday night and will play host to the Shock-10 at Hoglund-Maunpin Stadium.
"I'm very pleased with Kevin Marozs, Kent Mahon, W.Juycheck and Jim Hanna," he said. "Those are kids who have waited their turn and
---
Big Eight Baseball Standings
| | W | L | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma State | 6 | 2 | .750 |
| Missouri | 8 | 4 | .667 |
| Oklahoma | 7 | 5 | .583 |
| Kansas | 6 | 6 | .500 |
| Kansas State | 7 | 9 | .438 |
| Iowa State | 4 | 8 | .333 |
| Nebraska | 2 | 6 | .250 |
*Colorado has no baseball program
Including yesterday's game at Creighton, Mahon has gone an inspirer-
tion to play the ball.
then produced when they got in. To me, that's what makes a program.
"We've hit the ball well for the last week," Mahon said. "We're ready for the rest of the year."
Clark's homer lifts Red Sox past Royals
The Associated Press
BOSTON — After going 0-9 for
with eight strikeouts and a two-
play-play grounder, Jack Clark
insisted there would be good days
he's had in his new role as
designated hitter for the Boston
Red Sox.
Clark, benched for one game, showed what he meant yesterday, returning to the lineup with a two-run homer and a double in Boston's 6-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
"I felt better. This is the best I've felt this season," said Clark, who became a multimillionaire when he signed as a free agent with Boston during the off-season. "But this day is over with, and now I'm thinking about tomorrow."
Mike Greenwell also homered, giving the Red Sox five home runs in two days after only two in their first seven games. $ ^{4} $
victory in his first 1991 start, and Jeff Gray retired six batters in order for his first save.
"There were a lot of swings on first pitches," Bolton said after pitching in the 44-degree weather. "I don't think the hitters wanted to stand around too long up there at the plate."
Boston left-hander Tom Bolton allowed just six hits and two runs in seven innings. He earned the
After the Royals managed just two runs for the second day in a row, Royals manager John Wathan said, "We've got to score some runs. Fenway is supposed to favor run production."
Clark, who ended his drought with a second-inning double, broke a 2-2 tie with his second homer, a drive high into the screen in left field during the fourth inning.
That was all Bolton needed. The Red Sox beat the Royals for the second game in a row after losing five of six previous games.
Kansas City's Storm Davis, who is now 1-1, allowed eight hits and all six runs in seven and two-thirds innings.
Punishment in sexual incident reduced for Arkansas players
Forward Todd Day and three teammates now will be held out only until December, meaning they will miss a tournament in Hawaii and perhaps some non-conference baseball basas system president B. Alan Sung.
The Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — One-year suspensions given to four University of Arkansas basketball players involved in a sexual incident on campus were drastically reduced as the Arkansas' university system president.
Arkansas head basketball coach Nolan Richardson broke his silence on the matter yesterday, saying he had been prepared to offer his resignation to university chancellor Dan Ferritor over the incident. According
to Richardson, Ferritor said running away would not solve the problem.
Sugg said school officials, including Ferritor, Richardson and athletic director Frank Broyles, made a mistake by dragging their feet on the incident. Ferritor urged Broyles in February to make sure strong and weak players has taken against the players. Broyles and Richardson rejected the advice.
Lawyers for the players said they were pleased with the ruling by Sung.
Softball team wants better hitting
Day and teammates Darrell Hawkins, Elmer Martin and Roosevelt Wallace were suspended from the basketball team for a year by the All University Judicial Board, highly placed university sources said. They could not play or practice under the ruling, which was appealed to Sugg.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Jayhawks know what they have to do to beat Wichita State in the doubleheader that begins at 3 p.m. today at Javakhw Field.
"We have to come through on our hitting," Kansas junior pitcher Shelly Sack said. "Everyone is going to step up and do it for themselves."
Sack said that the Jayhawks had been hitting, but just not when it was most needed.
She said the players had the tendency to not worry whether they struck out. They automatically thought the next batter would step up
Concentration and desire were what Sack said the Jayhawks needed to win.
Last night, Kansas lost to Creighton for the first time in three years.
The Jayhawks lost the first game 1-0 and won the second game 2-0.
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said his team did not take advantage of chances it had.
"We had a lot of opportunities up and down the line to drive in the run," Haack said. "We were disappointed that we didn't get sitting in a good situation to win."
Haack said that in the first game, Kansas had runners at second and third base during 10 of the 12 innings and still failed to score.
"You dream of having that many opportunities against a good team like Creighton, and when you don't see them, it's them, its sickening." Haack said.
Haack said that the Javhawks did
Sack's record improved to 9-0 after her victory against Creighton.
Saxby had the winning RBI last night.
"We got the people on," Saxby said. "We just didn't get them in. Our hitting just wasn't there."
Kansas junior outfielder Ty Saxy said that Creighton probably expected tougher competition from Kansas yesterday but that because the Jayhawks' hitting was not on, they did not widen the point spread between the teams.
well defensively and that Sack and freshman pitcher Stephani Williams both had good games.
Haack said he was not sure what the Jayhawks needed to do to get their hitting back on track.
"We've tried practicing in the morning," Haack said. "I've hol-
and I have always taken not putting things together. We don't
have real chemical right now."
Haack said Wichita State (20-12) was an improved team this season and the key to its turnaround was its pitcher and third baseman.
Wichita State is undefeated in the Gateway Conference.
Haack said the Jayhawks would try to be consistent and control the game with their base running and pitching.
Their goal will be to score early against Wichita State.
"We want to get the momentum on our side and let the other team play catch-up," Haack said. "If we get together, the sky's the limit."
14
Thursday, April 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
LOUISE'S
DOWNTOWN
Acoustic Open Mic Night
Every Sunday
at
Louise's Downtown
&
$1.25 Margaritas
843-9768
100's
Classified Directory
200's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Entertainment
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
**Employment**
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
$ \left| \right|^{300's} $
400's
100s Announcements
A
105 Personal
Pray to St. Jude, Miracles do happen.
S W M age 4, 7.15 inches, brown hair and eyes like country life and animals, seeks female friends for work or study. Please email or hand off card or hardship gate be interested? Please fill out 42412, Lawrence, Kansas 60044
boy. Lee Chrys, you may be able to visit here. Please be ready at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, evening. April 18 for the beginning of a weekend that you'll never forget
110 Bus. Personal
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or stop by headquarters.
We're here because we care
841.2345 1419 Miss.
We're always open.
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Mass. 843-0611
VISA-MC-AMLXP-DISCOVER CARD
The Etc. Shop
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
Howell Creative Studios
Plastic Laminating
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 25 inches wide)
203 Iowa 442-9265 corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa 1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
Thrifty
Thursday
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Only $3.49 for a small pizza.
(add tops only .75)
CARRY OUT only except for orders of 2 or more.
GOODEVERY
THURSDAY
Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
842-3232
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall,
enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence using bi tech automation, Carry Case-M431, Lawrence Hypnosis and Sacramento Management.
ANNOUNCING: Beauti Control. Look and feel your very best. Complete...
Hypnosis and Stress Management Center
ANNOUNCING: Beautiful Control. Look and feel your very best. Complete image update and skin tone correction. Call (415) 237-6829 for an appointment today!
Bausch & Lomb, Ray Ban Sunglasses
20%, Below Sug. Retail
The Etc. Shop
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and acc. services. 24-hour VBA, Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales. 732 Mass.
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS. New designs, quick delivery. Order now. It's Your Parity. 1601 W. Zedd 749-3455
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western City! Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Creek Bookstores.
Net just for Biker Babes anymore?
Temporary Tattoos
The Ete, Shop
"72 Men," $100.
120 Announcements
Final weeks of guitting business sale at the Book End, in Quintail's FIle Market. All hardcover books $1- no exceptions. Friday-Sunday 10-5
MATTERING can be emotional or physical
women. When you meet a woman
Women night eight 7:9am Call 614 6007 for
matters.
$College Money Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finest! Since 1901 COL. Bank $College Money Private Scholarship. Box 1801, Incl No. 684/1901, 1801/684.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2431. Headquarters.
Johnny's Sunday Special $2.50 Cheeseburger, Fries & Draft or Soda
Johnny's UP & UNDER
is available for Engagement Parties, Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible.
Hillel
לָה
842-0377
Thursday, April 18
National Treasure
Events of the Week
Jewish Film Festival
April 16-20
Woodruff Auditorium
Isaac in America
& The Cafeteria
7:00 p.m.
Dr. David Vital
"ZIONISM:
Jewish Survival and
the State of Israel"
7:30 p.m. Centennial Rm.
Havdalah Under the Star
Cookout, campfire, & singin;
Clinton Lake
Meet at Hillel House
4:30 p.m.
We use it,
we abuse it, we take it for granted. And yet life itself is impossible without it. We need it more than we need oil or gold.
Saturday, April 20
Isaac in America
& The Cafeteria
4:00 p.m.
For rides and more information call 864-3948
7:30 p.m. Centennial Rm Kansas Union
WD
Gay & Leshian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals call returned by counselors. Headquarters for KU Info 844-3586 Sponsored by GLSOR
we abuse it.
$ \mathrm{H}_{2} \mathrm{O}! $
Remember Earth Day April 22!
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
by students and for students
1204 Oversee
PREPARED FOR FINAL EXAMS
WORKSHOPS Cover times management, using data analysis techniques and coping with test anxiety and test taking
Hall Hail-Free: Presented by the Student Assistance
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER! `there anytime with AIRHITCH (r) for $40 from the East Coast? $299 from the Midwest (when flying to Europe) at Times 1 & Let Go!) AIRHITCH (r) 212-864-6350
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 812-245 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center.
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE 'Recover from stress and injure you so can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 641-062-169 or fly a go-kite.
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartsRestored,
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67378. Confidential
response/material will follow
Taco Sale When: Fri April 19 Where: Lawrence
Indian United Methodist Church. 21st & Haskell.
St. Time: 4:37
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content oriented BBS,
841 9752 8 N 1
140 Lost-Found
Found Friday 7/14 at 8pm in Fraser. One pair
found Small, gold ring in front to Wescowe.
Found Small, gold ring in front to Wescowe.
LOST PAPRIOT Green with red forehead Valued
at 789.300 call a Kevin at 748-307-300
or the $10 reward
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
42.5/hr. Convenient store clerk. Phillips 66 h.
DeSoto. Weekend shift. Cash register experience
necessary. 385-3033
Assistant needed to work full-time in Chirpurea
assistance. Call 211-659-1330 for full job description includes but not limited to insurance billing, therapies and other office calls. Call 799-800-1800 to for instructions
BAJA HAYA'S Patsa Bar and Grill is looking for energetic people for all positions. Great back, great times, great incentives for those deserving. Call 913-838-1602 for information and appointments.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys' girls summer camp. Teach swimming, canning, sailing, wrestling, gymnastics, golfing, scrimmage, camping, camping, drama, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $1000 or less. 788-635-2842, 788-635-3143, Mild, IID: 6003. 788-464-2442
Babysitter wanted Must have own vehicle. 8 a.m.
Sunday, May 26. Must be 18 months ago,
month good. pay BOGO asup or ASPAM
overland. Overland Park home area 100n and Hall
Call Nancy. Orkney 0872-8753 before 5.31 and 431-831
Catering Department, Kansas University hiring for positions including Food Service Manager. 42% hourly. Will pay cash day following employment. Food service experiences helpful. Must have a Bachelor's degree in food service or related office. Level 1 for shift schedules and to apply online.
COLORADO ROCKIES SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT-SUMmer camp for disabled
children and adults during summers/attendances
in Rocky Mountain Village at 908
606-2333
12-month contract; supervise and direct recruitment, admissions, enrollment, financial aid, scholarships, on campus housing, guidance service, education and mentorship for government student, student activities; member of educational center. Postsecondary educational center. administrative affairs, master's degree in administration, master's degree in services required; community college experience and education preferred. Send letter of application to E.D. Guild, president; Seward County Community College, llc 137, Liberal Ct. 9706-1197-81;
**COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN. Deadline:** 6/19/18 $125,000-800,000 Dates include January to June for support to support data communications and networking, working primarily in "C" on MS DOS, UNIX, and Windows. Requires documentation, and maintenance of existing software systems. Installing communication hardware is required, including staff and users in computer interfacing and networking areas. To apply, submit resumes online at http://www.computer-science.international.org/Anta Herikson, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence,KS 73704.
Full-time Summer Work? Are you looking for a job that's exciting, challenging and rewarding? Work with other college students and see another country. Great money. Call 1-800-628-4988.
FUNDRAISER* We're looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would be involved in one week marketing project right on campus. We need a hardworking. Bake at Calverly (809.592.2121)
Editor/Education Assistant KU Graduate Student Council Applicant should have strong research and writing/editing skills and background in computer science, layout, paste-up and solving advertising. Assists Executive Coordinator in all areas of office communications. Must be KU student.
preferred Ten-month halftime student monthly period for application. One semester per month. Application deadline April 26, 1981 at the University of Kansas; reference to Graduate Student Council, 48 Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. Preference in applicants for referrals references to Graduate Student Council, 48 Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
HAVE THE SUMMER OF A LIFE TIME! Camp Ebola Lake is looking for men and women to be the most important person in a kid's life for 8 years (and maybe longer). If you offer any offer not give us a call. You may contact our camps representer Benton (841-7651) or get on touch with us directly at 211 E. Hartleave St., Oakland, CA.
Here is an opportunity to earn money, see the country, and keep physically fit all in one exciting job. we will train you to drive a truck and move cargo on the road. You will earn $748 at 27th East 31st street or call 843 830 right away.
Kansas & Burge Union Food Service catering department needs a part-time person to work very flexible hours as needed. Include some weeks but no nights. 10-35 hours some weeks. Must be able to work in an office. Must be experienced in arranging salad, meat and/or cheese trays with an artistic touch. Must be able to attend to standard health sanitation and food safety. Must have an EOE Kansas Union Personnel Office, level 5. EOE
Interviews
Friday, April 19th
Pioneer Room, Burge Union
12:00 to 3:00pm
(Please be prompt)
SUMMER
INTERNSHIPS
Make $5,000
Gain Experience
$$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $
Mary Foster at Mazzo Pizza at 24th & Ions for a look at part of my workbook. Work 30-10-15 on a bank statement, current insurance and a good driving record Earn $44 commission! Tips don't Dell.
The Southwestern Company
NANNIES immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida Excellent salaries plus benefits 1 year commitment. Call area representative. 913-827-3044
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs No experience necessary 1-800-955-2709
SUMMER-PALL PARTTIME JOB or in-person care attendant for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Mature fit, bright hair, no visible stains. Afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU vacations a plus. Good job for OT, PT, DSP, and nursing students. Accepts students or persons with like interests. Reliable car and phone required U. C. citizenship desired. 424.588.1661 between Tainam weekdays to apply
SUMMER Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counselors in WSI, Wennis, Arts & Crafts Ceramics, Soccer Coach, Technical Assistant, Nurse. Call: 1-800-432-6483, Call: Aflame Appl. 1-800-432-6483
**Ameren Sports Outdoors over 7,000 Opening!**
National Parks, Forests, Fire Creek, Send Stamp
For Free Details. Sallivan's. 113 E. Wyoming,
Kaiselpell. MT 5900
Teammarketing Mon-Thur, 6-9pm, Call Mon-Thur
680-841-1790
Looking for a few key people who are interested in making lot of $$$$
842-2863
Sell it, buy it, trade it, find it. Kansan Classifieds work.
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WATER-SKI COUNSELLERS Boy's camp;camp in Berkeley Mountains West MEA. Great golden salary facilities with 3 yr male faculty and faciliies with 4 yr male faculty. Must love children & siblings. Call or visit Camp Windsor 5 Glen Lake, CA. Call camp: www.windsorca.org
**Textbook Clerks:** KU Bookstores. Part time $45 per hour; position could possibly last until Sep 16, 1991. Must be able to work weekdays between the hours. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods, have good communication skills, be employed and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant to have interest or knowledge books. Apply to KU Personnel Course Level 5. EOE
Want a summer job where you can lose weight, feel great and earn lots of money? Please call Debbie (816) 444-2251.
Wanted: ENGINEERING student with mechanical and home maintenance skills. Flexible working hours. 824-8546 or 843-5877, Roger White.
FRIITER WANTED: Pics need words, words need images. Photographer would like to freelance w/ writer-Human interest. Environmental, New age. Call Steve. 842-3141.
225 Professional Services
river Education licensed to mid-Western Driving school, serving KU students for 20 years. trivers' license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-749.
JAYHAWK
loverment photos, passports, immigration,
sensi, senior modeling, & arts portions/
BKAW. color. Call Tom Swells 749-1611
- Fully Insured
* Free Boxed
* Free Pick-up and Delivery
Summer Storage
843-4533
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-8787
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD D. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Thanie 2. Diamente Cine
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
Need an Attorney?
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
235 Typing Services
i der Woman Word Processing Former editor works your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 842/263, days e or evenings.
i dollar per double spaced page. Rush pgs on three.
Laser printed word processing. 79-468-41
1. Word Processing. Term Papers, letters.
2. Paper Size. 8-1/2 x 10-3/4 to 30 x 30 mm any
whichever.
3. Number of Pages.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-space page. Call 10 a.m. 6 p.m.
Mrs. Mattia, 841129
A- Word Processing turns your frog into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. @ 942-7883.
Call R.J. ? Typesing Services 84192 5942
Paper legal,ses. ect.,e calls. No talking to 9 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers,ses. dissertations, letters.
pages, digs several veins, editions after p.m.
terms, copies, and manuscripts. Send letter,
term papers, themes, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser printing
and spelling corrected. 220 GW St. S10. M-
FAST ACCURATE TYPING - 45 per page. in classes UP and DL, AND anywhere in city limits Transcriptions and Database Projects also handed C Call Mae at: 842.3821
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 6255
Professional resumes - Consultations, formating,
typeeting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927 $^{1}$
Mass. 841.167)
Professional typist Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
WordPerfect word processing. InkJet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 943-8568
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call Key WORKS. 842.8307
300s Merchandise
Merchandise
305 For Sale
16 foot Hobie Catamaran. New condition! Trailer with sail tube, lots of extras. $3500, 841-5914-leave message
1988 Honda Elite. Low mileage. Like new. $490
841-6186
199 Trek 7000 Mountain Bike, 22" aluminum, excellent condition $65.00 new $40.00 -849.99
CREAP 16 pace ticket KTC to College Station, Texas
creap date April 23-28. For more info call 849-214-4911
FOR SALE: Hamilton Draftsman Drifting Station w/ Verno drafting machine. Good condition, orig $2,500, $600 obo. Call M-F 8-5 841-7641.
JOVT SURPLUS | Sleeping bags, backpacks,
camouflage coatlets, wet weather gear,
hats, jackets, raincoat, gloves.
CARHARTT WORKEAR Mon-Sat 1-473-274 21. St. Marys Surplus Sales. St. Marys, KS.
St. Marys Rescue Robet 480 Silver Anniversary
Garage Robet Gargee Gargee Beautiful, Terry. 841-287 21.
Honda Elite Moped 50cc 70 miles, almost new.
6900 Call at 12:20 am. 865-6677
Imagewriter- Compatible printer for any Macintosh computer. 5 months old, accessories included. $229 (per unit) 749-400.
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walks welcome. Call 843-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
PUMP (INCLUDES GUAGE) $250.812-9168.
One-way ticket, KC1 to DFW on May 16th. $100
oboe. Call Kelly, 864-8117.
Step-by-step manuals that can make you up to $150 by next week. Fewen remain $5 (resundable) to P.O. Box 42142 Lawrence, KS 60044.
Waterbed 4 sale: Super-single, padded side rails,
headboard with mirror. HP 841. 2702
YAKIMA GT bike sled-complete. $45.10 o.b.o
AKTMA GT bike sled-complete $45.10 o.b.o.
42-8731
340 Auto Sales
1986₁ Toyota Supra, black with gray leather,
sunroof, 5 spd, sports pkw l 4 mounted
Yokohama snow. 61k miles. 811.000 841.477
**1882 Blue Buck Leshac, AC, new brakes, good condition, $1200 or best offer.** **Call 847-7115.**
**1855 HMW 110, 4 DR, 62,000 miles, sunroof, leather, heated seats, b.o.c. **Call 847-7115.** Leave message in *no* phone.
1998 Plymouth Laser RS, automatic, A/C factory CD player, Blue, 15K miles, perfect condition $2,500, 814-4777.
7. SELL, LOAN CASH.
4 Sale 85 Celica GT, PS, PB, AC, am/im fass.
Good condition: $3500 b.o.b Call 864-2874.
BUY, SELL, LOVE DAVID CUNNEY
On TV's "Taylor Swift," jewelry, stereo, musical instrument's care, canine instruments, music instruments. Wife Vina/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry 104.W.60th.749119
360 Miscellaneous
THE CHAPMAN
U.S. one who lives in...
New location!
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Rentals by phone, text
(841) 0550-090
Lawrence Glass Tinting. Special rates for students.Call anytime,7am to 10pm. 73 E. 22nd.
841-7019.
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CD's $6.00 and down. Records and tapes $2.00 and top. Top dollar for collections.
Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts, 865-0123
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! For rent or buy
$275/mo. 842 9136.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-8971/843-1601
Close to campus. 8250 mon - 841-4353
b bedroom apartment available June 1st Option for fall Wood floors, oriental rug, washer dryer privacy. Must see. 863-9038
1 or 2 females for summer sublease. Great location,
nice, spacious, pool, AC, DW, MW. Retreatable.
Please leave message. 865-2822
Summer sublease-Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
super location, great pool. Call 749-6213
2 bedroom/2 bath summer sublease in Meadowbrook. We rent for $750/mo. We rent it for $750/mo. Water, cable paid-pool? Sorry, no pets. Call 841-6597.
2 Bdr apt available August. Walk to KU or downtown. Wood floor, washer/dryer hookups Water paid. pen 440. pkmo. 841. 1074.
2b ap available in new building of West Hill apt. for 1 June. Great apt for microwave, with closets, clusters, energy efficient appliance. Great location near campus [900 Emery Hdr. 4400]. No pets.
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt, water and basic cable paid. Pool and laundry facilities $110/mo. Call 749-4235
Summer sublease Available May 15-aug 13 with an option to review 2 C bedroom kitchen and laundry fast food and other entertainment *Laundry and food need a place to stay for summer needs any needing a place to stay for summer needs*
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option.
Spacious. Economical AC, DW, on bus route. Call
749-3477.
3 studio apt. for rent starting at $205.00. No pets.
Call 749-7568.
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 17th ohio (new construction) 1 and 2 BR. (Formerly Vita Capri; new construction) 3 BR-2 bath. 3 BR-2 bath. new construction) 2 BR-1 bath. 2 BR-2 bath. with washers/dryers Across from Memorial Park.
- 4 bR apt for summer sublease 2, wath D, WU AC, microwave, phone tennis courts, on bus route. Sunrise Village. Call Kim. 865-9625, leave message.
- 541 Michigan 6 plex. jy old- B3-BR-3H2
* Bath All with water/ dryer
Braidford Square Apartments, 601. Colored 2.
Call First Management 749-1568. house open every Saturday from 12 to 8 aftendad
Square, 601. Colored - 3- Office hours Mon-Fri
Available June or August Efficiency 1 bedroom apts in nice older houses Walk to KU or downtown $283 and up. Walks 941-1074
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower House. 148 Tennessee 7294 8871 or 841 0484
Available 15th June up to the fall term or August 11th FURISHNED 2nd floor bf2m ap3t baltoyapn Very quick and easy to book Very quiet! Close to campus and downtown Deposit and references required. No pets. Monomers preferred. 420k plan *water and elec power* @6:30 aft on 1pm. If no answer call 619.
Available June 1; option for fall: 4 bedroom apartment with loft in Orchard Corners. Spacious, beautifully furnished, pool, on bus route. Extra furniture free. 841-1445.
Check out Berkeley Flats, Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
830-415/1mc. Call 845-2116
Available June and July for sublease. 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. 842-9045
Available immediately. Large 1 bedroom apt. for rent. 1 block from Union. Must see. Call 841-5797 or 865-0010. Leave message.
Co-ops have been part of KU since 1919. Come a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun. There are many different activities, convenience and easy on the pocketbook. SUNRISE House 104 Tennessee. 749-6717 or 841-6844
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people). Clean and efficient, large deck. 843-3961
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water paid $23 per month. Available summer rentals for up to 6 guests. Some with utilities and ceiling fans, mini bins, private parking and facilities. Just one block from the beach.
Excellent Location, 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom room in 4, ginkgo baths, WD hookup, WA, no pets, available 1年. $360 At 1314 Ohio Call 842-4242
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, disability, age, 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 advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Giant one bedroom apartment in nice, older house, wooden floors, sun room, a/c, gas and water paid. Available June. $430. No pets. 841-1074
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 18. 1991
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
Summer sublease. Two bedroom apt-close to campus. Two to four people, BAI2298.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid)
2 bedroom apis. 950 sq ft
2 bedroom apart. 950 sq ft $365 to $415 per month (water paid)
Near campus
Mon. Wed. Thurs
1:00-4:30 p.m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
A Tree of Life
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $350
- 2 bedroom $440,
- 3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hordee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tue - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for app
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Pool
Free cable
JU
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
Summer sublease with possibility for fall: 4,
dormitory wood floors, close campus, 1011
abama 8643.
mbaira 8643.
Summer sublease 4 bedroom house. Close to Campus $100/mo Call Aaron or Grace. 841-6963 HUGE. HUGE studio for summer sublease 841-6963 May rent Pay $275/mo 841-6744 at 6pm
Summer sublease starting in June at Orchard
*O'Rens. Call for more 841-4278.*
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
SWAN
Swan Management
- Gazebo
- Graystone
- 1:2:3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1:5 p.m.
Sat. 11:3 p.m.
749-1288
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BF 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
Boardwalk
apartments
1 & 2 Bedrooms
842-4444
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- 2 on-site bus stops 50
- Laundry room- 50¢
- Laundry Room- 30¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
appliances
Walk to grocery
Georgetown
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
Apartments
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- Low Security Deposit
Office Hours: M-F 1-5;00 WKNDS · BY APPT.
Summer sublease with option for 1 bed. furlowed in large, beautiful Home. Close to campus. Prefer non-smoking. upperclassman or grad student.
$1700 up; call Frank 865.362-8572
On Site MGT./Reliable
24 hour Maintenance
Call about our Summer Special
630 Michigan 749-7279
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday
- No pets
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
Summer sublease. Spacious 3 bdmr, new kitchen,
dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, good price.
842-4633
Summer sublease. Semi furnished 2 br; jucches,
nice & clean rent, not eligible. Also, female roommate needed for next year, non-smoker. Jill.
865-0549
Summer sublease. Roommate wanted April Free.
Basically everything provided. Cory, nice.
Bus route. $10 plus utilities. Call 841-8314 or 847-425.
Route
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 106 Tennessee.
2 BR apt. 1 block off campus, 2 floors, study area, water paid. Call 865-290 and leave message. Best apartment in Lawrence.
... a y st bedroom oldroom home in good condition
and has bus route. Original wood work
in dining room, piano and fireplace.
$475 a month plus utilities. $475 deposit, 12 month
with insurance. Smokers only. 864388 or 117-635-7292.
984388 or 117-635-7292.
Double Take
Whole house, 3 bedrooms plus walk to KU or downtown, town floors, aeors, waer dryer hookups, dishwasher, sun deck, off street parking, available June 80-$49.00 pcs. bp1-1074
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- plush carpets
1 & 2 Bedrooms for Summer & Fall
- water & trash paid
- large rooms & closets
- mini-blinds
- central air & gas heat
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
--studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes among a peaceful country
THE LAND OF THOUSANDS
1. 2,3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
& Apartment Living
• On Bus Route
Luxurious Town Hom & Apartment Living
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
- Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
6th & Gateway
Sunrise Village
--studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes among a peaceful country
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
841-1287 or 841-8400
Open House Daily
841.1287 841.8100
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Open House Dai
Mon.-Fri.10-5
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
OFFERS
MASTERCRAFT
HANOVER PLACE
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
"... AND SO WE DRAW TO A CLOSE THIS CAUTIONARY TALE BEAUTY COAT, MAKING ENTIRELY USELESS IN THE PROCESS."
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
IN THE PROCESS."
841-5255 7th & Florida
ORCHARD CORNERS
Students women: Want to live in a nonexist environment where you can learn maintenance skills? Try Skiffwheel House. The student's alternative, 140 Tennessey 790-697 or 81-694.
TANGLEWOOD
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
The man is making a point. The woman is listening.
SO, YOU'VE HEARD THE MONOLOGUE
WHAT DO YOU THINK MY CHANCES
ARE FOR THE SUMMER THEATER?
Lighted Tennis Courts Two pools
meadowbrook
Wide range of GREAT
among a peaceful country atmosphere
IRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Two Tools Laundry facility
Laundry facilities in each building
I DUNNO, IT SOUNDS VERY
"FAMILIAR, IT COULD BE THE MATER-
Would be AMAZING, but I
WOULD BE AS AN ADVANTAGE IF YOU USED
A LIGHTER TOUCH ON THE HUMOR.
Carports / Garages
Experienced Profess
Maintenance
MON-FRI 8:5:30
SAT 8-5
SUN 1-4
842-4200
It's Time to Step Up to
Experienced Professional
Free Basic Cable
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
It's Time to Step Up to MEADOWBROOK
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for You!!
Today to Reserve You Space for Fall!!
- Volleyball Court
- volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
$355 - $425
Sat. 10- 4 p.m. Sun.12- 4 p.m.
With the Student In Mind!
842-5111
Professionally Managed
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1301 W.24th
NAISMITH HALL.
Professionally Managed
The cost of living has
- Free utilities
gone down at Naismith:
• NEW LOWER COSTSI
GI
- "Dine Anytime"
- Convenient location
SAN MATEO
- Convenient location
More fun for
NAISMITHHALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913)834-8559
MAYBE IT IS THE MATERIAL. IT'S A PIECE OF WOUSES LIFTED FROM ONE OF LAST YEARS' NOTEBOOKS
Tom Austin joke笑话
GREAT SUBLEASE 2 BR w microwave. May rent paid. Close to campus. Call 843-4512.
Hey KU Med students-move in June 1 and receive $2 off your rent for two. *Station 1, 2 and 2 bedroom apartments. Hea'r和水 paid water. Hea'r 水Med. Center. Rainbow Tower KU. 931-853-681
Great location for KU and downstairs. Studio ap-
with gas and water paid: $900/mo. Call 843-2116.
Great location. Quite and close to campus 2
flowers, no pets. Fees available: June 1, 1801, at 1801
Fitzgerald Street.
Hey! KU Med. student. Move in June 1 and hey! KU med. student for your rent at 3 months. *Studies 1 and 2 bedrooms* pts. *Heat and water paid.* *Access to Rainbow Center Tank Apt* 931-891-9063
THAT SETTLES IT YOU DID
HANDLE THE HUMOR A LITTLE BIT
TOO HEAVY/WANDEDLY.
Female for summer sublease. Close to campus.
Fully furnished. One room and no. Security deposit. $3 utilities, rent negotiable. 843-2498
House share 2, BH. big yard. $17.50/mi. 414 Minnesota.
Call: 843-8436.
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stays open 365 days a year and is a great place for friends! 146remembers 749-8417 or 841-0484
by Tom Avery
Leasing now for Fall or Summer. 2 bhap in a
4-12 month lease. CA, DW. close to Campus,
office parking. Low Utilities. Call 842-8744.
Ask for Tracy or Leave message.
Lorimar Townehouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway.
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new. Available now. & 2 & 1床套. For up to 12 months. 4801 WAYF, MADISON
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new, available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until May, July, or for 12 months. 811-7489, 841-4433
Need a place during summer school? Economical, near 2 br available in quiet apartments. New home on the campus. Nice. Nice space. 32 br duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, central air, WD hookup, garage, utilities Avail in June, $400 no. Mo.
Nice studio at 1032 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts Water paid 845.3722
ho hill to climb! Large 1 bedroom at 11th
Louisiana Central air, laundry facilities,
maintenance staff Avail. May or June through
Aug. $25; Call Broil, 863-3557
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
Appears West Apex Beds. $305 for bedroom, $875
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to campus.
Call 842-1490 or 842-1389
Poolside 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Summer sublease available June 1. On bus route. Call for info. 842 8459
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at southfirland
Plaza Apts. 1 room, $25.20 2 rooms start at $35. 10 month lease Water and cable paid
enormed kitchen, new carpet. Call 841-186-1234
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom
townhouse with 2 bathrooms $185.00 per month,
1* utilities 641-2652
Spoil Yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apartment.
W/D, DW, Microwave Sublease $395. Call
865-3837.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 Mississippi Water, gas, cable paid $300.00 841-662
SUBLEASE at HAMNER PLACE. Furnished
one bedroom. From mid May to December.
Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386
6pm-11pm
SUBLET 2 rooms in a1t room. Avail early. May to end July $100 + utils. Will negotiate. No dep. Extra incentive. Please call 842-7333 Kerrie
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 BR, 14. Rent and furnishings negotiable. Close to campus: 605-0726
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Orchard Corners.
1-4/balm受宠, furnished, bus, bus route,
clean. $170/mo/person Call 843-0290
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Spacious four bedroom, two story household, 3 available bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms, dishwasher, trash compactor, cable, storage, low amenities, 3 pools, ten courts, great location
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, garage, AC 2021 Heatherway. 841 9707.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 4 bedroom house. 1315
NH $100) mo. neg. Cool house. Swell location.
Call 842-475-783
SUMMER SULEASE: 3 bedroom, 2 full bath apartment. Air conditioned, washer/dryer, off street parking, microwave, great Room. KU or DUMOND by Joe's Dumons 842-7288
SUMMER SURFLEE Beginning May 1 or June 1 July 31 Four bedroom townhouse in Sunrise Village 865 0106 No deposit necessary
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall, 1 bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid. All electric. 157 Lynch CI, Sundance. 822-525 or 843-614.
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location, at a superior price.
bedrooms, 2 floors. Call 842-3350 (24 HOURS)
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D. Call
841-7645. Rent $355.00 mo.
Sublease av. June 1 2 br, ceiling fan, economical
with rent. ks-865-097 or 841-098
Sublease two bedroom am May 15-Aug 15 $345 per month. 749-268 or 842-3040, ask for Jennifer
Sublease 3 bdmr townhouse from mid-May or June to I July 29 $12 bath. fireplace $550/mi² utilities. On bus route 749-3407.
Sublease. Three bedroom apartment close to campus Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 865-2977
Roo-229:
1 bed, 3 bath and Fall leasing. Pursued 1 and 3
bedroom beds. 1 bit from KU with of street park-
ing, no pets. 841-5500
Summer Sublease: Studio apt. Murphy bed. Great balcony. Excellent location on campus. Call 865-5193.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment
Dishwasher, balcony, pool $50/mo Leavi
Kitchen $75/mo
Summer Subway 3-bases, room available May 1 July 31. Unfilled 4-dorm room in snowy Terrace Village. Female non-smoker $180/mo. plus $140 refundable deposit. 749-1500
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $350. 2 bedroom
$300 and 1 bedroom $250. Heatherwood Valley
Apts. 843-4754
THE FAR SIDE
Summer sublet. Large, very nice 2 BR duplex,
near Holidome, patio, dishwasher, W/D, AC
$37/month. Call 749-4823
Summer sublease. Spacies 2 bedroom at northw.
Banks, 3 blocks north of 6th on Michigan.
W/D hookups. Brand new. $775/month plus
utilities. Call 841-5605.
Now leasing for summer & fall 1991
-gas heat & water pts (on apartments)
studios - 3 poors
1.2 & 2BR apts - tennis courts
1.2 & 2BR townhomes - KU bus route
- gas heat & water paid
TRAILRIDGE APTS
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer sublease with option for fall 3 bedroom $505.00. Water, gas paid: 841-708.
April Rent Free-Female roommate needed immediately. Share 3 bedroom duplex-W/D, microwave, dishwasher, air conditioned, garage, laundry, storage, Call Lisa 843-458, leave-wage address
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share 2 BR apt at Northwinds. Own room. Brand new $187.50 mo plus ½ utilities. 842-3571.
Female roommate needed to share a four bedroom apartment in Orchard Corners. $122.90 per month plus $i utilities. 749-6300.
Call now for summer sublease Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-9606
Female non-smoker to assume *i2* lease 6-1 in lg
sun apt. $182.50 plus *i2* utilities. 843-6136 or
842-3040.
Female, non-braider roommate need for Fall 2012. Share 3 bt trainee, own bedroom, w/d central kitchen, laundry room, office. Pay $210/month plus u. yellows. Prefer graduate or upperclassman. Annette. 844-313-4310
Female roommate summer sublease. Own bedroom, close to campus, non-smoker. $28/month. *i* utilities: 865-3822
Female roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in Meudownbrook. Water, cable paid. Pool! Call 855-0829
Female roommate wanted for summer! **one**
bedroom in house. Shake kitchen and bath.
Mant re-free RI 8120 m² plus t_utilitys 5/1-7/31.
Located on 13th Vermont. Host #64 86138.
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share spacious house $160 month plus utilities Alison, 985 2578
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month.
749-5628
Male roommate needed. Duplex W S part of
town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robert, 842-4252
One female roommate for 4 bdm 16
bathroom apt at orchard Corners. Start Aug
10.
Help! Roommate needed immediately for
spacious apartment two blocks from campus.
$415. 90 utilities off, of street parking. $32-0730.
Melaine.
Quiet, tidy roommate with sense of humor for $t_2$
big house $£255. 841-1332. West Lawrence.
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. '91. Large apartment, furniture, W/D, summer storage: 841-3300
One roommate wanted for niced spacies a bedroom, two bath apartment in K.C Near KU Med Center Sublease for summer Call 813-239-9077
Roommate wanted: House bordering campus,
non-smoker, clean, responsible Rent: $225.00
total. Call Richard at 749-2564
Roommate wanted for fall, preferably non-smoker, organized, mid at late twenties. Appropriate with all conveniences. 3 minute walk to campus. Attendance in person. Call Mike at 841-6072 evenings or 846-3730 days.
Roommate requires $150 a month. No util. No lease required. Call 832 (438) after 6:00 p.m.
Sublet for summer Roommate for Fall. Nice
Summer courses for 1 or people made of male of diverse races. Call Nancy 649-320-2785. Summer plus 1 month is required. Call Nancy 649-320-2785. Summer beside course to take over lease in summer 13/07. Call Jan. 649-320-2785. Roommate wanted 130 month. Call Jan. 649-320-2785.
Summer sublease: Two roommates needed Large furnished apartment $160/mo.³ utilities 1310 Kentucky. Near campus: 843-229
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer sublease. Call Rebecca 865-0674
Wanted: Female roommate non-smoker to share 2 bedroom condo, on bus route. Call 842-2195.
Wanted May 1st -Non-homophobic female room
room. Bachelor's or equiv in Health Sciences,
c 2 full baths, W D jackets, CA fireplace,
carport $160.00 plus *u* 4 utilities. Must
be a health sciences major, will negotiate on
the deposit. 862-7484
By GARY LARSON
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
Suddenly, one of the Dorkonians began to flagellate hysterically. Something, apparently, had gone down the wrong pipe.
16
Thursdav. April 18. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Cry Out & Interface
Reggae Late Nite
Sat., April 20th • 9:30pm-3am
at the Outhouse
$4 at the gate. All ages
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.)
STUDENTS WORK ABROAD
Work up to 6 months in Britain, Ireland,
France, Germany, Jamaica, New Zealand,
UK or Work-Konfiguration
gain the only one of the UK's U.S.
through at the red tarp.
The
Etc. 723 Mass
Shop
Chicago, IL 312-951-0585
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Florida attorney outraged at reporting name of woman allegedly raped at Kennedy estate
"This woman has been put on trial and there has not been a trial or even an attack." By
Palm Beach police also expressed displeasure with reporting of the woman's name.
PALM BEACH, Fla. — The attorney for the woman who alleges she was raped at the Kennedy estate said yesterday he was outraged about reporting of her name in newspapers and on network television.
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
Ted Kennedy
Police continue interviewing witnesses, but formal charges have not been filed yet
The Associated Press
arrest yet Police Chief Joseph Terlizzese said.
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Roth added that use of her name would in no way affect her hope that justice would be done
"My partner, Doug Duncan, and myself are shocked and appalled that a news organization we felt was ethical and reputable would violate Florida law in this manner" the lawyer said. Ruth added that use of her name
Jack Freese, a representative of the Palm Beach County state attorney, said yesterday that prosecutors were researching the Florida statute that forbids the media from identifying rape victims
Gunkel would not comment on reports that police want to interview Nellie McGrail, a longtime Kennedy
GOLD
She said at least 12 guests were at the home over the weekend.
estate cook, who told The Miami Herald she was at the compound the night of the alleged rape and did not mention her. She has have indicated an assault took place.
Police representative Craig Gunkel said police were continuing to interview witnesses, but he declined to give any details or to estimate whose would be ready to present their investigation to the state attorney.
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Police have identified William Kennedy Smith, nephew of Sen. Edward Kennedy D Mass., as the suspect.
"I saw everyone all weekend, and not a soul heard anything," she said. Police have not questioned McCormack. She was in hospitalized with a kidney infection.
The 29 year-old woman told police she was raped near the swimming pool of the Kennedy estate early March 30.
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VOL.101.No.135
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA) KS 66612
THE UNIVERSITY DA KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-1358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Board of Regents sets tuition increases
Kansan staff writer
P. B. SMITH
'I do not expect the state to increase student scholarships in any significant way in the immediate years ahead.'
- Chancellor Gene Budig
MANHATTAN — Student representatives and administrators agreed on one thing about yesterday's Board of Regents meeting; Students in Kansas will be hit hard financially in the fall.
The Regents set tuition increases for both resident and nonresident students. And to the discontent of KU officials, a proposal by the student advisory committee for the Regents or additional scholarships was tabled.
Tution for fiscal year 1992 will include an increase in resident tuition of 8 percent and in non-resident tuition of 15 percent. KU resident undergraduate tuition will increase from $613 to $662 and nonresident tuition will jump from $2,175 to $2,501.
The Regents also accepted a proposal from the committee on tuition and fees for increases in FY 1983 tuition. Resident fees will increase by 8 percent for the smaller regional institutions, and by 10 percent for research institutions, including KU. Tuition for nonresident students will increase by $12\frac{1}{2}$ percent.
Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the Regents, told the Regents that the Legislature had not
viewed tuition increases in the past as being aggressive enough, especially with higher-income students.
The Legislature's proposed financing of higher education in FY 1992 recommended increases of 3 percent for residents in the regional institutions, 8 percent for residents at the research institutions and 20 percent for all non-residents. Those increases would create $7.3 million in revenue
Hauke said the Regents proposal that now would be sent to the Senate conference committee would generate a million less than was reconquered.
If students and administrators were not frustrated by then they were after a SAC proposal for new scholarships was tabled at the request of Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents. The Regents decided that the proposal would be
reviewed by a task force that already is examining financial aid.
Chancellor Gene Budig said, "I do not expect the state to increase student scholarships in any signifi- cally in the immediate years ahead."
The action by the Regents will place more pressure on KU to raise private money to finance student scholarships, he said. Campaign Kansas has a goal of raising $35 million for student scholarships.
"It is important that we be in a position to assist deserving students who seek education opportunity at KU." Budg said. "KU will remain a solid investment, but increases will make it less attractive."
Both Budig and D. Kay Clawson, executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas Medical Center, expressed concern about opportunity.
Engineering fee permanent
Bv Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
MANHATTAN — The engineering equipment fee, which is to be implemented in the fall, was given on Monday to the board of Regents meeting yesterday.
The motion was made by Regent Shirley Palmer, who called for the fee to stand indefinitely. The fee originally was created for only the same year, but the Regents staff recommended that it be continued.
Mike Schreiner, student body president, said the student advisory committee to the Regents supported the high increases in tuition with the understanding that the additional revenue would cover
costs that the fee would be used for
"That is part of our endorsement of higher tuition increases," he said.
Schreiner said he doubted students would stand for both tuition increases and the fee.
Carl Locke, dean of engineering,
said that despite increases in tuition,
the fee still was necessary to
meet the cost of its massas'
program and equipment needs.
"I feel pretty sure the tuition increases would not provide sufficient funds for equipment fees in engineering," he said.
The fee will generate about $400,000 in revenue each year to be added to the less than $50,000 allotted for equipment in the
budget. Locke said many schools spent up to $1 million in equipment
Students at KU and Wichita State University will pay $15 for each credit hour in engineering. Students at Kansas State University will pay $100 a semester.
The money will help improve instructional labs and finance computers. Locke said.
Locke said the total expense estimated for students would be $1,000 during their time at the institution.
ties and scholarships for minorities
ties and scholarships for minorities
Budig said that he supported the original $12.5\%$ percent increase for non-residents recommended by the Regents but that the rates set yesterday were too high. He said non-resident students had experienced double-digit increases the past five
He said some students were excited about what the fee could mean to the School of Engineering how the money could be used.
years
"I thought $12_{2^{-}}$ percent represented a significant increase," he said.
Mike Schreiner, student body president, said the Regents sent a message that they were not concerned with student issues. He said they
were limiting access to higher education.
Bush will maintain railroad schedules
Schreiner was not optimistic that new scholarships would be created
"But we're going to keep on trying," he said.
Regent taken ill at meeting Page 3
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — the nation's freight trains rumbled back to the rail yesterday after the government stepped in to halt a 19-hour strike, but the disputes that led to a walkout by 400 workers remained unresolved.
Freight carriers and their unions will now make their cases on wage and work-rule disputes to a special review panel. Absent any new agreement, the company will impose a mandatory settlement on both sides by late June.
Under emergency legislation rushed through Congress, the clock will start on a 65 day timetable as the state's governor Bush names the board's members.
The unions won't be able to strike again, even if they don't like the ultimate settlement, nor will management be able to lock them out.
Work-rule issues regarding crew sizes, miles in a one-day shift and pay differentials for some employees required by the labor unions, officials said.
The size of wage increases — though the unions said they were too small — were not expected to be a significant issue, nor was a plan to make workers start picking up part of their health care costs.
By yesterday afternoon, just hours after Bush signed legislation ending the strike, nearly all picket lines in the nation's freight rail yards were down and cargo trains were rolling again.
Both Congress and the White House wanted to move quickly because of the potential cost to an already struggling U.S. economy.
Relay warm-up
TRACK
The Kansas men's varsity cross country team runs distance intervals in preparation for Wednesday with the men's decathlon and the women's heptathlon, and will continue tomorrow at the Kansas Relays in Memorial Stadium. The relays began through tomorrow.
Tardy war payments by allies leave taxpayers stuck with bill
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — American taxpayers will have to foot more than $3 billion of the latest installment of $22.2 billion for the United States' costs of the Persian Gulf War, Bush administration figures show.
The U.S. funds are needed because six wartime allies have so far delivered less than two-thirds of the $54.6 billion they pledged to help the United States defray the costs of its war with Iraq.
The need for money will probably grow by tens of billions of dollars because the $2.2 billion is only part of what the war and its aftermath are expected to cost, an administration report said.
The figures are the first update of the conflict's costs since Congress passed war-financing legislation last month. The report also comes from the administration on the war's
expenses and foreign contributions.
"We do not yet know the total amount that will be needed, but we expect our allies to pay their fair share." The latter said that they pledged "Byrd."
They were released Thursday by Sen. Robert Byrd, D-Wa, who once again expressed his displeasure with the bill which contributions have arrived.
The United States is using those funds to pay the bulk of the latest war bills. The rest, more than $3 billion, is coming from $15 billion in federal funding provided in the war-financing legislation that Bush signed into law April 10.
So far, six countries have paid just
$20 billion in cash to the United
States.
▶ Iraq reveals warfare secrets Page 7
B. H. C. S.
Doing It...
In his popular class, "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life", Dennis Dailey teaches everything from masturbation to imagining parents having sex. See Story Page 14
Commencement raises concern
Indoor ceremony creates safety risks
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
KU's new policy to cancel commencement in the event of inclement weather rather than conduct the event in Allen Field House has raised concern among some administrators and graduating seniors.
Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor and vice-chairperson of the commencement committee, said he would be willing to fulfill a number of complaints about the policy.
Sically said the idea to cancel commencement rather than conduct it in the field house had been discussed as early as 1861, when the field house was used for the ceremony.
"There is a feeling that we would be irresponsible if we held it in the
field house." he said.
Scaly said that in 1981, police estimated that 24,000 people entered the field house, which has a capacity of 24,000 when there is seating on the floor.
Scally said the complaints about commencement that year were horrific.
"By being concerned about safety, we considered the grind," he said.
"In most aides, people were seated on the steps," he said. "If there had been a medical emergency, I don't know how we would have gotten to them."
"The last place you want to be in severe weather is under a roof without columns supporting it," he said.
KU police Lt. J. Mullens agreed that concern for safety was behind the policy of not scheduling commencement in the field house.
mornings said late afternoons and early evenings in spring were times with a great chance for severe storms, as the storm of last month as an example.
Mullens also said there would be no way to regulate attendance to keep the audience size within safety codes ceremony were in the field house.
"What happens to the great uncle from California that shows up and says he wants to see his nephew," he said. "You don't turn him away."
Scally said that the committee had considered delaying the ceremony by one day in the event of bad weather but that the committee thought it would be arrogant to ask the families to hang around an extra day.
"Where would they stay?" he said
2
Friday, April 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Fake IDs are focus of preliminary trial
May 1 hearing set for student at KU
Kansan staff writer
By Rick C. Honish
The preliminary hearing for Meredith Goldstein has been set for May 1, said Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory.
Goldstein, St. Louis freshman, was arrested April 10 after an anonymously tip from the Crimesopter's Hot Line alerted KU police about a stolen credit card. He was later released on a $5,000 bond.
He said the charges against Joseph Hegeman, Stillwell freshman, had not been formally filed.
Flory said the formal charges filed from the district attorney's office against Goldstein were burglary, dealing in false identification, misdemeanor theft and unlawful use of a credit card.
Hegeman was arrested for using false identification and misdemeanor theft.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the burglary charge had a maximum sentence of one to 10 years in jail and a $10,000 fine. The dealing in false ID charge could bring a maximum of one to five years and a $10,000 fine. The other charges could each bring up to one year in jail and a $2,500 fine.
Mullens said 20 people had attempted to obtain or had obtained false IDs. The IDs allegedly were made by Goldstein and Hegeman.
Mullens said that none of the people would be arrested, jailed or bonded, but that all would follow normal courtroom procedures.
The 20 individuals charged will appear in district court because the charge is a state offense rather than a city offense.
Mullens said the penalties for the 20 individuals could vary, depending on their past records.
Have a story idea? Call 864-4810 Want to place an ad? Call 864-4358
The University Dialy 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 final 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 Kansas. 118
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The CLASS Award established by the class of 1987 as a citation for
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148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
WHO CAN BE NOMINATED? Division of Student Affairs
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Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have "Readers" Theater" at 7 tonight at 100 Smith Hall.
The Lawrence Region Men's and Women's Widowed Group will meet at 7 ontun at Watkins Museum, 11th and Massachusetts streets.
- KU Office of Study Abroad will have a mandatory departure orientation at 8:45 a.m. Saturday at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union for students studying abroad in Fall 1991 or during the 1991-92 academic year.
- GLSOK and the KU Guests
GLSOK and the KU Gay and Lesbian Alumni Association will have a reunion at 11 a.m. Saturday at
he English Room in the Kansas Union.
- GLSOK will sponsor a parade, rally and picnic at 3 p.m. Saturday. The parade will begin at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, and end with a rally and picnic at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
- Lewis Hall will have a party with music and volleyball at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in front of the hall.
GLSOK will have a dance at 9 p.m.
saturday at the Party Room in the
Burge Union.
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Only seniors can turn in nominations for The CLASS Award
Turn applications in at the
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Application deadline today at 4:00 p.m.
From 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 19, 1991
3
Environs sponsors carnival for kids
Earth Day activities begin on campus today
By Katie Chipman Kansan staff writer
Environs, a KU environmental group, is kicking off the weekend Earth Day celebrations today by sponsoring several activities for students and Lawrence community members.
Community businesses, campus groups and representatives from environmental organizations will be on hand for the Kansas Union. 3 p.m. in front of the Kansas Union.
'The kids will go to seven different stations. Each has an activity which is tied to learning about the environment.'
- Margy Redford Environs member
Redford said that 700 students were expected to attend the carnival, which will be from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. today.
Margy Redford, Environs member, said 29 groups would be present to answer students' questions about the environment and how they could become more environmentally aware.
The campus group also is sponsoring an Earth Day carnival in the grassy area behind Spencer Art Center for local elementary students.
"The kids will go to seven different stations." Each has an activity which is tied to learning about the environment," she said.
Also today, members of JKHW will sponsor a contest from noon to 1 p.m. at the Kansas Union to encourage student awareness.
Earth Day celebrations will take place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
The park activities are sponsored by the Obiji Farm School Players, a group of performers who will perform a play at the event.
Joy Eckertson, coordinator, said park activities would include dance sing-alongs, face-painting informational hobbies and live music by several bands.
Eckertson said that at the end of the afternoon the crowd would participate in an earth-healing circle.
Students build concrete canoes
KAN
Water races will start tomorrow
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
It might sound like a crazy idea, but the department of civil engineering has built two canoes out of concrete.
The KU chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers once again is entering the Mid-West Concrete Canoe Rage.
The series of races will begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the spillway lagoon of the Tuttle Creek Lake near Manhattan. Kansas State University, as well as 10 other schools, is entering the race.
However, Anschutz said designing and building the canoes was a valuable teaching lesson because they provided knowledge from the classroom.
Michelle Anschutz, Topeka senior and president of the KU chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers, said that most of those who participated made the canoes and entered the race for fun.
"We were all told in our first materials class that concrete was heavier than water," she said. "I问了 you did ever see a building float?"
The two types of canoes weigh about 170 and 200 pounds and are about $ \frac{1}{4} $ an inch thick.
They are made by placing two layers of galvanized steel mesh in a mold made from a racing canoe and filling the concrete through the mesh.
The special high strength concrete contains small styrofoam and glass beads that are sometimes called ecto-spheres or micro-balloons. The beads add strength and reduce the weight of the concrete.
"This is pretty much asking us to be creative." he said.
The canoes are light enough so they when they are full of water they float.
The University of Kansas will field six men's teams, six women's teams, two coed teams and two faculty teams.
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Steve Baalman, Grinnell senior, helped build the canoes and said it was an unusual project.
The course is a straight 200 yards out and back. Two KU graduate students set the regional men's record for the race last year.
Financing for the canoes was provided by engineering alumni.
1
Earthbound plan will reduce waste
LEFT: Michelle Anschutz, president of the KU Chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers and co-chairperson of the concrete canoe project, paints a Jayhawk onto the bow of one of the canoes to be raced tomorrow.
ABOVE: KU engineering students put the finishing touches on a concrete canoe. Their boat will be entered in the Mid-West Concrete Canoe Competition tomorrow at Tuttle Creek Lake near Manhattan. Since 1978, KU has won nine of the past 13 races.
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Patricia Marvin, recycling coordinator for Lawrence, said the Earthbound 91 program that began this month could save 25,000 cubic yards of landfill space every year.
Earthbound '91 is a pilot program that provides curbside pickup and drop-off sites to collect resources that are reusable or biodegradable.
The drop-off sites are known by the acronym GLOBE because grass, leaves, oil and batteries may be taken to the site area. The 'E' stands for Earthbound '91.
GLOBE drop-off times and sites are 10
a. m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays at Centenial Park, Ninth Street and Rockledge Road, and from no. 4 to p.m. on Sundays at Holcom Park, 2700 W. 27th St.
"The drop-off system was a logical way to meet the needs of the people," she said. "But we'll probably have to extend the drop-off site times to an additional afternoon."
Becca Green, Lawrence senior and a recycling intern for the city of Lawrence, Sarah and curb-side collection in two pilot areas in Lawrence for the collection of grass and leaves.
"About 35 percent of our landfills is yard waste," she said.
Although the city started a pilot program last year, this year's program has been expanded to include more residents.
Marvin said that the collection of yard waste was made into compost that was used in city landscapes instead of wasting space in a landfill.
"We have 10,000 tons of yard wastes every year. Why shouldn't we use it for something," she said.
"We collect grass, leaves, sod and bedding plants to be composted — no food or tree limbs, because they compost at a different rate."
Regents chair rushed to hospital during tuition meeting at K-State
Kansan staff report
MANHATTAN — Robert Creighton, chairperson of the Board of Regents, was transported in an ambulance from an airport to Kansas State University yesterday.
Creighton was taken to St. Mary's Hospital in Manhattan at 9:15 a.m. At 12:35 p.m. he was released and transferred to a Topeka physician's office.
Martine Hammond Paludan, director of academic affairs for the Regents, said that at last word, physicians were determining
whether Creighton needed treatment or admittance to a hospital.
Bok Krause, vice president for institutional advancement at Kansas State, said Creighton became ill about 8:15 a.m. during a break between meetings.
He said Creighton was resting and waiting for testing equipment to become available.
"Beyond that we haven't had any word," he said. "We're all thinking of him."
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4
Friday, April 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Earth Day today
KU Environs invites schoolchildren to campus in attempt to promote environmental awareness
In Georgia, the billboard industry is upset because trees on public lands are
constructing motorists' view of billboards Members of the industry have proposed to the state Transportation Board that these offensive trees be cut down to increase billboard visibility. They argue that tree trimming is necessary for the survival of businesses.
Maybe they have not heard, but the Earth's forests are shrinking by 27 million acres a year. The Earth's coat of trees is now one-third smaller than it was in pre-agricultural times.
But thanks to the efforts of many environmental organizations, awareness of the fragile ecosystem is increasing. On April 22, this awareness will be celebrated in an event called Earth Day.
Earth Day began in the late 1960s as part of an environmental movement and has gained momentum over the past 30 years.
Last year millions of people around the world took time out to participate in activities that celebrated the Earth. In Kansas City alone, thousands of people were involved in Earth Day events.
The University of Kansas will celebrate Earth Day '91 today. Environs has invited between 700 and 800 schoolchildren to participate in events on campus, such as environmental storytelling and forming the words "Earth Day" on a large piece of plywood with pieces of trash.
Environs also will set up tables in front of the Kansas Union to distribute information about the environment and answer any questions students might have.
Take advantage of the opportunity. Find out more about the world in which we live. Or just take a look around.
That is what Earth Day is all about. A day set aside to notice . . . and to think.
Jenniter Schultz for the editorial board
Military bases
Defense cuts must be balanced with human needs
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney last Friday encountered howls of protest from politicians fighting his proposal to close or realign 61 domestic military bases and installations.
The legislators claim that their states' imperiled bases are of vital economic, historical or strategic importance, but the Defense Department — uncharacteristically — argues that they have useless useless pork barrels.
Closing and reorganizing the bases would net about $850 million over the cost of the restructuring. After the restructuring, the military would save about $1.7 billion a year.
military would have saved a year.
Those savings could represent an important step toward a reduced post-Cold War defense budget.
Because the cutbacks must be approved by a bipartisan panel, the public can be assured the cuts will not be made capriciously or for political motives.
However, the positive effects of eliminating needless defense expenditures have a human cost.
House Armed Services Committee analysts estimate that the closings would wipe out nearly 70,000 military and civilian jobs by 1997.
Cheney's predictions are more dire. He thinks the closures would force him to lay off 521,000 workers.
When the people who work in cities dependent on the bases are factored in, the magnitude of the effects of closing military bases becomes clear.
A sensible solution would be for the federal government to reinvest a percentage of the savings from the base reorganization into economic development in those communities hardest hit by military cutbacks.
Grants could be administered by a politically balanced panel similar to the one that will review Cheney's promised cuts.
By channeling defense savings into other industries for several years, the government could promote more productive economies in cities that have been subsisting for years on unneeded military bases.
■ Editorialists reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kansas editorial board. Editorials appear in a box on the left side of the page. Editorialists reflect the majority opinion of the board but not necessarily the opinion of the signed opinions.
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.
Chris Siron for the editorial board
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Everyone, please rise for the 'Sta-hah-stah-hah-spah-huh?'
Let's test your knowledge of music. Tell me what song these lvrics are from.
1. Oh-dah-lah-hah la-hah-hahahaee-lee-hah-aaand-aaand aaaan-uhuvva-uvva-fruh-hee-heeee
2. Anna homma-duh homma-du du-du hommaaaaaaa.
3. Dee-uh-dee-hah-hah-hah `buh`
`huh-eee-buh-hue-ee-eee-eee-ray`
You say you don't recognize it? Nonsense. Of course you do. It's likely that you've heard and sang it dozens or hundreds of times, depending on your age. Your parents sang it. And probably your grandparents.
You still don't know it? All right I'll throw out a few hints.
It's a very old song. The words were written more than 150 years ago. The melody is even older than that.
You still don't know? Then you go to many opening days at busines
But it's no longer done that way. In recent times, there has developed a sort of informal competition among singers at ballparks, hockey rinks, basketball arenas and other patriotic gathering places to see who can best turn the "Star Spangled Banner" into something most resembling the howls of a maniac locked in the asylum tower.
I'm not sure when and where these free-form interpretations began, although I vaguely remember some
BERT HUGHES
Mike Royko
Syndicated columnist
Of course, when Francis Scott Key wrote that line, as well as the others that precede and follow it, he kept the lyrics much simpler for the human brain to comprehend: "O're the land of the free and the home of the brave." And for many years, that's the way it was sung.
guy named Jose creating a stir a few years ago by opening a World Series with a rendition that sounded like the Star-Spangled Cha-Cha-Cha.
Since then, I have heard the anthem has been performed as the Star-Spangled Rock, the Star-Spangled Disco, the Star-Spangled Gospel, the Star-Spangled Blues, the Star-Spangled Hovenanny, the Star-Spangled Barbershop Quartet and the Star-Spangled Scaled Cat.
A few weeks ago, a woman who sang it before a Chicago Bulls game was thought to have set a record by using a variety of prolonged howls,声情动画, screams and other social artifacts, gauging it out on more than five minutes.
A man who was there told me, "I couldn't understand one word. And, I swear, if I were a Chicago policeman driving on a street in my squad car and I heard those sounds coming from a building, I would radio for backup, then draw my gun and go to the police station. For assumption that a woman was being brutally attacked by a gang of fiends."
I think it is time to draw the line. After all, it is our national anthem. As such, it should be performed with some dignity, rather than sounding as if the singer has been bitten in the rear by a pit bull.
It's doubtful that anyone would stand in center court at Wimbledon or play tennis. Ow-ow-ow guh-ray-hey-hey-hey hew shuqh Qwa-hey-qua-heye-hee
eeen. "That," "God save our gra-
cious queen," ballpark style. The
English would say more than tut-tut,
I'll go.
Nor would they be impressed north of the border if someone gave them:
"Oh-hoo, Cay-hey-cay-neee-dah"
Owah, yes, oawah ahoooa, ahoooa and ney-yeh-yey-tiv-tiwlub-baby-baby-light my-uh fiyla-hah-lah-eeh-uhay-and ("O Canada") Our home and native!"
If Mr. Key could return and be transported to an athletic arena to hear a modern interpretation, he'd recognize the tune, but he'd probably say: "Ah, English is no longer the native tongue?"
And think of the children. Generation after generation of parents brings their children to ballparks to introduce them to the national pastime. Do we want these children later standing up in the assembly hall saying, "No teacher, it starts like this: 'Oh-hah bey cah-yan you-see uh by the daw-haw-haws err-uhr-err-lee-lee-lah-like'?"
Even worse, these wild-eyed renditions of the "Sta-hah bayuh-hapshu-gulled bayuh bayuh-ner-herers" encourage the more excitable, beer-soaked, rock-oriented members of the audience to leap up and clap their hands above their heads and shout, "Wow . . . hey . . . yeah . . go
baby ... go
On the other hand, some musicologists say that the same melody can be traced back to England where it had different lyrics and was a drinking song.
So maybe it isn't totally inappropriate for today's singers to sound as if they just downed a quart of Southern Comfort.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
Want to put off studies? Try torturing parents, roommates
As the year rolls along with finals ahead like a big bunk of road-kill you can't swerve to avoid on the highway, the brain begins to drift in some pretty odd directions (how do you think I came up with the road-kil metaphor?)*
As a matter of fact, while I should be working on my research paper, I am instead pondering various ways to annoy friends and family. It is an art form — an acquired talent to push someone to the edge.
Parents are usually the easiest to torture because they are closer to the edge than anyone.
The visit home may be the perfect time to try a couple of new techniques. First of all, your parents are ready. We'll help you come home a completely changed
Matt Walsh
Staff col
individual.
Staff columnist
up to their fears — arrive in a "Free Charles Manson" T-shirt and lime green hotpants. Not that brave? Try this: Walk up to your mom with a worried look on your face. Say to her, "Mom, I have something very important to tell you." As her face mets warmth, she leans into going down, frown she'll pat your hand and say you probably should be sitting down.
"You know all those things you
100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000
warned me about drugs and premarial sex?" you ask. "Well, I . . , is that the phone?" and walk out of the room.
After assuring your mother and every relative she called that you have no problems with drugs or otherwise, begin phase two: Remind your parents of their mortality. Put your name down on all the furniture and possessions you want left to you in your parents' will.
"You don't have a will yet?" you ask, again. Your parents begin to check their legs for varicose veins as you walk out of the room.
The best form of mild torture is that which reaps some sort of material gain. For example, how do you learn to eat a steak? D-I-S-O-R-D-E-R. Since your mom is
already sure that you haven't eaten since you last stepped out of her house and away from her casserole-laden retreferrator, all you have to do is eat the bread with experience dicates that copious care packages will follow for weeks after.
In the realms of roommate torture, more sneakiness is involved. I personally enjoy messing with any of my four housemates' minds. One such activity is called "Death by Conway." This procedure involves playing Conway Twity albums near your roommate's ears before he or she awakes. The subconscious humming of such a Twity classic as "Tight Fittin' Jeans" will undoubtedly lead your roommate to loving you about as much as a case of jock itch in a body cast.
Play "Remote Control Mind Screw." This entails the flipping of the channel that your rooie is watching to the Home Shopping Network over and over again with a concealed remote control. The victim will be ordering curnbrum at a circumferential purse results before he knows what hit him.
Drive your roommate slightly insane. Get a large group of your friends together to watch the big game on TV. But don't turn it on. This plan may backfire if your roommate starts cheering at the blank screen.
The level of emotional disturbance following this next technique will be in direct relationship with how deserves a roommate. "Oh, someone called for roomie," "Oh, someone called for
Another fun piece of torture for this kind of roommate is to color the front two teeth of his favorite Victoria's Secret model. Those catalogs are not for women at all. They were meant to show men what they will never have. The fantasy is shattered with the truth that you can't be tough to look lustily at someone who looks like a Tilt-A-Wirl operator at the county fair.
you," and leave it at that.
I could go on and on about new and innovative ways to drive those closest to us completely bonkers, but what's the point?
Oh yeah, I forgot. The point is to waste time instead of study.
Matt Walsh is an Emporia freshman planning to major in journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
News...Melanie Matthes
Editorial...Tiffany Harness
Planning...Holly M. Neuman
Campus...Jennifer Reynolds,
Pam Sollinner
Sports...Ann Sommerlath
Photography...Keith Thorpe
Graphics...Melissa Unterberg
Features...Jill Harrington
Business staff
Campus sales mgr...Sophie Wehbe
Regional sales mgr...Carmen Dresch
National sales mgr...Jennifer Claxton
Co-op sales mgr...Christine Musser
Production mgrs...Rich Harshbarger
Katie Stader
Marketing director...Gall Embrinder
Creative director...Christy Heils
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 must include class and home town, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be biographical.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be sent to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 19, 1991
5
THE LABOR OF MICHAEL BURRITT
Life drawing
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Sophomore Max Nickel studies the contours of model Stephen Prine, Lawrence resident. Nickol and his classmates were sketching Prine for their class "Life Drawing" yesterday at the Art and Design Building. The class concerns anatomical studies of the human body. Prine models for the classes several times a week.
Speaker says past explains modern Zionist movement
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
David Vital does not defend Zion. Nor does he apologize for it.
He does speak about how it emerged and developed from the persecuted Eastern European Jews to present day Jews living in the modern world.
"You can't understand the phenomenon without going back in time," said Vital, who has written a three-volume account of the rise and evolution of the Zionist movement. He spoke to about 75 people at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union last night.
He said that as the Jewish people entered the 20th century, they became increasingly secularized as well as scattered throughout the world.
As Jews migrated to the United States from places of persecution, Zionism became a needed change, he said.
"The thesis of Zionism is for the Jews to solve their own problems, to pull themselves together," he said. He urged for there to be a radical change.
Vital said part of the change needed to be a territorial solution.
"The troubles Jews encountered living where they were was a consequence where they were a minority," he said. "The essential thing was for the Jews to reacquire a territory where they would not be a minority."
Vital said Zionism sought equality, dignity, cultural continuity, safety and autonomy for the Jewish people in establishing a Jewish state.
However, questions after the
speech focused on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, not Zionism.
"The idea of Zionism was freeing people," said Ibrahim El-Khatib, Jerusalem senior. "This is for sure not Zionism, what is happening right now in Israel."
El-Khatib said the Palestinians had recognized Israel and had a right to coexist with it.
Ossi Azuelos, Jerusalem freshman,
said there were many opponents who
had reason to be opponents at the
speech.
Atezuel said Vital would be the last
the keep a Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
She said, "He came here to talk about history and not today's conflict."
Be environmentally conscious!
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Program
5p.m.-6p.m. Supper Break
2p.m.-5p.m. Gourd Dancing
6p.m.-7p.m. Specials/Give aways
5p.m.-6p.m. Supper Break
(n.m.-Snoffle(Cinema)
7:30p.m.-12a.m. Parade in and Pow Wow
funded by the University of Kansas Student Senate, SUA,and Native American Student Association
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Friday, April 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Prof researches effects of volunteering with AIDS patients
Kansan staff writer
After a full day of classes, loads of homework and an after-school job, the last thing a busy student wants to do is volunteer work.
But Allen Omoto, assistant professor of psychology, thinks the extra
"People can get a lot out of volunteer work," he said. "There are a lot of rewards. You can help a lot of people and feel
PETER LYNCH
good about helping others.''
For more than three years, Omoite has been researching how working with people with AIDS affects volunteers.
He and four KU graduate students are examining volunteers. Five colleagues at the University of Minnesota also are involved.
Omoto is looking at three stages in the volunteer process. First, he is concerned with who does AIDS volunteer work and why. He said that although reasons varied, the most popular motivation for a person doing such work was humanitarian concerns.
The final stage involves the effects that volunteering has on people — how they have been changed, how their attitude changes, and if they have more knowledge about AIDS.
The second stage of Omoto's research examines the direct relationship between the volunteers and their clients.
"There's a lot of potential changes
that could take place by working with
clients and suppliers."
He and his research team are using psychological theories to guide their
Theories and research from social psychology are helping us to
Jim Berghus, Holland, Mich., graduate student, is working with Omoo. He said volunteers were an important help in helping people who must live with AIDS.
frame the questions from each of these stages and they are we address them.
"It's important mainly because it's a problem," he said of AIDS. "Since there isn't a cure now, there's only going to be more and more people who need it." He video a very important aspect in terms of helping people with AIDS."
Berghuis also is analyzing data from a national survey the research
team designed to study volunteers around the nation.
"What we want to know is what are volunteers like across the country." Ometo said. "We asked them that tie into each of our stares."
Omoto is working with the Good Samaritan Project, a volunteer organization in Kansas City, Mo. The research team is tracking the project's volunteers during a six-month period.
"We're looking at the whole process as it unfolds," he said.
Through his research, Omoto hopes to encourage people to become
involved in volunteer work. He wants to help society understand the roles volunteers play.
Volunteers have the ability to become health educators for a society that still is uneasy about the disease because they are knowledgeable about AIDS and understand what their clients are going through, he said.
"Our goal is to find ways to make better use of volunteers." Omito said. "We want to let people know that AIDS is an issue, even in Lawrence, Kansas, and the longer people ignore it as an issue, the worse it's going to get."
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The City of Lawrence • The Ethel & Raymond F. Rice Foundation • Kansas Arts Commission • Kansas Committee for the Humanities • Downtown Lawrence • Celebration of Cultures Corp.
The Celebration of Cultures Corp. is a non-profit organization dedicated to celebrating the ethnic and cultural diversity in Lawrence and Douglas County.
Sponsored by:
Going to Kansas City, Kansas City here I Come.
Celebration of Cultures Festival
CELEBRATION OF CULTURES
LAWRENCE
Saturday April 20th 11:00 a.m.-6 p.m. 8th & Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence, Kansas Opening Ceremony at 12:00 noon
Planning on attending KU Medical Center next semester? Cambridge West Apartments are only a short walk from KU Medical Center.
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Nation/World
Nation/World briefs
Iraq obeys U.N. resolution
United Nations
Iraq turned over information on its chemical and biological warfare capability and its nuclear facilities yesterday, in apparent communication ending the Persian Gulf War, officials said.
While that list was being delivered to the U.N. Security Council, Iraqi diplomats also provided a letter on Baghdad's nuclear stock and materials in the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna.
There was no immediate comment from U.N. officials on whether the Iraqi documents met all criteria.
Yesterday was the deadline set by the United Nations for Iraq to provide the two documents. The April 3 resolution that established cease fire measures against Iraq to destroy its weapons of mass destruction.
Iraqi Ambassador Abdul Amir al-Anbari would not provide details of what else was on the U.N. list, but he said it included scientific and military weapons, weaponry and the sites of weapons systems.
University Daily Kansan / Fri.av. April 19, 1991
Washington
The government reported yesterday that the number of people filing initial claims for unemployment benefits plunged for a second straight week in early April, leading some economists to declare that the end of the recession was at hand.
Benefit claims plunge again
The Labor Department said new applications for jobless benefits fell by 22,000 in the week ending April 6 after a drop of 70,000 a week earlier.
The two consecutive drops pushed the total for initial claims downward to a seasonally adjusted 451,000 for the first week in April. Initial claims had been above the half-million mark for three consecutive weeks earlier in March, their highest level since the 1981-82 recession.
Miami
The families of 37 sailors killed in a gun turret explosion aboard the USS Iowa two years ago filed $2 billion in wrongful death claims against the Navy yesterday, their attorney said.
USS Iowa families file suit
7
Longstanding U.S. Supreme Court doctrine bars such claims on behalf of military personnel, but Miami-based lawyer Ellis Rubin said the families were challenging that precedent.
"They want me to test this decision and ask the Supreme Court to revisit this question. Probably."
The families also filed a parallel lawsuit under admiralty law in an Alexandria, Va., federal court.
The families reached the $2 billion figure by valuing each year the victims were likely to have lived at $1 million, or an average of about $50 million a sailor, said Rubin.
From The Associated Press
Bush's education plan gets bipartisan praise
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush, calling for a revolution in American education, unveiled his blueprint yesterday for top-to-bottom school reforms, including a voluntary nationwide exam system, aid pegged to academic results and $550 million in start-up funds for a new generation of schools
"I'm here to say America will move forward," declared Bush as he described the "America 2000" education strategy in an East Room address before governors, business leaders and educators.
"The time for all the reports and rankings, for all the studies and surveys about what's wrong with this country."
The plan, crafted by new Education Secretary Lamar Alexander in his first month on the job, calls for relatively little new federal spending. It relies instead upon states, governors, teachers, parents, students and communities to take steps to embrace the rigorous new education goals that Bush and the governors pronounced early last year.
Alexander's plan is a national strategy, not a federal program, according to a 34-page Education Reform Report.
Still, Bush said he would ask Congress for $690 million, royalty for $1 million seed grants to open a
prototype "New American School" in each of the 335 congressional districts by 1996. He invited communities to vie for the grants to create the school, and he selected out of which may be operated by private businesses.
Democratic leaders of Congress said they would work with Bush on the plan but also accused him of waiting to long to act on the education issue and of objecting their past school improvement initiatives.
"We welcome his interest in education, belated as it is," Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, said.
Mitchell said Bush had failed to help Democrats pass new education legislation last fall, and he added, "All of us have seen a large number of White House press conferences before. Too often, effort on behalf of the issue . . . stops when the cameras stop rolling."
The new tests described in the Bush plan will be non-compulsory, honors-type exams in five core subjects — English, math, science, history and geography — for fourth, eighth and 12th graders. Bush said he was determined to have the first tests for fourth graders ready by September 1993. He promised presidential citations for top 12th grade scorers.
NATO hopeful of Soviet talks
The Associated Press
Some negotiators for NATO and the disbanding Warsaw Pact said a positive Soviet response could come within days at the 22-nation Conventional Forces in Europe talks.
VIENNA, Austria — After months of resistance, the Soviets seem ready to implement a historic treaty slashing conventional weapons and opening fire on Russian troops in troop strength, arms negotiators said yesterday.
Settling the dispute would remove what the White House said this week is the largest stumbling block to a summit between U.S. President George Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
The talks resumed Wednesday after a scheduled three-week break.
The 16-member NATO and five former Soviet allies who were joined with the Kremlin in the Warsaw Pact accuse Moscow of violating treaty conditions it accepted last November.
Speaking to a closed session yesterday, Chief Soviet Negotiator Oleg Grinevsky suggested a response would arrive soon to a letter Bush sent on Friday. The statement, by a Hungarian delegate said, without giving details.
The accord, signed in Paris by all NATO and Warsaw Pact countries, committed the 22 nations to slashing their arsenals of tanks and other conventional weapons in Europe.
The West accused Moscow of trying to circumvent the accord by transferring three motorized infantry divisions with about 2,600 weapons. Navy forces are not covered by the agreement.
WASHINGTON — Political unrest in the Soviet Union increases the chances of an accident nuclear attack on the United States, the German Defense Initiative told Congress yesterday.
Looking to bolster dwindling support for the SDI program, Henry Cooper said concerns of Soviet officials about regional turmoil and the possibility of an accidental missile launch heightens the need for the $46 billion program.
The Associated Press
"If defending against accidental and unauthorized launches was a valid concern in 1988, when Senator (Sam) Nunn argued that should the governor be there, it is a greater concern today," Cooper said.
Nunn, D-Ga., is chairperson of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Cooper encountered opposition from some Democrats as he told the House Armed Services research and development subcommittee that it would require $6 billion annually in the mid-1990s.
The director also said spending on some items within the next two or three years would require changes in laws regarding the 1972 U.S.-Soviet treaty banning further development of anti-ballistic missiles.
Today!
FRIDAY, 19 APRIL 1991
- CHILDREN'S ACTIVITIES
9-11 am & 1-3 pm
in Marvin Grove (near Art Museum)
- INFORMATION TABLES 11am - 3pm
- LIVE MUSIC
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents the
[Treat Yourself!]
I am not sure what is written in the image. It looks like a close-up of a pair of shoes.
Miami City, Pallett
Edward Villella, Artistic Director A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
"...dances with expansiveness, wit, and speed... make it look easy and fun."
The Boston Globe
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office;
student tickets available at the USA Office, Kansas
Union; all seats reserved; public $15 & $18, KU and
K-12 students $7.50 & $6, senior citizens and other
students $14 & $11; to charge by phone, call
913.864.3902.
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 24, 1991
Hoch Auditorium
Partially funded by the Mid-Armenia Arts Alliance through the Kansas Arts Association and the National Endowment for the Arts, additional support provided by the KU JEWELS (Jewish Embassy Swietoch Society) and the KU Endowment Association.
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners:
Hallmark Cards, Inc. Payless ShoeSource and Sailie Max
{Step Out for Great Entertainment}
8
Friday, April 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
How long should a person's legs be?
Long enough to get 'em to the Love Garden!
Love Garden Sounds
926 1/2 Mass St. (upstairs)
843 1551 M Sat. 10-7
YISA/MC Sun. 1-5
THE LYRIC OPERA OF KANSAS CITY PRESENTS GILBERT & SULLIVAN'S
H.M.S. PINAFORE
April 19,20,22,24
High jinks in Her Majesty's Navy. Romance flounders. Little Buttercup's dark secret may capsize wedding plans.
April 19, 2015 • 2:34
Tickets: $6.00 - $35.00 • Call (816) 471-7344
Monday/Wednesday curtain: 7:30 p.m.
Friday/Saturday curtain: 8:00 p.m.
*Student Rush* $3.00 30 minutes prior to curtail
Russell Patterson, General Artistic Director
Financial assistance provided by the Missouri Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts. *USAir* is the lyric's official airline.
AT THE MUSIC HALL
Jayhawk Discount Card • Jayhawk Discount Card
The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions of:
- Treasurer
- Administrative Assistant
- Student Executive Committee Chairman
- Executive Secretary
- A.S.K. Director
- Community Service Coordinator
Applications available at the Student Senate Office, 410 KS Union Deadline: April 19, 5:00 p.m.
???s...Contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710
JAYHAWK TBNNIS
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Court to decide on ethics of naming of rape victim
The Associated Press
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — A prosecutor yesterday sought a court ruling on whether he can prosecute news organizations that have identified a woman who says she was raped by a Kennedy family member.
Palm Beach County State Attorney David Bludworth also said he expected three more weeks of investigation before making a decision on whether to charge William Kennedy for the murders of U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.
“This is the Smith case to us.” Bludworth said, insisting the investigation was progressing and that no criticism had been shown the Kennedy’s.
In his first extensive public comments since the March 30 rape allegation, Bludworth also defended the Palm Beach police investigation and his office's handling of the investigation.
After publication of the 29-year-old woman's name and photo in a Boca Raton-based supermarket tabloid, The Globe, NBC News broadcast her name Tuesday. Her name then was published Wednesday in The New York Times and some other newspapers — but not in any southern
Bludworth filed a petition asking a judge to rule whether a 1911 Florida statute barring identification of a sex-crime victim, which makes violation a second-degree criminal misdemeanor, meets state and U.S. constitutional standards.
Florida daily.
"There are some important First Amendment claims that must be weighed against the private rights of reporters and investigators in this assault." Blindwound told reporters.
The woman's attorney, David Roth, said Wednesday he was shocked and appalled by publication of her identity. Its use has brought out debate in newsrooms and among scholars and victims' advocates.
Bludworth said his study of that ruling indicated it didn't clarify the criminal nature and constitutionality of the law.
NBC said yesterday it was confident about its decision.
"NBC has studied the Florida statute and the analysis of the statute by the Supreme Court as well as other
constitutional decisions," the network said in a statement. "NBC is confident that its editorial decision to air the name of the rape victim is consistent with the protections afforded by the Constitution."
The New York Times said it no longer would shield the alleged victim's privacy once her name had been broadcast nationally.
"Only while a subject's anonymity is effective and genuine can we justify withholding information from our readers on an issue of genuine public interest," a newspaper statement said.
"We are confident that the court will determine that any attempt to apply Florida's statute to the publication of accurate facts about a matter of public importance is plainly unconstitutional," the Times' statement said.
■ Editor's note: It is Kansan policy not to print the names of rape victims except in circumstances approved by the editor. Editors are consulted when naming the victims of any traumatic event or violent crime. Suspects in rape cases are not identified until the suspect has been charged in court, except in cases of unusual prominence or newsworthiness.
Journalists must balance ethics options
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
effect."
Journalists face ethical decisions every day about what they should report to viewers and readers. The decision that The New York Times and NBC News made last week did not please some people.
The news agencies announced the name of a woman who filed a complaint of rape against William Kennedy Smith, the nephew of Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass. Some people in Lawrence think a rape victim's name should not be publicized without the victim's consent.
"I think the victim should have the opportunity to decide whether or not their name will be published."
"I don't think it should be published without a clear consent," said Sarah Russell, director of the Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service. "I think if we are in a mode of giving support to victims of violent crime, we have to support their choices. I feel the whole time line of recovery could be hindered. It could have an even more devastating
Charlene Muehlenhard, assistant professor of psychology and women's studies, said, "Rape takes the person's control away from them.
Sherrell Robinson, graduate assistant for the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said, "If you put that person's name out, it's putting that person on trial before the jury. It's all part of the victimizing the victim."
One reason for withholding the name is that publication might discourage people from reporting a rape incident.
"It's possible that it could be a deterrent," Robinson said. "If someone's going to see their name is going to be all over the paper, that's going to be another deterrent. People must be concerned about the rights and feelings of the victim-survivor."
'If you put that person's name out, it's putting that person on trial before the trial ste.
- Sherrill Robinson graduate assistant, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
"There are all kinds of pressures on the victim at this time," he said. "It might keep more people from reporting a rape.
Robert Turvey, associate director of the Student Assistance Center, agreed that publication could be a deterrent for reporting rape.
Carole Rich, assistant professor of journalism, said a news agency should carefully balance the news and the harm against the harm a story might cause.
"Ethically, I think you have to weigh, are you doing more harm than good," Rich said.
2ND ANNUAL CHARITY BASKETBALL GAME
Kansas Alumni Basketball Players & The Lawrence Jaycees
VS The Kansas City Chiefs
Kansas Alumni & Lawrence Jaycees Roster
umni & Lawrence Jaycee
Mark Randall
Jeff Gueldner
Chris Piper
Senator Wint Winter
Gary Hall
Ernesto Hodison
Wint Winter, Sr.
Kyle Turner
Jim Boyle
Dane Floyd
Bud Stallworth
Susan Ellis
Susan Bragg
on Washington (Team Coa
veees Roster
Coach)
BOYS & GIRLS CLUB OF LAWRENCE
FRIDAY, APRIL 19TH Tip-off at 7:30pm ALLEN FIELD HOUSE TICKETS: $10 per person or 4 persons for $25
*All Proceeds go to the Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence*
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 19. 1991
Arts and Entertainment
9
Ballet company to demonstrate different styles
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Old meets new in the city Miami, both in the streets and on the stage.
Just as the progressive metropolis remains heavily influenced by its Old-world, Hispanic heritage the relatively new Miami employs modern techniques against a backdrop of traditional repertoire.
Now on tour across the United States, the classical dance troupe will touch down in Lawrence Wednesday to give the University of Kansas a taste of this combination of styles.
Led by artistic director Edward Villella, the Miami City Ballet will perform at 8 p.m. in Hoch Audio Theater, 1022 W. Clement Street this year's KLK Concert Series.
Charla Jenkins, director of Uni-
tary Theatre Relations, said the four works the ballet company would perform would demonstrate both modern and traditional dance.
Choreographed by Villilea's mentor, the late George Balanchine of the New York City Ballet, the works include "Square Dance," an imitation of country dance set to barque music. The other dances are "Tchaikovsky Suite No. 3." "Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux" and "Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra."
Jenkins said that Villella, who worked with Balanchine at the New York City Ballet, not only adopted many of Balanchine's works but also his vision and style.
"His dancers are rehearsed to perform with the combination of force and delicacy necessary to machine's genus." Jenkins said.
Jerel Hilding, associate professor of dance $ ^{i} $ said that the style
'It's mostly dance just for the beauty of it.'
Jerel Hilding associate professor of dance
incorporated by Villella and Balanchein in their dances did not revolve around story lines. Rather, the movements concentrate on the techniques themselves.
"It's mostly dance just for the beauty of it," he said. "It's the use of ballet techniques and stretching them to beyond the norm of what you see in 'Swan Lake,' for instance."
Since its premiere performance in 1986, the 33-member company has presented more than 50 ballets, including 20 world premieres. Jenkins said.
"It's one of the fastest growing classical dance troupes in the United States," she said.
The fast-paced growth of the ballet company also can be attributed to the members of the dance troupes. Many come from such large dance companies and schools as the New York City Ballet, the Off-White School of Ballet, Ballet du Nord and School of American Ballet.
Resident choreographer Jimmy Gamonet De Los Heros is the former lead dancer of the Peruvian National Ballet. His creation, "Transtangos," is the signature piece of the Miami City Ballet, Jenkins said.
Tickets for the ballet performance are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office, and student tickets are available at the SUA Office in Kansas Union Tickets are $15 for the public and $7.50 for students.
COPA
"The Fantasticks," to be performed at Hashinger Hall, features, from left, Jamie Cutburth, David Hastings and Christen Bourre
Art blooms at Hashinger Hall
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
Hashinger Hall, the Residence Center for the Creative Arts, is preparing to celebrate its annual spring extravaganza.
Spring Art Week, which will begin tonight at the residence hall, will offer a week of guest artists, concerts and displays.
Stephanie Payne, Hashinger creative arts committee chairme, said the week was an effort to make the hall a diverse awareness of the hall's diversity.
“There's a stigma about Hashir" she said. "We have a reputation on this campus as being a little weird. In reality, we are a group of very diverse people who have come to form a very strong community."
Rebecca Waters, Hashinger's programming coordinator, said the week also was designed to benefit Hashinger residents.
"What we want to do for Hashinger residents is bring to them opportunities to experience various art forms right here where they live," she said.
The week will kick off with a production of "The Fantasticks" at 8 p.m. tonight The musical also will be on Sunday and Sunday nights at the same time.
Keith Worthington, St. Charles, Ill. senator, who is assisting Waters in the week's activities, said that he had become a tradition at the hall.
Worthington said that the festival probably had started sometime after 1972, when Hashinger officially became the creative arts hall.
Wayne Kruse, Herkimer senior and director of the musical, said the play was a reverse "Romeo and Juliet."
"The parents want their kids to get together, but they keep them apart," he said. "They think that by keeping them together, they will want to get together, and they do."
Following is a list of other weekly events. All events will be free and will take place in the Hashinger theater, except where noted
Kruse also said that "The Fantasticks" had been performed continuously since its off-Broadway premiere May 6, 1960.
At 6:30 Monday night, Michael Bradley, art administrator, will lead a forum of professional artists in a discussion of careers in the arts.
Band II and the KU Jazz Band III will perform at "Club Hash." Non-alcoholic beverages will be served.
At 8 p.m. Tuesday, the KU Jazz
At 9 p.m. Wednesday, the avant-garde band Schloss Tegal will perform its electronic performance/ and be $1 for non-Hashing residents.
At 7 p.m. Thursday, opera singer Brian Steele will conduct a master class and perform some vocal selections.
At 3 p.m. Friday, a tie-dye party will be sponsored on Hashinger's front lawn, where KJHK will broadcast live. At 7 p.m., the best performances from this and previous years of "Sneaky Pete's," a monthly open mike contest, will be presented. An improvisational performance led by Steve Fluet, Mt. Prospect, Ill., freshman, will follow at 8:30 p.m.
Top 10 Video Rentals
As appears in next week's edition of Billboard magazine
REVIEWS
1. "Ghost"
2. "Pacific Heights"
3. "Presumed Innocent"
4. "Flatliners"
5. "Arachnophobia"
6. "Air America"
6. "Air America
7. "Darkman"
8. "White Palace"
9. "Narrow Margin"
10. "Die Hard 2: Die Harder"
Reprinted with permission
Angst-ridden BoDeans release intense album
Special to the Kansan
By Kristine Curley
If you listen to "Black and White," the new album by the BoDeans, only once, you probably won't be too impressed.
"Black and White" is the fourth album by the quintet. The 12-song compilation of the morse love bids and apprehensions on the group's other three albums.
Songs such as "Good Things," and "Paradise," arguably are reminiscent of the band's most successful album, "Love, Hope, Sex and Relationship." Its depiction about relationships is present in this album as in previous works.
"Can you tell me what to do/Tell me what to say/Now every little dream I dream is calling out your name."
"Do I Do," is the best example of how the group has taken their angst-ridden vision of love and set it to the sound of their last album. "Home."
"Black and White," also is a progression for this band whose praiseworthy "Love, Hope, Sex and Dreams" was followed by the medicine "Home." The album shows the band's ability to merge the sounds of their previous work while still managing to write fresh and interesting material.
MUSIC
?
Despite their sometimes main-stream sound, the band with the unusual voices of Kurt Neumann and Mike Mills lend a unique sound to every song.
Neumann and Llanas's song-writing has an edge that carries it above the sugar-coated lyrics of groups such as Nelson and Lyon Phillips. Their sound is more mature and often is more realistic than the fairy-tale dreams painted in most of today's popular songs.
"Black and White," isn't as good as "Love, Hope, Sex and Dreams," but has created an album that gets better and better each time it is listened to.
Friday
■ "Flatliners," SUA Movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
Visiting Artists Series: Robert Vernon, viola. Swarthout Recital Hall. free.
**Inge Theatre Series:** "Cinzano" and "Sinnova's Birthday." 8 p.m., Inge Theatre, tickets on sale at Murphy Hall Box Office. $3 for students.
i Ian Moore and Moment's Notice with Kilidevi Blues. 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hamshire St. $4
CALENDAR
- Wild Cards, 9.30 p.m., The Jazzhaus,
926½ Massachusetts St. $4.
- ■ "Repo Man," SUA Movie, midnight,
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
$2.50
- The Twisters, 9.30 p.m., The Mad Hatter, 904 New Hampshire St., no cover before 9.30 p.m.
"iasac in America. A Journey with Isaac Bashev Singer" and "The Cateria." SAV Movies, 4 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union.$2.
**Igue Theatre Series "Cinzano" and "Sinimina's birthday," 2:30 and 8 p.m.** Iguie Theatre, tickets on sale at Murphy Hall Box Office, $3 for students
"Flatteners," SUA Movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas
Saturday
Union, $2.50.
National People's Gang with Zoom:
9:30 p.m. The Bottlejack, 737 New
Hampshire St., $4
■ Wild Cards, 9:30 p.m., The Jazzhaus,
926½ Massachusetts St., $4.
- The Twisters, 9:30 p.m., The Mad Hatter, 904 New Hampshire St., no cover before 9:30 p.m.
■ "Repo Man," SUA Movie, midnight
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
$2.50.
Sundav
■ "Flintlers," SUA Movie, 2 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
$2.50
University Symphonic Band Spring Concert, Robert E. Foster, conductor, James Barnes and Carol Daryl Pennington, conductors, Craft-Preyer Theatre, free
**Inge Theatre Series:** "Cinzano" and "Sinnovina's Birthday." B. p.m., Inge Theatre, tickets on sale at Murphy Hall Box Office, $3 for students.
Monday
KU Percussion Ensemble Spring Concert, George Bobber, conductor, 8 p., Swainout Rectal Hall, free.
Open Mike, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., free.
Tuesday
■ "The Gods Must Be Crazy." SUA Movie, 7 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2
■ Black Cat Bone with Junkman, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., $3.
Wednesday
■ "The Gods Must Be Crazy," SUA Movie, 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas University, $2.
Concert Series: Miami City Ballet, B.p. Hoch-Audium, ticketes at Murphy Hall Box Office, $7.50 and $6 for students, all seats reserved.
The Connells with Three Merry Widows, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., advance tickets $6.
Thursday
■ "The Gods Must Be Crazy," SUA Movie, 7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.
Nick Cosmos, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., $3.
ida McBeth and Friends, 9:30 p.m.
The Jazzhass, 926½ Massachusetts St.,
$3.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITY
SUA
THE ASSOCIATE OF HANKS
EARTH DAY '91
Kansas & Burge Unions Earth Day Open House
Monday, April 22
SUA activities:
DUNK TANK 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
dunk your favorite KU people!
outside Kansas Union
50* for 1 throw, $1 for 3
MAKE-YOUR-OWN FREE
JEWELRY & GOD'S EYES
10a.m.-2 p.m. Ks. Union lobby
FREE PLANT RAFFLE
10a.m.-2 p.m. Ks. Union lobby
drawing at 3p.m. 5 winners
EARTH PHOTOS $2 each
picture yourself as the earth!
10a.m.-2 p.m. outside KU Union
Also, environmental product ideas,
tunes at noon, and more!
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10
Friday, April 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Bottleneck
Bottleneck
727 New Hampshire, Lawrence, Kansas
Tonight, 4/19
From Austin Texas'
next guitar legend Ian
Moore and Moments
Notice
with special guest
Killdevil Blues
Saturday, 4/20
From LA
National People's
Gang
with special guest
Zoom
Coming Events
4/24 The Connells
4/26 Uncle Tupelo
Coming in May
Monks of Dome,
(formerly Camper Van Beethoven)
Firehouse, Paladins,
Throwing Muses
Members & Guests welcome
Saturday, 4/20
From LA
National People's
Gang
with special guest
Zoom
Coming Events
4/24 The Connells
4/26 Uncle Tupelo
Coming in May
Monks of Dome,
(formerly Camper Van Beethoven)
Firehouse, Paladins,
Throwing Muses
Members & Guests welcome
Save Gas While Apartment Shopping
In an effort to help you with your housing needs please answer the questions below and return by mail. Once we know your needs we can get in touch with you which will save you time and money.
Name ___ Phone
Present Address
Rental Price Desired $ per/month
Would like to move in on
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lease check the appropriate boxes below that best describe your needs
Apt. □
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House □
Studio □ Apt.
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2 Br. House
Bus Route
Walk to campus
12 mo. lease
waster/Dryer
Hookup
Fireplace
please tear out and mail to:
KWM
Kaw Valley Management, Inc.
R.O. Box 323
P. O. Box 323
Lawrence, KS 66044
Office is at 901 Kentucky Suite 205
Phone: 841-6080
Warning: Excessive studying may cause spontaneous combustion.
---
So get to Benchwarmers before you blow up!
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Friday Saturday
BENCHWARMERS
Southern Hills Mall
1601 W. 23rd St.
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1999
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Hayden selected for office by Bush
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Former Gov. Mike Hayden was selected yesterday by President Bush for a senior Interior Department job overseeing the National Park Service and the Fish and Wildlife Service.
The president said he would nominate Hayden, a one-term Republican defeated in last November's election, to become assistant secretary of the Fish and Wildlife and parks. The nomination must be confirmed by the Senate.
The job has a salary of $108,300 a year.
Hayden, 47, has a bachelor's degree in wildlife conservation and a master's degree in biology. His four terms as governor ended in January.
Senior Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan, praised Hayden and predicted the former governor would win Senate confirmation.
"I don't see any problem there," Dole said.
"No doubt about it, he's committed to the environment He certainly knows a lot about wildlife He's an expert in the right sense of the word."
Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan said Hayden had outstanding records in parks, wildlife and natural resources, as well as a governor and state legislator.
Haydon would serve as one of six assistant secretaries in the department, reporting to a deputy secretary and ultimately to Lujan.
He would oversee the National Park Service, which administers 80 million acres of land in the national park system and has 13,000 full-time employees. The Fish and Wildlife Service administers 90 million acres of land, including wildfire refuges, and has about 6,300 employees.
XΩ
ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT
Mike Turner/KANSAN
Hula-hooping for hunger
Kristen Wiskur, Lenexa freshman, hula-hoops through an obstacle course in front of Fraser Hall to raise money for the war on hunger. Yesterday's event, organized by KU Students Against Hunger, featured teams representing the Arnold Air Society, the Chi Omega sorority, Hispanic American Leadership Organization and men's and women's lacrosse. Proceeds from the fund-raiser will benefit the Salvation Army Homeless Shelter and the Lawrence Interdenominational Nutrition Kitchen.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 19, 1991
11
Students compete in Relays despite weather
WICHITA STATE
392
NEBRASKA
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Denise Brungardt (center) of WSU wins the 800-meter run
Socks provide better traction in discus throw
By Rick C. Honish Kansan sportswriter
A different technique was used in your discussion disc throw in your tqaRaq system.
But Nebraska's Mike Bailey found a way to at least lift the adversity in
A light rain fell most of the afternoon, and the discus as well as the thrower.
"I put my socks on over my shoes to get better traction." Bailey said. "I had my best throw of the day like that."
Today's Events
Bailey said he told Steve Fritz about his little secret, and Fritz, an unattached athlete, went on to have his best throw.
"The next time we turned around, just about everybody had socks on like that," he said.
Fritz finished in first place in the event, with a throw of 138 feet, 4 inches.
Fritz ended up winning the death-
tion with a point total of 7,860. Right
behind him in second place was
Bailey at 7,181.
For KU, Chris Walters placed fifth and Sean Jacobson placed 11th
Fritz was not affected by the weather, either. His first throw sailed 205 feet. It was good enough for first place in the event, and Fritz stood for the stadium confident that his throw, a personal best, would stand.
The pole vault portion of the decathlon was moved indoors, as well as the women's heptathlon long jump.
Bailey finished in 10th place, with a throw of 106-2.
He said the cold weather slowed many of the times in other decathlon events and may have caused some cramping.
"I think some of the guys had trouble with their elbows in the javelins. Bailey said." They were sure they on them like they were pretty sure."
David Kaiser, Kansas Relays manager, said the decision to move those events to the Anschutz Sports Pavilion "is one of the best." "The runway for the long jump was
The weather didn't hamper Bailey, though, who had his personal best in the javelin with a throw of 160-2.
"The runway for the long jump was really wet and slick. Kaiser said."
"And the lightning and wind made us put the vault inside.
Morning Session
Time Events
8.27 Men's Billy Mills 10,000 Meter Run
12.15 Women's Sprint Medley Relay
12.20 Men's Sprint Medley Relay
Afternoon Session
Time Events
1.00 Men's Pole Vault/Men's Bill Nieder Shot Put
Men's Bill Easton 4 Mile Relay
Women's Long Jump
1.20 Women's 880 Yard Relay
1.26 Men's 880 Yard Relay
1.47 Men's Wes Santee 1,500 Meter Run
3.08 Women's 800 Meter Run
3.23 Men's 800 Meter Run
"We didn't want to risk the athletes with injury in those conditions."
The top three finishers in the heptathlon were Daphne Saunders of Barton County Community College.
Businard Rogers of Pittsburgh State
Pete Peterson of Barton County, Connec-
tion
No Kansas athletes competed in the heptathlon.
Her highest-scoring event was the long jump, in which she jumped 20 feet. 3 inches and earned 902 points
Her closest competition in the long jump was Pritchett, with a jumf of 14.5.
Eric Wilcox practices for the hammer throw at Memorial Stadium
Saunders finished with a point total of 5.019, 17 points ahead of Rogers.
- High school events start at 8:00 a.m. and run throughout the day.
MARYLAND
Hammer flies for Illinois State
Kansan staff report
The men's Bill Penny hammer throw and the inversion hammer throw were the only events at yesterdays' Big Ten basketball game than the heptathlon and the decathlon.
The Bill Penny hammer throw was named this year for the 1971 Kansas All-American and member of the 1970 indoor and outdoor national championship teams. The event is open only to collegiate-level athletes.
The invitational hammer throw is open to top collegians as well as university athletes.
Chad Canadae of Illinois State won the event with a throw of 178 feet, 2 inches.
The winner of the invitational was John Billinsley of the Stars and Strips club. He had a throw of 207,6 only 5 inches farther than the second place finisher John O'Connor of the American Big Guys club.
Fit will fight fat in battle of ages
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — The moment is at hand for George Forceman to make boxing history or be exposed as a old fatighter.
The land of 02 for the 42-year-old, 257-pound wizard of self promotion will be the Convention Center.
At the end of the yellow brick road paved by hand-picked opponents stands Evander Hollyfield, the heavyweight champion of the world.
The 28-year-old, 208-pound Hollyfield toiled for several years as a champion in the boxing wasteland and the crusierweight division.
2 When he relinquished the cruiser-
weight title and became a heavy-
weight Hollyfield was ridiculed as
a champion. In winter, too small to
become a champion.
So he simply became champion by knocking out James "Buster" Douglas in the third round Oct. 25, although most of the attention was focused on Douglas' flabby 246-pound body and his shameful effort.
For Hollyfield to keep the most lucrative title in sports, he must beat a man who has made himself the king for the middle-aged appadised set.
"What kind of credibility will I beating George Foreman?" Holy
Holyfield will have a dandy credit rating, though.
"People write, 'You got to win George, you must do it,' said Formalin, a 3-1 underdog in his bid to win the championship in any weight class.
bought, bought,
He is assured of earning at least $20
million. Foreman is guaranteed $12.5
million.
The victory would come 16 years, five months and 20 days after he lost the title to Muhammad All on an overhead knockout in Kinshaa, Zaire.
He had won the title by stopping Joe Frazier in the second round in 1974 in Kingston, Jamaica. Watching on closed-circuit television in Atlanta
was 10-year-old Evander Holyfield
After losing to Jimmy Young in 1977, Foreman retired and became an evangelist. He began his come-back in 1987.
He weighed 367 pounds for his first fight, a fourth-round knockout of Steve Zouski his weight of 257 pounds. He was the highest of the four highest for a championship bout.
Primo Carrera weighed 260½ pounds when he won the title from Jack Sharkey in 1933 and weighed 259½ and 259½ for three defenses.
After he was knocked out by Forman in the fourth round in 1990, Mike Jameson said, "I can take a punch. I can take a punch harder than anyone, like Mike Tyson."
Whatever the quality of his 24 comeback opponents, there is no question Foreman can punch hard. He knocked out or stopped 23 opponents to boost his career record to 69-2, with 65 knockouts.
Foreman has convinced more than a few boxing people that he can win.
Others see him as a snake oil salesman, who, while making jokes about eating cheeseburgers, fattened his record on hamburger opposition.
George Benton, the former middleweight contender who trains Hollyfield said that age didn't affect punching strength.
Despite Foreman's weight, trainer
Archie Moore, the 77-year-old former
light heavyweight champion who
believes Foreman is in top condition.
"He hits you with those hands, it's like a wrecking ball coming at you."
Foreman, of course, wants to win early. He doesn't want to have to haul his bulk over 12 rounds against a superbly conditioned opponent.
Tennis teams to meet final title obstacles
He believes Foreman is better now than he was in the 1970s.
"You don't lose your power," Benton said.
"He's more sage," Moore said; "He's more subtle, more devastating, more confident."
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The men, 4-0 in the Eight, and the women, 5-0 in the conference, will play host to Oklahoma State tomorrow and Oklahoma on Sunday.
Success in this weekend's duals can go a long way toward sealing a Big Eight Conference title for the men's and women's tennis teams.
The women play at 9 a.m. and the men at 2 p.m. both days at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
Because of highly competitive matches in recent years, the Cowboys and the Sooners are two teams that the Kansas players respect.
Okahla State and Oklahoma are the last two teams that could put a speedbump in the Jayhawks'
smooth trek into the conference tour nament.
"This is going to be a weekend where the dominant teams, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Kansas, are fighting for the championship," Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "We're looking forward to playing these two teams, especially at home."
The men's team might be playing with a shuffled lineup
Yesterday morning, Perelman said that Buth's status was uncertain for the weekend matches pending the outcome of a bone scan.
Kansas freshman Rhain Buth injured his left leg in Tuesday's 9-0 victory against Missouri.
The Jayhawks moved junior Patrici
RanH to No. 5 singles and subsi-
tuted junior Paul Garvin in Han's 6 tuted against the Tigers. They likely will do it again if Buth is unable to play.
The women's team also could be a player short if senior Stacy Stotts is unable to recover from a bad back caused her out of the Missouri match.
However, No. 1 singles player junior Eveline Hamers appears to have recovered from a knee injury, and the Jayhawks as a team have dominated their first five conference duals.
After the Kansas women's 9-0 victory on Tuesday, women's tennis coach Michael Center said he liked Hawks' haunts' the rest of the season.
"I told the players we had positioned ourselves well in the conference after five matches," he said. "We have the top two returning teams from last year coming here. I think we'll get a great crowd and be ready to take them on head-to-head."
Currently the women have 38 points, and the men have 31. A big lead heading into the conference tournament can make the difference between a championship and second place, Perelman said.
Every match will be particularly important to the Jayhaws this weekend as each victory counts as a point toward the Big Eight title.
"Anything beyond five points is a significant lead in my mind," he said. "Three to four points is good. Three less than three is too close."
Red Sox's Clemens beats Royals in 1-0 shutout
The Associated Press
BOSTON — A pair of two-time American League Cy Young Award winners hooked up yesterday, and an injured run was the only difference.
Roger Clemens increased his shut- out streak to 23 innings as the Boston Red Sox beat the Kansas City Royals and Bret Saberhagen 1.50
Clemens (3-0), who shut out Cleveland in his last start, allowed three hits in eight innings. He walked one and struck out 10, reaching double figures for his second straight game and the 43rd time in his career.
"It was the type of game where you hope for a break, and we got it." Clemens said after improving his lifetime record against Kansas City to 11-2. "They hit some balls hard, but our guys came up with them. I helped them win some, doing different things, and it was hard to keep it in the strike zone."
Clemens, pitching while his five-game suspension is being appealed, was scheduled for a hearing before commissioner Fay Vincent in New York to give him given the penalty for his conduct in Game Four of last year's AL playoffs.
Sabhagen (1-2) gave up four hits, struck out five and walked one in seven innings, but he was the victim of an error by leftfielder Jim Eisenerth. He also completed a three-game sweep, their first against Kansas City since 1988.
"he pitched just as well, but didn't have any luck." Clemens said.
You go in against Clemens and you expect to have a great ballgame, and that's exactly what happened." Saberhagen said. You can't make mistakes in a ballpark like this with that kind of lineau."
Wade Boggs singled with two outs
Jack Clark singled as he led off the fourth. Two outs later he advanced to third on two wild pitches by Sabahera and Quintana lined out to end the iming.
in the third for the game's first hit.
Jody Reed then broke an 0-14-7 slump by poking a 3-2 pitch into shallow left and Boggs scored all the way from first as the ball skipped past Eisenreich for an error.
Tom Brunansky双胞胎 in the seventh and took third on Quintana's and Pena then lined out, and Saberhagen too. Tim Neahring for the third time.
Sports briefs
Kansas softball awaits weekend full of games
The Kansas softball team will be at home for two full days of games this weekend.
The Jayhawks, 27-10, will play Oklahoma City for a doubleheader starting at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Jayhawk Field.
Kansas then will face Friends in two games beginning at 1 p.m. Sun-
Monday night TV spots
dav.
Yesterday's game against Wichita State was cancelled because of the weather.
No decision has been made about whether the game will be rescheduled.
Chiefs slated for three Monday night TV spot
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The Kansas City Chiefs, who appeared once last
The team said yesterday that two of the Monday night games would be at Arrowhead Stadium — against the AFC champion Buffalo Bills on Oct. 7 and against AFC West Division rival Los Angeles Raiders on Oct. 28.
season on ABC's Night Monday Football after a seven-year hiatus, will have no less than three games in the Monday spotlight this season.
"One of our goals has been to
The other Monday game sends the Chiefs to Houston on Sept. 16.
create greater national exposure for the Chiefs, and, with three games on Monday Night Football in 1991, we believe we do that," said Chiefs President and General Manager Carl Peterson.
The Chiefs played their second game of the 1990 season in Denver on a Monday night. Before that, they won against the popular time slot since Sep. 12, 1983.
From staff and wire reports
12
Friday, April 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Speaker stresses value of different perspectives
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
By taking different perspectives when looking at issues, society will dismantle common myths about different cultures and strengthen understanding through community diversity.
Terry Tatoya, a Toas Pueblo/ Warm Springs American-Indian and psychologist who is studying high-risk sex behavior among men in New Mexico and Oregon, presented that he had spent 17 years people in the Barruge Inn last night.
The forum was presented by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas as part of Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week activities.
Tatoya, who was raised to be a storyteller by his tribe, used a slide show and a traditional American Indian legend to demonstrate the difference between learning in a spiritual sense and learning in a physical sense, and to promote the ideal of looking at issues from different perspectives
"A lot of times, people who are spiritually developed can do things that seem like magic to ordinary people," he said. "That's the reason we teach these stories over and over again. To say there is no one truth; there's no one way to understanding."
Carrie Cornelius, Tecumseh junior, said Talofya's presentation encouraged people to be aware of other perspectives.
Tatya added that it was important not to lose a sense of individuality when trying to see things in different ways.
"The idea is that you share your vision," he said. "But you don't give up your way of seeing, because that's sacred."
"He pulled out so many values that are lost in this society," she said. "When I see something like that, I think, 'That's the way you should look at things, that's the way you should think.'"
ПВФ ПКА
PREZO
CUP
FIRST ANNUAL
Soccer Tournament April 15-21 Mens Division at Y.S.I. Fields Womens Division at Intramural Fields
FIRST ANNUAL SOCCER TOURNAMENT
Thanks To Our Sponsors:
USAIR, Mr. Guy, Prairie Graphics KLZR 106, Naismith Hall, McDonald Beverages, First National Bank Eastons LTD, Beauty Warehouse Fifi Nabils, Dos Hombres, Mainline Printing, Penny Construction, and Pyramid Pizza
ORIGINAL FIELD BAND
Lawrence's Queen of the 80's in back
The Kelley
Hunt Band
Rockin' R&B at Liberty Hall
Downtown Lawrence
Saturday April 20th Spn
Tickets $4 in advance $5 at the door
available at Liberty hall box office
& Mass Street Music
Classified Directory
I
100's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
110 Travel
125 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost N Found
200's
**Employment**
205 Help Wanted
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105 Personal
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Pray to G. Ishley, Miracles do happen
S W. M age: G. 42, II53 braces, brow
braces, headphones, female for
dating and possible serious relationship. Would
foreign or handcapped girl be interested? Please
contact us!
110 Bus. Personal
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EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence using iBluetooth devices. Support the use of Hyposis Hypnosis and Stress Management Center.
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305 For Sale
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Wanted
ANNOUNCING Beautal Control. Look and feed
for beauty. Call (1-800) 923-6289 for
reasonable fees
Make a SPECTACLE of yourself.
Etc. Shop Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Mass. 843-0611
120 Announcements
VISA-MC-AM.EXP-DISCOVER CARD
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and maintenance. 510 nth 4th @ 941-685-665 M VIS 6. FSA
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses 20% Below Sug. Retail The Etc. Shop
Final weeks of quitting business at the Book End, in Quantimore's Flea Market. All hardback books-1 $ no exceptions. Friday Sunday-10.5.
BATTERY can be emotional or physical.
WTCS Campus Support Group for battered teens. 7:48 call. 7:51 614-6867 for location and info
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes sense of *Western CivI* makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
*College Money, Private Scholarships You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money退换. America's Finest! Since 1921 COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS, BOSS, Box 1815270000000000
9th year SALE!
FUTONS
FRAMES
COVERS
LAMPS...
10-50% off
BLUE
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937 MASS.
841-9443
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals called回来 by counselors. Headpartners for RU info 804 3360 Sponsored by GLOSK
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER? There ever there anytime with AIRHITCH (r) for $160 from the Eagle Airline to the Midwest (when he Repared) for Times at Its Go'er (r) 212-844-3000.
PREFABRING FOR FINAL EXAMS
notes for review, memory techniques,
coping with test anxiety and text taking
examinations. (Use the free FIU FREE! FREE!) Presented by the Student Assistant
Rainbows and DeMollays welcome any members.
Call Vickie at 841-4115
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE! Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-6622 or fly a goat
FORMAL WEAR The Etc. Shop
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS. New designs, quick delivery. Order now. It's Your Party. 160) W 2rd. 749-345.
Earn up to $800-$1300/mo. part-time this summer at home. To schedule an interview, call Straight Arrow Enterprises, 842-341-40.
Not just for Biker Babes anymore!
Temporary Tissues
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-0811
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartStored.
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential
response/material will follow.
The Etc. Sho 732 Mass. 843-0611
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841-234 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
Taco Sale When: Fri April 19 Where: Lawrence
Indian United Methodist Church. 21st & Haskell.
St. Time: 4:17pm
The Etc. Shop
Metal and Sales 723 M
The French Club invites all KU students and faculty to join us at the Festival of Cultures on Saturday, April 20th in downtown Lawrenceville with a variety of French books, movies, we will be selling French foods and displaying French literature. If you have any questions or need further information, please call Kell at 749-1545.
Johnny's UP & UNDER
is available for Engagement Parties,
Birthday Parties.
Pinning Parties and any other party possible.
842-0377
Events of the Week
Jewish Film Festival
April 16-20
Woodruff Auditorium
Hillel
130 Entertainment
The Congo
Tonight:Bad Lands
Student Parties Welcome
520 N. 3rd. 842-9409
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
841.9720 R N 1
Saturday, April 20
Isaac in America
& The Cafeteria
4:00 p.m.
140 Lost-Found
Saturday, April 20
Found Black Friday 4/12 at 2pm in Fraser. One pair black sunglasses. Call Kevin 643 to describe. Found Small, gold ring in front to Wescota. To identify call 644 4388.
205 Help Wanted
Employment
4:00 p.m.
Havdalah under the Stars
Cookout, campfire, & singing
Clinton Lake
Meet at Hilul House
4:30 p.m.
For rides and more information,
call 864-3948
Johnny's Sunday Special $2.50 Cheeseburger, Fries & Draft or Soda
Assistant need to work full time in Chiropractic's office for the summer and part-time when needed. Req. Bachelor's degree or insurance billing, therapies and other office duties. Call 749-6100 to 7pm for instruction.
Babyssy wanted Must have own vehicle. 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Kids 3, 9 and 10
years old. Entrance to home must be break,
Overland Park home - area 1998 and 5
Call Nancy Cilik #275 #755 before 5 and 341-811-3
$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $
200s Employment
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camp activities, patents, peters, camping,戏剧, dramas, or riding Also kitchen, office, maintenance $1000 or more plus RM2 Marc Sweeney. 766 Maple Nbk.
COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN Deadline 4/26/91 Salary $150-$600 monthly Dates include support of data communications and networking working primarily in "C" on MS OS UNIX, and information management, documentation, and maintenance of existing software systems. Installing communication software will require training in configuring suits with staff and users in computer communications and networking areas. Apply to subject: Information Systems Manager, Ata Heinrisson, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
SUMMER INTERNSHIPS Make $5,000 Gain Experience
Full-time Summer Work: Are you looking for a job that’s exciting, challenging and rewarding? Work with other college students and see another country. Great money! Call 1-800-629-2838
FUNDRAISER- We're looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would like to make $500,100 for a one week marketing campaign. Send resumes to Fundraiser at Ackley Bancorp and hardworking. Call Ackley at 800-592-3213.
Interviews
Friday, April 19th
Pioneer Room, Burge Union
12:00pm and 3:00pm
(Please be prompt)
The Southwestern Company
Fun & Exciting-Plus you can make $10 hour waitressing. Must start part time now. 18 yrs and up. Ampl 1:30/5:00 today at 9:00 Mississippi)
HAVE THE SUMMER OF A LIFE DAY! Take the Ebola Lake is looking for men and women to be the most important person in a kite fly. We have all the equipment needed to offer why not give us a call. You may contact our campuses representer Ben (841) 7651) or get in touch with us directly at Harville Ave. 412-873-4955.
Here is an opportunity to earn money, see the country, and keep physically fit all in one exciting job. We will train you to drive a truck and move from place to place. 21 East St or call 843-4839 right away.
Kansas & Burge Union Food Service catering department needs a part-time person to work very flexible hours as needed including *Some* start rates at $7.50 per hour. No fringe benefits. Must be experienced in arranging salad meat and pasta dishes. Must be able to adhere to standard health sanitary and
NANIES immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida. Excellent salaries plus benefits. 1 year commitment. Call for representative. 915-877-3044
personal hygiene requirements AEP, Kansas Union Personal Equipment, AEP; Hoover & Lewis is looking for a part-time delivery work. Work 10-15 per week. Must have reliable transportation, current insurance, and a good driving record. Earn $4/hr + commission + tips. Don't delay.
Need money fast! Make up to $125.90 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary.
+800-695-2789
Need person to show apartments, answer phones and general office work. Full time in summer employment or study work eligible. Call Mary Pat at 241-600-8583. Applicant must have needed beginner processing, general accounting procedures, processing, general accounting procedures, skills required. Mail resume to Mary Pat at 242-850-7493. Send letter of interest, resume, and name and phone number of 242-850-7493. Mail resume to Mary Pat at 204-899-7443. KS 6004-7493 (142)
Sitter needed for summer for 12 yr old boy
Alamara area. Live in optional. Room and board
newvised 749-4538 after 6.
SUMMER-FALL PARK TIME JOB as personal care attendant for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Mature length of stay required. Afternoons and mornings. Available to work during KU vacations a plus. Good job for OT, JTF, or RN. Requires education in students or persons with like interests. Reliable car and phone required. U.C. Citizenship desired. Job number 1688 between Lainn signup weeks to apply.
SUMMER Tailors in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs coaches in训:WSI, Tennis, Arts & Crafts/Creativity, Soccer Coach, Technical Coaches. Call Info: 1-843-443-6288 Call Adrian ASAP 1-843-443-6288
Textbook Clerks: KB Bookstores. Part time $48 per hour. position could possibly last until Sept 16, 1985. Job duties include booking hours of farm and 1pm. Weekends as scheduled. Must speak English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods, understand English, know how to work on employment and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant to have interested or knowledge of books, computers, or Office Level 5.10 and EOE.
Summer John outdoors, over 7,000*openings!* National Parks, Forests, Free Fire, Seed Stamp For Free Details, Sullivan's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kallipell, MT 9901
Telemarketing: Mon Thur, 6.9pm Call Mon Thur
6-6pm, 841-1209
WATER-SAI COUNSELORS' boy camp in Berkshire Mountain, West MA. Good salary, excellent training facilities with a 3 male hike. Move children & caregivers to Camp Call or visit Camp Wimpsa. $5 Glen Lane.
Want a summer job where you can lose weight,
feel great and earn lots of money? Please call
Debbie (816) 442-2553.
WRITTEN WANTED. Pest need words, word needs
and research questions to help a writer.
writer (human interest). Environmental, New
york.
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Driver education offered to mid-Minister Driving School, serving K-U students for 20 years, driver's license obtained, transportation provided; ed. 841-7749
16 East 13th 842-1133
Government photo, passports, immigration,
banking. Req.: BS or equiv in CS or
bAW, color. Call Tom Sellwes 794-8011
PRIVATE OFFICE
Observation Boat Tours Overland Park
over park
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street
841-4000
235 Typing Services
1. d her Word Word Processing. Former editor transforms your adventure and accurately spelled letters of a letter type; 842, 2663 or even days.
2. dollar per double-page space. Rub jobs to proper formats.
3. word processing. 1. Word Processing. Term Paper, letters, resumes, etc. 842-4754, 3:00 - 30 p.m. wkday.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25;double spaced page. Call 10 a.m - 6 p.m.
Mrs. Mattila 841-1219
A- Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana
pipes. Give your words the professional appla-
uance they deserve . 492 7838.
C-B Lite U, Services 491 0942 Term
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942 Term papers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Damn Good Typin
By Dixie
843-6500
Dona's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term paper types, desserts, letterss
resumes, assignments, mails lasts. Laser
printing and spelling corrected. GW B-218 W.SH E.
N
FAST ACCURATING STATUS 43; 50 per page. Includes PCI and DEL anywhere in city limits. Transmissions and Database Projects also handled. Call Macat. 841. 802. 782
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 6255
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, $927. $Mass. 841-1071.
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call 842.3206
Research Projects* Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires Call
KeyWorks. 842.8307
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. 814 6254
Merchandise
305 For Sale
16 foot Hobie Catamaran. New condition! Trailer with sail tube, lots of extras. $3500. 841-594-leave message
1987 Cannondale racing bike, Shimano 600, hardy used. $400 neg. Call Sam, 865-1510.
1985 Honda Elite, Low mileage. Like new. $490.
841-6186.
CHEAP plane ticket KCI to College Station, Texas or to Houston April 26-28. For more info call 864-1628
Custom box with two "12" Orion extreme subwoofer $300 Rockford Flood Punch 75 HD amplifier $250 Call after 6pm at 848-8948.
FOR SALE: Hamilton Hydraulic Drafting Station
v/ Wemco drafting machine Good condition.
orig. $2,500; $500 obo Call M-F 8-5. 841-7641.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks, tenis, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear, combat bandana and Specklebands. Also kids' items: 1-437-724-3784 St. Mary's Sports Sales, St. Mary's, MS Harleyseye Honda Rebel 400 Silver Amber Gargek Garglee Gargek Gargek turrid, Terry: 841-287-8
Honda Elite Moped 50cc 70 miles, almost new
699. Call them 12:30 am. 865-0677.
Imagewriter-Compatible printer for any Macintosh computer. 5 months old, accessories included. $225, Firm. 749-420.
MT BIKE, "Giant", 58 cm black, DECOR XT, extr. lightweight. Like New worth $100, asking price $399.
NEW LEGIH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 150 NEW LEGIH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 150 PIPL (INCL GARAGE) GASPO 842-841-646.
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walks welcome. Call 843-4111. Ask for sales/service department.
PUMP (INCLUDES GAUGE) $250.84-914.66
One-way ticket, KCI to DFW on May 10th: $100
ooo Call Kelly. 884-811-67
Step-by-step manuals that can make you up to $19b by next week. Few remain. Send $5 (refundable) to P.O. Box 44212 Lawrence, KS 6004.
Waterbed 4 sale. Single-super. padded side rails.
headboard with armrest. $99. $41. 2702
YAKIMA GT bike sied-complete. $45.10 o b o
$48.4731.
340 Auto Sales
1982 Blue Buck LeSabre, AC, new brakes, good condition, $1200 or best offer. Mail 462-7415.
condition, $1200 or best offer,
*Toyota Supra, black with gray leather,
sunroof, 5 spd, sports pkg w/ 4 mounted
Yokohama snowboards 61 KMiles 8100 8417 877
Plymouth Horizon, auto, a/c /m fm, 13.00
mile, like new interior, $600 negligible call
1990 Plymouth Laser RS, automatic, A/C, factory CD player, Blue, 15K miles, perfect condition.
$12.500, 841-4777
4 Sale '35 Cilica GT, PS PB, AC, am/fm cass
Good condition. $3000 b o. Call 864-2874
/ SELL LOAN CASH
On TV, TV's. VCK, vears' stereo, musical in
stuffs, cameras and more. We honour
Visa/MC/AMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn &
Jewelry 1084 W. 6th 749 1919
A HOUSE
Lawrence Glass Tinting. Special rates for
students. Call anytime. 7am to 10pm. 777 E. 22nd
841-7019.
Wanted 'CD-', $0.90 and down Records and tapes-$2.90 and down Top dollar for collections Alcat Cal Store, 717 Massachusetts, 865-0122
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
or 12 females for summer sublease. Great location,
nice, spacious, pool, AC, DW, MW, Rent negotiable! Please leave message, 865-2822
1 BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! for rent or buy
$275/mo. 842-9136
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1 Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-8971/843-0601
2 Bdr apt available August. Walk to KU or downtown. Wood floor, washer/dryer hookups. Water paid no. Pipes 841. mo. 014-7024
1 bedroom apartment available June 1st. Option for fall. Wood floors, orient rug, washer/dryer private entrance. Must see 965-0038
2 bedroom/2 bath summer sublease in
Meadowbrook. We rent for $750/mo. We'll rent to
$370/mo. Water, cable paid pool* Sorry,
no pets. Call 814 691 697
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option
Spacious Economical AC, DW, on bus route Call 649-3477
2b apt available in new building of West Hills ap. for June 1. Great apt with microwave, a wedge, compost heap, energy efficient gas heat. Great location near campus. 100 Emery Eldr 400-405 no pets
br t rwchome, 2*b*, wa, h, dg, wage, dry
utilities, available 6/1. Sunrise Village 843-4093
3 studio apt for rent starting at $255.00 No pets
卡 749-7568
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, disability, 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 dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
4 BR apt for summer sublease. 2 w卫, WD, DAC.
A microwave, farmhouse, tennis courts, on busn.
Route. Village. Call Kim. 865-0625, leave
message.
- Chamberly Place Apartments, 170h Ohio (new construction) 1 and 2 BR (Formerly Villa Capi) * Memorial View Apartments, 165h Massachusetts 1 and 2 BR-1 bath with washers/dryers. Across from Memorial 541h Michigan 8plex, 1 yr old-1 BR-3 BR-2 bath. All with washer/dryer/brass dishwasher. Call for room. 1BR-1 bath and 3 BR-2 bath. Great prizes. Call today! First Management 749156. Open house every Saturday from 12:55 at Bradford Square, 911 Colorado # C. Office hours Mon-Fri.
You are concerned about the environment?
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower
Coffee. We teach you how to be an eco-
aware customer. Available June or August. Efficiency. 1 bedroom,
2 bathrooms, or up and up. No pets. 841-1049
Now that you've read it Recycle it! (thanks again)
Available 16th June this fall to the fall term or August 15th. FURNISHED 2nd floor 3birth a/w/baby in private home. Ideal for couple or 2 women. Required credit. No phone calls, Deposit and references required. No pets. Smokers preferred. 40plus $1 x water and electricity. 843-7697 after 2pm. If no answer call.
Available immediately. Large 1 bedroom apt. for rent. 1 block from Union. Must see. Call 841-5797 or 865-0101. Leave message.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 19, 1991
13
Available June and July for sublease 2 bedroom
close to campus and downtown.
855-761-4300.
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300-445/1mo. Call 845-2116.
Coops have been part of KU since 1919. Come join a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun, socially responsible, environmentally conscious, and sustainable. Sunrise House 146 Tennessee; 149-8071 or 814-2352.
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people) Clean and efficient, large deck. 843-3961
EMBRY PLACE
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and pad, paid $25 per month. Available immediately. Two bedrooms. Some with utilities paid. Celling fans, mini blinds, one block from campus at 1419 and 1423 Obj 08a2.
Excellent Location! 1 block to campus; 2 bedrooms
in the building. Amenities include:
puppies, available June 1 600 at 1348 Ohio Chu;
call 877-795-5200.
Female for summer sublease. Close to campa-
ly furnished. Own room and bath. No security.
$500 per month.
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice townhouse $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! Call May. Ann Call (eventsl best) 814-4548
Giant one bedroom apartment in new older house, wooden floors, sun room, a/c gas and water paid. Available June. $430. No pets. 841-1074.
Got Married, need subetter. 1 bedroom apartment with fireplace, wet bar, full appliances.
Water and cable included. $300. 843-8023
GREAT SUBLEASE: 2 BR w/ microwave. May rent paid. Call campus. Will 844-4121
Great location for KU and downtown Studio apt 421.
Great location for Call and chat 421.
Great location. Quiet and comfortable bedroom apartment with superspace, CA, Woodland.
June 1, June 8, 140 at 801 Mississippi. Call 424-8421.
Hey KU HC students-move in June 1 and receive $1 off your rent for 2 months. *Studios, 1 and bedroom apartments. Heat and water paid*. Hey KU HC Med. Center Rain Tower Apts. 913-831-9634
House share 2 BR, bkg yard. $187,500 mo 414 Minnesota.
Call 843-8436
Huge 2 bedroom summer sublease. Free furniture
use if necessary. Gas/water paid. 865-1387. Leave
message.
International Students: Tired by kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stays up 365 days of wear and is a great make friends. 146 Tencent. 149/867 and 149/868.
Leasing, now for Fall or summer 2 bpr. kit
4 plex 12 month season. CA DW. Close to Campus,
off street parking, Low Utilities Call 842-6744
for Trac or Leave message
Lorinar Townhomes 3801, Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand-
new available. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
July, May or for 12 months. 871-8483, 7843-8483.
Need a place during summer school?
once you find it, fr available in quiet apartments or other accommodations.
One nice br apartment close to campus. Hard wood floors, off street parking. No pels. 780-2910
Nice, specie 3 bdr duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, central air, W/D hockup, garage, low utilities. Avail. in June. $40/mo. No pets. 843-2888
No hill to climb! Large 1 bedroom at 11th and Louisiana Central air, laundry facilities, maintenance staff. Avail May or June through Aug. $245; Call Bags, 865-357-6357
Nice studio at 1032 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts. Water paid 843-5272.
Now leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Siproutside Plaa Apt. 153, rented $75. 2 rooms start at $15. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1166.
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apartment. Apsen West Apartment. $35 for bedroom, $75
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to campus.
Call 842-1840 or 842-189
Spoil Yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apartment.
W/D, DW, Microwave. Sublease $96. Call
865-3837.
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom townhouse with 2 bathrooms. $185.00 per month.
¹ utilities. $641.2852
Studio apt at 1028 Mississippi. Available now
$205.00 plus deposit 749-7568
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 108 West Campus Water, gas, cable paid-$300.00 941-6682
SUBLEASE at HANOVER PLACE. Furnished one bedroom. From mid-May to December. Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386 6pm-11pm.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 BR. $1/hr. Rent and furnishings not negotiable. Close to Campus. 865-4736.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Orchard Corners. Rent or lease building bus line bus road. $70/mo call. Phone 843-7481.
SUBLET 2 rooms in 3r. townhouse, Avail. early
payment. Call Extremities, Please call 842 7333
*Exc. Intrventure*. Please call 842 7333
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 bedroom, garage. AC.
2021 Heatherwood. 841 9707.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 4 bedroom house. 1315
N.H. $100/mo. neg. Cool House. Swell location.
Call 842-785.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beginning May 1 or June
J- July 31. Four bedroom townhouse in Sunrise
Village 855-606. No deposit necessary
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall 1
bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid.
All electric. 157 Llynn Ct. Sundance. 852-5235 or
843-6614.
SUMMER SUBLASELE: 3 bedroom, 2 full bath apartment. Air conditioned, washer/dryer, off street parking, dishwasher, microwave Great Room. KU or downtown. By Joe's Number: 84277588.
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location, at a superior price.
bedrooms, 2 floors Call 842-3350 (34 HOURS)
Suburban two bedroom suite with W/D
Cabinet Floor
Fully equipped
month 749-2681 or 842-3040, ask for Jennifer
June 1 June 17 29 b/1 bath fireplace $500/mo
June 1 July 18 29 b/1 bath fireplace $500/mo
Sublease: Three bedroom apartment close to campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 865-297
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2
bathrooms from KU to off-street parking.
no pets. 641-500-6900
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 b/f from KU with of-street parking. No pets. 841-5600.
Summer Sublease 3 rooms available May 1- July 1
Uninfirmed 2斗埋塘 townhouse in Somerville Village. Female non-smoker $100/mo plus $140 refundable deposit. 749-1500.
Summer Sublease: V cool studio near 9th and Ohio. Deck. $250/mo 863-890.
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $350. 2 bedroom
$90 and 1 bedroom $250. Heatherwood Valley
Apts. 845-4754.
Summer sublime: Spacious 2 bedroom apt at Northwinds. 3 backs of north 0 of Michigan W/D. hookups. Brand new. $75/月 plus utilities. Call 841-5665.
Summer sublease: Two bedroom apt -close to campus. Two to four people. 841-2568.
Summer sublease with option for fall 3 bedroom
$505.00 Water, gas paid. 841-4708
$505.00 Water, gas paid 841-4708
Summer sublure-Bacard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
932 West 2nd Street
Summer sublease with option for fall. 1 bedroom.
in large, beautiful home. Close to campus. Prefer
non-smoking upperclassman or grad student.
$170.00/mo. Call Frank, 865-3622
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt. water,
toilet and laundry facility! $109/mo.
Tel: 454-742-8932
Fax: 454-742-8940
Suburban sublease. Available May 15-Aug 15 with an option to renew. Clean 2 bedroom apartment located on south side of town away grocery store, fast food, and other entertainment. Laundry room available. Ideal for anyone needing a place to stay for summer session. If interested, call 748-2789.
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom house. Close to campus. 1000/m² Call Anna or Greg. 481-4763.
Summer startle starting in June at Orchard Corners. For more info: 481-4728
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT /Reliable
- KU Bus Route-Holdome
- On Site MGT./Reliable
24 hrs Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- 10 or 12 March Leaves
- Low Security Deposit
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Special
Office Hours: M-F 1:50-1:00
WKNS - BY APPL.
630 Michigan 749-7297
Boardwalk
apartments
Showing Units Daily 9-6
842-4144
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
appliances
Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
LEARN THE A B Cs of NAISMITH.
Affordable Living
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Detter quality living
We have our own
anytime, and great social events.
Summer sublease. Semi-furnished 2 br, jacuzzi,
nice & clean, rent negotiable. Also, female roommate needed for next year, non-smoker. Jill.
865-049
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Convenient location
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route Naismith spells out a wise living move.
Summer sublease Spacious 3 bdrm, new kitchen,
dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, good price
842-4603
Summer tableware. Roommate waged. April Free.
Basically every package. Copy, nice. Mail:
$10 plus utilities. Code 841 8314 or 842 4735
Leave message.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 146 Tennessee
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
A
Pool
Close to KU bus route
Water paid
South Pointe APARTMENTS
for Summer & Fall
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- mini-blinds
- central air & gas heat
- large rooms & closets
- Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
- refreshing pool*
843-6446
2166 W 26th
LIFE BUDGET
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
WOODWAY
WOODWELL
AFFILIATIONS
Each apartment features
-Washer and dryer
-Mirrors
-Gas heat, central air
-Large bedrooms
-Mini blinds
-On KU bus route
-Carports available
1 bedroom $250
2 bedroom $440
3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
Whole house, 3 bedrooms plus walk to KU or downtown, townhouses, floor a/cs, a wash/ dryer hookups, dishwasher, sun deck, off street parking, available, June 84-$0.90 $piles, ku1-81047
Special
S
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Swan Management
- 1-2-3-4 bed aparts.
Open House M-F 1.5 p.m.
Sat. 11:3 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
Please call Kristy for add
- Graystone
G
West Free APARTMENTS
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
FROM SAME
A
bathroom apt. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water bath)
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
and unfurnished
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
2 bedroom aparts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(water paid)
Great location
HEY!
"FRESH"
FISH!
THANKS!
(water paid!)
2 bedroom ants 950 sq ft
Near campus
1:00 A-4:30 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
Enlarged to Show Texture
中国铁塔集团股份有限公司
--studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts.
2 & 3 bedroom townhouses among a peaceful country
Sunrise Apts
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs
Wow!
AN X-TRA,
X-TRA LARGE
SUMMER
SWEATSHIRT
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Studios
- Tennis Court, Pools
* Free Cable T.V. (PL & Terr.)
- Garages (VIII.)
- Tennis Court Pools
---
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
- On Bus Route
& Apartment Living
IN A RECENT SURVEY, IT WAS FOUND THAT THREE OUT OF EVERY FOUR BIRTHDAY PRESENTS ARE RETURNED...
- Close to Campus
MY VERY
OWN RUNN
SLIPPERS!
THANKS,
DIXIE!
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
Open House Daily
CLOSE
YOUR EYES.
ADDison,
IT'S A
SURPRIZE!
THIS I THINK
I'LL BE
KEEPING...
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
Two story 3 bedroom bedroom in good condition
two downtown and bus route. Original wood work
$475 a month plus utilities $475 deposit, 12月
available. June 1. No pets. Non-smoker on
campus.
WETLANDBROOK
meadowbrook
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Visit Meadowbrook Apts Wide range of GREAT
by Brian Gunning
- Lighted Tennis Courts
* Two Pools
- Laundry facilities in most buildings.
Carports/Garages available
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Playgrounds
Free Basic Cable KU Bue Store
- Experienced Professional Maintenance
Sorry No Pets
MON-FRI 8:5-30 SAT 8-5
424-4200 SUN 1-4
It's Time to Step Up to
MEADOWBROOK
---
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!!
- Volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
$355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
OFFERS
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1 2 + 3 4 Bedroom Apartments
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HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Muses
1212 * 14th & Mass.
KENTUCKY PLACE
749.0445 * 1310 Knotts
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
841-5255 * 7th & Florida
9424455
749-2415 * 10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226·15th&Kasold
THE FAR SIDE
**Women students:** Want to live in a non-exe-**
environment where you can learn repair and
maintenance skills. Sun Flower House, Hine-
ne Park, 749-8071 or 841-0484.
749-8071 or 841-0484
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626
430 Roommate Wanted
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share
2 BR app at Northwinds. Own room. Brand new
4187.50 mo plus 3 utilities. 842.3371
Female non-smoker to assume $ _{1/2} $ lease 6-1 in lg sunny apt. $ \mathrm{182.50 plus } _{1/2} $ utilities. 843-6136 or 843-3040.
Female, non-specialized roommate needed for Fail
Share a twin bed, owner room, w/d, central
chair, shared bathroom. Bathroom $125;
$120/$160 monthly plus $4 t匀ities. Prefer grad
upperclassman. Annette. 864-313-1391.
Uppercaseclassman. Annette. 864-313-1391.
Female roommate summer sublease. Own bedroom. close to campus. non-smoker.
$200 month, $_ utilities. 865-3822.
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share
spacious house $160 month plus utilities. Alison,
965-2578
Female roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in Meadowbrook. Water, cable paid. Pool! Call 865-0829
Female roommate wanted for summer: One bedroom in house. Share kitchen and bath. May rent FREE $218 mow + $5 utilities 7/1-7/31 Located on 13th Vermont. Call 864-6813.
Help! Roommate needed immediately for
spacious apartment two blocks from campus.
B47-50, utilities off, low street parking. 832-0730.
Melanue.
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month.
749-3678
Male roommate needed. Duplex S.W. part of
town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robt. 842-4255
One female roommate needed for 4 bdrm 2 bathroom apt at Orchid Corners. Starting Aug. 91. Call Samhan. 749-4797.
one roommate wanted for nice spacious two-bedroom, two bath apartment in K.C. Near KU Med Center. Sublease for summer. Call 813-296-9007
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. 91. Large apartment, furniture, W/D, summer storage. 841-3330.
Quiet, tidy roommate with sense of humor for $12
big house. $225. 841-1532. West Lawrence.
- **wasted:** House bordering campus,
non-smoker, clean, responsible. Rent: $225.00.
total. Call Rick at 749-2564.
Roommate wanted for fall, non-smoker, organized, mid to late twenties. Apartment has all conveniences, 5 minute walk to kitchen, laundry room, call like at 841-017 and 8637 or 3429.
Roommate needed. $150 a month. NoUtil. No lease required.Call 832-1438 after 6:00 pm.
mindshift* 5 adults *1 or people* (male of female)
birthday room 2 bed/ bathroom 2 at ORCHARD
ONNERS Pool Bedroom on bus route
185/month plus 8 utilities. Call Nancy 841-227.
Summer sublease. Option to take over lease in fall.
Brand new 2nd br 2 one female roommate wanted $180/month. Call J.A.Lynn, 841-1149.
Summer sublease. Two roommates needed.
Large furnished apartment. $180/mo. 4' utilities.
1310 Kentucky. Near campus. 843-2299
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer sublease. Call Rebecca, 865-0574.
Wanted Mist-1st -non-homophobic female room-
room. Use washbasin and closet, close to
campsis. Full baths. WD Jackets. Carport.
carport $145.00 mo *plus* 4 units. Must
installed immediately, will negotiate on the
price.
By GARY LARSON
THE ARTIST THINKS OF THE Cows IN THE MOON.
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
4. 8 Lawson
The curse of "artist's block"
14
Friday, April 19. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
“ ”
[If I had to teach full-time, I think I'd go crazy. If I traveled all the time, I know I'd go crazy. If I had to do therapy full-time, I'd go nuts, too. But being able to do all of these things makes me feel like I have died and gone to heaven."
Dennis Dailey
In teaching sex, Dennis Dailey doesn't screw around
YOU DON'T
EXPECT THE
UNEXPECTED YOU
WILL NEVER FIND
IT.
Bv adding humor to his lectures. Dennis Dailey makes his sex education class entertaining.
By Shannon Peters
special to the nansan
Three hundred students sat in Wes-
een Auditorium, waiting for a film to begin.
Some talked quietly to people sitting around them; others sat without saying a word. After looking over the bus, a few students got up and left.
A few minutes later the lights were turned out and the film began. A picture of a man was projected onto the large screen in front of the class.
The students watching this film were in an undergraduate social welfare class titled "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life." taught by Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare.
Humor and shock
Teaching the students how to mas turbate was one of many goals Dailey had for the semester. His class covers all aspects of sex education.
"It still remember the first day of class," said Carla Puky, Venezuela senator. "He told us that the goal of our class is to imagine our parents 'doing it.'"
Dailey's humorous, sometimes shocking, approach to sex puts his class in demand. Dailey said that the course reached its maximum enrollment of 308 students quickly and that all his students were juniors and seniors.
Michelle Volke, Wichita senior and a student of Dailey's, said, "it basically a senior class because it closes so quickly. Lots of people want to take it, and you have to get an early enrollment to get in."
Dailey said the demand for his class was high because fewer than 10 percent of all people had received sex education from their parents.
This deficiency of sex education in homes is what drew Dailey to teaching the subject. He teaches one graduate and one undergraduate
"Young people don't get near the comprehensive sex education they need to guarantee their healthy adult sexual relationships," he said. "I provide students a chance to learn what they didn't get anywhere else."
class each semester. He said he believed that professors should make the subjects they teach come alive.
"I think you can entertain and enlighten at the same time," Dailey said. "I've known some brilliant people who teach their way out of a paper sack."
Puky said Dailev did not have this problem. Dailey received the Chancellor's Professorship Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1990. Stories, examples and occasional jokes make his classroom lively.
"One time we were watching a film on the birthing process," Puky said. "A security guard came in looking for a guy from the class. Before the guard left, Dailey asked him. Would you like to stay and help us push?"
"Every class period is a memorable experience. His classes are always educational, but he makes them funny, too."
Dalley said his goal as a professor was to be a role model for at least one student.
'I hope that someday, some
human sexuality professor will be saying that part of the reason he or she is teaching is because of me, he said "If you get one person saying 'You believe you've done what you were supposed to do while you were here'."
The college classroom is not the only place where Dailey teaches about sex. He offers private sex therapy for both heterosexual and homosexual couples, and for more than 20 years he weekly talk show on KLZR radio. The program, "Let's Talk Sex," was discontinued in November.
Dailey said that if he could buy delay equipment, which would allow him to screen out joke calls, he probably would put the program back on the air. He said that if he had more spare time he would consider
"I was sorry to see it go, but there developed a lot of poke calls in the last few weeks," Dailey said. "I believe that show represented a real service. A lot of people were listening."
doing the show via a national satellite, with a toll-free telephone number
"It's a lot more work and requires sponsorship," he said. "You have to sell the program. Our hope is to at least get it back on in the Lawrence, Topela, Kansas City, Manhattan and Emporia area."
Dailey does not need the radio program to keep him busy. In addition to his other activities, he prepares for conferences all over the country.
His younger years
Dailey said that when he was a child, he did not dream he would be giving presentations, writing and teaching.
"When I was really small, up until I was in junior high school, I wanted to go back."
Dailey lived in small towns in Minnesota until he was 12, when his family moved to Minneapolis. His father changed occupations frequently, working as a barber, running a gas station and managing a little store. His mother took care of her brother, who is two years younger.
"I grew up in the woods and on the water," Dailey said. "A small town is a great place for a kid. You know anybody and everyone knows you."
When Dailey was in junior high, he became involved in church youth activities and attended church camps during the summer months.
“Out of that experience and a friendship with a youth minister, I decided to do people-work instead of teaching planes and computers,” he said.
Dailey said he went to Hammie University in St. Paul, Minn., with the intention of becoming a Methodist minister. However, while he was there he decided he would prefer a college. He left despite his strong religious faith. He changed his major and got a bachelor's degree in social work.
When he was a senior, he met Judi Brown, who was a freshman at Hamline. They were married after his graduation in 1960 and had two daughters, Lisa and Amy. Dailey went on to graduate school at the University of Missouri, where he got his master's degree in social work in 1963.
"If I was in the lounge and I heard someone say, 'about a Professor' and they kept him silent."
Forrest Swail, who is director of the social welfare bachelor's program and assistant professor of management at MU, gave MU and knew Dailey in the 1960s.
"He was a bright, energetic, inquiring young man," Swail said. He can teach because he makes sex lessons for students. He knows his material."
Dailey came to KU in 1969, after getting his doctorate in social work at Washington University in St. Louis. Judy Dailey went back to school and earned bachelor's and master's degrees in social work from KU. She worked as a teacher for a year. She said that it was interesting playing her dual role as wife and student but that she worried about caves-dropping on her classmates.
his wife, I would get up and leave," she said.
Heaven on earth
A wooden sign reading "Century Estates Erected 1883" stands in the front yard of the house that the Daileys call home. The red brick house with white shutters is surrounded by tall trees, a blackberry patch, a vegetable garden and a large red wooden barn. The house stands on five acres of land at 19th Street and Haskell Drive, and has been placed on the National Register of Historic Homes.
Inside the house are many antiques, collected by the Daileys.
"My special interest is in old Keenkitter tools and glass candy containers," Dalley said "I don't do anything with them. I just look at
Dailey said he spent his free time talking to his wife, who is a clinical social worker at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Dailey said he also enjoyed going to KU basketball games and reading. He likes non-fiction books, especially biographies and feminist feature, and he also likes Ms. magazine.
"I read that magazine cover to cover," he said. "I can't wait for it to come each month."
Amy and Lisa Daisley, who now are 27 and 29, both graduated from KU and have moved from the house. Lisa went on to KU's law school and is employed by the NCAA, and Amy is a teacher at Baldwin Junior High School.
"They are incredibly neat when bailes are." They're two of my best.
Dailey said he considered himself a lucky person. Unlike many people who spend their lives in jobs they do not like. Dailey said he enjoyed what he was doing and had been happy with his life for many years.
"If I had to teach full-time, I think I'd go crazy," he said. "I I traveled all the time, I know I'd go crazy. If I had to do therapy full-time, I'd go nuts, too. But being able to do all of these things makes me feel like I have died and gone to heaven."
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V
VOL.101,No.136
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA; KS 66612
TAIKE STUDENT NEWSPAFER OF THE TANIVERSARY OF KAANSAF
TAIKE STUDENT NEWSPAFER OF THE TANIVERSARY OF KAANSAF
MONDAY, APRIL 22, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Weekend events mark Earth Day
CINEMAS
TICKETS
Four-year-old Neela Sandal, left, and 6-year-old Kaitlin Kilduff chase after a giant bubble during an Earth Day celebration yesterday at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Festivities teach children about ecological issues
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
The children visited seven stations, each of which featured an activity related to the environment
"It was neat. They were asking us questions because they were truly concerned."
At one station, volunteers discussed the ingredients of chocolate chip cookies and explained to the children that to have safe cookies to eat, there had to be a safe environment.
Although few local events were planned today for Earth Day 91, KU students and Lawrence resisted the event during the weekend.
Local elementary school children participated in an Earth Day carnival Friday sponsored by Environs, a KU environmental group.
Gretchen Goodman, Overland Park junior, volunteered at the carnival. She said that community response had been good and that about 650 elementary students had attended the carnival.
"The younger kids got a lot out of it," she said. "A lot of them already knew about environmental concerns from their schools."
PACIFIC OCEAN
BARRICA
AFRICA
SOUTH AFRICA
GREENland
AUSTRALIA
NEW ZEALAND
SWITZERLAND
MEXICO
CUBA
DENMARK
NORWAY
ISLA MÓNICA
HONOLULU
CORPILLA DE ESPAÑA
UNION ESPAÑOLA
Earth Day
Goodman said that about 25 KU students volunteered to help at the carnival. Some of the volunteers were Enviros members, and others just wanted to participate in the Earth Day celebration.
Alan Nelson, Environs member, said the volunteers had a good time with the children.
"We probably had a better time playing with the kids than they had at the carnival," he said. "On a campus, you don't see that ruffy kids."
Another Earth Day celebration that Lawrence residents participated in took place yesterday at the North Smith and Massachusetts streets.
The event was sponsored by Objij Farm School, an alternative private school for students in kindergarten through fourth grades.
Joy Eckertson, a coordinator of the event, said there were many
activities for the children, including a sing-along, storytelling and a play performed by children at Obiji.
In addition to several individual musicians and a band that provided entertainment for all, information
booths were set up from environmental organizations and businesses in Lawrence.
Shannon Chappell, a representative of Voice, which sponsored a booth, said there was a lot of
"Last year's Earth Day celebration was bigger, but it was a novelty then," she said. "There are a lot of people this year with a committed interest."
enthusiasm at the event.
Officers shoot, kill armed man
Kansan staff report
Police officers shot and killed an armed man yesterday morning at a residence at 1627 E. 18th Street Terrace. Lawrence police reported
The victim was identified as Gregory Allen Sevier, 22.
Police officers answered a call at 2:28 a.m. from relatives of the victim who said he was armed and disguised about personal problems, police said.
According to a police statement, officers responded to the call and followed up on the information.
frontation with Sevier when they arrived.
"Shots were fired by the officers, and the family member was killed," the statement said.
The two officers involved in the shooting were placed on administrative leave with pay.
The Douglas County Sheriff's Office and KU police are assisting the Lawrence police in an investigation of the incident.
Lawrence police are expected to release more information on the shooting today.
Nationwide survey ranks Med Center as sixth out of 66
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Medical Center is the sixth best medical school in the nation emphasizing in primary care, according to a survey published today in U.S. News and World Report.
The category of primary care was defined as practice in the areas of pediatrics, family practice and general internal medicine.
Matt Tucker, U.S. News and World Report representative, said there were 66 primary care medical schools in the United States. The University of Kentucky tied with KU for sixth place.
James Price, dean of the Med Center, said he heard the results of
the survey last week.
"If they're going to say something about you, it's nice if it good," he said.
Fred Hannon, media relations coordinator for US News and World Report, said 7,827 surveys were sent, of which 3,538, or 45.2 percent, were returned. That far exceeded the expected response.
"They were sent to the deans of medical school and the heads of the departments."
Tucker said the survey was based on academic reputation. The survey asked about such areas as the internship residency director heads of departments, deans of the medical schools and deans of academic affairs.
KU squad paddles foes in concrete-canoe races
Kansan staff writer
Bv Beniamin W. Allen
KU continued its domination in racing concrete canoes by capturing the overall team trophy for the fourth time. The annual event Saturday in Manhattan
The KU chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers placed first in the women's, coed and faculty race. The women and men's race and design competition.
At the end of the day, the KU team finished with 59 points, while the nearest competitor, Arkansas State University, totaled 30.
KU's victory qualifies the team to attend a national competition June 20-23 in Orlando, Fla.
David Darwin, professor of civil engineering, has participated in the event since its inception in 1975 and said KU's history of winning the competition was a useful recruiting tool.
"We've had students come to KU simply because of the exposure we get by winning the race," he said.
Michelle Anschutz, Topeka senior and co-chairperson of the concrete canoe project, said the competition was fun but tiring.
Over the top
Athlete reaching for the bar during a high jump competition.
KU alumnus Scott Huffman clears the pole at $17-6_{1/2}$ and advances to the final round of the men's invitational pole-vault competition at the Kansas Relays. Huffman won the competition with a vault of $18_{1/2}$, beating out Kansas vaulter Pat Manson on Saturday. See Relays coverage, Page 13.
Ron Klein/KANSAN
Iraq against troops aiding Kurds U.S. Marines cross into Iraq; national law by moving into northern Iraq without international permission
The Associated Press
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iraq's state press yesterday bitterly denounced the use of U.S. troops to protect camps being built in northern Iraq
More than 400 U.S. Marines entered northern Iraq on Saturday, and a U.S. convoy crossed into the country yesterday to establish camps in towns of Kurds who fled Saddam Hussein's troops following a failed uprising.
"This provocative behavior is blatant interference in Iraq's domestic affairs and a flagrant violation of international law," wrote Al-Thawra, the voice of the ruling Arab Baath Socialist Party.
Military authorities near the Iraqi border in Turkey reported no Iraqi resistance, but the official Iraqi newspapers expressed bitterness.
France, Britain, Italy and the Netherlands also have decided to set up camps in Iraq or say they are considering it.
The army newspaper Al-Qadisiya said, "America's dream is to fragment Iraq and to impose complete U.S. domination over it."
Al-Thawra said that Iraq itself had signed an agreement with the United Nations to channel aid to Kurdish forces in Syria. U.S. camps were established illegally.
It said the United States, Britain and France had violated interna-
Iranian Foreign Minister Al Akbar Velayat, whose country has been swamped by refugees, took a guarded line on the so-called safe
"If it does not harm the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Iraq, it could be considered posi-
tive for the United States in a conference yesterday in Tehran.
But he ruled out the establishment of a similar zone along his country's border, where hundreds of thousands of cattle are camped with little food or shelter.
He urged more aid for those refugees, as well as the 1 million who have entered Iran.
Iraq, meanwhile, complained that both Iran and the coalition forces were violating its borders and airspace.
The official Iraqi News Agency said Iraq sent a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar accusing Iran of firing 12 rockets into the city and threatening its harbor e Shirin area. It did not describe the damage the missiles caused.
In Turkey, Turkish troops shot and killed one Iraqi Kurdish refugee and wounded five other refugees yesterday while trying to stop a stone mob at a refuge settlement, the Anatolia news agency reported.
The deputy governor of the Hakkari province, Necdet Ozeroglu, said a riot broke out at a camp near this border township after people crowded into a food distribution point.
He said the refugees began to throw stones at Turkish troops who tried to restore order, the semi-official agency reported.
Lawrence churches accept help for Kurds
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Images of cold, starving Kurds burying dead babies have prompted efforts by relief agencies in the region. The world to help the Kurdish people
After three weeks of mass exodus from northern Iraq, Kurdish refugees finally are being fed, relief officials said.
Although the Kurds receive more food, water shortages and medical care remain serious problems for the 400 Kurds along the Turkish border.
After three weeks of mass exodus from northern Iraq, Kurdish refugees finally are being fed, relief officials said.
Catholic Relief Services, a national relief organization, is one of many groups running relief efforts to help the poor. When they are without a homeland.
In Lawrence, several Catholic churches are accepting donations for the Kurdish refugees.
Father Vince Krische of the lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, said the Catholic Center is using effort for the Kardushas refugee
"But if people wanted to donate money to the Kurdish refugees, they could do it through the Catholic Center," he said.
He said that Catholic Relief Services was helping the Kurds in any way.
"The agency has a fund it can draw from immediately for tragedies like that of the Kurds," he said. "They need donations to replenish the
fund."
Father Frank Horvat, of Corpus Christi Catholic Church, 1100 Kasold Drive, said donations for the Catholic Relief Services fund for Kurdish refugees would be accepted at the church also.
"Nobody over there seems to be able to get the food to the refugees," Horvat said. "It's just hard to get the food that they need it."
the national number for Catholic Relief Services is 1-800-SEND-HOPE
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
2
Monday, April 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Rain
HI:56°
LO:43°
67/46
56/45
57/34
59/39
65/53
80/59
82/65
Today's Forecast
Most of the state will receive rain today while temperatures will remain on the cool side. High 56/ Low 43.
Salina
55/41
KC
55/44
Dodge City
60/44
Wichita
58/44
3-day Forecast
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Tuesday - Cloudy with a chance for morning showers. High 70/Low 50.
Wednesday - Partly cloudy High 67/ Low 43.
**Thursday** - Mostly sunny as temperatures reach into the 70s. High 71/ Low 45
forecast by Steven A. Bürger
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuffer-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 Staufer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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THE PRINCETON REVIEW
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843-3131
Free Tax Advice Legal Services Available Free with Valid KU ID Appointment Necessary Legal Services for Students 148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
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Airline will take books to Costa Rica for free
The national airline of Costa Rica, LACSA, has donated shipping to KU's book drive for the University of Costa Rica.
Kansan staff report
are being collected in a drive under way at KU.
Roberta Cavitt, the drive's coordinator, said the airline would allow students who traveled to the country to bring a book or to bring a box of books with them.
The books, which will go to the University of Costa Rica libraries;
Cavitt said that last week, the School of Business donated more than 1,000 books to the drive, a load that cannot be carried entirely by the students who will go to Costa Rica in February.
The average number of KU students in the Costa Rican Study Abroad program is 50, she said.
Police report
Someone broke a glass door in the 1400 block of West 23rd Street on Saturday morning by throwing a rock, Lawrence police reported.
p. m. Friday and left without paying Lawrence police reported
A man filled the fuel tank of his car with gas at a gas station in the 1900 block of Haskell Avenue at 1:55
An unknown suspect broke the driver's side window and stole a purse from a car parked in the 400 block of North Second Street on Friday night, Lawrence police reported.
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All members of the University Community invited to:
An open forum on Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues in our Community
School's out!
Tuesday, April 23 7:00 p.m. Pioneer Room, Burge Union Sponsored by The Gay & Lesbian Concerns Study Committee
The paying assignments are waiting for students who need immediate summertime work. Learn all about the advantages of working as a Manpower temporary. Come visit our booth!
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Stop by to fill out an application.
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The CLASS Award
Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union and are due today 4:00 p.m.
Only seniors can turn in nominations for The CLASS Award
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNION FOR STUDENTS
EARTH DAY'91
Monday, April 22
Kansas & Burge Unions Earth Day Open House
SUA activities:
DUNK TANK 11a.m.-3p.m. duk your favorite KU people! outside Kansas Union
50* for 1 throw, $1 for 3
MAKE-YOUR-OWN F jewELRY & GOD'S EYES
10a.m.-2p.m. Ks. Union lobby
FREE PLANT RAFFLE
10a.m.-2p.m. Ks. Union lobby drawing at 3p.m.-5 winners
EARTH PHOTOS $2 each picture yourself as the earth!
10a.m.-2p.m. outside KU Union
Also, environmental product ideas, tunes at noon, and more!
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 22, 1991
3
Office set for tuition increase
Financial aid officials predict change, adjust award money
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
When the Board of Regents raised tuition Thursday, KU officials in the office of student financial aid were told that the board would it would take to adjudicate award money.
In fact, they already had done the work
Diane Del Buono, associate director of student financial aid, said that she and Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, made the adjustments Tuesday, two days before the Regents meeting at Kansas State University. The Regents increased resident tuition by 8 per
cent and nonresident tuition by 15 percent.
"I was prepared to gamble on it.
I am a decorated and long-time job as an
and we gambled and won," she said. Del Buono said that after discussing the matter with other KU officials who worked with the Legislature, she expected the increases would be at least what they turned out to be.
The aid adjustments were based on a formula that took into account the increases that were implemented. Letters notifying students of their awards will be sent out this week.
"The awards they are getting should be based on an accurate cost of tuition and fees," she said.
Ed Hammond, president of Fort Hays State University, said at the meeting Thursday that he was concerned about some students possibly losing financial aid because of the increase.
He said that some students would receive more aid, but that the possibility existed that others would lose aid because of the shift in tuition. He also said it would be difficult to distribute the aid with the increase rate in the year, after some financial awards had been established.
Del Buono said the increase could cut off some students because individual students would need more training. "I don't stretch as far as it did in the past."
But she said this information was not as drastic as it might seem because the office could make adjustments to minimize any loss of financial aid for students.
The office already has increased the budget for students and increased awards based on the adjustments, Del Buono said.
But she said an indirect effect of the increases probably would be that students would borrow more money than a more of a debt when they graduate.
"We will as a financial aid office try to minimize any consequences that would result in students losing financial aid from the federal programs," she said.
CHAPEL
By Jonathan Plummer
Kenneth staff writer
Phi Kappa Psi cook snags $6.2 million but won't leave job
But then again, lots of things can change when you win the $6.2 million Lotto America jackpot.
Kansan staff writer
Donna Morrison said she would continue to work as the cook of the Phi Kappa Psif praterium house. Normally this would not be unusual. She has worked there for more than 18 years.
In a news conference Friday in Topeka at the Kansas Lottery headquarters, Morrison said she knew the university would be pleased for her.
"They'll be really happy," she said. "I don't know what meals I'm going to plan for them."
The Inspirational Gospel Voices sing at the 12th Annual Spring Concert. The group was one of several last night at the Kansas Union.
Mike Roell, a former president of the fraternity, said he worked as a waiter for Morrison for three years.
Sinain' out!
“Actually I talked to her yesterday and she said she was going to try to keep it quiet. But I guess it’s something like this,” he said.
Morrison said at the news conference that she planned to take a trip to Seattle to see one of her nine children. The other eight, as well as her church, St. Luke African Methodist Episcopal of Lawrence, also will benefit from her good fortune.
Morrison said she bought the winning ticket Wednesday evening at the Presta Phillips 66 station, 602 W Ninth St, although they sold Lotto America tickets at a grocery store where she shops.
She said she spends about $3 a week on lottery tickets.
'She said we had been good to her, so she was going to be good to us. I really admire her for that. I don't think I would be able to do that.'
On Thursday, she came home from work and took a nap, she said. When she awoke, her husband had bought a USA Today
- Mike Rozell
Former president of Phi Khi Psi Spi
newspaper and was comparing Lotto America winning numbers with the ticket she bought.
"I thought I was going to have a heart attack or faint for a minute," she said.
All of her nine children have been notified, she said, including one son who called her three times because he thought she was teasing him. Morrison also has 15 grandchildren.
Morrison will receive a check for $319,048.2 in about 10 days. She then will receive $311,000 a year for 19 years.
Rozell said that Morrison felt her commitment to the house did not end just because she had become a millionaire.
"She said we had been good to her, so she was going to be good to us," he said. "I really admire her work. I think I would be able to do that."
Morrison is friendly, but it took time to get to know her well, Rozell said.
Firefighters, city start closed-door negotiations
"She is a real nice lady, and she had a good time with us, but I had no idea she had nine kids until I saw it on the news," he said.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
"I'm real happy for her. I know she'll put it to good use."
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
In the first contract negotiations between the city and its firefighters since an impasse led to a court battle two years ago, both the city and firefighters union officials say they are pleased with current talks.
and done, but we will reach an agreement."
"We're still in the honeymoon phase," said Rod Bremby, assistant city manager and chief negotiator for the City of Bremy. "I've noticed other names before it's all been used."
The biennial negotiations, which are being conducted behind closed doors for the first time in more than 20 years, began Friday with a 1/4 hour in conference room at Free Free Brewing Co., 636 Massachusetts St.
After negotiators established a few preliminary ground rules, firefighters presented their proposal. Although city officials questioned the
proposal's suggested methods for torso reduction. Bremen said the proposed solution was
Bob Kent, Lawrence firefighters' union representative, agreed that talks had gone smoothly so far, but he said he and yet to submit a counterproposal.
"We felt extremely good about yesterday's meeting." he said at news conference Saturday. "We did not understand it." The listening of the listening. I don't know what the
city's going to come back with."
The city will present its proposal Wednesday at the next meeting. Meanwhile, city staff members have begun analyzing various cost implications of the firefighter's proposal, Bremby said.
"On the face of it, yes, it's reasonable," he said. "But what we need to do now is make sure that the context which they provided is correct."
Kent attributed the good relationship between the negotiators not only
to the closed-door meetings, but also
and the rest of the city's negotiating
meetings.
"The whole chemistry depends on the way the parties treat each other," he said. "So far it's been outstanding."
Disagreements between firefighters and city officials over the city's two-year work agreements resulted in an impasse in 1989. Firefighters filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of two-year contracts, but the
100 attend Black conference
The city, however, could return to a nonbinding agreement, called a "memorandum of understanding," if the Lawrence City Commission voted to do so. According to the resolution, an agreement must be reached by June 1. If not, a federal mediator will be called in.
Kansas Supreme Court upheld the Kansas Court of Appeal's decision that the work agreements were binding.
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writers
The African-American man is an endangered species, making up more than half the prison population, said Jeffrey S. Morgan, Black Male Conference yesterday.
John Lewis, executive board member of Black Men of Today, said that people needed to recognize that urgency and that African-American men needed to learn how to survive in today's society.
"Overcoming All the Obstacles:
Black Men Unging under One Cause," was the title of the confer-
ence, which took place on Saturday and at the Kansas Union.
the small number, was very positive. It made the impact I wanted it to," said Lewis, who organized the conference.
The overall conference, even with
About 100 people attended various portions of the conference, which was fewer than Lewis had honed for
He said those who attended could use what they learned to help their communities.
Tippett said that although Lewis had wanted at least 150 people to register and attend the entire conference, he thought the conference was a success.
Ardra Tippett, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences student senator, co-sponsored the bill in Senate that co-sponsors the memorarium of $4,500 for the conference.
The conference featured six speakers including Sherwood Thompson, director of the office of minority affairs.
Another conference is planned for next year. Lewis said.
"A hundred people heard those speakers," she said. "I just don't want to see positive, productive cases g hindered because of numbers."
Lewis said he hoped that more publicity would boost attendance for next year.
The topics covered were academic success, leadership, spirituality, Africans in the Bible and misconception about the African-American male.
Facts coalition can't pay its fines looks at options to work out a deal
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie
The Facts coalition is having trouble raising money to pay its fines, a coalition representative said yesterday.
The representative, Peter Paustkus,
said that $110 in fines were not paid by deadline Friday and that
coalition members were attempting to work out a deal with the Student
Eleventh Congress Commission.
Paukistel said one alternative Facts had thought of was to do some kind of community service work.
Curt Winegarner, elections commission chairperson, said the commission would have to discuss the
situation before he would comment on it.
The commission fired the coalition $253. The commission made $110 due last Friday and $143 due this Friday. Facts plans to appeal $128 of this Frida's amount to University Judiciary in the next few days, Pauls said.
"We feel that we have a good case," he said. "We feel that there has been a lack of separation of powers in the elections process. It is not the power of the elections commission has the power of all three branches of government."
Winegarner said that many governmental bodies had legislative,
executive and judicial powers and that the elections commission was no
Paakstelsi said that another argument Facts was planning to use was that not enough time had been allotted for the complaint hearings.
"We were hoping for more time to prepare our defense," he said.
The coalition submitted a request for a continuance that was denied, he said.
Winegarner said the time constraint was necessary so the elections could be certified. The complaint hearings had to be completed before the commission could decide whether to make the election official.
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Monday, April 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
River ecology
Dumping of sludge into the Kaw to save money is harmful and not environmentally defensible
At a time when more and more people are becoming environmentally aware, it is amazing that Water District No.1 of Johnson County is considering a project that could be potentially harmful to the environment.
The water district is asking for the state's permission to dump about 60 tons of sludge, a mixture of lime, silt and other materials, into the Kaw River. At the same time, it would study the effects thedumpings would have on the river's aquatic life.
Although the water district board claims that it wouldn't be putting anything back into the water that wasn't already there, the consequences of such dumping would be harmful. Not only would the waste disposal damage the habitat of some aquatic life in the Kaw, but it also would increase the difficulty of finding food for most of the river's organisms, including the flathead chub, which is a threatened species of fish in Kansas.
In the past, the water district has used
lagoons near the treatment plant to dispose of the sludge. However, concerns about the lagoons' future land use, combined with the expiration of the water district's special-use permit with Kansas City, has the water district looking for an easier and cheaper way of getting rid of the sludge.
The water district said it would save about $2 million during a 20-year span, averaging savings of about $100,000 a year. This bargain is not significant enough to justify the possibility of harming the environment.
The state Department of Health and Environment already has asked Lawrence, Topka and Leavenworth to discontinue the dumping of their materials into nearby rivers. To keep things consistent, Johnson County Water District No. 1 should not be allowed to dump its sludge into the Kaw River. Saving the environment is much more important than saving money.
Brent Mavcock for the editorial board.
McDonald's cares
Company jumps on environmental bandwagon
M
Donald's cares about Mother Earth. Perhaps not.
But recent efforts by the multi-billion dollar corporation suggest that maybe environmental awareness is being accepted as mainstream instead of radical activism.
The truth is that from an economic viewpoint McDonald's can afford not to care about being environmentally sound.
People have been eating McDonald's hamburgers without much regard for the chain's environmental practices for years.
True, a few eyebrows were raised when consumers jumped on the anti-plastic foam cause and encouraged the discontinuation of its use.
McDonald's caved in and started wrapping its beef patties in paper instead of in plastic foam cartons.
But even then, public outcries were few. No large boycott occurred. Proteests were nil.
But now McDonald's has decided to get on board the environmental bandwagon.
"It's entirely proper that we can divert more than 80 percent of our on-premise solid waste."
McDonald's director of operations development said.
The bright light that has popped on in McDonald's psyche has led the corporation to reconsider some of its former practices.
Gone are the days of individual ketchup packages. Large pump containers now will used.
Coffee will be percolated through reusable coffee filters.
And those full-sized napkins will be gone soon. They will be replaced by shrunken versions.
Unbleached paper products are to replace the brightly dyed wrappers now in use.
The motivating factor pushing Mickey D's may remain a intra-corporation secret. But it really does not matter.
McDonald's will continue to sell burgers by the billions.
And consumers will keep buying them.
At least now the environment will pay a bit less for consumers' fast food binges.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board.
CRUMBLE CRUMBLE CRUMBLE
1955
HAPPY EARTH DAY...
BURN IT AND BURY IT
Kurds in Iraq deserve help not creation of Kurdish state
t is a good step.
The United States has erected military camps in northern Iraq to care for the Kurdish refugees. The aid is needed. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds are dying. They have no place to go. Despite the huge-scale rescue campaign launched by the government of Turkey, the United States, British and French militia units and numerous Kurdish civilians, the plight of the Kurds is worsening.
Diarrhea and dehydration already are rampant, especially among youngsters, who account for nearly half the refugees in some places. Sanitation conditions are poor. The water supply falls short of meeting basic needs. The situation is so desperate that fewer than half the women who were breastfeeding their babies are able to provide adequate dehydration and stress. It is for this reason that the expanded relief effort is needed.
The plan sounds like a good idea. It would guarantee that the Kurds would be protected from Saddam Hussein's military attacks. It also would guarantee that there would be no interference with the relief efforts
Is this the first step toward creating a separate state for the Kurds? The 12-member European Community has backed British Prime Minister John Major's proposal for creating an enclave in Northern Iraq where refugees could be sheltered under the protection of the United Nations.
Cherukuri Suman
Guest columnist
from Iraq.
But, such a safety enclave might end up as a new country in Iraq. Look at Israel. It was first established as a safe haven under similar circumstances, and the area became a new country.
Creating protected enclaves would not solve the real problem — the disintegration of Iraq and the discrimination against the Kurds. This type of move actually could make the problem worse by widening the gap between Kurds and non-Kurds and increasing the hostilities between them.
What has happened in Israel? It has experienced four large wars since its creation.
What has happened in South Africa? The Pretoria government has legalized once-banned opposition political parties and repealed state-of-emergency regulations, but discrimination against Blacks still exists and Congress has not. Congress insists that whites still don't really mix with the Blacks.
People cannot be brought together by force. They have to learn to rise above traditional prejudices on their part, and that is how it equals. Hostilities will reduce between
people and true integration will take place only when people want it, not when they are forced into it.
Therefore, creating a protected area for the Kurds won't help as long as the discrimination against the minority exists in the minds of the other Iraqis. How long can the United States or the United Nations protect the Kurds in the enclave? Only when Iraqs start accepting Kurds as their own countrymen and as their equals will the problem be solved.
Establishing a pseudo Kurdistan would encourage disintegration. It would mean cutting off Iraqi Kurds from the rest of their native country. Such a sanctuary also could become a dumping ground for some of the 12 million Kurds in Turkey and the 4 million Kurds in Iran.
If countries start getting created for every minority group in the world, what would it lead to? What would happen if African-Americans started asking for a separate state in the United States? What would happen if such demands started getting made in India, a country where many religions, castes and cultures exist? It would lead to the decision of humanity groups, hostile toward each other, on the basis of religion, race and caste. No peace-loving, broad-minded person would want to allow this to happen.
Churuki Suman is a Hyderabad, India,
graduate student.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Grads merit ceremony
The goals of our University were bold and clear when KU opened its doors 125 years ago. Born from the pioneering dreams of educators such as Reverend Oliver, John Fraser and Chancellor Marvin, the University of Kansas rose as a center for teaching and instruction. The prime concern of the times was education and the students, it would be the graduate would serve the cause of progress and advancement of Kansas, the nation and humankind. Commencement symbolized the beginning of this mission. Today the graduation ceremony still has the same meaning. It represents the ultimate purpose of
the university fulfilled. Every year when a graduate walks down the Hill, the University of Kansas celebrates its very reason of being.
Perhaps 125 years are too many. Perhaps a monetary value cannot be fixed to the values of our University. How can the Commencement Committee forget the meaning of graduation? How can a little rain cancel commencement? Perhaps four years of a college education are not worth the inconvenience of rescheduled commencement. Maybe graduation is not worth a three-hour celebration. Is not worth the expense of the Commencement Committee to organize and find solutions? I suppose that consulting the graduating class was too much of a bother. I guess the student is no longer important.
Raymond Nichols, Chancellor Emeritus, once wrote: "Each year thousands of alumni and former students return to campus drawn by the joy and honor of a visit or attend anniversary occasions, such as the celebration of their graduation.
hold reunions of their social groups, or visit their own children now at the University. Still others serve on advisory committees to their professional schools or the Alumni or Endowment Associations. Such response to the calls of Alma Mater are most important."
I guess these words have lost their meaning and are only inflated rhetoric today. Let it rain on Graduation Sunday. Let Commencement be canceled. Let the cheers of alumni of 1941 will celebrate a striking man matter that abandoned its own destiny.
We students are not alone in ourire. I have faith that Oliver, Fraser and Marvin are as disappointed and insulted as we are. I can only tell the Commencement Committee that they have commemorated the 125th anniversary of the University of Kansas in a very peculiar way — with one of the greatest disserves ever done to this institution.
Manuel Mendez Mexico City junior
Learn better social tact
A brief comment on the comic strip "Sketch" in Thursday's Kansas, David Rosenfield has his process backwards. If his male character learns not to offend anyone, he will probably learn about more good books to read, have a chance to understand and we certainly have more people to associate with, not vice-versa.
Melissa Nuckolls Office of Affirmative Action
Toxins plague campus
Thursday morning as I walked across campus on my way to work, the air was heavy with the smell of pesticides sprayed on campus grounds. I only had to look at the curling dandelion in the morning in the day, a worker mentioned that four large crab apple trees had been chopped down in front of Watson
Library. As I stood on the steps of Watson and surveyed the damage, a friend mentioned that he had seen someone spraying other campus trees earlier that day. The person spraying must have known the spray was toxic, because he paused each time someone walked by. About this time, I began wondering when the east half of Watson's lawn would be killed with a herbicide, as promised last year when the other half was treated and renovated. My question is this: Is this the way we as a university community want to celebrate the soon approaching Earth Day?
Julie Waters
Science Library librarian
Respect the flag code
On Dec. 22, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt approved the Flag Code governing the use, and defining the misuse of the American Flag. One of
the sections of that code is entitled "Respect for the Flug."
Some interesting points of that section of the code are: Civilians should stand during the National Anthem; civilians should salute the flag if displayed during the National Anthem; civilians should place the hand over the heart when reciting the Pledge of Allegiance; civilians should stand at attention when listening to the Pledge of Allegiance.
Finally, the section titled "Respect for the Flag" states: "The flag should never be used . . . as any portion of a costume or athletic uniform." That applies equally to Lee Greenwood singing "Gospel Bless the USA" on TV and to the KU basketball teams. It is not respect for our troops, but disrespect for our flag that these people display when they appear on the courts and on television with American Flags on their clothing and uniforms.
KANSAN STAFF
Michael B. Kelly Lawrence resident
CHRIS'SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors Business staff
News. Marek Mathes Campus sales manager Sophie Whobe
Editorial. Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Candre Dresch
Planning Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus. Jennifer Reynolds. Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Solner Production mgrs. Rich Harshbarger
Sports. Anja Sommeltahl Marketing director Kate Sade
Photography. Katie Gap marketing Director Erik Enikow
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chris Hatsy
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, address, and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be presented.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and dictionaries. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stuifler-Flunt Hall.
Loco Locals
HMMM..
IT SAYS HERE IN THE RECENT ISSUE OF OMNI! 'THE FEMALE OCTOPUS HASHER 'YOU KNOW' INHER NOSE. IF THE MALE OCTOPUS APPROACHES. WHEN SHE IS NOT READY FOR MATING, THE FEMALE...WILL BITE OFF HIS 'YOU KNOW' (ONE OF EIGHT) AND SWIM AWAY WITH IT"
T
MKHAITD.CW91
4/22
OK ...LET ME
GUESS WHAT
YOU'RE THINKING.
by Tom Michaud
GOD MESSED UP BY NOT GIVING EVERY FEMALE SPECIES THIS OPTION.
RIGHT?...
WELL?
DOH.
University Daily Kansan / Mondav. April 22. 1991
Senate ethics bill weak, group says
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
5
A government watchdog group blasted the Kansas Senate on Friday for weakening and passing the House version of the ethics bill.
Common Cause/Kansas, a non-profit, non-partisan citizens' lobby group, said the Senate's version of the bill would make tougher reforms from the House version.
Bob Woolf, executive director of the group, said the most controversial difference between the two versions was that the one that Nassas could be issued by the Public
Disclosure Commission, the state agency in charge of the enforcement
"Just like last year, the House voted in favor of full investigative subpoena power, and the Senate gutted it," he said.
The Senate's version of the bill would require the commission to prove probable cause and give the suspected violator 30 days notice before it could issue a subpoena for records or individuals.
"Not only do they give someone 30 days to burn the records and hide the evidence, but they also forbid the
commission from investigating anything that occurred before the first of last year," Woolf said. "Now who are they protecting with that?"
State Sen. Bill Morris, R-Wichita, who was against any kind of ethics reform, said approval of a such bill would not protect anyone but would leave the legislative process unprotected.
"The bill would restrict open government, not promote it," he said. "People who want to come to Topeka and speak for small groups would be even more reluctant to do so with the provisions in this measure. I find the
entire measure contained in this bill insulting."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who voted for the measure, said that ethics of some kind was needed and that a conference would be set to resolve House and Senate differences in the bill sometime this week.
He said Common Cause/Kansas had a legitimate concern about the subpoena issue.
"I think they're right about that," Winter said. "I think it's going to get strengthened. I would hope so."
CALENDAR
Monday
■ KU Wellness Center will sponsor a stress-management workshop at 12:10 p.m. Monday at 138 Robinson.
■ Recycling Task Force will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
Monday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at 207 Robinson
**Women's Transitional Care Services will have a support group for battered women at 7 p.m. Monday. Call 841-6887 for the location.**
Tuesday
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. Tuesday at 138 Robinson.
Women's Resource Center will
sponsor "Women's Recognition Program" at 8 p.m. tuesday at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union Building at 8:30 p.m. tuesday at 130 Robinson
Wednesdav
■ The Office of Foreign Student Services will sponsor an information session on practical training for graduating foreign students at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Regional Room in the Kansas Union.
the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
University Forum will have a luncheon at 11:40 a.m. Wednesday at
KU KWellness Center will sponsor a stress-management workshop at 12:10 p.m. Wednesday at 138 Robinson.
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at 207 Robinson.
Thursdav
KU Wellness Center will sponsor an workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. Thursday at 138 Robinson
- Graduate students and graduating seniors should see their advisers regarding departmental nominations.
- Graduate Direct Exchange Abroad.
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
KU Med Center starts Donor Awareness Week
Room 44 B became home for Luther Burris for 73 days while he waited. He was ready at 4:50 p.m. Feb. 25, when he was told his waist was over.
He was asked if he wanted a heart. He said "yes."
Burris, 32. Cauney resident, was the 50th heart transplant patient at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
He said he hoped more people would become aware of the need for organ donation.
"A lot of people are unaware." Burris said. "I was unaware before I had any trouble, but you learn an awful lot."
The Med Center is trying to do just that this week. Yesterday was the first day of National Organ and Tissue Done Awareness Week. An information table will be in the lobby of the hospital this week.
Barbara Flakus, cardiac transplant coordinator for the Med Center, said one of the goals of the week was to show the need for organ donors.
"There is a big demand for organs right now." she said.
The average wait for an organ transplant is 255 days. An organ is issued on the basis of blood type, compatibility, how long patients have been waiting and the patient's conditions.
The demands for donors has increased because there are more possible recipients but not more donors, she said.
Prioritix to the donor also is a large factor, she said. The Med Center offers two possible recipients within close proximity to the hospital. If an organ becomes
available, the patient must be at the hospital quickly.
For a live organ transplant, such as a heart, liver or lungs, the organ is taken from someone who is brain damaged or life-support systems. Flakus said.
Non-life organs, such as eyes, can be taken from a donor who has been deceased.
It takes 12 to 24 hours from the time an organ is found to the end of the surgery. The organ is matched to a recipient through the United Network for Organ Sharing and a local organ bank, she said.
"Every recipient for an organ is listed on a national network," she said.
Such fears are unwarranted. Flakus said.
One reason for the lack of donors is that families often fear that a body will be mutilated if any of its organs become available for donation.
Another reason is that people often do not inform their families that they want to donate their organs after they die, she said. People without family objections can indicate that they would like to donate organs.
"It is very important to discuss their wishes with their significant family member," Flakus said. "People don't realize that signing the back of a driver's license or donor card is not legally binding."
Although the Med Center has a policy that the donor's identity must be kept confidential, contact can be provided in request of the donor's family, she said.
"Families like to be aware of the organ is," she said. "They like to know that this person did not die in vain."
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WE WANT YOU TO PURCHASE A 1991 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
TUCKER CENTER
The 1991 Jayhawker Yearbook will be on sale today thru May 3. Distribution tables will be set up in front of the Kansas Union and Wescoe Hall from 10 - 3 daily. Bring your KUID to pick up your reserved copy or you can purchase one for $25. If you have any questions call 864-3728
6
Monday, April 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
PREPARING FOR EXAMS
Study Skills Workshop
Covers: time management using notes to review
strategies for successful test taking coping with test anxiety
Tuesday, April 23
7-9 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
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Wichita State offers five Summer Session options
Presession: May 28-June 7
8-Week Session: June 10 August 2
First 4-Week Session: June 10-July 5
Second 4-Week Session: July 8-August 2
Workshops Throughout the Summer
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in Kansas, call toll-free, 1-800-362-2594.
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Mail to the Office of Undergraduate Admissions, The Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas 67208-1595.
Baker won't ask Israel to back off
The Associated Press
JIDDAH, Saudi Arabia — Secretary of State James Baker said yesterday that he was not putting pressure on Israel to compromise its stand on peace talks with the Arabs, but he made it clear that there should be an international involvement in any negotiations.
While Baker waited to hear from Jerusalem, he flew to Saudi Arabia to discuss the possibility of assigning a sharply limited role to the oil rich kingdom in the process of resolving the Arab Israeh dispute.
"I do not anticipate that they would be there in the context of the political discussions between Israel and her Arab neighbors and the political discussions between Israel and Palestine," said at a news conference in Caro.
In Jiddah, Baker was to conduct talks with Saudi King Fahd and Prince Saud, the foreign minister. Baker met Saturday with Jordan's King Hussein and yesterday with Egyptian President Hosn Mubarak.
In the meantime, Baker's strategy seemed geared to placing the onus on Israel to keep his peace mission from disintegrating.
"We have not heard responses to the suggestions that we made in my last visit."
He has refused to spell out the proposals that he left with Israel Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Russia's Minister David Levy on Friday.
But Baker has said the Soviets should co-sponsor the peace talks with the United States, and he's leaming publicly in the direction of Arab and European demands for an international conference.
teristic to any meetings that would involve five, or six, or even seven countries from different parts of the world." Baker said in Cairo.
Baker said he called Shamir on Saturday, not to get answers but to give him a personal debriefing of his visit to Jordan.
Israel agreed nearly two weeks ago to negotiate with the Arab states and representatives of the 1.7 million Palestinians who live on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. But Israel wants to restrict the Soviets to a limited role, bar members of the Palestine Liberation Organization and keep all outside powers except the United States on the sidelines.
"We do not intend to pressure for an answer." Eaker told reporters.
The Israeli cabinet took up those issues yesterday, but delayed any move.
"There is an international charac
Baker's aides told reporters Saturday that he would not return to Jerusalem after he ended his tour of Arab countries in Syria tomorrow. But Levy was quoted in Jerusalem as saying that Baker would return tomorrow night and conduct meetings there Wednesday.
Meanwhile, Israeli newspapers reported that Baker had asked Shamir and Levy if they would allow the United Nations and the European Community to participate in peace talks. They also asked the Israeli leaders if they would try to exclude Palestinians with links to East Jerusalem.
Shamir and Levy want to deal directly with the Arabs. They do not want even a symbolic suggestion that East Jerusalem, which became part of Israel's capital after the 1967 Middle East War, should be handed over to the Arabs.
Arabs and Israelis:
A history of conflict
Key to achieving peace in the Middle East after the gulf war is setting the dispute between the Arabs and the Israelis. Its history issues.
Arab position:
■ Egypt, Syria and Jordan want Israel to return occupied lands
■ Palestinians, many of whom live in Israel-occupied lands, seek homeland
History of conflict:
1947: United Nations divides Palestine into Jewish and Arab zones
1948: Egypt, Syria Lebanon,
iraq, Jordan attack Israel.
Israel gains territory
1956: Israel, Britain, France attack Egypt after Egypt nationalizes Suez Canal. U N disputes dispute
1967: Six-Day War with Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Israel clams Sinai Peninsula, Gaza Strip, West Bank, Golan Heights
1973: Yom Kippur War. Egypt, Syria attack Israel forces along the Suez Canal
1979: Egypt, Israel sign peace treaty
1982: Israel completely withdraws from Sinai Peninsula
1987: Palestinian uprising ('intifada') begins in Israeli-occupied territories
Religious groups in Israel (excluding occupied land)
13%
83% Jews
2% Christians
2% Other
Israeli position:
Muslims
its statehood, as Egypt has
■ Politically divided. Likud (government party) opposes return of occupied lands, Labor Party advocates peaceful agreement with Arabs, Palestinians
Wants all Arab nations to recognize its statehood, as Egypt has
Occupied territories
Mediterranean Sea
Lebanon
Syria
Haifa
Israel
Golan Heights
West Bank
Jordan River
Tel Aviv
Jerusalem
Anman
Dead Sea
Gaza
Gaza Strip
Jordan
Map area
Egypt
0 Miles
N 20
SOURCE: Europa Yearbook. World Book Research by PAT CARR
Consumer debt grows,may prolong recession
The Associated Press
U.S. household debt nearly tripped
the last decade according to a
Pew Research survey.
WASHINGTON — Eighty-five percent of all U.S. households owed money at some time last year on items such as mortgages, automobiles, credit cards and department stores.
But analysts said there was no need for alarm.
"I don't think it's dangerous," economist Bruce Steinberg of Merrill Lynch Capital Markets said. "I don't think it means mass consumer bankruptcies or that people are going to lose face homes."
Still, the record debt could reduce consumer spending and thus slow a recovery from the recession.
'In the 90s, at best, consumers spending will keep track with their incomes, unlike the 80s, when debt
spending grew so much faster than incomes." Steinberg said.
Consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of all economy activity and is critical to the strength of a recovery from the recession.
The study shows that home mortgages and consumer debt rose from $1.3 trillion at the end of 1980 to just $1.2 trillion in 2015. The study was conducted by Glenn
Canner and Charles Luckett and was published in the April issue of the Federal Reserve Bulletin.
Home-mortgage debt, which includes home-equity lines of credit, totaled $2.6 billion at end of 1990 and the debt amount to about $800 billion
Consumer debt includes money owed on credit cards and automobile loans.
D
Be environmentally conscious!
Celebrate
EARTH DAY '91
Monday April 22
• Enter the Nerf Bowling Contest in the Kansas Union Lobby to receive free tokens to the Jaybowl.
• Donate $1 to have a tree planted for you. Get a free button!
• Bring a cup or squeeze bottle to Union Square, The Hawk's Nest or the Hawk Stop for 25¢ refills on soda or coffee.
• Drop off your recyclables in Kansas or Burge Ur
• Enjoy a special Tunes At Noon Concern
THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS
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Take advantage of exceptional savings being offered on Macintosh computers only at the KU Bookstores Computer Store now through May 16th. Take a Macintosh computer home with you over the summer and become a Macintosh expert. Be back next fall ready for action! To be continued...
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 22, 1991
7
Nation/World briefs Islamabad, Pakistan
Islamabad, Pakistan
Missile strike kills up to 300
Searchers dug through debris yesterday, trying to unearth bodies after a missile strike on a crowded bazaar in a provincial capital in eastern Afghanistan. Reports said up to 300 people were killed and 700 were hurt.
At least two Soviet-made Scud missiles slammed into Asadabad, the capital of Afghanistan's eastern Kunar province, late Saturday, said Qairib Saeed, a representative for the radical Hezb-i-Islami, or party of Islam, guerrilla group.
Pompignan, France
Church roof collapses, kills 7
The roofing on the central part of a church collapsed during a classical music concert, killing seven people, including two girls and a boy. In northwestern village, officials said westwardly.
Thirteen people were injured in the accident Saturday night, officials said.
Regional Gov. Victor Convert, who visited the accident site, said a circular hole was found in the plaster and brick roofing over the central part of the church. He would not speculate on its significance.
■ From The Associated Press
From The Associated Press
Congressmen tell Iraqi refugees U.S. troops will not desert them
The Associated Press
About 40,000 fearful Kurds camp in nuetral no-man's land in northern Iraq
SAFANW, Iraq — Members of a U.S. delegation delegated assured Iraqi refugees yesterday that U.S. troops would not abandon their positions to prevent reprisals by Iraqi forces.
More than 1,000 refugees sat in the dust chanting slogans against Saddam Hussein while others lobbed face to face during the war. Army-army camp near the Iraq-Kuwait border
Many refugees have links to resistance groups that unsuccessfully rebelled against Saddam after Iraq's defeat in the Persian Gulf War, or who are members of police or prison once the U.S. soldiers leave.
The delegation's leader, Rep G.V. "Sonny"
Montgomery, D-Miss. and the United States
wrote a letter to President Obama.
"We're not going to move these forces out until we know these people can be protected."
A 1,440-member U.N. peace-keeping force is to replace the remaining U.S. troop in a war zone.
into Iraq and three miles into Kuwait. An estimated 40,000 refugees are in the area.
Rep. Alfred McCandless, R-Calf, said that the United States was not going to ignore the fears of refugees and that he expected the U.N. protection cover after it deployed in the coming weeks.
The U.N. cease-fire plan would permit Iraq to resume civil administration, including law enforcement, in its part of the buffer zone. It also would allow Iraqi forces they shared the refugees' concerns about this.
"They better not move," he said. "We've got our forces in the air."
Montgomery suggested that any aggressive acts in the area by Iraqi forces might prompt U.S. military strikes even after the ground troops withdraw.
En route to Safwan, the delegation flew over one of the oil fields where wells were set afire by Iraqi troops.
Several members of Congress said they were shocked at the extent of the inferno. More than 500 wells across the emirate are spewing huge clouds of ink-black smoke into the air.
Rep. John Tanner, D-Tenn., said, "Saddam ought to be executed for what he's done. It's the most senseless environmental destruction I've ever seen."
From Safwan, the delegation flew in an Army helicopter to Kuwait City and met for about 30 minutes with the prime minister, Crown Prince Sa'ad Abdallah al-Sabah.
Asked afterward how long U.S. troops would remain, Rep. Barbara Vulcanovich, R-Neb., said, "Kuwait would love to have the United States forces stay here, but I don't think any of us are committed to that, and we all feel the U.N. forces are the ones who should be here."
Rep. Austin Murphy, D-Pa., said the delegation discussed with the crown prince Anmesty International report on human rights violations in Kuwait.
"The thing we are seeking is all that citizens and all people who live in Kuwait are equally treated with justice," he said. "They appear to be moving in the right direction to allow all people to have some voice in their government, and I think we're quite satisfied."
Editor in chief.
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Monday, April 22. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Strat- W
Earth Day
April 22
Be kind to the earth with these environmentally sound items:
Ampad 100% recycled legal pad
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Ampad Recycled paper memo books
Ampad Green Cycle two pocket portfolios
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Expand your knowledge and save 15% on these titles*:
Environment, Nature and Gardening
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BY THE ROCKS
A cleaner lake
imothy Miller/KANSAN
Dan Carrigan, Atchison sophomore (right), and Brad Neyman, Lenexa sophomore, pick up trash on the dam at Clinton Lake. Carrigan and Neyman are members of the Delta Tau Delta Fraternity who participated in the Eighth Annual "Take Pride in America" clean-up day at Clinton Lake on Saturday. Jackie Wedel, Clinton Lake park ranger, said that about 600 people from 45 groups participated in this year's cleanup.
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
With arms slung around each others' shoulders and a white rope binding their legs, Danny Hughes and Kirk Douglas dashed across the grass in the three-legged race and collapsed in a pile after crossing the finish line first. They jump up and land on each other with load cheers and a hug.
For Hughes, Evanston, III., freshman, and Douglas, a Lawrence resident who is mentally retarded, the tun did not stop there.
a water balloon toss, dunk tank and other games were all part of the first Natural Ties Field Day on Saturday at the Sigma Alpha Episcop fraternity house, 1301 West Campus Rd.
Although Hughes is a member of the fraternity, his older brother, Patrick Hughes, Evanston, Ill., senior. is Patrick Hughes started the
Natural Ties program in 1988.
Natural Ties is designed to integrate people with disabilities into organizations so they will feel a part of a living group.
"It can create a great deal of awareness," said Hughes, executive director of the program. "Whatever area of life people go into, they're going to have a more sensitive outlook of people with disabilities."
Douglas and Jay Turnbull,
Lawrence resident, are both honorary members of SAE. They often visit the house, eat dinner with their fraternity brothers and wear the same clothes. They even know the secret handshake.
The chilly, overcast day did not seem to cloud anyone's spirits. About 75 people who are mentally retarded participated in the day's events, many of whom are honorary members of the other 18 participating fraternities and sororites.
Kathy Lobb, a honorary member of the Delta Gamma sorority, went from table to table playing various games and adding to her bag of prizes. Games included knocking down blocks with a tennis ball and selecting a floating duck in a tub of water to win a prize.
"I like it really well," Lobb said, grinning as she displayed a pink rubber bracelet she had won. "It's something fun to do. I've learned a lot."
Amy Bortz, Chicago senior and Delta Gamma member, said having Kathy as part of the sorority provided a good opportunity for both her house and Kathy.
"It's great because it gets our organization involved in something it may not have before," she said. "To Kathy, having something she belongs to means so much."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 22, 1991
9
German voters may put Kohl out of power
The Associated Press
BERLIN — Voters knocked Chancellor Helmut Kohl's party out of power in his home state yesterday, according to early election projections. He also gave a serious blow to the German leader's prestige.
The election in Rinkeland-Palatinate state in southwestern Germany was the first major vote since Kohl's center-right coalition won national elections in December, and it was seen as a referendum on the embattled chancellor's policies on German unification.
Kohl's Christian Democrats could lose their majority in the Bundesrat, the upper house of the national parliament, as a result of the election.
Kohl's Christian Democrates could lose their majority in the Bundesrat, the upper house of the national parliament, as a result of the election.
But his coalition would maintain its majority in the more powerful lower house, which approves less than 15% of the votes.
Kohl has been criticized for having miscalculated the enormity of the economic problems in former East Germany. That error has led to lower taxes in the west and worker unrest in the east.
A throng of Social Democrats in Mainz, the state capital on the Rhine River, erupted in cheers when the national ARD and ZDF television networks flashed their projections as soon as polling places closed.
The Christian Democrats have held power in the state since the first state elections after World War II.
The projections showed the Social Democrats with 45 percent and Kohl's Christian Democrats with 38.6 percent. That would give the Social Democrats of 47 of the 101 seats in the state legislature, and the Christian Democrats 40 seats.
Kohl's coalition partners, the Free Democrats, were projected to win 6.8 percent of the vote and seven seats. The leftist Greens were projected at 6.7 percent and seven seats.
The television projections were based on surveys of 6,500 people after they voted. No margin of error was given, but the projections traditionally have been quite reliable.
The Greens have proposed a coalition government with the Social Democrats, and if the television projections are confirmed, the two parties would hold 54 of the chamber's 101 seats.
That would allow them to claim the state's four seats in the Bundesrat, and Kohl's party would lose its majority of 35. State governments appoint the members of the 65-seat Bundesrat.
Kohl's Christian Democrats would only have 31 seats. The Social Democrats would have 37, giving them a majority and new political authority on the national legislation affecting the course of unification.
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The Mac Challenge
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Kay Walcher, Scott City junior and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority member, blocks a tip during the finals of the Mac Challenge II Volleyball Tournament in front of Allen Field House. The Alpha Gamma Delta team received a Macintosh Classic computer for defeating the Kappa Alpha Theta team in the finals. Yesterday's tournament was sponsored by KU Bookstores and Apple Macintosh. Proceeds will go to the women's volleyball team.
German authorities to indict patrolmen
The Associated Press
BERLIN — Authorities are preparing indictments against former East German soldiers who shot and killed two young men as they were trying to climb over the Berlin Wall to free Germany's newspaper reported yesterday.
The Berliner Morgentorp said that authorities had the names of both victims and the soldiers involved in the attack. In 1986 and the other, in December, 1984
"An indictment against the former border soldiers is to be issued shortly," the Morgengpost said, citing Berlin justice authorities.
Authorities had intended first to try
former Communist leader Erich Honecker and his associates for issuing the shoot-to-kill orders.
However, the Soviet Union's decision to take Honecker to Moscow forced authorities to revise their plans. Moscow has made it clear that it has no intention of sending the 78-man Honecker back to Germany to stand trial.
According to the Morgenpost, the November 1986 shooting was particularly cold-blooded.
The border soldiers shot and wounded 25-year-old Michael Bittern as he was trying to climb over the wall, a part of the city, the newspaper said.
United States, Vietnam to establish new office
The Associated Press
BANGKOK, Thailand — The United States and Vietnam have agreed to put a U.S. office in Hanoi to speed the search for U.S. soldiers still missing after the attack on countries said in a joint statement.
A joint statement said the two sides agreed to establish a temporary office in Hanoi. The statement, dated Saturday, was carried out by the embassy and made available by a Western embassy in Bangkok yesterday.
The move could help pave the way for formal U.S. recognition of the Communist government in Hanoi.
The agreement came during a visit to the Vietnamese capital by special presidential envoy Gen. John W. Vessey, who met with Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach last week.
It said the office would concentrate on improving joint field investigations, planning for joint training exercises, and conducting allied sightings of U.S. citizens.
The issue of U.S. citizens missing in action has cast a shadow over U.S.-Vietnamese relations since the close of the Vietnam war. Nearly 1,700 U.S. citizens are still listed as missing.
KU
The University of Kansas COMMENCEMENT
Degree Candidates and Faculty: Caps, Gowns & Hoods All participles, including durate, law, master's andachelors candidas, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26.
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Monday, April 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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South American officials battle cholera, seek help
The Associated Press
LA PAZ, Bolivia - South American health officials yesterday called for international assistance to combat a cholera epidemic that has killed more than 1,200 people and is expected to spread.
Bolivia's health minister, Mario Zamora, told a meeting in the capital city of Sacre that the internauclio could should help set up a fund for the effort.
Jamary and has since spread to Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil and Chile. The World Health Organization predicted that cholera could spread throughout Latin America.
Colombia's health minister,
Camilo Gonzales, said that one of the priorities for Latin America was to provide safe drinking water and to improve sanitation. The disease is spread through fecal-contaminated water and food.
The meeting in Surce, 350 miles southeast of La Paiz, included health ministers from Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela as well as health officials from Brazil, Argentina and Cuba.
The epidemic began in Peru in late
Also participated were the vice minister of health from Spain, Jose Luis Norgea, and the director of the Health Organization, Carkle Guerra.
Guerría on Friday recommended a $12 billion Latin American emergency health fund, saying the epidemic could eventually strike 6 million people and kill 42.000.
Bolivia has not reported the presence of cholera, but officials fear cholera eventually will cross its borders.
An estimated 150,000 people have been affected by cholera and at least 1,200 have died in the most serious outbreak. It has hit South America this century.
The disease is mainly affecting the poor, who do not have access to water suitable for drinking and sewage systems.
Those infected with cholera suffer from diarrhea and dehydration that can prove fatal if not quickly treated. The spread of cholera in Peru has been aggravated by a health workers' strike.
White House guards Sununu
Democrats question necessity of travel in military aircraft The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The White House yesterday defended Chief of Staff John Sununu's frequent travel on military jets, saying President Bush needs to be able to reach him at all times.
But Democrats challenged Sumuim's use of military craft on fundraising trips for the Republican Party, as well as on vacations and tours at A House panel said it would demand Government Accounting Office probe.
Vice President Dan Quinyle was
among the administration officials
to visit the campus.
"He knows what is right and what is wrong, and I don't think he did anything wrong."
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said Sunumu was following a policy, established in 1987 by then-President Reagan, saying that both the White House chief of staff and the national defense always travel on military aircraft.
"Both those officials need secure voice communications at all times with Washington and with the White House. Chenese said on CBS TV's *This Morning*.
"I don't think you want those two senior officials out of touch," he said.
"It could create some real problems if the president couldn't reach them."
The Washington Post and U.S. News & World Report reported over the weekend that Sununu has taken more than 60 trips over the past 27 months on military jets, almost half back to New England and his New Hampshire home, but also to Colorado ski resorts.
The trips included official business as well as personal and political travel, the accounts said.
Rep. Vic Fazio, D-Calif., vice chairman of the House Democratic Caucus and head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said taxpayers deserved a full accounting of the potential misuse of public money and a reimbursement of every penny spent by John Sumu for his own personal pleasure and agenda.
The House Government Operations Committee will ask the GAO today to examine the propriety and legality of the U.S. military jets, a committee aide said.
According to Pentagon records, Sununu usually flies in a C-20, the sleek, 12 passenger, twin engine jet of the Gullstream III corporat
The Air Force keeps several C-205 at Andrews Air Force Base for such VIPs as Barbara Bush. President Bush himself flies aboard a C-205 to arrive at airports too small to accommodate his jumbo jet, Air Force One.
Congress scuttled an attempt two years ago to secure a C20 for the use of House Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash.
A White House aide who insisted on anonymity said, "All of Sununu's personal and political travel has been attended at full commercial rates."
Commercial airfares would cover only a fraction of the cost of flying on a C-20. The Air Force lists the C-20's hourly operating rate at $3,945, not counting the salaries of the five-member crew.
Aide Ed Rogers said Summah had no comment on his travel arrangements. Rogers refused to answer questions about the reports.
U. S. News cited two sources as estimating that Sunumu had spent at least $45,000 of his own money on trips. The Republican Party had picked up the tab for his political travels.
U. S. News said Summa, a former three-term governor of New Hampshire, had used government aircraft at least 148 times on 63 trips.
"From what I read of what John Sumuum did, there was nothing inappropriate." "Quagly said on NBC TV'S "Meet the Press." "Sumuum has worked his heart out for the president."
A White House representative, John Herrick, said in a statement from Camp David that Sununu's travel had been in accordance with official authorization for chief of staff travel.
Do you have a news story idea? Call 864-4810
WALK
Arts
on the
Boulevard
DON'T WALK
9:00am till 4:30pm
april 24 1991
fulfill your cultural fantasies on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall
RUN
Arts on the Boulevard is a free indoor/outdoor arts festival planned to circulate art and music among the rest of the campus. The festival will feature works from the university art students and there will be a World Beat music spin from KUHK in front of the Kansas University from noon till 1:30.
2. ( )
NO admission fee
University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 22, 1991
11
Earth Day festivities promote education
The Associated Press
Earth Day became Earth Weekend in some parts of the country, as environmentalists got a head start on the annual ecological holiday.
There was a beach cleanup in San Francisco, a salmon release and tree planting party in Seattle, educational events in New Orleans, and concerts in Massachusetts and soggy New Jersey
The is day the designated as
Earth Day. Daily commemorations
are held and applied around
In San Francisco, more than 200 people spent yesterday on the beach, enjoying a mild breeze, walking on the sand and picking up trash.
"Cleaning up the beach is only going to last one day," said organizer Maria Brown. "But people here are learning there's lots of trash on our beaches. So next time they're here, they're not so likely to tolerate it."
There also was a volunteer beach cleanup in Seattle, which lived up its green image with several Earth Day events. Thousands of salmonDay events in Salt Lake City in the city's Carkeek Park, and trees were planted at another park.
In addition, a weekend festival at the Seattle Center offered free exhibits, workshops, entertainment and speakers who exhorted people to change their lives in environmentally friendly ways.
In Holmdel, N.J., soaked Earth Day celebrants thought it was appropriate that Mother Earth rained on their party.
"You've got to love it. It's Earth Day and it rains," said one revereler as she huddled under a sopping poncho at the state-sponsored tribute to the environment at the Garden State Arts Center. "I think this is a sign Someone's trying to tell us something."
Or teach something. Messages were everywhere for the estimated 8,000 people who attended the event, which featured a concert starring Souhide Johnny, the Turtles, Joe Sidee and Johnnie Winning song writer Juelie Gold.
Before the music, a group on the stage led concertgoers through the Earth Day pledge. They said they would pledge to learn how the earth's natural systems worked and would restore it and restored the health of the planet.
In one of the first Earth Day events, about 35,000 people gathered at Foxbor Stadium in Foxbor, Mass., on Saturday for a benefit concert featuring Willie Wilson, Jack Browne, Bruce Hornsby and many Manias. Indigo Girls and rappers KRS One and Queen Latifah
In New Orleans, Earth Day activities also began Saturday with exhibits and a poster contest at a mall or suburban Kenner and displays and games in a park in Chalmette, another suburb.
Gay rights groups gain respect
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Gay rights groups that a few years ago couldn't get a phone call returned by Establishment Washington say they're now being welcomed, if not open arms, at least with open arms.
"We're treated with the respect that we should always have had but we had to establish," said Urvashiyani and Mr. Saadh. The general Gav and Lesban Task Force
Most recently, Vaid said she was a little surprised to be invited to a news conference at the Justice Department, where the FBI released the first national data on bias crimes. The FBI even paid tribute to the task's work to include homosexuals in the Hate Crime Statistics Act of 1990.
"In the '50s and the '60s, the FBI kept files on gay and lesbian organizations," she said afterward. "And today, there we were, welcomed by the director of the FBI, considered equal partners at the table," she said, that convert their community and a lot of other people in this society."
Gay activists point to several other recent mileposts: passage of the Americans With Disabilities Act.
which prohibits discrimination against people with the AIDS virus and other disabilities; and the repeal of a ban on homosexual immigrants
Even their longtime foes admit the gav lobb has clout.
"I have nothing but respect for the extent to which they network in this country and the extent to which they've been able to influence public policy," said conservative Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California. "Alarming thing is the willingness of leaders in our society to stand up and affirm our values."
Dannemeyer is author of a book entitled "Shadow in the Land," which attacks gay activists for attempting the wholesale restructuring of American society by demanding "special rights."
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who sponsored the immigration bill, said attitudes toward gay people are changing in society and, as a result, on Capitol Hill The immigration bill, he noted, was repealed without a blasphem from conservatives like Demneyer or Sen Jesse Helms. R.N.C.
"The fact that the people who hated that policy were so unable to oppose it was an interesting sign, said Frank, one of two openly gay
Frank said that AIDS made it necessary, and politically easier — for members of congress to vote for extending rights and protections to
members of Congress
"It's one thing to give in to prejudice, but it's another thing when you're talking about life and death," he said.
The two largest gay lobbies — the task force and the Human Rights Campaign Fund — say their top priority this year is overturning the ban on gay people serving in the armed forces.
Lisa M. Keen, senior editor of the Washington Blade, a gay weekly newspaper in the nation's capital, said he was surprised finally paying off for the gay lobby.
"And I guess Washington has grown accustomed to hearing that voice and slowly but surely is understanding, that this minority voice is very similar to the voices of other minorities in that it is a group of people who are discriminated against." she said.
But Vaid credits some colder, harder facts: "The movement has proved that it can muster bodies, votes and money."
An increasing number of gay peo
"In the old days — 10 years ago, eight years ago, even five years ago."
ple are spending money to try to influence elections, said Timothy McFeeley, executive director of the Human Rights Campaign Fund. The campaign fund operates the only national gay political action committee, which last year contributed more than 15 percent to federal candidates. They hope to trouble that amount in the next election cycle, McFeeley said.
— it was hard for people to take money from the gay and lesbian lobby. he said, “That is almost a thing of the past. I wouldn't say it's totally a thing of the past. I think there are still some states and districts where police afraid if they take gay PAC money it will be political suicide for them.”
McFeely won't name the politicians who used to shun gay money but now take it. But, he said, if a formerly reluctant candidate comes calling, the fund is happy to contribute.
"I'm very realistic about counting
votes and getting votes," he said.
"And even though the (gay) community may not like the system, they like the fact that we're in there playing the system."
Brady Bill misses heart of problem
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A proposed seven-day waiting period for handgun purchases and President Bush's crime package satisfy the need to dispense don't attack the heart of America's crime problem, criminologists say.
The handgun measure, dubbed the Brady Bill, and the president's proposals to relax search and seizure laws, are the most great political and symbolic value.
But neither measure "is going to make a significant dent on crime," said criminologist Alfred Blumstein, dean of the school of public affairs at the University of Chicago. "Both of them are impressive exercises in symbolism.
Critics of Bush's proposal say the damage it would do to the Bill of
Rights is too high a price to pay to save the handful of cases that are dismissed each year in federal court. Police conducted improper searches.
Opponents of the handgun measure, particularly the National Rifle Association, contend it wouldn't prevent criminals from buying handguns but would impose great inconveniences on the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens to protect themselves
Criminals are just not lining up at gun stores to fill out papers and have their backgrounds checked" Jim Irwin, AOA's legislative chair, said last week.
Attorney General Dick Thornton burtham notes that only 17 percent of guns used by felons to commit crimes are bought in stores. The rest are obtain
ed illegally on the street
The Brady Bill has symbolic importance for both supporters and opponents and carries great emotional appeal.
It is named for James Brady, the White House press secretary who was severely wounded by a gunman who tried to kill President Reagan in 1961. Reagan recently endorsed the bill.
The measure would allow, but not require, local police to conduct record checks to determine if would be gun buyers are convicted felons and therefore ineligible to purchase a handgun.
Bush, who has opposed the bill in the past, has signaled a willingness to pressure of Congress passes his crime pledge to civil libertarians opposed by civil libertarians and
some liberal Democrats.
Among other features, the president's bill would revive and expand the federal death penalty, applying it to such crimes as terrorism, use of weapons of "mass destruction" and political assassinations.
But criminologists said that a death penalty for federal crimes would be used so iniquitely that its effect on the crime would be mainly symbolic.
"Most things the federal government does have very little to do with the crime problem," said James Alan Fox, a criminologist.
"The federal government having the death penalty is really silly because there are very few capital offenses in the federal system and they are certainly not street crimes." he said.
Break up of Waggoner Ranch may be near
The Associated Press
And now, the big showdown.
VERNON, Texas — It's Texas myth come to life: big land, big oil, big family, big fortune.
Many among the 12,000 people inhabiting Vernon, where the ranch
The W.T. Waggoner Estate, an empr built from a ranch two-thirds the size of Ribbe Island, appears to be crumbling under the weight of a squabble between the founder's third and fourth-generation descendants. Presiding over it all is W.T.'s grandmother, 78-year-old sculptor and socialite Electra Waggoner Biggs.
and its offshoots provide an annual $1 million payroll, watch with worry the company's debt levels.
"You remember when you were a kid and you wondered why are Mommy and Daddy fighting?" said Mayor Emmett Maxon.
Miss. Brigs has asked a court to help sell off the 550,000-acre ranch. Dotted by oil wells and cows, mansions and aircraft hangars stalls and ranches cover most of two north Texas counties and reaches in to four others.
You thought, 'Which side is going to choose me?' That is their ap pro position.
With land in the area selling for $200 to $600 an acre, the estate is conservatively valued at $110 million for the land alone. With the assets thrown in, the price could rise to $330 million.
Ranch history stretches back to pre-Civil War Texas when Dan Waggoner William Thomas Waggoner's father, bought land a few counties east of the present ranch. In 1870, legend says, father and son drove a herd of Longhorn cattle to stockyards in Texas with $5,000 in their saddlebags.
They set themselves up near the Red River, north of the present town
Paying about $1 an acre, the Waggoners slowly built their cattle and horse empire westward.
When oil was discovered on Wagoner land in 1903, W T wished for wagon roads.
"oil, oil, what do I want with damn he reportedly said "I look in my pocket."
But oil's potential was clear and the Waggons' reversed triple-D cattle brand was soon emblazoned on oil wells.
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Foreman proves himself
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — The last thing Evander Holfyield expected was to see George Foreman standing and smiling, then the last bit George expected.
But there he was, the 42-year-old challenger, whaling away at the 28-year-old champion. It didn't matter that Hollyfield was far ahead on points. It didn't matter that neither had enough left to hurt the other.
It didn't even matter that Foreman won the last round on two judges' winner, even though the heavyweight title would remain with Hollyfield.
"I proved to the whole world you don't have to be ashamed of being a senior citizen." Foreman said Friday night after losing a unanimous decision to the unbeaten Hollyfield. "He was one point and one point. If you can live, you can dream."
"I came within inches of being the heavyweight champion."
Not really. The fight wasn't close after the seventh round. But Foreman fulfilled what many considered more than a fantasy before the fight. He tested the champ for 36 minutes, about a half-hour longer than many thought he would last.
"I knew I would have to fight the
best fight of my life," said Holyfield, now 26-0. "He proved that at 42 it's not over.
Holyfield did more than enough. The cards read 116-111, 117-110 and 115-112. Holyfield was stung several times, especially in the second, fifth and seventh rounds, but he never seemed close to going down.
"The toughest part was the pressure George put on me," said Holfield, who earned $20 million to Foreman's $12.5 million.
"He hit me with some good shots, but I never gave him a chance to force up. A lot of times, I madeEOE do things to spend his energy."
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 22, 1991
13
SCORE SETS
30
20
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Despite a 3-2 lead, Javhawk senior Craig Widley buries his head in frustration as his edge slips away against Oklahoma
Tennis teams suffer Big-8 losses
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams suffered their second Big Eight Conference losses in two days yesterday at the hands of the
On Saturday, Oklahoma State swept the Kansas women 9-0 and nipped the Kansas men 5-4. The Wildcats lost to South Carolina by identical 4-scores Sunday.
The Kansas women are in second place, heading into the conference tournament with 42 points. The men also are in second with 39 points.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said the Oklahoma State women's team will have 61 points entering the tournament, which will assure the Cowgirls of a conference title.
The Kansas men, however, still have a legitimate shot at the title, trailing Oklahoma State by a mere three points.
In yesterday's women's match,
Kansas came out strong against the
Kansas junior Eveline Hewlett tied Tracy Trees' all-time Kansas career sivery victory mark of 106 in her 3-6, 3-6, 2 defeat of Oklahoma's S. Stecey
Sooners in singles matches at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
The turning point in the match came in the third set.
Trailing 1-2, Hamers aced Bullman to take a 40-15 lead in the game.
Bullman protested the call but was overruled by the line judge. The ruling shook Bullman's composure for the rest of the match as Hamers slammed and volleyed her way into the KU record book.
Kansas juniors Renee Raychahuri and Page Goines also were victorious in singles, but Sonner victories scored at three big doubles.
All three doubles matches were close, but the Jayhawks could not get their shots to fall at the right times.
Hamers and Raychaudhari teamed together to defeat Oklahoma's Bulls.
fought 7-5. 4-6. 6-4 victory
Unfortunately for Kansas, the Sooners already had sealed the dual by posting victories at Nos. 2 and 3 doubles.
"Once again, we let things ship through our fingers." Center said. "We had some opportunities and just didn't capitalize."
Although the women's title has all but been claimed by the Cowgirls, Center said the Jayhawks would attend at the conference tournament.
"Now our backs are against the wall," he said. "We'll enter the tournament two to four points behind us." "If we win, I don't think they're a better team."
in yesterday's men's match, emotion and intensity ran rampant.
A raucous crowd was on hand at the field house courts to court Kansas senior Jeff Gloss and junior Rafael Stromer in pictures over their Sooner opponents.
own in Nos. 1, 3 and 5 singles
With the team score tied at three, rain forced the two teams and what was left of the crowd into the shelter. In the end, the Swim Club for the doubles matches.
The emotion present at the field house courts found its way to Alvamar, but it was unable to push the Jahvacks to victory.
Oklahoma answered the Jay hawks' victories with three of their
Kansas seniors Craig Widley and Chris Walker pulled out a gut-wrenching 6-7, 6-1, 7-5 victory over Oklahoma's Michael Martinez and Michel Tremblay, but that was all the magic KU had left.
The Sooners won posts at No. 2
and 3 doubles to account for the 5-4
winning pair.
Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perlman said the players on both teams played as hard as they could for as long as they could.
“it’s disappointing to lose, but there no time to dwell on it,” he said. “We’re three points behind and there still 72 points to be had.”
Relays include KU successes, show of talent
'Hawk women win 2-mile relay
By Rick C. Honish
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
The 66th Annual Kansas Relays concluded Saturday evening after a four-day showcase of track-and-field talent. More than 2,600 college and high school athletes competed in the event.
Marybeth Labsky also recorded a firstplace for Kansas, winning the high jump with a leap of 5 feet, 10 inches.
In recent years, it had been suggested by many that the Relays were in a slump, but Eddie Allen said this year could be the beginning of new glory for the event. Allen, who oversees many of the electronics used at Relays, said he had been coming to Lawrence for the event for 41 years.
He said that the level of excellence had dropped for the past two or three Kansas Relays.
In terms of the Kansas Jayhawks, Allen may be right. Kansas found success in many events during Friday and Saturday's competition.
Not thinking about it may have been what freshman Dan Waters did as well. Waters sprained an ankle Tuesday and was hobbling after a visit to the gym. Relay, but his effort helped the squad take first place with a time of 9:50.7.
"I think the competition is on its way back up this year." he said.
In the collegiate pole vault, freshman John Bazzoni took first after clearing 16 feet.
After running what she called her worst race ever in Friday's 800-meter run, freshman Helaft Haistrom helped the women's two-mile relay team win first place with a time of 9.03:89. Before Saturday's relay, Haistrom said her legs had been tired since Monday.
"Coach told me not to think about it," she said.
Bazzoni said he was surprised 16 feet won the event.
"This is the KU Relays, where you expect 17 feet to win it," he said.
Senior All-American Pat Manson and former Kansas stand-out Scott Hoffman made it to 18-1, but Manson fell short. He finished at third, clearing 17-6; Huffman attempted the next hole with a score of 16-2, but he grazed the bar on his third attempt. Huffman finished in first place after clearing 18-1.
Even 17 feet could not win the invitational pole vault.
Manson said that was a good height for Huffman.
"The post-collegiate haven't even trained for this," Manson said. "It is just a workout for them."
Freshman javelin hurler Heather Berlin reached a new level in her young career at Kansas. Berlin had a personal best throw of 165 feet, 2 inches, good enough for a third-place finish.
Bernil said she was glad to beat her personal record, but her first goal was to win the event.
"My personal record felt good," she said. "But I can still get better by working on my technique."
Among the athletes working on technique at Memorial Stadium was senior distance runner Troy Neaville of Pittsburg State.
"We are a Division II school," he said. "So we don't get to see these guys from Kansas or K-State.
Neville said the Kansas Relays was a great opportunity for athletes like himself to push themselves an extra step.
Rocket bolts draft dawdles
"The competition here is better than any other meet we go to. We really look forward to coming here."
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Once the Rocket lifted off to Canada, the NFL draft turned into a defensive drama.
The first six picks yesterday were defensive players, with Miami tackle Russell Maryland as the No. 1 overall pick by the Dallas Cowbys. The defensive run doubled the previous record at the start of a draft.
That's not to say that Ismail was forgotten, however. The Los Angeles Raiders, always willing to use a draft pick as a gamble, selected Ismail with the 15th pick of the fourth round, the 100th pick overall.
There were six defensive backs and six defensive linemen taken in the longest first round in draft history — 4 hours, 55 minutes. The record was due to the many deals that took place, most of them orchestrated by Coach Three of the top six players were defensive backs, including UCLA safety Eric Turner; taken second by the Cleveland Browns.
The teams completed four rounds yesterday and will resume this morn-
Such a strong run was made on defense that 300-pound lineman Eric Swann, who never played a down in college, was the No. 6 overall pick by the Phoenix Cardinals, who have a record or make surprise first-round picks.
The most notable offensive pick came late in the round, when the Raiders, picking 24th, chose controversial quarterback Todd Marino. The opposing defense sapphire more was arrested earlier this year on drug possession charges.
The previous record for completing
1st-round picks The Associated Press
NEW YORK—First-round selections yesterday in the NFL draft
1. Datals from New England, Rusty Malenko, Mauna Loa, Fiesta. 2. Fireside, Tiremur, C. Forsyth, Miami. 3. Nassau. 4. Derval, Mike Gloeckel to New Orleans. 5. Mike Gloeckel to New Orleans. 6. Tampa, Eric Bacchus, n.college. 7. Tampa, Eric Bacchus, n.college.
6. Philadelphia (from Green Bay) Antoine Davis, of Tampa, was 19 years old. Davison, David Stanley, of Oakland, was 11 years old. 11. New England (from Minnesota) through Dallas) Paul Hiatus, of Salt Lake City. 12. California (from Pasadena) Mina Mithai, of Indianapolis) Mina Mithai, of Pasadena) Mina Mithai, of Indianapolis
15. Pittsburgh, Huey Richardson, Bb. Florida
19. Seattle Dan McCain, Db. San Diego State
20. Utah David Berry, Db. Englewood
England and Dallas) Bobby Wilson, dM. Michigan
18. Chicago) Albert William, dM.
Clark, dO. Ohio) 20. Dallas (from Washington)
21. Miami) 20. Mississippi) 31. Ohio) Harvey Wiley
the first round was 4 hours, 16 minutes in 1967. This year's record time reflected the questions about most of the players who left almost all the teams using their allotted 15 minutes.
22. Chicago, Brian Thomas, of Texas 23. Mamaril, Randy Milton, w/ Miami, Wfam 24. Liam Scherzer, of Texas 25. San Francisco, Dan Washington 26. San Francisco, Ted Washington 27. New York Game, Jarrett Jack, b. Michigan ♥ knotted rights to Detroit for a second and ♥ fourth-round in the fourth-round from Miami
Six deals were made in the first round, and Dallas was involved in three, using picks obtained in deals the last two years for Herschel Walker and Steve Walsh for flexibility.
Kansas sweeps four as home games end
Bv Lana Smith
Kansan sportswrite
The Kansas softball team finished its home season undefeated after completing the weekend with a four-game sweep against Oklahoma City and Friends universities.
Junior outfielder Jennifer Frost said that she thought the Jayhawks should have come out stronger against Friends yesterday but that overall she was pleased with their performance.
On Saturday, Kansas defeated Oklahoma City 5-0 and 7-0. The Jayhawks took their victory streak further yesterday, holding Friends in the same place, 5-0 in seven games and 7-0 in the second.
"Oklahoma City is a pretty good team." Frost said. "We came out and didn't really give them a chance to get into the game."
Kansas senior Jodi Hoyer said the Jayhawks had been hitting well, but not necessarily when the hits were critical.
The Jayhawks have been trying to strengthen their hitting in the past two weeks because they have the biggest being in their baserunners.
Frost said that the Jayhawks' pitching was good but that their hitting still needed improvement.
"We're still leaving too many runners on." Hoyer said. "We hit the ball, but sometimes we just get knocked off by runners in scoring position. We
"We could have hit the ball on the nose a little better," Frost said.
Hoyer said Kansas coach Kalum Haack had told them to work on bringing scorers in because the Jayhawks might not have as many opportunities to score later against tougher teams.
need to move them up or score."
Freshman pitcher Stephani Williams improved her record to 14-7, after grabbing the first victory against Oklahoma City and the second-game victory against Friends.
Junior pitcher Shelly Sack also went 2-for-2 with one run scored.
Sack stepped up and pitched the second game and took her record to 10-2 for the victory. She also went 1-for-2 with one RBI and a double during the second game against Oklahoma City.
Junior shortstop Christy Artterburn said the strongest aspect of the Kansas softball team was its defense, even though defense is one area she would like to improve.
Arterburn went 3-for-4 and stole four bases during the first game against Friends yesterday.
Sophomore pitcher Jill Bailey took the first-game victory against Friends and improved her record to 7-3.
Arterburn said that the Jayhawers were getting closer to reaching their potential but that they should have to keep up their intensity.
"I think we're almost there," Arterburn said. "By the time the Big Eight tournament comes together, we'll be on track." We're back on track."
Layhawks
Seniors Kim Sacco and Jodi Hover reflect on their last home game.
11th-inning balk call allows Sooners victory
Sports briefs
In the bottom of the 11th inning with the score tied 10-10, the Sooners had runners on second and third when Kansas pitcher Joel Bacon was called for a balk by the home plate umpire.
One of the rarest calls in the game cost the Kansas baseball team a victory yesterday afternoon against Oklahoma Sooners in Norman, Oklahoma.
The call brought the game-winning run home and gave the Sooners a
split in the four-game Big Eight Conference series.
The Jayhawks took Friday's game 5-3 in ten innings and the first game of Saturday's double header 4-0 won Saturday's second game 3-1.
With the split, Kansas remained in fourth place in the Big Eight.
The Jayhawks will travel to Wichita State tomorrow night and will play host to the Shockers at 7 p.m. night at Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
Missouri leads the conference with a 10-6 record.
KU men's golf team finishes second in Ohio
The Kansas men's golf team finished second at the Firestone Intercollegiate Invitational over the weekend in Akron, Ohio.
Indiana University took first place with a total score of 878.
Two Jayhawks placed in the top 10 at the tournament.
Matt Gogel took fourth place with a score of 221, and Brad Bruno grabbed seventh place with 222.
Thirty-four teams competed in the tournament.
Jackson's wife responds
to criticism from Star
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Linda Jackson says she knows Bo, and that two Kansas City sports columnists are all wrong about him.
In a letter published Sunday in the Kansas City Star, the wife of the slugger released by the Kansas City Royals March 18 because of a hip injury went to bat for her husband, say. The star said he is an important member of the team.
At a news conference in Chicago on Fridav. the two-sports star criticized
"Throughout my five years in this city, I have patiently observed both praise and ridicule of my husband," Mrs. Jackson wrote. "However, none of the ridicule or attacks can compare with those by Jonathan Rand
the royals and owner Ewink Cuffman, saying he was "happy to be with an organization that is not going to use me as a piece of meat."
In her letter to The Star, Mrs. Jackson criticized Jonan Rand and Gib Tywman, two of the paper's sports columnists, zeroning in par-turn on an April 5 piece in which hand blinded the White Sox judgment was blinded.
and Gib Twyman. These two men have made bashing Bo Jackson a sport of its own."
She pointed to Rand's assertion that statistics show the Royals were a much better team without her husband.
"However, even expert statisticians agree that while statistics serve as a helpful tool, at the same time they can be misleading and/or interpreted incorrectly in the needs of the researchers," Mrs. Jackson wrote.
From staff and wire reports
14
Monday, April 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Headmasters
809 Vermont
843-8808
NATURAL WAY
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New Panasonic XK-P1123,24-pin printer $269
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841-DIET(3438)
935 IOWA
(Hillcrest Med Center)
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Sat., 10-Noon
Classified Directory
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
130 Lost & Found
200's
**Employment**
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300's
---
110 Bus. Personal
100s Announcements
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A
Merchandise
305 For Sale
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306 Miscellaneous
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111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Eating Pizza
BUY ONE PIZZA
& GET THE SECOND
ONE FREE!
Monday Mania
enhance concentration, creativity and study
self-confidence using h-lead intel-
vision brain machines. Call 841-351. Lawrence
Hypnosis and Stress Management Call
760-629-6593 or feel very well. Complete image update and color
reasonable for reasonable calls. Call 911-323-6289
Those crazy people at
Pyramid Pizza are
letting you buy any
Pyramid Pizza & get
the second Pizza (of equal value) FREE!
Earn up to $800/$1200/month this summer
Interview with Straight Away
Enterprise, 842-604-3950
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS New designs, quick delivery. Order now. It's Your Party. 1601. W 23rd. 749-3455.
B. AUTOMOTIVE, is your full service auto repair. B. Repair class. Completed to classic. Body shop available. American motoroverse and repair & maintenance services accepted. Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sugal, Retail
The Ete. Shop
732 Mass. 843-9611
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* "makes sense of Western Civs" makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores
Not just for biker Babes anymore!
Temporary Tattoos
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-0611
120 Announcements
FORMAL WEAR
The. Eat. Shop
Rental and Sales. 732 Mas
**College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finest! Since 1901. COLLEGE SCHOOLHOLDERS LOCATION. Honors. B.A., M.S., Ph.D.**
BATTERING can be emotional or physical.
Mom on Monday night, 7 p.m. Call 814-697-8081
women Monday night, 7 p.m. Call 814-697-8081
(limited lunch delivery area)
Also, try our Colomba Frozen Yogurt
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER! JET there anytime with AIRHITCH (r) for $109 from the East Coast ($229) to the Midwest (when you travel to the West) and Let G+G hit AIRHITCH (r) 323-864-2000.
Honey available at request for additional cost.
842-3232
14th & Ohio
(under The Wheel)
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counsel A friendly advice understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called return to counselors). Headquarters 841-235 or KU Info 844-3560 Sponsored by
Have you been censored by a professor? Have you seen someone in your life who that others find objectional, racist, sexist or stupid? Are you sure?
PREPARING FOR FINAL EXAMS
WORKSHOP. Coaches cover time management, using tools to help students cope with test anxiety and test-taking with the use of a free TExas FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Program.
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Theravai on 416-682-7608 go by a fly kite
Suffering from abortion? Write Hearts Restore,
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential
reserve; material will follow
130 Entertainment
140 Lost-Found
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS
841.7553.8 N.J.
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 812-2454 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters Counseling Center
Found: Small, gold ring in front to Wescoe. To identify call 864-6388
PYRAMID
LOST PARROT! Green with red forehead. Valued
companion. If seen, call Kevin at 749-3707 or
841-3718. $50 Reward.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Assistant needed to work full-time in Chiropractor's office for the summer and part time in the fall. Must have a bachelor's degree, insurance billing, therapies and other office calls 7:40am to 1:30pm for instructions.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterboarding, gymnastics, camp fishing, camping, crafts,DRAMING, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $400 or less. Job ID 786-1342. Maple Ridge 786-1342. IH-100. 786-1344.
Attendant needed for disabled woman. Some lifting required. Approx. 7 hrs. a week $4.50/hr.
842-1794
Local Restaurant 30 Openings
$4.50 Starting Wage
Apply from 3-5p.m. at
901 Kentucky 204A
Here in an opportunity to earn money, see i.e.
country, and keep physically fit all in one惊喜 job. We will train you to drive a truck and move
from one place to another. The East 13th street or Call 843-6838 right away.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-Career Opportunities for alignment and recruitment. Benefits in cole degree starting salary, company car. At any of our locations in the US. Position requires a must in call collect. Mr. Schwartz.
Cashiers
Fun & Exciting—Plus you can make $10/hour waitressing. Must start part-time now. 18 yrs and up. Apply 1:35 to today at 90 Massachusetts.
COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERN. Deadline:
June 12, 2015. Programming micro/mini main computer programs to support data communications and networking, working primarily in "C" on MS DOS UNIX, AND, in "B" on UNIX, .NET, documentation, and maintenance of exe-
tension software. Participate in the organization and networking equipment as needed. Consulting with staff and users in computer compilers, programming languages, and a letter of application and a current resume to Aitken Humphrey, Personal Officer, Computer
Associate, USO/EMCO, Lawrence, MA 60045. EO/ALE EMPLOYER
EARN $5,000-$10,000 Now hiring-managers and
limited opportunity. Part-time now,
full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
Call: 800-400-COLLEGE; M. Gannon.
Kansas & Burge Union Food Service catering department need a part-time worker to work weekends but no nights. 10-25 hours some weeks. Must be fluent in English. Must be experienced in arranging salad, meat and or cheese trays with an artistic touch. Must have knowledge of food service requirements. Apply in person.
Marty Foster at Manteo's Pizza at 8th & Ilowa is
providing insurance. Must have transportation, must
have Low Risk transportation, current insurance and a good driving record. Earn $10, commission tips. Don't delay.
Check out www.marteopizza.com
NANNEz-Immediate positions on the EARE
Coast, Washington D.C and Florida. Excellent
salaries plus benefits. 1 year commitment. Call
area representative. 913.872.4947.
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary.
1-800-695-2789
Need a break? Be a nanny! Earn good money, go to interesting places for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency, Lawrence. 842-4443
Need person to show apartments, answer phones and general office work. Full time in summer employment or internship. Need to be work study eligible. Call Mary Pat at 841-6003. Part-time secretary/bookkeeper needed beginning summer. Will need to be responsible for processing, general accounting procedures, organization skills and effective customer retainer skills. Provide client referral interest, resume, and name and phone number of 2 personal assistants required. P.O. Box 1904, Lawrence, MA 70493 (645) 744-1732. P.O. Box 1904, Lawrence, MA 70493 (645) 744-1732.
Work available in K.C. area. Secretarial-word processing, data entry and secretarial skills need to be demonstrated by 14 pm May 6th or 20th Packing and Unloading-Want to stay physically iFlex! Flexible schedule: Apply 14pm noon May 6th or 20th Packing. Only 2-3rd blue and gray office complex.
Sitter needed for summer for 12 yr old boy. Alvaram area. Live in optional. Room and board provided. 749-438 after 6.
SUM_MER-FALL PARTYTIME JOB as personal care attendances, for disabled, retired KU staff. Job duties include providing care persons that will be able to work some evening, afternoons, and mornings. Availability to work durations vary by job role. Nursing or Med, Social Welfare or Spec. Reliable students or people with like interests. Reliable car and phone required. U. C. citizenship desired. Job number 842-1691 between 9am-6pm weekdays to apply.
SUMMER-Topus in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counsellors in WSI. Tennis Technical Theater Assist, Gymnastics Upper Classmess preferred Call Arise ASAP 1400-6432
Summer and fall sales help wanted. Background prepared in HPER 350-48 times/week. Apply at altas or lower.
Summer Jobs Outdoors, over 7,000 openings! Near
New York. Resumes to Lifelong, 13 E. Winger Ave.
For More Info, Sullivan's, 13 E. Winger Ave.
**Textbook Clerkks:** KU Bookstores. Part time $2.50 per hour, position could possibly last until Sept. 16, 1990. Must be able to work weekdays between the school and job. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods, speak English fluently, have employment and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant to have interest or knowledge books. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office Level 5.
Telemarketing Mon-Thur, 6-9pm Call Mon Thur
6-1pm, 841-1289
WHITER WANTED. Pics need words, word need words. Photographer would like to freelance w/ writer-Human interest. Environmental. New Age. Call Steve. 842-3414
The INP is looking for a few dedicated individuals to assist with merchant subscriptions. Applicants must work this summer, and have own IT skills. The course will provide good oral and visual presentation skills will be helpful. Fall placement available Lawrence Business Connection, Inc. 841-2244
Want a summer job where you can lose weight
feel great and earn lots of moneya Please call
Dublin (R6) 444.225
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered mid-Muscat Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, drivers license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-8716.
Government photo, passports, immigration,
vies, senior portraits, modeling & arts, port
follows. 18:4W. Video calls via calli
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn & Alertion Services
Calli
Thesis & Dissertations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E. 9th Street.
843-600
DWI-TRAFFIC
JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
235 Typing Services
Pake ID's & alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbin into accurately spelled words in a letter-quality type, 843-8263, day or evening. (dollar per word) - 150 words of word processing, 74-646 words
1) a page-double-spaced. Accurate, Fast Word Processing.
2) Call Reshete At 841-0776
A. Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. @ 842-7383.
1+ Word Processing: Term Papers, letters, resumes, etc. call 829-4754, 3:30 to 30 pm wkdys, anytime wkdys
Call R.J.S. Typing Services 841-5042 Term papers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m. Great Training
By Dixie
843 5052
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term paper, terms, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings, and
other documents. GW 212N W. 84th St. 78,
8a m. 5m. p. F - 8a S. 8m. p. 89. 8427 214
FAST ACCEPTU TYPING $-1.20 per page. Includes PU and DEL, where in city limits Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Cal Mae at: 842.3882
w correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible答卷 Phil. 842 6255
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, $927/",
Mass. 841-1071.
Professional typist. Reasonable rates. Call
(843) 2903
Research Project? Save! Assess and frustrate!
Experienced professional will enter your data file from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call KeyWors. 842-8307.
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer.
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8586.
Word Processing/Typing; Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
Word Processing. $1.00 bill, Spell check, etc. Call
843-4638
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
16 foot Hobie Catamaran. New condition! Trailer with sail tube, lots of extras. $550. 841-5914-leave message
12630 Mobile home 2 bedroom. W/D, stove,
refrigerator $1500 842 0794, leave message. 2 cats free to good home
1986 Honda Aero 50. Runs great, looks good, 90
plus mpg. $300 OBO. BGS-3930.
used. $490 msg. Call Sarm, 865-1510
1988 Honda Elite. Low mileage. Like new. $490
411-2370
FOR SALE: Hamilton Hydraulic Drafting Station /
V. vendo Trencher Good Condition, good
orig. $2,300, $600 abs. Call M-F 8-5141741
CHEAP plane ticket KCT to College Station, Texas or to Houston April 26-28. For more info call 804-1628
org 2,590 $100 obo Call M F 8-5 84...
For sale SAIL SKI 1691 Call M 190 new front tire,
headlight 1890 Likable $100 Call B41 9209.
Custom box with two '12" Orion extreme subwoofer $200; Rockford Foggate Punch 75 HD amplifier $259; Call after 5pm at 842-804-800.
tENT SURPLUS? Sleeping bags, backpacks,
nets, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
shoes, outdoor gear.
CARHARTT WORKWEAR Mon Sat 5-14 47:27:44 St. Marys Surplus Sales St. Marys, St. Marys Harleysave Honda Rebel 400 Silver Anniversary New brakes, battery Garage kept
Honda Elite Moped Scc 70 miles, almost new
$600. Call before 12:00 am 985-667-077
NUELE RAILCHAIR BIKES WITH SUNLINN 100W
PUMP (INCLUDES GASFUGE) 825-891-916
one way ticket, KT to DFW on May 16th. $100
oob Call Kelly. 84-011-73
MT BEKE 'Giant' 58 cm. black. Decree XT extra.
limestone. Low hike. Now worth $1,000.
$75 mo. jason. 913-469-1000 Overland Park.
Step by step manuals that can make you up to $158 for next week. Fewrem will return $5 refundable to P.O. Box 424124 Lawrence, RS 69044
Rockford Fogate car stereo equipment for sale
Call 364-2927
TREK 560 Road Bike, Mint Condition. 22 in. Must
sell. Jason 865-1957
Waterbed 4 sale. Super single, padded side rails,
boardhead with mirror. $90. 841-2702.
340 Auto Sales
1982 Blue Buck LeSabre, AC, new brakes, good condition,
$1200 or best offer. Call 842-7151
1986's Toyota Supra, black with gray leather, sumoon 5 spd. spats pwr w/ 4 mounted Yokohama snow伞 61k Miles 801-44775
1989 Plymouth Horizon, auto, a/c, am fm, 13.000 miles, like new interior $6,200 negotiable Call 841-7641
199 Plymouth Laser RS, automatic, A/C, factory CD player, Blue, 15K miles, perfect condition
$12.500 841-4777
4 Sale. 83 Cifela GT, PS, PB, AC, am/fm/cms.
Good condition. $300 b o. b. Call 864-2574
ENJOY THE SUMMER with this beauty! 1. Chevy Cavalier convertible, white w/ black top 68 mm, automatic, 2.8 V-6, ac, stereo cabinet 2.900 cal, $299-328 today
For sale 1881 TOYOTA CELICA GT Always starts, runs great, no hail. $1400.00 841-4449 evenings.
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
360 Miscellaneous
On TV, VCIS, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor ViMOC AMEX. Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 104 W. 8th - 749 1919
Lawrence Glass Tinting Special rates for students. Call anytime, 7am to 10pm. 737 E. 22nd.
841-7691
370 Want to Buy
cont. CD-56 and down Records and tapes: 320 and down Top dollar for collections Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts. 865-0122
Make someone's day special in the Kansan Personals
400s
Real Estate
405 For Rent
1. BR, CA, WD hookup. quiet! For rent or buy
$75/week. 843-936
1 BR, Summer term, 14th and Tennessee Area
Rent Negotiable! No pets. For appt. 841-5797.
After 3 p.m. call 965-4237
1 bedroom basement apartment, walk to campus
and KU. Available mid-August. $235, utilities incl,
non-smoker. 842-4938
or 2 females for summer sublease. Great location,
new, spacious, pool, AC, DW, MW, Rent negotiable! Please leave message. 865-3822
2 Bdr apt available August. Walk to KU or downstairs. Wood floor, washer/dry hookups. Water paid. No pets. $440/mi. 841-1074.
2 bedroom/2 bath summer sublease in
Moodybrook. We rent for $70/mo. We'll rent to you for $370/mo. Water, cable paid-pool? Sorry,
poaching. Call 841-6997.
2 ap available in new building of West Hills apt for June 1. Great apt with Wi-Fi access, walk-in closets, energy efficient gas. Great location near campus. 106 Emery Hill id. 4400. No pets.
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option.
Spacious. Economical. AC, DW, on bus route. Call 749-3477.
TRAILRIDGE APTS
Now leasing
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
br threehour, 2b wa, b/w, dwarf, garage,
utilities, available 6/1. Survise Village 845-4903.
3 stud apt. for rent starting at $255.00 No pets.
Call 749-7568
**standards**
1.2& 8 BR apts – 3-pools
1.2& 8 BR rentals – tennis courts
1.2& 8 BR enclosures – bus route
– heat & water paid
(on apartments)
Now leasing for summer & fall 1991
Downstown 1 bedroom large enough for 2 tolerant people. Clean and efficient, large deck. 843-996-961
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, physical condition or an intention, to make any such preferential 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 devellations advertised in this newspaper can be available on an equal opportunity basis.
Available June and July for sublease 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown 842-9045
4 BR apt for summer sublease 2. Width, W.D. DRAC
ac microwave, water tennis courts, on board
Sunrise Village, Call Kim, 865-925, leavr message.
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown $345.415/mo Call 844-2116
Coops have been part of KU since 1993. Come a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun, socially responsible, environmentally conscious, and healthy. House of Coops - 749-6771 or 841-9484
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 715th Ohio construction; and 2 BR (Formerly Capitol Place) construction. New construction; 2 BR-1 bath; 3 BR-2 bath; with washers dryers. Access from Memorial
- You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower
Hill, 1468 Tennessee, 749-8217 or 814-8484.
- 541 Michigan 8:90 am, 1 plex or BR-3-BR-2B. Bath All with washer/dryer. Square Apartments. Square Coloring. colorado. 24:50 call today. First Management 749-1566. Open house every Saturday from 12:35 at Bradford Squirrel 300, Colorado C-14. Office hours Mon-Fri 8:30am - 12:35am.
Available June or August Efficiency 1 bedroom apts in nine older houses Walk to KU or downtown $25 and no. Pets KU-814-1074
Available immediately. Large 1 bedroom apt. for rent. 1 block from Union. Must see. Call 841-5797 or 865-001. Leave message.
Excellent Location: 1 block to campus; 2 bedroom apt in 4k9, dishwasher, WD hookup, CAU. Job #1, $400 /月, #1400 /Ohio. City: Ohio 482-742-8423
Available immediately one bedroom, gas and water paid $23 per month. Availability summer nights. Private room. Some with utilities and ceiling fans, mini blinds private parking, laundry facilities. Just one block from hotel.
Female on-smoking roommate wanted to share nice towhee, $25 include spacious ivory bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! Available, May. Call Ann (evenings 8am)
Giant, one bedroom apartment in nice, older house, wood floors, sun room, a/c, gas and water paid. Available June. $430. No pets.
841-1074
Hey KU M. students-move-in 1 June and receive $2 \frac{1}{2} up your rent for 2 months. *Studies, 2 and 2 bedroom apartments. Heat and water waste* *Aerocar from KU Med. Center. Rainy Tropics*.
Got Married, need subseller ! bedroom apartment with fireplace, wet bar, full appliances Water and cable included. 8300, 843-8022
GREATEST BLEASE 2. Br w/ microwave paid close. Camp on campus. Call now, 834-4112 Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt near campus. Quaint apartment to campas. Great location. Quaint and close to campas. 2 bedroom apartment with surmount. CA, wood floors. Phone 1-800-750-9222. $190 per room. Missington. Call 842-4242.
hey KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and
receive y2 our rent for 2 months * Studies J.
and 2 bedmats * Heat and water paid * Across
CENTER, Rainway Center Tower Aqw3
831-981-863
Huge 2 bedroom summer sublease. Free furniture use if necessary. Gas/water paid. 865-1387. Leave message.
International Students: Diting of get-fitted kicked out of the dorms over the holiday? Sunflower House stay open 365 days a year and is a great place to study. 146 Tremont 749/687 or 814/0484
Leasing now for Fall or Summer. 2 Br. apt.
4-12 lease, 1 month CA, DW. Close to Campus.
parking street. Low Utilities. Call 842-8784
ask for Tracy or leave message
Lorimar Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new, available now! 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease this property in or out of town for $695 per month. One nice apartment close to campus. Hardwood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-2018 or 842-9007 evenings.
Nature. spacios 3 bdr duplex. Has all kitchen appliances; central air, W/D w吊柜, garage, low utilities Avail. in June $450 mo. No pet! ea.778898
Nice studio at 1032 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts. Water paid: 84327.5272
Nicet two bedroom home with all applicances.
New carpet and paint. Blinds, garage, quiet areas
no pet, prides on long term tenants. Available
infinitely.
$435. $435. 8288.
No hill to climb! Large 1 bed room at 11th and Louisiana. Central air, laundry facilities; maintenance staff. Avail. May or June through Aug. 924. Call Incw. 805-367-9587
new leasing and 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southfair Plaza. Apsa Bed. Apartments. $75,200 starts at lawn care, Wi-Fi and cash back on remodeled kitchen. Wash, dry and clean. New leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments Apsen West Apts. $350 for 1 bedroom, $750 for ceiling fans. Filing waist, walk to carpark.
Studio Apartment available now, in like new condition at 1008 Mississippi. Water, gas, cable paid $300.00 - 941-6826.
Studio apt at 1028 Mississippi. Available now.
$205.00 plus deposit. 749-7588.
SUBLEASE at HAMOVER PLACE. Furnished one bedroom. From mid-May to December. Close to campus and downtown. Call 865-4386 10pm-11pm.
SUBLET 2 rooms in 3rd楼. Avail. early
May to end July. $180/mo + utilities. Will negotiate.
No dep. Extra incentive. Please call 842-7333
Kerrie.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Orchard Corners
1-4/brd available, furnished, pool, bus route
clean $170/mo/person. Call 845-6290
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, garage, AC. 2021 Heatherwood, 841-9707.
SUMMER SULEASE: 3 bedroom, 2 full bath apartment. Air conditioned, washer/dryer, off street parking, dishwasher, microwave. Great room or RU or downtown. By Joe's 842-788-3788
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 4 bedroom house. 1315
N.H. $190 mo. neg. Cool house. Swell location.
Call 842-4785.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beginning May 1 or June
-July 31. Four bedroom townhouse in Sunrise
Village. 865-406. No deposit required.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 22.1991
15
Summer Sublease: 3 rooms available May 1- July 1.
Unfurnished 0 to 3 km² townhouse in Savignie Village. Female non-smiling $180/mo plus $40 refundable deposit. 700-1590
Summer Sublease: V. cool studio near 9th and
Oinch Deck. $250/mo. 863-3890
Summer Sublease-Reduced Rent, 3 Br Washer/dryer, Microwave, Dishwasher, A/C Call 865-1655
Summer Sublease: Three roommates needed.
Very nice apartment A.168/mo plus utilities.
Sundance II Apts. 7th and Florida. 843-215.
Summer special on 2 bedroom for $50, 2 bedroom
$90 and 1 bedroom $250. Heatherwood Valley
Apts. 843-4754
new great buildings - no netroom, incredible loca-
ment on big grounds - Call Mike or Mk. 749-3044
Summer Sublease - own bedroom. Very close to
campus. New Place 180/plus mls. utilizes Calfi.
at Bjf 141 at 8561
Summer sublease with option for fall. 3 bedroom.
$605.00. Water, gas paid. 841-4708.
Summer sublease- Orchard Corners Apts. 4 BR,
super location, great pool. K74 0921-83
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt, water and basic cable paid. Pool and laundry facilities. $110/mo. Call 749-4235.
Summer sublease. Available May 15-Aug 15 at option to renew. Clean 2 bedroom apartment with large kitchen, free fast food and other entertainment. Laundry room available. See website for details anyone needing a place to stay for summer sessions.
Summer sublease starting in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278.
Summer besale with option for fall | bedroom in large, beautiful home. Close to Campus. Prefer non-smoking upperclassman or grad student. $100.00 mo. Call Mali 865-3622
Summer sublease. Semi-formed 2 br. jacquarie &
clean & clean, rent negotiable. Also female room
mate needed for next year, non-smoker. Jill
855-049
Summer sublease. Spacious 3 bdrm, new kitchen dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, good price 840-460
Summer sublease. Roommate wants April free.
Basicly everything provided. Coye, nice.
Bus route. $10 plus utilities. Call 841 8314 or 842-4735
Leave message
Summer sublease, male roommate needed. Two
beds, 180 sq ft each, water paid $180/mo. Cull Dave 836-392-3632
email: rlwang@aol.com
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has room available for summer and fall. Call 749-4071 or drop by 146 Tennessee.
Whole house, 3 bedrooms plus walk to KU or downtown, town floors, a/c, weather/driver hookups, dishwasher, sun deck, off street parking, available June 14 $60.00 pts. bai 814-705-121
Women students: Want to live in a nonexist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Sunflower House. 146 Tennessee, 749-892-8141 or 841 0448
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
...
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Free cable
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Pool
Water paid
JPG
Close to KU bus route
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
春秋. arts. furnish
and unfurnished
1 bedroom ants. 735 sq ft
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 - 4:30 p. m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II
YOUNG BODY CARE
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Larges bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $440.
- 2 bedroom $860
- 3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Harden's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
10:20-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call KU for more
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
SUMMER SURGEASE, with option for fall 11 bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid. All electric: 157 Lynch CI, Sundance: 842-525 or 843-6614
SUPERIOR NUMBER SILENCE
In a superior location at a superior price 2
units less than 1328 (21 HOURS).
Siluasee two bedrooms with W/D Call
841-7645. Resserve $3.00 per night.
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D. Call
414-7645. Rent $355.00 mo.
Sublease two bedrooms and Mar 15 Apr 15 $95 per
Sublease two bedroom room May 15 18 AM to 45 PM month, 749 JUNE or 843 JULY, ask for Jennifer Sublease 3 dorm househouse from mid May or mid June. Ask for $600/mo. Utilities on屋线 749-3467
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
Treatment Area
- Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 or 12 Month Leaves
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
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
Boardwalk
apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Water & trash paid
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6 842.4444
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- Unfurnished with
Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
- 2 on-site bus stops
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Clean & well maintained
appliances
Large closets & living space
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
Sublease. Three bedroom apartment close to campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 863-2997
- 2 on-site bus stops
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Sublease. Nice 1 BRA $154 Water paid, w.d. r.c.
microwave, dishwasher, on KU, b.a.c route
$80 monthly wg. w/ lease renewal option at end of July.
Please call 865 4019
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- water & trash paid
for Summer & Fall
- plush carpets
1 & 2 Bedrooms for Summer & Fall
- large rooms & closets
- mini-blinds
- central air & gas heat
- refreshing pool
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
843-6446
2166 W.26th
TOMBSTONE BANK
Sunrise Apts.
--atmosphere
Summer and Fall leaing. Furnished rooms on shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bth from RU with off street parking. No pets. 841-5050
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- Studios
- Free Cable I.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
• Luxurious Town Home
- Luxurious Town Home
Garages (Vill.)
• Tennis Court Pools
Luxurious Town Hom
& Apartment Living
Enlarged to Show Texture
Close to Campus
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Place 9th & Michie
Sunrise Terrace
Sunrise Village
--atmosphere
1841-1287 or 841-8400
6th & Gateway
COMPETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
HANOVER PLACE
1-5 P.M.
THEED of being crammed into small living areas? Visit Meadowbrook Apts
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
MASTERCRAFT
OFFERS
Wide range of GREAT*
studios, 1.2 & 2.8 bdm. apts.
2& 3 bedroom townhomes
among a peaceful country
841-5255 7th & Florida
OPEN DAILY
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
meadowbrook
749-0445 • 1310 Kentuck
SUNDANCE
KENTUCKY PLACE
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana
.
Visit Meadowbrook Apts Wide range of GREAT
- Laundry facilities in most buildings
ORCHARD CORNERS
TANGLEWOOD
I DIDN'T
THINK YOU'D
ACTUALLY
DO IT... YOU'VE
JOINED THE...
THE...
SUNDANCE
749-4226 * 15th & Kasold
- Carports/Garages available
* Playgrounds
Lighted Tennis Courts
842-4455
Playgrounds
Experienced Professional Maintenance
Free Basic Cable
Water Paid
MON-FRI 8-5:30 SAT 8-5
842-4200 SUN 1-4
Sorry No Pets
It's Time to Step Up to
MEADOWBROOK
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
It doesn't take a genius to
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
- Free utilities
- Computer Center
* Great social events
- Wise up and make the move now!
- "Dine Anytime"
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 834-8599
NAISMITHHALL
---
Summer Leases Still
Available! Hurry in
Today to Reserve Your
Space for Fall!!
Wow!
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Vollevball Court
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Lodges/Oakland
- Exercise Room
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Swan Management
Special
- 3 Hot Tubs
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun.12-4 p.m.
- Gazebo
S
- On Bus Route
Models Open Daily
$355 - $425
"SUPER-CUT"
AT ONLY
$4.99 GROUP!
IT'LLGROW
HAIR GROW
I'll BE
NORMAL
SOMEDAY...
- Graystone
842-5111
1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
by Brian Gunning
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom upst.
Open House M/F 1-5 p.m.
Sat. 11-3 p.m.
2512 W. Wkth.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom units a 1bk from KU with off street parking. no pets. B41-5000
Female roommate needed to share a four bedroom apartment in Orchard Corners. $132.00 a month plus 1 utilities, 749-5400.
430 Roommate Wanted
Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626.
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share 2 bB apt at Northings. Own room. Brand new. Furnished. No pets. Welcome.
Female, non-smoking roammaster needed for Fall female, 2 brater trainee, w/d central school; 10/week non-smoker required $120/90 month *s* utilities. Prefer grad student or upperclassman Annete. 86413 141)
Female non-smoker to assume $t_2$ lease 6-1 in lg sunny apt $482.50 plus $t_3$ utilities 843.613 or 843.094
Female roommate summer sublease. Own bedroom, close to campus, non-smoker. $200/month. 2 utilities: 865-3822
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share
spacious house $160/month plus utilities. Alison,
805-2578
Female roommate wanted for summer! One bedroom in house. Share kitchen and bath. May rent FREE. $218 mow + 5 utilities / 7/1-73 Located on 13th Vermont. House #65-8613.
Female roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in Meadowbrook. Water, cable paid. Pool! Call 865-0829.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
town. big room. deal on rent. Robert, 482-4235.
One female roommate needed for 4.2 bbrm
2 bathroom apt. at Orchard Corners. Starting Aug.
91. Call Shannon. 749-4797
Male roommate needed. Duplex S.W. part of town Bighroom. Deal on rent. Robert, 842-4253.
Going to Europe. Need male roommate to take place this summer, furnished 4 brm. $180/month. 749-5678
Roammate wanted for fall, preferably nonm农机ized, organized, mid to late winter. Apartment has all conveniences, 3 minute walk to kitchen, 2 minute walk to laundry. Call Mike at 841-1017 or 844-3720.
Joommate wanted: House bordering campus, non-smoker, clean, responsible. Rent: $225.00 total. Call Richard at 749-2564
- Policy
Quiet, tidy roommate with sense of humor for 1/2
big house. $225. 841-1532. West Lawrence.
One roommate wanted for nice, spacious two-bedroom- two bath apartment in K.C. Near KU Med Center. Sublease for summer. Call 913-296-9077.
Summer Sublease 1, or 2 people (male or female) need to share bed/2 room at ORCHARD CONNER POOL A/C, cable on bus route 1855 month plus 1, utility Calls 941-821-7217
10% month plus 32 inches. Call Nancy 841-2271.
Summer sublease. Option to take over lease in
brand New 2 br. 2 br. One female roommate
wanted $180/month Call Jalynn, 841-1149.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
CALL 852-1438 after 6:00 pm.
Roommate needed $150 a month. No use. No lease required. Call 852-1438 after 6:00 pm.
Two female non-smokers needed to share space with three room townhouse for a summer stay.
Wanted May 1st - Non-homophobic female roommate to share nice, new, a bedroom house close to my apartment. Carport carport $165/mo plus 4 utilities. Must submit immediately, will negotiate on the fee.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE, count as 5 words.
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105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 370 want to buy
110 business persons 205 help wanted 340 auto sales 405 for rent
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wi
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D.I.L.OW KANSAN POLICY
take checks payable to:
213 478-0955
191 Stauffer-Flint Hail
Lawrence KS 60455
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
In some remote areas of the world, the popular sport is to watch a courageous young man avoid being hugged by a Leo Buscaglia Impersonator.
16
Monday, April 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Kennedv scandal confuses Palm Beach
Incident upsets some of the residents others say it will not affect their lives
The Associated Press
PALM BEACH, Fla. — There's a For Sale sign just a few doors down from the Kennedy estate. But, no, an international scandal in the neighborhood isn't driving away the always preened, sometimes prim and usually private residents of this island of wealth.
Indeed, while many longtime Palm Beachers express disapproval, even suggesting it's the Kenndees who should move out, feelings among the Kennedy-Royce set are mixed about the Kennedy case and all the attention it hass brought to their town of 12,000 residents.
'Except for the ones who are
titillated, the rest are embarrassed," said Kathryn Robinette, editor of Palm Beach Today, a newspaper that chronicles charity parties and gallery openings and appears twice weekly during the Thanksgiving-to-Easter social season, weekly the rest of the year.
"It's a terrible thing for Palm Beach," said Esther Elson, who like other longtime residents, worries that publicity surrounding a woman's allegation that she was raped at the Kennedy estate will further change the town.
Many older Palm Beachers remember a world even more cloistered and set apart and say they are
adjusting reluctantly to many changes - some subtle, some less so - that have come to their town.
They speak snobbiety of "new money," which they say they understand too well. They say they do not understand the trust fund children who, as news stories surrounding the Kennedy case have hinted, might lighten the burden for love or something smaller by hopping from club to club until closing time.
Other Palm Beachers implied that the real trouble with the periodic scandals involving Kennedys, or whomever, is the attention they bring, the invasion by the world outside Palm Beach
"For a couple of days our regular clientele stayed away," said Stuartichtener Schmidt, club that the Kennedy party left from before the alleged
But after avoiding the initial onlaugh of the news media, the regulars have returned, said Lichtenstein.
attack
Marion Jones, who operates a real estate agency, said publicly like that in the Kennedy case neither attracts homeowners nor homebuyers in this rare market.
Advertisements for the $5.8 million home - 6 bedrooms, elevator, pool, marble floors, 118 feet on the ocean - a few doors down from the Kennedy will not mention the famous neighbors.
Last year, on a nearby sale, Jones said someone proposed, "Maybe we should advertise, 'Live across from the Kennedys.'"
"They did not, of course, she said. And it didn't have any effect on the sale."
Poll shows public supports Kennedy, but not victim ID
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy retains strong public support in his home state despite an alleged rape at his family's mansion in Florida, according to a poll published yesterday.
A large majority of the Massachusetts residents who responded to the poll, conducted for the Boston Globe, also thought that news media should not identify rape victims.
Police in Palm Beach, Fla., said a 29-year-old Florida woman had accused William Kennedy Smith, 30, a nephew of the senator and a medical student, of raping her at the beachfront villa on March 30
By a 3-to-1 ratio, those polled said the events surrounding the incident would have no lasting negative impact on Kennedy's ability to serve effectively in the Senate. Seventy-three percent said the events would have no impact on their decision to vote for Kennedy, should he run for re-election in 1994.
Sixty-nine percent said news media should not publish or broadcast a rape victim's name. Sixty-seven percent said the woman in the Kennedy case should not be identified.
Of those polled, 53 percent said they viewed the Kennedys positively.
Spring has Sprung on 23rd Street!
Amigos
Amigos Soft Pinto Burritos
Amigos
Soft Pinto Burritos
3 For
$1.00
Come Take A Study Break
With Us!
$1.00
- Check Out Our 21 Menu Items
- for Under $1.00!!
- Open until 2 a.m!
- Free Drink Refills! 1819 W.23rd
Offer Expires 5-16-91
Offer Expires 5-16-91 842-1620
Fantastic Sam's the Original Family Haircutters
S
Quick & Easy Perm $21.95
- Shampoo
- Precision Cut
Precision Cut
- Shampoo
• Conditioning/Rinse
$6.95
Long hair extra
offer expires 5-3-91
Staffed with professionally trained sylists!
You Don't Have To Pay A lot to Look Good!
Starting May 5th 23rd & Louisiana
open Sundays 12 to 5 749-1976
DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS THRIFT STORE
NOW OPEN! Quality merchandise at low prices.
DONATIONS NEEDED
Bring by: 1601 W.23rd, Suite 116 south side of
Southern Hills Mall between 9 and 4.
- Serviceable Clothing • Appliances
• Furniture • Misc. Household Goods
FREE PICK UP CALL 749-4900 or
目
Hours: 9 a.m - 6 p.m. Mon - Sat
--expires 5/31/91
SUBWAY
(Feeds 25-30 people)
Get a 6 foot Party Sub for only $48!
1720 W. 23rd Street
842-4782
Amoco Come to Gill's & Hillcrest For These Specials!
Miller. Close Out Sale!
12 paks
&
6 paks
&
Quarts
*Hurry In While Supplies Last!
Miller
HIGH LIVE
BREWERY
Gill's Amoco...23rd & Louisiana
Hillcrest Amoco...914 Iowa
IF YOU CAN BREAK IT, WE CAN FIX IT!
Audio video Services
ALLBRANDS • VCR'S • CAMCORDERS
CD'S • CB'S • HOME, CAR & PORTABLE STEREOS
TELEPHONEEQUIPMENT • CUSTOM
INSTALLATIONS
MANUFACTURERTAINED PERSONNEL
FCC LICENSED
"Fast Expert Cost Effective Repair"
We honor manufacturer's warranties Serving Lawrence since 1967 2245 Ohio ( in the Hertz building) 841-0777
STEAK SANDWICHES!
Rax 707 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, KS.
- PHILLY STEAK: Sirloin steak strips
- Choose From 3 Great Sandwiches!!!
- PHILLY STEAK. Brown in covered in sauteed green peppers, onion and mushrooms with Swiss Cheese.
- Choose From 3 Great Sandwiches!
- MUSHROOM STEAK: Sirloin steak strips covered with a mushroom garlic sauce.
- STEAK & SWISS: Sirloin steak strips smothered in Swiss Cheese.
NOBODY STAX UP TO Rax
$1.00 OFF!
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KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOFKEA, KS 66612
VOL. 101, No. 137
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY,APRIL 23,1991
(USPS 650-640)
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Police wait for shooting death inquest results
Findings may reveal whether officers acted appropriately
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
The investigators in Sunday's shooting of a 22-year-old man by Lawrence police officers will wait for the coroner inquest scheduled for April 30 before releasing details about the death.
Gregory Allen Sevier was shot
Sunday morning at his home, 1627
E. 18th Street Terrace, by police
officials who were called to the
scene at 2:28 a.m. by relatives of
the victim.
The relatives asked police for assistance in dealing with Sevier, who was armed with a knife and pistol and had been taken from law enforcement. Police exported
Officers Ted Bordman and James Philips arrived at Sevier's residence at the request of the family said don Flory, Douglas Hewlett, Sgt. yesterday Lawrence police sgt George Wheeler was with them.
Floy: said the family members informed police officers about Sevira's behavior upon their arrival. He would not comment on the information the family gave police at scene.
Flory did not have any information indicating that Sevier was threatening to take his own life or that of a family member.
Present at Sevier's residence at the time of the shooting were Wheeler, Bordman, Phillips and three family members whose names were not disclosed by police.
Flory gave the two officers came in contact with Sevier after speaking with his relatives.
"At that point the officers determined that Sevier was armed with a large knife." Flory said. "They made repeated requests for Mr. Sevier to drop the knife, disarm himself, and at that point he initiated attack and attacked Officer Bordman.
"Both officers Bordman and Phillips fired their service weapons. Mr. Sevier was struck."
I only said Sevier was hit by more than one shot, but he declined to give the number of shots he was pronounced dead at the scene.
Flory would not comment on whether the officers had been justified in shooting Sevier instead of resorting to other, less drastic measures of disarming him.
"I don't think it would be appropriate for me to speculate on why they did what they did," he said. "The purpose of the coroner's inquest is to explore all of those questions, and attempt to find answers."
Flory said officials would not release any details about the investigation before the inquest, scheduled for 9 a.m. April 30. The location of the inquest has not been confirmed.
'At this point I would like to say that we welcome the public's review of this particular incident and are looking toward the coroner's inquest as the vehicle for that review.'
Ron Olin Lawrence police chief
Lawrence Police Chief Ron Olin did the Douglas County Sheriff's Office and KU police were helping law enforcement in the investigation of the case.
Bordman and Phillips were placed on administrative leave with pay.
He said breathalyzer tests were performed on both officers, who tested negative Drug tests also and not been completed yesterday.
He said he did not believe the shooting of Sevier, an American Indian, was not racially motivated.
"At this point I would like to say that we welcome the public's review of this particular incident and are looking toward the coroner's inquest as the vehicle for that review." Olin said.
Flory said the Douglas County Coroner, Carol Moddrell, had performed an autopsy yesterday morning. Kris Sperry, a forensic pathologist from Atlanta, assisted Moddrell in the autopsy
No official results were available yesterday.
The Sewier family has declined to comment. The Lawrence university Center is organizing a program to address the issue Sunday.
Funeral services for Sevier will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Warren McElwain Mortuary, 120 W. 138th Street, Robert Pinedzadebly officiating.
Sevier was born July 23, 1986 in Tailequh, Okla., the son of Willie and Orene Watson Sevier. He attended grade school and junior high school in Okla. He was deuated in 1988 from Sequoyah High School in Tailequh.
Survivors include his parents, Willie and Orene Sevier, and two sisters, Judy Sevier Hoffman and Juliet Sevier Gudenkan, all of whom are ill.
Sevier was self-employed.
Burial will be at 2 p.m. Thursday on Sevier family land in Hitchita, Okla.
Contributions may be sent to the Warren-McElwain Mortuary, 120 W. 13th St., Lawrence, Kan.
Committee to create contingency plan for graduation in case of bad weather
By Jonathan Plummer
The commencement committee will meet today to create a contingency plan for the graduation ceremony it bad weather should occur.
In a news release, Deil Shankler, interim executive vice chancellor, stated that the committee would look for alternative sites for a series of ceremonies if one complete event at Memorial Stadium was impossible.
The committee ruled earlier that the ceremony would be canceled rather than conducted in Allen Field House, as it was in 1981, it rain prohibited it from being in Memorial Stadium.
Susan Elkins, a member of the committee, said she thought the special meeting was called because of negative student, faculty and staff
Previously, the committee had considered moving the ceremony to another day in case of bad weather, an idea that caused William Bayne. Lawrence senior, to help organize a protest.
response to the announcement that the ceremony could be canceled.
Bayne said the rally would occur as planned at noon tomorrow in front of Strong Hall, whether the University planned to conduct commencement
stand if the committee proposed moving the ceremony to another day but that a better plan should be adopted for the future.
"Either it will be a protest, or it will be a fun meeting," he said.
"I'd like to have all of us sit down and work something out because graduation is the point of why we are here." Mr. Alvey said. "We are all going to do eventually."
Bayne said that at the rally tomor row those who opposed the new policy should stand in front of Strong and he laughed that they favored it in front of Wescoda Hall.
Mendez said she would attend tomorrow's rally unless the University administration as well as the commencement committee confirmed a contingency policy
Liz Mendez, Kansas City, Kan. senior, said that she would under
"My feeling is that graduation is not only for me but it is primarily for my family and friends," she said. There are a lot of other people that wear masks to the blood, sweat and tears of the college experience, not just that individual."
6th Street
Kansas River
The Outhouse
Mass Street
15th Street
ore than one year after the unexplained death of 19-year-old Chris Bread, police still have no answers. if anything, more questions linger. See story, page 8
No Blowing!
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
Problems with furnaces and ventilation at the glass-blowing barn on West Campus have prompted a shutdown of the building.
Glass-blowing barn closes
Safety concerns result in temporary shutdown of arts facility
Kansan staff writer
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Safety concerns at KU's glass-blowing barn have prompted a partial shutdown of the facility, the dean of fine arts said yesterday.
"Certain operations of the glass-blowing program will be stopped until further notice." Peter Thompson says. "I don't have any students getting hurt."
Thompson said the shutdown would include turning down the hot-glass equipment.
pistol; the three officers fired in self-defense. The shooting occurred after police questioned Picotte about an armed robbery the week before at Site Service Station, 946 E. 23rd St.
Shooting of civilian unusual, police say
The other shooting incident happened about one-and-a-half years ago when officers shot a man at the Willey Pontiase Cadillac. 284low victims. The victim was holding a security guard at gimpoint.
He said the barn, which is situated on West Campus, would be unavailable for student use until electricians and University safety officials could insult it. He said inspections should begin today.
He said that one occurred four or five years ago when a detective shot a man suspected of robbery. The man survived.
The last time officers killed a civilian was in March 1977, when three officers shot and killed Laurence Picotte, Haskell Indian Junior College sophomore, at 1009 Massachusetts St., what was then the Long Branch Bar and is now Louise's Bar.
"Hey, safety comes first. My students are first," he said. "If somebody's afraid of something, it should be looked at."
Between Sunday's incident and the 1977 shooting death, only two other cases were reported of people shooting civilians, Harmon said.
said. "We are aware of some problems, and we are addressing them."
Vernon Brejeg, associate professor of design in charge of the glass program, said he had no problem with the partial shutdown of the barn.
This is not a new problem." he
Brejcha said he had been working to solve some of the safety problems since November 1989. This summer he built a barn and barn is slated for partial renovation.
Jonathan Cohen, Mission Hills senior, said he distributed a packet about glass-blowing safety throughout the University this month that addressed problems with furnaces, electrical wiring, natural gas lines
At the time, police reported that Picotte threatened police with a
After the incident, police reported that Picotte's gun had not been loaded.
and ventilation.
He said problems included unground wires, dangerously situated gas lines and unsafe ventilation.
"The equipment at the barn is designed dangerously, and people are not told how to use it," he said.
Cases of Lawrence police officers shooting and killing civilians are infrequent, said Sgt. Kevin Johnson. The police representative, yesterday.
His comments came after a Sunday morning incident in which Lawrence police officers shot and killed an armed man at his residence.
The furnace, which is kept on at all times, is unsafe as well, he said. The handles become too hot to touch and flames are exposed when the furnace
He said he had been trying to direct attention toward the safety concerns for two years but had been ignored by a police officer. He said the only instructor in the program.
He said much of the equipment probably would be repaired or replaced this summer if enough money was available.
"I've been working on it for several years," Zeller said. "And we've brought it to the attention of the administration."
Joe Zeller, design chairperson,
said Cohen's packet about safety
in the face of a bully.
more aware of the problems.
"It's not very often at all that we use our weapons," Harmon said.
Susan Holland, Leavenworth senior, said that although she would be inconvenienced by the shutdown, safety issues were being addressed.
About 25 students are using the barn this semester.
Kansan staff report
“It’s protecting people's lives. It should have been done before,” she said. “I’m hoping that the issues can be solved so we can keep on with the program.”
Earthquake rattles Central America, damages Costa Rica, Western Panama
The Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Stricken areas remained cut off today and the Carribean city of Puerto Limon was devastated after a major earthquake killed at least 19 people and injuring more than 100.
Scores of people were feared trapped under the rubble of collapsed buildings after the quake, which hit Mexico early in 2016 and thousands were left homeless.
In Puerto Limon, home to 130,000 people, the three-story International Hotel, an office building and dozens of houses collapsed Firefighters struggled with major fires well into night, and water and power were out.
When the quake hit, the sea receded 100 feet and people fleed for higher ground.
San Jose, the capital, suffered extensive damage and, throughout the city, many of its buildings were destroyed.
'This place looks like one of these Hollywood apocalyptic movies. It felt like the world was coming to an end as everything moved and heaved.'
— Rigoberto Perez Puerto Limon resident
roads blocked by landslides and power lines severed.
"This place looks like one of these Hollywood apocalyptic movies. It felt like the world was coming to an end as everything moved and heaved." Rigoberto Pererez, a resident of Puerto Limon, said by telephone.
Authorities said eight people died and 15 were injured in the Panamanian provinces of Bocas del Toro and
At least 11 people died in the collapse of the two big buildings in Puerto Limon. Red Cross officials said
Chiriqui, near the Costa Rican border.
The quake was centered 70 miles southeast of San Jose, said Willis Jacobs of the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo. The first jolt, which was followed by more than 20 aftershocks, five of them serious, struck at 3:58 p.m. Monday (5:58 p.m. EDT).
He said a first planeload of U.S. aid was arriving today.
Nicaragua was also sending helicopters to evacuate some of the injured, and Mexico and Venezuela also promised help.
President Rafael Angel Calderon appealed to President Bush and Latin American governments for medicine and other humanitarian
"Let us all embrace (each other) and may God help us so that we can help our brothers in Limon." He told in a nationwide radio broadcast.
He said he planned to tour stricken areas today.
In Puerto Limon, dozens of houses fell apart with the first jolt, since virtually all the city's homes are old and wooden.
Alberto Leo, a Red Cross official,
said at a news conference that a preliminary survey showed that 11 people died and 24 were injured in the collapse of the International Hotel and the office building.
The Customs House was also destroyed.
At a government-owned refinery on the outskirts of the port, a gasoline tank exploded, sending up a huge fireball, and an electrical short-circuit set a factory ablaze, the fire department said.
The local hospital was so badly damaged that all 28 patients had to be moved out, including 12 newborn babies who were flown to San Jose.
2
Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Partly Cloudy
HI:67°
LO:42°
56/44
59/51
54/36
63/38
68/54
79/56
88/75
Today's Forecast
Partly cloudy skies today with little precipitation expected until Thursday. High 67/Low 42.
Salina
67/43
KC
Dodge City
65/45
71/44
Wichita
70/46
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
3-day Forecast
Wednesday - Sunny. High 66/Low 45.
Thursday - Cloudy with light rain. High 72/ Low 49.
Friday - Partly cloudy. High 70/ Low 40
forecast by Mike Schauer
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows
The University Daily Kanstan (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, Kan. 66045.
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Office provides grant advising
Study-abroad grants may be easier to get with proposal help
By Sarah Davis
To help students receive grants to study in a foreign country, a new procedure has been implemented at the KU office of study abroad
Kansan staff writer
Students interested in applying for a Fulbright grant or a KU Direct Exchange grant are required to fill out a pre-proposal form before they complete the actual proposal they plan to submit.
"The University wants the students to get these grants," she said. "What we want in this pre-proposal is that they have thought out these things."
Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of study abroad, said the office was requiring students to file the new application in advance. "It has not been well advised and had turne
The pre-proposal form asks students to give a one-sentence statement of what they hope to accomplish in their year abroad.
in proposals that were not clearly outlined or understandable.
They also must describe their project - why they need to study in a particular country, what they plan to do and what effect their research
Anne Musser, Lawrence graduate student, applied and wrote her proposal for a Fulbright grant last semester when the new pre-proposal procedures were not in place. She said that because a proposal needed to be well thought out, direction from others would be beneficial.
offer suggestions and advice about ways to improve the proposals.
"It it would be helpful to ask study abroad what makes a good proposal and what doesn't," she said. "The more feedback, the better."
selects students who will receive the grants.
She said the required pre-proposal was beneficial to students.
Linda Stone-Ferrari, associate professor of art history, is one of 15 museum educators in the U.S.
"A poorly written proposal can be damaging," she said. "But it (the new procedure) gives students an opportunity to do some retooling and reworking of their proposal. It gives them a second chance to rewrite."
Interviews for Senate positions conducted
Debiicki said there was a formula to writing a proposal and offered students a chance to learn how. An informational video on the workshop will be given from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Rv Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
One of the first tasks of the newly elected student body president is to appoint students to the seven paid positions on Student Senate.
Yesterday, Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden, president and vice president-elect, interviewed 20 people for possible appointments. Although Lowden sat in on the interview, Alan Lowden, President, has the authority to make the appointments, pending Senate approval.
On campus
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will have an eating disorder support group at 7:30 tonight in 20 Watkins Memorial Health Center.
- Voice will meet at 7 tonight at 1204 -
Ooread Ave.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. in 138 Robinson Center.
Lowden said that the ASK positions would be co-directors for the first time. This year, ASK had a campus director and an assistant director.
The KU chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists will feature Robert Unger, national correspondent with the Kansas City Star and Persian Gulf War reporter. He will speak about issues regarding the news media during the war at 3:30 p.m in 100 Stauffer-Flint.
■ KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at the southwest lobby in the Burge Union.
There will be a speaker audience debate about lowering Kansas property tax at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
- Christian Science Organization will meet at 6 p.m. Anyone interested should call 749-5602 for the location.
KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas University.
KU Chess Club will meet at 7
宴 at Parlor C in the Kansas
Avenue
The paid positions are executive secretary, executive committee chairperson and administrative assistant, all of which pay $330 a month; treasurer and community manager; associate student a month; and Associated Students of Kansas co-directors, which pay $300 a month.
A KU student's mountain bike and lock valued at $48.90, were taken between 3:30 and 5 p.m. Friday from the Science Library. KU police reported.
- Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Women's Recognition Program" at 8 tonight at the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
- There will be a support conference for lesbians and bisexuals. For information call Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas at 864-3091.
A storage truck was forced open between 2 and 9 a.m. Saturday at the Brass Apple Bar & Grill, 3300 W.15th St., Lawrence police reported. Thirty-nine cases of beer, 30 pounds of hamburger and 20 other packages of various foods together valued at $1,663.05 were taken.
Police report
because the treasurer's job required a lot of technical knowledge.
A potted cactus and potted plant were taken between 5 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m. Friday from the 1500 block of Engel Road, KU police reported.
The interview process took an international business feel when Lowden and Fulcher conducted a telephone interview with Jill Sullivan, Leawood sophomore, who is studying this semester in Spain. Sullivan applied for executive secretary.
Fulcher and Lowden are expected to release the names of the appoint-ments today.
It is difficult to fulfill the treasurer's responsibilities without knowing what to do from the beginning, he said.
Stu Comfort, this year's administrative assistant, was the only applicant for treasurer. He said that the administrative assistant traditionally became treasurer the next year
Senate is scheduled to vote on the appointments at tomorrow's meeting. Fulcher's choices must receive a vote before the Senate. Senate before they become official.
level and the other would operate on the state level.
Lowden said that one of the codirectors would work on the campus
County looks for new appraiser
Kansan staff report
County officials have begun the search for a new county appraiser.
line would be May 31.
The Douglas County Commission yesterday decided to begin advertising for the position. Don Gordon, the commissioner, announced April 15 that he would resign.
Pam Madl, county personnel administrator, said the application dead-
Mike Amyx's promise that problems in reappraisal would never happen again as one of his reasons for quitting.
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said the new appraiser would begin work July 15.
Gordon, who has been besieged with criticism from taxpayers since the appraiser's office sent out property value notices earlier this month, resigned as county appraiser last week. He cited County Commissioner
Gordon, who has been county appraiser since 1978, said he would use his remaining vacation time to travel and would resign officially July 5.
Grand jury may decide charges in alleged rape case on Kennedy estate
The Associated Press
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — A prosecutor said yesterday he might let a grand jury decide whether to charge William Kennedy Smith in an alleged rape at his family's Palm Beach estate.
"It's a possibility," said Palm Beach County State Attorney David Bludworth. He would not say why he was charged with the uncommon move in such a case.
Police have said it may be weeks before they are ready to present their evidence.
Bludworth said yesterday that he would not decide how to proceed until he had heard all the evidence. He said it could be three more weeks before a decision was made on the allegation by the 29-year-old woman.
Police have identified Smith, a police officer awarded Kennedy, as the prime suspect.
Grand jury testimony is secret and turning the case over to the panel of community members could lessen charges of politically motivated handling. Bludworth has denied such charges.
State law only requires that grand juries hear first-degree murder cases; in other investigations, prosecutors decide whether to make charges directly, dismiss cases or go to a grand jury.
Court records indicate that among unsealed indictments on record, only two sexual battery cases were taken in the past five years, grand jury in the past five years.
Bludworth last week asked a judge
for a ruling on whether he could prosecute news organizations that had identified the woman.
He said yesterday he might cite public interest against identifying rape victims when he argued before a judge on his petition.
"It might be interesting to say that the citizens of Florida have a paramount interest in this issue."
He said all polls he had seen in the past week indicated high majorities against identifying rape victims. Rape is a crime on the increase, Bludworth said, and he thinks identifying victims would deter them from reporting the assaults against them.
The name of the woman allegedly attacked at the Kennedy estate was published in the Globe, a supermarket tabloid, and then was published in The New York Times, Reuters news agency and other news organizations.
The Associated Press has not identified the woman and does not identify rape victims, except in extraordinary cases.
Bludworth said his own research indicated no past court opinions had shown clearly whether the Florida Court restricts First Amendment rights.
He predicted arguments in the case would reach the U.S. Supreme Court.
Bludworth was at an advocates' coalition event marking National Victims' Rights Week, which featured television's anti-crime show host John Walsh.
Five teen-age boys shoot, kill random victim in Dodge City
Only one of the youths fired the shot that struck Romans in the head April 16, but police want all five charged with first-degree murder because all were involved in and knew about the shooting, said Capt. Mary Chambers, chief investigator for the Dodge City Police Department.
The Associated Press
DODGE CITY — To five teenage boys being held in the killing of Bruce Romans, the meat inspector walking home early one morning was only somebody to shoot, the lead investigator in the case said yesterday.
The five, aged 15 through 17, were arrested Saturday night and are being held in the Ford County Detention Center, according to Chambers. All five are juveniles under Kansas law.
Romans, 28, and the youths apparently did not know each other, according to Chambers.
"It wasn't an accidental shooting, but he was a random victim," she said. "They were going to shoot somebody."
She called Romans' killing depressing.
"For them, he was just somebody to shoot," she said.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 23, 1991
3
KINGSTON
Aluminum pins
Carol Duermeier, Lawrence resident, and her five-year-old son,
Thomas, try to knock down aluminum can bowling pins with
plastic balls. The game was one of several activities sponsored by SUA yesterday in the Kansas Union to celebrate Earth Day and to promote awareness of the need to recycle.
Union celebrates Earth Day Students discover environmentally safe cleaning alternatives
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
In celebration of Earth Day yesterday, some KU students participated in activities at the Kansas Conservation and the environment
The open house, which was sponsored by SUA, consisted of information tables, a contest, games and arts and crafts.
Many students stopped at one table that had information about making products such as hairspray, scouring powder and various cleaners at home, without using chemicals that many store-bought brands contain that may harm the environment.
The ingredients to all of the alternative products are natural substances such as lemons, baking soda and salt.
Jennifer Gilbert, a coordinator of the open house, said, "A lot of the things we buy to clean our houses are toxic, and we don't realize it. We need to know that there are alternates that are safe and cheap."
Robert Taylor, Prairie Village senior, said, "I think as people become more environmentally aware, they will rely on more products like these. Realistically, I think we'll see more businesses that cater to this sort of thing in the future."
Gilbert said there were also homemade products that could be used to control pests outside the home instead of using the chemicals that not only were dangerous to the environment but also to people.
he made several of his own household cleaning products because the chemicals in store-bought products scared him.
Alex Ellett. Topeka senior, said
Ellett said he uses soap rather than detergent when doing laundry because detergent was a by-product of petroleum.
"I use plain vinegar to wash my hair," he said. "I use vinegar water and newspaper to clean windows. I can make this stuff myself with the impact on the environment. It's cheaper and just as effective."
Committee pulls money for 1992 primary election
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — In an unexpected turn, the Senate wages and Means Committee yesterday pulled financing for Kansas' scheduled 1992 presidential preference primary election.
The move stunned some lawmakers.
"I thought we had resolved this once and for all," said Sen. Dick Rock, D-Arkansas City.
"We did," replied Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, the committee's representative. "We're taking a second shot at it."
The committee pulled $1.2 million from the so-called omnibus appropriations bill, money the state would have used to reimburse counties for the cost of the primary, which is set for April 7, 1992.
The Legislature passed a bill in 1990 that authorizes the primary.
The only presidential primary in Kansas history was conducted in April 1980. It was not continued for 1984, mainly because of the cost, but also because Kansas attracted few candidates for personal appearances. However, more people voted in that election than any primary in state history, about 484,000.
Rock said that the Ways and Means Committee was in effect vetting legislation already passed and that members were trying to repeal the law if they pulled financing.
Harder said the committee was not ignoring a law passed earlier by deleting the financing for the building and must delay it until 1996, he said.
"The issue was decided on the floor," added Sen. Wint Winter, R.Lawrence.
The financing for the primary could still be reinstated during
Except for 1980, Kansas has used a caucus system to select delegates to the national Democratic and Republican conventions, where the two parties' presidential candidates are nominated.
floor debate.
Except for 1980, Kansas has used a caucus system to select delegates to the national Democratic and Republican conventions, where the two parties' presidential candidates are nominated.
Under the primary scheduled for next year, delegates would be apportioned according to how the candidates fared in the primary.
The omnibus bill is a catchall appropriations measure that traditionally is one of the final bills passed by the Legislature.
Meanwhile, the House Appropriations Committee yesterday endorsed a plan designed to stop the further development of new state payroll and personnel computer system.
However, the state still would have to spend $1.64 million on the system during the budget year that begins July 1. The money would be used to maintain the current payroll computer system. Both systems have been described as troubled.
The proposal would give Gov. Joan Finney's administration time to develop a plan for improving the state's payroll computer system. The proposal also is a rejection of suggestions to add to the existing computer system.
Med Center seeks state bill approval to begin building
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Medical Center is waiting to find out whether Gov Joan Finney will approve $8 million worth of state financing for the construction a new medical research building.
The Med Center would receive the money for the Bio-Medical Research Building during four years starting in 1992, said Scott Rumney, assistant director of the Med Center. The Med Center itself would spend up to $4.5 million for the building.
Jack Alexander, legislative laison to the governor, said that no action had been taken by Finney but that the bill was being reviewed by her staff. If no action is taken by Friday, the bill will become a law.
Ramsey said the state already had spent $760,000 on planning the research building. The Med Center has been planning it. For several
years. The plans should be completed in about three months.
The building would be located east of Wahl Hall and would connect with four or five other buildings including Wahl, Sudler Hall and the patient care area of the hospital. The connection have not been easy to design, he said.
Gay, lesbian and bisexual organization formed to be a voice for faculty, staff
Ramsay said that major planning was needed to create building access. "This was one of the reasons this is where they be found."
Difficulties with electricity, poor ventilation, lack of temperature control and close proximity to patient equipment in current research areas, he said.
The new building is needed because the current research areas are limited and scattered in 17 buildings, Ramsey said.
The research building will be four to five stories high with 65,000 to 70,000 gross square feet, he said.
Kansan staff writer
Maggie Chids thinks gay, lesbian and bisexual faculty and staff need to be as organized and politically active with them. They are gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
Childs, chairperson of East Asian language and culture, said she was impressed by Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week.
She said the week was her catalyst for starting a gay and lesbian group
for KU faculty and staff.
The group will have its first meeting at 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
"I was inspired by the competence and the talents of the students," she said. "But I was embarrassed that faculty and staff were unorganized."
Childs said she expected about a dozen faculty and staff to attend.
She said reactions to the group had been mixed.
Childs said other reactions had been positive.
Some faculty and staff will not attend because they are afraid that if they are known as gay and lesbian, they will not enroll today, she said.
"I wanted to get a group together to be one more voice on campus," she said, referring to speaking out on issues like the Department of Defense's ban on gays and lesbians from the military.
Mike Sullivan, co-director of
"As students, we need the support of our faculty and staff," he said.
GLSOK, said the student group was more than pleased with the formation of the faculty group.
Sullivan said the group would provide a crucial role model for gay and lesbian students who were uncomfortable with their sexuality.
"It will show you can be out at least in academia," he said.
"It's a great effort," he said. "It's long overdue."
Regents action makes engineering fee permanent
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
After the issue sat dormant for several months, action by the Board of Regents last week received concern from the $15-accredit-hour engineering fee.
expense.
Although students are not seen picketing or protesting, some are displeased that last week the Regents voted to abolish the police, however, see the need for the
The Regents originally said the fee would be in effect for one year, but at a meeting Thursday it gave the fee permanent status.
David Suroff, Leawood senior and engineering student student, said that with the academic year winding down and the Senate turning over in ratification, it was doubtful any official action would be taken until the fall.
He said the fee was disturbing in light of recent tuition increase set by the Regents. The Regents committee on tuition and fees recommended the increase with the understanding that the revenue generated would help cover operating and equipment costs at the Regents schools, he said.
John Gill, Mission senior and engineering student, said the action in the Legislature and by the Regents was exactly what he had expected.
He said he was afraid the fee would become a burden on juniors and seniors taking several engineering hours and paying the $15-a-credit hour rate.
Gill said he would have fewer complaints if the plan was like that at Kansas State University, where students would be charged $100-assemester, regardless of the number of engineering hours they enroll in.
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Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Railroad strike
Congress was right to give strikes only 65 days; a long strike would have been costly, pointless
.
Last week Congress put a quick end to the one-day railroad strike. It approved a bill forcing all railroad workers back to their jobs.
The bill requires a presidentially-appointed emergency board to come up with a solution to the disputes within 65 days. At that time, if the unions and the railroads have not resolved the problems themselves, they will be forced to accept the board's proposals.
Fortunately, Congress stepped in quickly, and, as a result, the strike did not have any significant effect on the transportation of goods by rail.
However, the strike had the potential to stop the transportation of one-third of the nation's goods. Across the nation, 235,000 union members went on strike, including 3,000 members in the Kansas City area.
Burlington Northern Railroad estimated that it lost between $5 million and $7 million in revenue just from the 24-hour strike. Some Amtrak passengers were forced to take buses because Amtrak uses many of the railways that were shut down. Conditions such as these could have become much worse if the strike had gone on longer.
Unions have been working with the rail
roads since 1988 to come to terms on acceptable wages, work rules and health care costs. Without government involvement, it seems unlikely that an agreement could have been reached soon.
With a federal board making proposals, the two sides will be more intent on reaching an agreement before they are forced to compromise and take the board's decisions. The board already has offered several solutions, including one for the wage issue.
Railroads want a wage freeze for most jobs. Unions want an increase of 5 percent a year, retroactive to 1988. The board has proposed something in between — an increase of about 10 percent during the next three to four years.
Neither side may be happy at the end of the 65-day negotiation period. But at least they will have reached some sort of agreement.
In the meantime, the one-third of the nation's goods that depend on trains will continue to be delivered.
Melanie Botts for the editorial board
Judicial integrity
Death row prisoners now have limited appeals
ion.
The Supreme Court has ruled that death row prisoners may appeal writs of habeas corpus only once after convic-
In a 6-3 decision last week, the court emphasized the need to stop repeated appeals that it says have undermined the integrity of the judicial process.
A habeas corpus petition is filed when the defendant thinks his or her constitutional rights have been violated through the trial process.
In the past, defendants could file these writs after a conviction. Judges accepted or rejected the claims. Many times this process delayed the actual execution, which in turn diminished the deterrent effect of the death penalty. The time spent on the appeals process and the defendant's extended stay in prison not only slows down the judicial process but wastes the taxpayers' money.
Although capital punishment is wrong, the appeals process for writes of habeas corpus jeopardizes the credibility of the sentence.
The implementation of a single appeals process for convicted capital crime is not any more inhumane than capital punishment itself. If the defendant can present evidence that he or she is not guilty, a second appeal may be granted. If the defendant can show that the constitutional violation actually harmed the case and that there was good cause for not raising the issue in the first round of appeals, the court will hear a second claim.
In an obvious attempt to make the judicial process more efficient, the only sacrifice the court has made is time — time wasted over the years on frivolous appeals that should have been used for new cases.
Julie Watkins for the editorial board
Military cuts needed
Other Voices
Already folks in Congress are howling about the proposed closure of 31 big military bases.
That's understandable. Many communities heavily depend on revenue from those bases. Entire communities face fiscal hard times.
But the purpose of the closure cannot be overlooked out of local economic panic. With the end of the world, it is time the world dictate that forces be trimmed.
Although economic shocks should be dealt with, perhaps by extending loans or other relief, much as if a disaster had struck a strucure of unnecessary bases should be closed for the sake of the U.S. taxpayer.
Efforts to make the U.S. armed
forces more efficient, less costly and more responsive should be applauded. Congress should hold firm in its support of the bill. From the Cilion Ledge, Jackson, Miss.
Biases in education
A new national study has reached troubling conclusions about the education being given to students assigned to low-ability classes or to schools with a large number of disadvantaged students. These students are often given inferior teachers, inferior textbooks, less access to computers and less instruction in higher-order thinking skills, according to a RAND Corporation study financed by the National Science Foundation.
Thus, the chances that these students will succeed academically and later, professionally, are significantly hampered by the educational system, not merely by their own abilities.
The RAND study also contends that children of those with the most power consistently receive a better education.
That means it will be difficult to correct these inequalities — as difficult, perhaps, as it was for this move to move away from segregation.
If educational equality ever happens, it will be due to the school boards, school superintendents and teachers. It is essential gats to stem the tide of favoritism.
From the Tampa (Fla.) Tribune.
AND THEY SAY THE
KURDS HAVE BEEN
FORGOTTEN...
US FEDERAL
MILITARY
TO MARSH
HOW DID IT FEEL
TO BE ATTACKED BY
HELICOPTER GUARDSHIPS?
HOW LONG HAVE YOU
BEEN WITHOUT
FOOD?
HOW'S THAT
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AMERICA'S HOMLESS
SBCTV
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Therefore, at that hour, let the space in front of Wescoe Hall be reserved for those who support the Commencement Committee's policy of cancellation. Let those opposed assemble on the Strong Wall side of Jayapur to protest against the television stations, which also will be in attendance, with an appropriate visual expression of the students' opinion on this matter.
It is important to remember that it would serve the rally's goals to conduct ourselves as students who deserve a graduation ceremony. It also will be important to remember that a gathering of this magnitude requires that streets surrounding Strong Hall be left open for vehicles.
It also is suggested that all participants in this year's commencement wear their graduation caps to the rally. If it does rain May 19th, this may be the last chance our chancellor will have to speak to us as a group. He may decide to give us at least a synopsis of what he would say if we have a commencement. He may even want to consider making this a yearly tradition. It could be all we'll get. Be prepared.
Decision hurts us all
Additionally, it has been asked of the dean of liberal arts and sciences, who is not a party to the Commencement Committee's shameful embarrassment, that he convene a special session of the College Assembly. At this meeting, a rule suspension will be requested to allow an immediate vote on a motion that the College formulate its own contingency plan for an indoor alternative for liberal arts students.
If the Commencement Committee's decision to cancel ceremonies in the event of rain accomplishes nothing else, it has managed to present the students of this University with an injustice that affects all of us equally, regardless of age, race, culture, sex or sexual orientation — not only graded. The university will grade classifications who think they will have earned formal recognition upon completion of the University's academic requirements.
Recent statements by administrators in the news have led many of us to conclude that the complaints voiced so far have left them unimpressed. Perhaps a crowd the size of those that turned out for our basketball team could change this. For these reasons, we will attend the Commencement Rain-Date Rally scheduled for noon April 24 in front of Strong Hall.
The deans of the other schools also are encouraged to be responsible in a similar manner on this issue. I hope their show of respect for their students will provide incentive for the Commencement Committee — with the blessings of our chancellor to do so. That would have been done in the first place.
4-15-21
Ideally, May 19th will be a sunny day. If it is, this rally will not have been a wasted effort because sooner or later, under the policy as it now stands, some graduating class will be sent home with no kisst: the other students will be unable to turn this thing around. How do you want it, Jayhawks?
William Bayne Lawrence senior
Analisa Colom Fairway senior
Graduation solutions
This commencement debate is really getting interesting, huh? We have Aunt Martha coming from out of town to see her nephew graduate, people rolling down crowded aisles and graduates melting from a little rainshower. Here are some brainstorming ideas to get you thinking about solutions instead of crying about your problems:
So what if it rains? Hey, if we can watch our football teams of the past slosh around, we can watch our graduates slide across the stage with their arms extended for the baton pass. Should be a lot of fun. Do watch your step though — what? Can't see your feet for the gown?
Split the ceremony and conduct some of commencement in Hoch Auditorium. Maybe the journalism class would volunteer. There are obvious disadvantages, but they would get out of there a lot quicker and have a jump on the Allen people in the race to the restaurants and bars. And until sheartha could learn back in her chair, she should look out for solinters.
Pray for sunshine. Sometimes I think all the learning and bell-raising that goes on around here dulls our faith a little. Remember, wherever two or more of you are gathered in His name . . .
I talked to the powers that be last night, and She said that Dan Henry said it would be like this: 73, mostly on a slight chance of morning dawn.
OK, so these may not be concrete solutions, but I am just a junior. Consider these ideas as you come up with better ones. There is no reason why an answer cannot be found. The rightful concerns for safety must come together with an unyielding demand that the show must go on. Money (what it was it, $5,000 to rent Allen?) is a scapgeopard of an event. The read of tuition increases — surely they can hide another quarter in everybody's rates. Graduation is, after all, what most of us are here for.
Mike Dick Lawrence junior
Torture is not funny
I want in response to Matt Walsh's column, "Want to put off studies? Torturing parents, roommates" (April 19, 1991). Being a member of Amnesty International has given me a grim insight into the numerous cases of human rights abuses, including torture, around the world. Torture causes enormous suffering; it is not a word to be used lightly. I advise Matt Walsh to read some Amnesty reports before using the word again.
Brian Daldorph Assistant English professor
Prejudice not limited
Let me start by saying that the column written by Arda Tippet doesn't seem to have any significance on police brutality.
I will agree that it is a shame that Rodney King was brutalized by police officers, yet Ardra wrote more on how hard life is for her and how whites cannot understand. Well, I am white and I do understand because I am also a Jew.
I was born and raised in Chicago with every type of prejudiced person you could imagine. I cannot, for the life of me, understand why someone would search around and call everything they see prejudice, like Ardra has.
We don't know exactly why the officers did what they did, but everyone says that it was a case of racism just because they were white and he was Black.
No one ever said that the cops might have had other reasons, such as maybe they (the officers) were looking for $0^{\circ}$ score or anything else.
Ardra says how she has it so bad and God forbid, she has a son. Pity she feels that way. You have it so bad. Well, tell me what whites should do. The Miss America pageant was sued by blacks because because it was all white. When Blacks were sued by white people, did they? They came out with a Black Miss America pageant. Tell me who is being prejudiced now.
I am also sorry to say that Ardra felt that all white citizens of Los Angeles and their brothers and sisters all over this nation hate Blacks. I agree that there are people who hate Blacks, but they also hate Jews, Mexicans, Chinese and anyone not exactly like them.
If you try to say that my skin is still white, so I can hide my identity, you're right. Yet I won't because I am not white. You will have a Star of David or my chi on.
David Weinstein Naperville, Ill., junior
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Kim Crowder
Letter 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 accepted.
Sketch
AT LAST, AFTER COUNTLESS LATE
NIGHTS OF STUDYING AT THE
SCIENCE LIBRARY—HARVE MY
EYESIGHT HAS DETERiorated TO
20/2000 VISION
I HAVE PERFECTED A
FORMULA FOR INVISIBILITY!
AND SINCE I DON'T BELIEVE
IN EXPERIMENTING WITH
ANIMALS, I'LL FOOLISHLY
TRY IT OUT ON MYSELF!
GLUG
GLUG
GLUG
AT LAST, AFTER COUNTLESS LATE NIGHTS OF STUDYING AT THE SCIENCE LIBRARY — WHERE MY EYESIGHT HAS DETERRIATED TO 20/2000 VISION—
I HAVE PERFECTED A FORMULA FOR INVISIBILITY! AND SINCE I DON'T BELIEVE IN EXPERIMENTING WITH ANIMALS, I'LL FOOLISHLY TRY IT OUT ON MYSELF!
GLUG GLUG GLUG
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BY SIMPLY REMOVING ALL MY CLOTHES, I BECOME COMPLETELY INVISIBLE... THUS VIOLATING SEVERAL OBSERVATION-IN-ART LAWS...
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AND ESPECIALY CARToonISTS WHO DON'T DRAW HANDS VERY WELL...
NOW, ALL I HAVE TO DO IS RUN DOWNSTAIRS AND SHARE MY SECRET WITH THE WAITING WORLD!
UH-OH! I JUST REALIZED! I CAN'T SEE A THING WITHOUT MY GLASSES!
TRIP!
CRASH!
WHOA! WHAT A FREAKY DREAM!
PERHAPS I HAVE BEEN STUDYING TOO HARD Lately!
EUREKA! IT WORKS!
WHAT A TREMENDOUS
BOON THIS WILL BE
FOR MANKIND! AND SCIENCE
... AND ESPECIALLY
CARTOONISTS WHO
DON'T DRAW HANDS
VERY WELL ...
BY SIMPLY REMOVING ALL
my CLOTHES, I BECOME
completely INVISIBLE...
THUS VIOLATING SEVERAL
OBSCENITY-IN ART LAWS...
OH, WELL. IT'S IN THE
CAUSE OF SCIENCE...
NOW, ALL I HAVE TO DO
IS RUN DOWNSTairs
AND SHARE MY SECRET
WITH THE WARNING WORLD!
by David Rosenfield
UN-OH! I JUST REALIZED!
I CAN'T SEE A THING
WITHOUT MY GLASSES!
TRIP!
THUMP
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CRASH!
WHOA! WHAT A
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PERHAPS I HAVE BEEN
STUDYING TOO HARD LATELY!
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 23, 1991
Features
5
1000
Chuck Magerl, Free State Brewery proprietor, shovels used grain from the boiling kettle into a wheelbarrow. The grain will be sold to a local swine farmer
107
Bradt examines readings from a wet hydrometer used to measure the amount of suspended solids in the fermenting beer.
THE FOOTBALL TEAM
Steve Bradt, assistant brewer, washes away contaminants in the brewing room to avoid a change in the taste of the beer.
Kansas' own
BEER
brews
Brewery mixes tradition science to create its beer
Free State Brewing Company Inc. 636 Massachusetts St., represents both past and present.
Steve Bradt, assistant brewer for Free State, said that the brewing room was kept sparkling clean with washings of iodine and hot water.
Bradt said that scientific instruments such as refractometers, which measure refraction, and wet hydrometers, which measure mass, in the same process, but the process itself had not changed much through history.
The brewing process
Malt barley grain from Wisconsin is milled above the brewing room. The grain rushes into the large cylin-
gular hole where it is mixed with hot water.
The business at Free State is not one of amateur basement brewing but a mixture of modern science and professional brewing.
In the first two stages, bittering hops are added during the first half hour of boiling
The hot water removes simple sugars from the grain. The result of this process is sweet raw beer, or wort. After the vat is full, the hot water is recirculated through the grain for about 30 minutes.
The wort is then boiled in the kettle for about an hour and a half while hops are added in three different stages.
The wort is then transferred into the boiling kettle. During the transfer, the grain is rinsed with hot water and then boiled for 10 minutes and to rinse the sugar from the straps.
The bittering hops counteract the sweetness of the wort, help settle the boil and act as a natural preservative for the beer.
Just before the boil is complete, the finish, or aromatic hops, are added.
"The finish hops don't contribute a great deal of bitterness, but they do provide some of the aroma and more subtle flavor of the beer." Bradt said.
Story and Photos by Tim Miller
Page design by Keith Thorpe
The wort is then settled, and the sediments are removed. The sediments are particles of hops and wheat, which have been kept together during the boil. The wort is
WE CRAFT COFFEE
LESS WATER
MORE HYDRATION
HARVEY'S BREWERY
Bradt said similar filters were also in swimming pools as well as by the wine industry and the aircraft industry, which uses them to filter jet fuel
ABOVE: The brewing room of Free State Brewery contains the brewing kettle, boiling kettle and fermentation tanks.
After the beer is filtered, it is piped into the 225-gallon storage tanks in the refrigerated room adjacent to the brewing room.
RIGHT: Bradt looks through a refractometer to check the amount of suspended solids in the raw beer.
The beer is then filtered through a diatomous earth filter.
often wrimppooled and settled again to make sure most of the sediments are in the middle of the kettle.
图 12-10
The final stage of the beer is, of course, when the bartender pulls back the handle on the tap, and the beer flows through 75 feet of line from the tanks in the refrigerated room.
Bradt said that the colder the beer was, the easier and more efficient the filtering process was.
Bradt said that Free State used about 900 gallons of beer a week for their events.
After the kettle is emplied, Bradi climbs down into the kettle and shovels the sediments into buckets.
After the settling process, the wort is pumped through a heat exchanger and cooled to 64 or 65 degrees on its way to the fermentation tanks. The temperature is kept at 65 degrees throughout the active fermentation process, which usually lasts the first three to five days the wort is in the fermentation tanks. The wort stays in the tanks for up to two weeks.
During the next week to week-and-a-half, the wort's temperature is lowered to 35 degrees to promote the final settling of the yeast.
Fermentation is accomplished through the use of top-fermenting yeast, or ale brewer's yeast. Bradt said the yeast was the original yeast used historically for brewing purposes.
Bradt described the yeast as a simple, single-scelled organism that digests simple sugars. The yeast's byproducts include alcohol and carbon dioxide. Bradt said that the yeast was reusable and that the same batch of yeast had been used since Free State opened two years ago.
Kegs are also available from Free State.
PETER BLAKE
Richie Backus, daytime bartender for Free State, draws a beer for a customer.
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Observers consider the Soviet leader's next move in the economy
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — U.S. officials are reluctantly concluding that Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's government is paralyzed and that the world-shaking reforms at home and abroad may not hold power much longer.
Kremlin watchers in Washington are studying the most likely successors and considering what a post-bachev苏联 Union may look like.
Gorbache has enjoyed hearty support from President Bush, who made no secret of his hope that the Soviet leader would succeed in his attempt to reform the Soviet economy. But Bush advisers and State Department analysts now say privately that Gorbache appears unable to regain control of his fractions country and that his time may be running out.
"He's getting pretty close to the edge, and one influential Soviet writer wrote that he believed
Another said the situation looked precarious.
One official with long experience observing Soviet affairs said the administration had received recent signals from various sources indicating that Gorbachev was in serious trouble and was furiously trying to protect himself and undercut the opposition.
"He's very much aware of the threat," the official said.
Analysis
Administration officials are reluctant to comment openly about a subject as sensitive as Gorbache's political survival, and those who
spoke to The Associated Press did so only on the condition they remain anonymous.
Other observers injected a note of caution and said there was much hysterical talk but little hard evidence.
John D. Steinbrunner, director of foreign policy studies at the Brookings Institution, said, "I do not see signs of his imminent demise."
"He has balanced the overall politics in a way that doesn't make it easy to get at him," Steinbruner said, though he acknowledged, "One never quite knows where the breaking point is."
State Department Counselor Robert B. Zoellick, in outlining Bush administration policy on Capitol Hill, recently alluded to the increased uncertainty about the future course of the Soviet Union.
Zoellick said that the United States should try to manage uncertainty by multiplying channels of information and increasing points of access within the rapidly changing Soviet society.
The administration is attempting to broaden its contacts at all levels of the Soviet power structure while trying not to undermine Gorbachev.
"We are resisting the advice of critics who say we should wash our hands of Gorbachev," said one well-prepared official.
Bush is pressing to settle a dispute over conventional force cuts in Europe and to complete work on a strategic arms reduction treaty while he still has a sympathetic counterpart in the Kremlin.
Sources said Bush eased his conditions for conducting a summit before the end of June in hopes of meeting Gorbachev again, in part to assess for himself what is happening in the Kremlin.
One indication of the depth of Gorbachev's trouble came during former President Nixon's recent trip to Moscow.
Dimitri Simes of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who accompanied Nixon, said that KGB Chairperson Vladimir Kryuchkov complained to them that he argued with Gorbachev too often.
That alone was an ominous sign, coming from the head of the secret police, but Simes recounted an even more intriguing follow-up.
"Just hours after our session with Kryuchkov, a senior KGB official requested a meeting with me," the Soviet affairs scholar wrote in an article for the Washington Post. "Claiming to be speaking with the KGB chairman's knowledge and for the benefit of Nixon, he suggested that, in our fact-finding, we consider a scenario in which the Supreme Court must actiant infighting between Gorbachev and (Russian Federation President Boris) Yeltsin and take power into its own hands."
Simes said the officer suggested Nixon pay more attention to Anatoly Lukvanov, a longtime party function-
ary whom Gorbachev selected as his first vice president and who now serves as chairperson of the Supreme Soviet.
"It was suggested that if the present stalemate continues, Lakyanov could play a major role in removing Gorbachev from power on the authority of the Soviet Legislature—presumably with full support of the military and security services." Simes said.
One State Department source said it was inconceivable that such a conversation would take place if the KGB chief were not trying to deliver a signal that Gorbachev was in serious trouble.
In recent months, the Soviet president has grown increasingly estranged from the reformers once fostered. And he has become more reliant on the KGB and the military to help him crack down on terrorist forces in the republics and restore order as strikes and unrest spread.
Official Soviet sources said in January that Gorbachev was no longer in complete control of his government and was, in effect, sharing power with the military.
Gorbachev could face a test this week when the Central Committee of the Communist Party meets in Moscow. Although the so-called plenum does not have the clout it did before Gorbachev moved his base of power from the Soviet Union to the party leadership, one of Gorbachev's last pedestals of support
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 23. 1991
7
Nation/World briefs Johannesburg, S. Africa
Witness helps Mandela's alibi
A witness supported Winnie Mandela's alibi in her kidnapping and assault trial yesterday, saying he was with her the night she was accused of beating four vouchers.
Thao Motau gave a detailed description of the drive he said he and Mandela made Dec. 29, 1988, recalling a town where he said they stopped to check the car's oil and water. Under the drive motorau only vaguely remembered four other trips with Mandela to the same place, Brandon.
When Prosecutor Chris van Vuuren pressed Motau to explain why he only recalled the December 1988 trip in detail, the witness explained that it occurred about New Year's Eve and that he recently had concluded his final high school exams.
"That would be a major thing in my life," said Motau.
Earlier, Mandela concluded four days of testimony and said she could not explain the presence of a blood-stained whip found in her home after the alleged crime.
Mandela has testified she was in Brandfort, far from Soweto, from the evening of Dec. 29, 1988, until New Year's Eve.
Motau told the court Mandela telephoned him in December 1988 and said she needed him to go to the court.
Basel, Switzerland
Third World economy rated
Thailand, South Korea and Taiwan are expected to register the Third World's highest economic growth rates over the next five years, according to a survey published yesterday.
Economically beleaguered Argentina and the Ivory Coast figure to end up at the lower end of the survey that covers 36 Asian, African and Latin American countries.
The Basel-based Prognos Center said in the survey that the average annual growth rate of the 36 countries would be 4 percent until 1985, compared with a worldwide average of about 3 percent.
Export growth, averaging 5.9 percent from 1983 through 1989, will increase to an annual 10.1 percent until 1995, the survey said. It forecast that Taiwan and South Korea will be the leading exporters, followed by Singapore, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong and Malaysia.
The survey also predicted that the 36 countries would sell $500 billion worth of manufactured goods on the world market in 1995, with eight countries having an 80 percent share of the total.
Singapore will continue to have the highest gross domestic product among the 36 countries.
From The Associated Press
Poorest families might be taxed highest percentage
WASHINGTON — The poorest U.S. families pay 81 percent of their average $12,700 earnings in state and local taxes than do U.S. citizens making $875,200 a year, a private research group said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Middle-income families, with earnings that average $310, must turn over a one-third bigger share of their incomes to state, city and county government, the wealthiest 1 percent, said Citizens for Tax Justice.
In both cases, the disparity is worse than it was five years ago, said the organization, which is financed by labor. church and social groups.
"When all of the major state and local taxes are added together, virtually every state taxes its poor and middle-income families at rates significantly higher than those faced by the richest families," the study concluded.
"The biggest problem is over-reliance on regressive sales and excise taxes rather than on progressive, ability-to-pay income taxes," said McInelyn, director of Citizens for Tax Justice.
The report by the organization, which advocates higher taxes for the rich, was billed as the most comprehensive study ever conducted on the burden of state and local taxes.
"It's sad but true," the report stated. "Forty-four states and the District of California tax the
In the 10 states that the study deemed to have the worst tax systems, the poor pay nearly three times as much of their income as taxes as the rich. In five states — Nevada, Texas, Florida, Washington and South Dakota — the poor pay five times as great a share.
very rich at lower rates than they tax the poor."
Only six states — Vermont, Delaware, Hawaii, Minnesota, Maryland and Oregon — require the rich to pay a greater share of their income than the poor. Only Vermont and Delaware require the rich to pay a greater share than faced by both middle-income and poor families.
"The federal government still relies on the income tax for 90 percent of its revenue (leaving little income base for other governments to tax)." Zimmerman said. "If a state taxes wealthy people at a high rate, they can simply move across the border into another state."
Chris Zimmerman, chief economist for the National Conference of State Legislatures, who had not read the report, said it generally was more difficult for states, cities and counties to maintain a progressive tax system than the federal government.
The eight states viewed as having the worst tax systems - South Dakota, Nevada, Texas, Florida, Washington, Tennessee, Wyoming and New Hampshire - have no broad personal income tax. Pennsylvania and Illinois, also among the worst 10, have flat, low-income taxes.
White House says college grants should no longer pay for bar tabs
WASHINGTON — The White House proposed yesterday to limit the kinds of expenses that can be charged to the government by universities conducting federally financed research.
Administration officials have been concerned that some colleges and universities are billing the government inappropriately for overhead expenses related to federal research grants.
The Office of Management and Budget's proposal would rule out such expenses as those relating to entertainment, alcoholic beverages, or recreational living expenses and social club memberships.
The Associated Press
OMB Director Richard Darman said the proposed guidelines were intended to clarify policy and reduce uncertainty.
Robert Rosenweig, president of the Association of American Universities, said Darman's proposal was a useful and important step in restoring public confidence in the research system. The changes will cause some accounting problems on campuses, he says, but the costs are worth paying.
A recent audit at Stanford University revealed the school had charged the government for expenses related to a $1,200 antique commode, a $10,000 set of donated silverware and a university-owned shopping center.
As a result, the school withdrew about $700,000 in billings for expenses associated with government-financed research.
Harvard Medical School earlier this month announced it would withdraw $500,000 in expenses billed to federal research projects, including charges for maintaining the private home of the school's president, operating the medical school dean's office and a retirement party.
The expenses at which the guidelines are aimed are those charged off as overhead or indirect costs of research. Schools are allowed to bill the government for certain costs that are not specifically for a particularly sponsored project but result from combined or joint use. These include costs for utilities, library services and building depreciation.
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Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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9TH & INDIANA
Local death remains a mystery
By Lara Gold Korean staff writer
Bv Lara Gold
A year after Chris Bread died there is nothing. No suspects. No motive. No arrests. No answers. No solace. There are only questions and controversy.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Lawrence police and the Douglas County Sheriff's Department have spent 13 months looking into the events that left Bread's head broken and his body tire-marked in a shallow ditch on 15th Street a mile and a half east of Lawrence.
What do they know about the death of 19-year-old Chris Bread, a breast cancer survivor?
- He was born in New York.
- He was born in Manhattan.
Nobody knows how Chris Bread died. The police and the forensic pathologist's reports contradict each other. The pathologist says Bread died of a hit-and-run accident. Police say it could have been an assault.
Mysteries still shroud detective work. Steps that were commonly taken in other cases were not taken in Bread's. People who saw Bread the night of his death were never questioned. Evidence that generally provides answers in hit-and-run cases only seems to raise more in this one.
Nobody knows why Chris Bread died. Skinheads and American Indians in Lawrence scoff at the idea that he might have been a motive in the case.
A year ago, police brought in Kris Sperry, a forensic pathologist from Atlanta to help with the case.
"We are still pretty much where we started a year ago," said Loren Anderson, Douglas County Sheriff.
Sperry concluded that Bread's injuries were typical of a hit-and-run accident. He wrote that that a large truck or a truck, van, killed Bread.
Sperry examined photographs of Bread's body, the ditch where his body was found and the autopsy report.
However, Anderson said Bread's injuries were so extensive that they
Anderson said the police might never be able to determine how Chris Bread died.
The KBI and the Lawrence police have asked questions and answered Anderson.
He said Bread's death had not been classified as an assault or a hit-and-run accident.
No suspects, however, have been found in any of the three possible scenarios.
Bread's death could have been an assault, an intentional hit-and-run or an unintentional hit-and-run, he said.
Zack Smith, a local skinhead, said the police tried to blame the skinheads for Bread's death.
He said the police grilled him for three hours to see whether he would confess something.
Charles Cornelius, a student at Haskell Indian Junior College, thinks blaming the skinheads for the death is ludicrous.
could not be called typical.
"If they are trying to blame the skins, then that's discrimination." he
Matthew Ute, a former Haskell student, agreed.
However, Anderson said there must have been a miscommunication because he said he never told Don Bierling that skinheads were the main suspect.
Don Bread, Chris Bread's father,
said Anderson originally told him that skinheads were the main suspect. He said they were 'bad guys' who'd love to see his son alive.
He said the skinheads and the American Indians did not fight the night Bread died. He said he never bred Bread's death was a hate crime.
Anderson said he was not blaming anyone and had no suspects in the case.
But no one knows whether Bread
Dogs were never taken to track Bread's scent to verify whether he had walked from the Outhouse, about miles east of Lawrence on 15th Street.
was walking home that night or if his body was dumped in the ditch.
Anderson said police had access to dogs and had used them on other
"We didn't realize there was going to be a controversy over how he got there," Anderson said referring to the ditch Bread was found in. "I don't want to make excuses for why we are dogs. No investigation is perfect."
Police also reported they had interviewed everyone who was there that
"We are thinking we have talked to everybody." Anderson said.
However, Cornelius said he saw Bread that night and had never been able to eat it.
The witness problem is one of several threads in the investigation that have simply run out. Evidence that usually answers questions in a hit-and-run case has left investigators clueless.
For instance. Anderson said it was unusual that no skid marks or car parts were found in the area.
Tire tread marks were imprinted across Bread's right leg.
Also, when Bread died, he was wearing a thick, black leather motorcycle jacket. Anderson said the jacket had been lab tested for paint specks, which are vital in most hit-and-run cases to help identify the vehicle. No color or car description has been released by police.
Anderson declined comment on the lab reports.
Anderson also said nothing had been determined from studying photographs of the tread marks on Bread's leg.
He said tread marks usually helped pinpoint the type of vehicle.
Nor has anything been determined from other clues found in the area.
A blue flannel shirt was found in a field near the ditch where the body was found. Don Bread said it was Chris's shirt. However, Anderson said Don Bread had not seen Chris for a few days, so police were not certain the shirt belonged to Chris. Anderson said the shirt was taken into evidence and lab-tested, but he declined to comment on the results.
Miscommunications
VanHoesen declined to comment and referred all questions to the sheriff.
Don Bread said he was told by Sheriff's Detective Bob VanHoesen that he found a depression in the field across from the Outhouse where an assault might have occurred.
Don Bread found a dime in the depression and asked the police to fingerprint it.
Anderson said he could not remember whether the brown pick-up truck had been found.
Two people at the Outhouse that night said they saw a fight between two American Indians. They both said one of the Indians had been driving in a brown pick-up truck One Indian had stopped for the Indians may have been Chris Bread.
Anderson said he could not remember whether lab tests were done on the coin.
In the end, the American Indian community remains upset, even angry, about the Chris Bread investigation.
Anderson said he had not given up. "I really, truly feel someone else knows about what happened to Chris Bread," he said.
Cornelius said that, as a Haskell student, he was disturbed by the many questions that linger a year after Bread's death.
"The police have not come up with anything." he said.
Bv Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
There was drinking, slam dancing and, sometime after 12:30 a.m., a dawn.
Unanswered questions linger in matter of Bread's post-midnight road fatality
What follows is a reconstruction of Chris Bread's last night.
It was supposed to be a night for a good time. Haskell students, local skinheads and punk rockers had gathered at the Outhouse to see the bands Gotic Slam and Laas Rocket.
6th Street
Mass. Street
Bread asked Shawna Lee, a friend from Haskell Indian Junior College, whether she was still going with him to the Outhouse. She was supposed to drive, but she told him she had decided not to go.
Christopher Bread was found on 15th Street about a mile and a half from The Outhouse.
Kansas River
The Outhouse
15th Street
Bread was moving his belongings from his cousin's house into his new house near Haskell.
■ 8:30 p.m.
What is known: Bread took a taxi to the Outhouse by himself. He paid the bouncer a $2 cover charge at the gate but appeared hesitant to go
What is not known? Why wouldn't Bread go with other friends to the Outhouse? Whom did he meet? Whom was he talking to?
9:30 p.m.
What is known: Charles Cornelius, a Haskell student who knew Bread, was sitting on his car in the parking lot drinking beer. He saw Bread walk across the lot toward a group of people. He did not see who the people
people? What were they doing?
10:30-11:00 p.m.
What is not known: Who were the
What is known: While Zack Smith, a skinhead, was leaving the Outhouse with Bob Cutler, a punk rocker, they saw two American Indians fighting on the right side of the Outhouse in a barren cornfield. One of the Indians had been driving in a brown pick-up truck. Smith said.
Cutler, who was driving, said he did not pay much attention. But he said it had looked like two drunken friends rough-housing with each other. Smith and Cutler left, not thinking twice about it.
Smith said he recognized Bread from his picture in the newspaper the next day as one of the Indians who had been fighting. No one else has verified that Bread was one of the Indians fighting that night.
What is not known: Was it a fight?
Were they fighting about? What was the outcome? Was one of the easily Bread?
12, 30, a)
What is known: Band members told police that they saw Bread leaving the Outhouse. They said that they offered him a ride home but that he refused.
What is not known: Did he walk?
Why would he refuse a ride on a cold March night when it was a two-and-a-half-mile walk home? Did he ait into a fight?
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What is known: A passing motorist found Bread's body in a shallow ditch about a mile and a half down the road. An officer who was injured shorties were notified within minutes.
What is not known: How did Bread die? Was he hit intentionally? Was he assaulted and then dumped in a cave? Are there any witnesses to his death?
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 23. 1991
9
Series of unsolved deaths worries local American Indian community
CHRIS
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Pictures of Don Bread's four children line his office desk.
Connie, 24, as a high school cheerleader. Joey, 2, smiling bright in a portrait. Erica, 9, cuddling with her big brother Chris.
Don Bread stands near a telephone pole where he has erected a memorial to his son Chris. The memorial was placed near a ditch where 19-year-old Chris Bread's body was found after his death one year ago. His body was discovered on 15th Street about a mile and a half from the Outhouse, an east Lawrence bar where Chris was seen the night before he died.
Chris, 19, dressed in a tuxedo the night of his senior prom.
Many pictures of Chris Bread were taken that night. But the one that rests on the center of Don Bread's desk was the best one taken.
"There is a light around his face."
Dare Bread said, "It is my favorite one."
Bread's children are his favorite thing in the world. He has tried to protect them by teaching them about safety.
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But he could not protect his son forever.
"I would tell Chris to always be cautious and aware of what's around him.
Chris Bread died either from a fractured skull caused by the impact from a vehicle in a hit-and-run accident or a blow to the head. He supposedly was walking home about 12:30 a.m from the Outhouse, a club about one-and-a-half miles east of the old High Street where he was struck by a large vehicle, a truck or a van, March 2, 1900. He was knocked unconscious and died about 10 minutes later, after becoming brain dead.
A passing motorist found his tire-marked body on the north side of the road in a shallow ditch about 1 a.m.
Since that night, mystery has surrou-
naded Chris's death.
Chris Bread was the fourth American Indian found dead in Lawrence that year.
The first Indian death occurred in April 1898, when John Sandoval. 19, was found drowned in the Kansas River
Cecil Dawes Jr., 21, a former KU student, was also found drowned in the Kansas River in October 1989
Harry Oliver, 72, was killed Dec. 4, 1989 in a hit-and-run accident.
Police offered no answers or suspects in any of the four cases.
At the beginning of the Bread investigation, Lawrence police and the Douglas County Sheriff's Department seemed optimistic.
With Chris Bread's death, rumors of hate crimes ripped through the Lawrence community.
Eighteen days after Chris Bread's death, Sheriff Lori Anderson said that officials had investigated 143 leads in the case.
He said the sheriff routinely informed him about progress.
But when the leads turned into dead ends, the American Indian community questioned whether local authorities were doing everything
At that time, Don Bread thought that everything possible was being done to find the person who killed his son.
The lack of evidence and his own unanswered questions sparked Dom Bread's own doubts about the investigation.
This March, when then Lawrence police representative Chris Mulvey made light of a Wall Street Journal article about the four Indian deaths by writing that the only "serious" malt beverage, "the American Indian community and Lawrence's minority community were outraged."
For them, Mulvenon's article cemented the belief that the police did not care about solving the deaths of black men and saved the American Indians as drunks.
"My son's life and the lives of those others were significant." Bread said.
scene where his son was found dead. The visits are a significant part of his life. He feels closer to Chris.
When the police markers that surround the ditch started to fade about four months ago, Don Bread repainted them in red.
"I never want to forget," he said as he stared down at the road.
Don Bread does not want anyone who drives along that road to forget.
Last Christmas, he carved a wooden cross and painted "Chris" on it.
It hangs about 15 feet up a telephone pole a few feet away from the ditch. A Christmas wreath hangs below.
Don Bread stands on the edge of the ditch. "This was the last place he
So many unanswered questions go through his mind, although more than a year has passed.
was alive. Maybe."
"With all the technology we have and not to be able to find a car," he
But he is not bitter. His belief in God allows him not to be.
The "maybes" continue to bother Don Bread.
said.
"We believe in life after death." he said with a half smile. "We are going to see him again."
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10
Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Just stop and "Think About It"
Tonight's Topic: "AIDS, Rape, and Civil Rights"
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Voice your opinion on that issue and call in during the show.
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Adolescent health examined
Study finds that youths need more accessible health care
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Many adolescents cannot get needed health services because they lack health insurance or face other barriers to care, a congressional research agency said yesterday.
A study by the Office of Technology Assessment found that children ages 10 to 18 are not as healthy as they are in older age groups and are less effective and accessible health care.
The office's report suggested a more sympathetic, supportive approach to adolescents and said development of school-based health centers may be one way to provide better health care for this age group.
“Standing as they do at a crossroads between childhood and adulthood, adolescents all too frequently fall prey to our social service system,” she said.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., one of 29 members of Congress who requested the study, said she would not characterize the problems of adolescents as being of crisis proportions.
The concept of school-based health centers has some merit, Kassbaum ce
But she said the report showed that their health status needed more attention.
said, but she added that the decision to establish a clinic in a school must be made by local officials.
Leading causes of death for teens
"I don't see the federal government leading the way," she said. "If they had been controversial, primarily when they provide contraceptive services.
The report also shows the federal government's approach to adolescent health has been scattershot, with nearly 60 programs spread across the national cabin department related to the health of this age group, she said.
Minorities are the least served, the report said. Half of all African-American, Hispanic-American, American Indian and Alaska native adolescents live in families with incomes of 150 percent of the poverty level or less. Seventeen percent of African-American adolescents live in families that are poor or near poor. The poverty level was $12.675 for a four-member family in 1989.
The report's researchers found that one in seven people ages 10 to 18 has no health insurance, and one in ten patients are not covered by Medicaid
Adolescents face other barriers to care, including health insurance benefits that do not cover needed services, such as when they do not yet manifest full-blown mental health problems, the report said.
Death rate by race and age group for top causes of death for teenagers.
Black 10-14 yrs. Black 15-19 yrs.
White 10-14 yrs. White 15-19 yrs.
40%
30
20
10
Motor vehicle injuries Other injuries Homicide Suicide
SOURCE: Office of Technology Assessment
Few health-care professionals have been trained specially to treat adolescents, despite a longstanding belief by medical providers that special skills and knowledge are needed, according to the report.
Requirements that they have parental consent or notification are also obstacles to health care, including contraceptive services, it said.
About 1,500 primary care physicians nationwide specialize in adolesc
Knight-Ridder Tnbune News/JUDY TREIBLE
Knight-Rider TITLE NURSE TREATMENT centice medicine, and about the same number of psychologists have a special interest in treating adolescents. Amounts to fewer than one such professional for every 1,000 adolescent cells.
OTA suggested several policy options for Congress, including support for development of improved school-linked or community-based centers that provide comprehensive health and related services for adolescents.
Congress also could expand Medicaid, the federal-state health-care program for the poor.
Tape of blood oath important evidence against Mafia boss
The Associated Press
BOSTON — On a Sunday autumn morning in a neat house in suburban Medford, New England's reputed Mafia leaders gathered for a secret meeting to initiate members.
Officials say four men took blood oaths in Italian to defend the group and vowed to murder anyone who posed a threat.
But the FBI was listening, tipped off when one inductee, a convicted killer serving time, supported on his application for a furlough.
The house the group had scrupulously chosen also was on the same street as an FBI agent's.
"It's a little bit like the gang that couldn't shoot straight," said Edith Flynn, a professor of criminal justice at Northeastern University and a specialist in organ trafficking. "The cops is Rule Number One. What is unusual is that they bungled it so badly."
A seven-hour tape recording of the alleged initiation could be the most important evidence against reputed crime boss Raymond Paterson, who has been held lieutenants facing racketeering charges, federal officials said.
Neither the recording nor a transcript has been made public, except for one brief segment.
"I . . . want to enter into this organization to protect my family and to protect all my friends," the inductees repeated.
except for the logon logs.
On it, a man identified as Biagio
Digiacomo administers an oath of
loyalty.
Each man's trigger finger was
cut to draw blood, a holy card with the image of a saint was burned, and Digiacomo administered a first dose of an antidote written in papers tipped with the court.
"As burns this saint, so will burn my soul. I enter alive into this organization and leave it dead."
U. S. District Judge Mark Wolf has decided to let prosecutors use the tape in Patriaura's ricketeer case, the protests of defense attorneys.
No trial date has been set.
Authorities worked for years to gather evidence against the mob and won convictions that, by 1899, resulted in a power struggle inside the alleged Patriarca organization, documents show.
In June 1989, reputed "underboss" William Grasso was discovered slain in Connecticut. Alleged Francis Salemme was shot the same day. Salemme was shot the same day.
New members apparently were needed.
One alleged candidate, Vincent Federico, serving a sentence for murder in a Massachusetts prison, was considered a close associate of alleged narcara crime expert Richard rara, government affidavit shows. Ferrara now is one of the defendants in the racketeer case.
But the alleged mob leaders were concerned about surveillance, the FBI said. They needed a safe place to conduct a ritual initiation and chose Federico's home in Medford and Medford 'Federico''s furlough application said he would be at the house Sunday, Oct. 29, 1989.
Ex-midshipman thinks judge showed gay bias
The Associated Press
Attorneys for Joseph C. Steffan asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to take U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch off the case.
WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court was asked yesterday to order a judge who called a gay plaintiff a "homo" in court to remove himself from the man's case challenge from the naval chase. The Naval Academy.
The judge refused to do so April 12, saying his use of the word "homo" three times in a March 6 hearing did not mean he was biased. He said he
But Stefan's attorneys contended in court papers that if a judge is
allowed to handle a case when the *n*max used a word considered offensive by the minority group involved, "the inevitable result will be to undermine the confidence of minority groups in the ability and willingness of the minority to safeguard their rights to due process and equal protection of the laws."
Government attorneys have contended that Gasch did not show specific bias against Steffan and that the plaintiff must prove the judge had personal bias against him.
Because he stated he was a homosexual, Steffan was dismissed from the Naval Academy six weeks before he was to graduate in 1987. He was not accused of homosexual conduct.
Discovery launch scrubbed because of equipment failure
The Associated Press
CAPE CANERAL, Fla. - NASA scrubbed the launch of space shuttle Discovery early today after a failure in one of the craft's engines.
The mission was scrubbed at 12:15 a.m. c.MT after engineers reported a transceiver failure on the high-pressure three main engines.
NASA began unloading the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen fuel to make the craft safe for further examination, officials said.
The launch had been scheduled for 6:05 a.m. CST today.
Discovery was to have carried seven astronauts and a Pentagon cargo worth more than $260 million.
NASA representative Lisa Malone said it could be two to five days before the equipment was repaired and the launch was rescheduled.
She said officials were meeting early today to determine how long it would take to complete repairs.
NASA had started loading more than a half-million gallons of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the shuttle late yesterday as it prepared for the launch. At the time, officials were concerned about bad weather delaying the launch, but they said there was an 80 percent chance the weather would be acceptable for liftoff.
The launch was to be the first Department of Defense mission in shuttle history open to public scrutiny.
The Pentagon expects to save $80 million a year by lifting secrecy around military shuttle flights. Much of the saving reflects the cost of secure computers and coding devices used on the secret missions.
KJ
The University of Kansas COMMENCEMENT
Degree Candidates and Faculty: Caps, Gowns & Hoods
AST
All participants, including faculty and graduate law, master's and bachelors candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26.
Participants may still obtain regalia on Saturday, May 18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and on Sunday, May 19 from 8 a.m. until Commencement. A late fee of $10 will be assessed. All sizes and types of regalia cannot be guaranteed after April 26.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 23, 1991
11
Professor seeks cure for complex disease
Little previous research conducted on Lupus although it afflicts many
By Sarah Davis
By Sarah Davis
Kaplan staff writer
Since the mid-19th century, the wolf dis ease has attacked.
It was named for the jagged-edged, butterfly-shaped rash that formed across the bridge of the nose and both cheeks of some patients. It resembled a wolf's bite.
40 HUMANE 7
Today, the name of this disease is as complex as the disease itself.
Dean Stetter, associate professor of biochemistry, performs chronic immunological disorder. Lupus causes the body's de-DNA sequencing on a human gene infected with Lupus, a fenses to turn against healthy tissues and organs.
Systemic lupus erythematosus, more com-monly known as Lupus, is a chronic immunological disorder that causes the body's spleen to turn against its healthy tissues and organs.
Every year, Lupus afflicts about 50,000 people in the United States and 500,000 to 1 million, mostly women, worldwide. Lupus can cause people than leukemia, eczema or AIDS.
A KU professor and his 15-member team of researchers are working to decrease that
Dean Stetler, associate professor of biochemistry, has been researching the mysterious disease for 12 years.
"It's been largely ignored, and I always root for the underdog," he said. "It'd be great if we can find a cure, but I'd be happy if we can contribute in some way."
But the road to a cure may be a long one. Lupus is easily mistaken for other diseases because its symptoms are vague and it affects many different areas. The disease affects the brain, joints, bones, lungs and other organs. It also is characterized by flare-ups and remissions that come and go unpredictably.
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
"The symptoms are not specific." Stetler said. "In some patients, the primary target is the kidney or the lungs, and in Lupus, that's one of the things we need to know. 'Why are there so many targets?' In order to treat or care we're going to need to take care of all these."
Stetler is taking care of a lot more than that.
Time-consuming activities
He manages to balance his research with being chairperson of the genetics program at the University of Kansas, teaching several courses and serving as a member of many committees.
"I'd be bored if I wasn't busy," he said. "If you like what you're doing, then it doesn't seem like work. One just has to keep track of everything."
And he manages to do just that with the help of a tiny appointment book — he has learned to write small — that he keeps in his back pocket at all times.
"If I lose it, I'm in trouble," he said.
chuckling. "I washed it once, and I was lost for months."
But in terms of his science-oriented interests, he was never lost.
Stetler grew up in Glen Elder, a town of 400 people in north-central Kansas. In high school, he took all the science classes he could, but it was when he took his first microbiology course at KU in 1972 that he knew he was hooked.
The class was easy for him, and he enjoyed it because he could make sense out of the conversation.
"That's how you know what you want to be said." Once you find that, that's the mah'fat.
Setter found what he liked to do right away. He graduated from KU in 1976 with a degree in microbiology, earned a doctorate from KU in 1979 and then headed to Hershey, Pa., where he was a post-doctoral student at Penn State College of Medicine. He was awarded the honor of pharmacology from 1982 to 1985 at Penn State college before he returned to KU.
"I liked it really well here." Stetter said. "It's a great place. It's the best university in Kansas."
He and his wife, Marsha, also wanted to move back to the Midwest to be closer to their families. She grew up in a small Kansas town 150 miles from where her husband lived. They met through a mutual friend and were married right after high school.
He and his wife have three children, ages 6,
12 and 18, and Stetler manager to squeeze in.
"It's not easy," he admitted, laughing. "The research has to almost come first without sacrificing the family."
Understanding the disease
Stetler is busy researching Lupus during the day between his microbiology lab and Gene Expression I classes. He arrives at his lab in Haworth Hall about 8 a.m. and goes
Stetler and his research team are examining various aspects of the disease.
"First we need to understand the disease's cause — how and why it initiates — and once we understand that, then it's easier to develop a drug or technique that can counteract the disease. We simply want to know why it happens and how the disease progreses."
He is studying the urine of Lapus patients to establish disease severity and to predict the extent of reabsorption.
He has detected an antibody called anti RNA polymerase I in the urine. This antibody becomes trapped in the kidneys and can lead to kidney failure and, eventually, death.
Because kidney failure is one of the most
common symptoms in Lupus patients, Stefler is examining what the antibody is reacting to.
Two kinds of drugs — prednisone and cyclophosphamide — are available to Lupus patients. These drugs stop immune cells from dividing, which is what causes the symptoms of Lupus. But these drugs suppress the whole immune system so that the patients are more susceptible to infectious diseases.
"We are trying to develop therapeutic agents that would specifically kill only those cells that are making the antibodies because they are not causing that are causing the disease." Steller said.
He also has done some speculating about how Lupus is contracted.
"I think it's more a genetic predisposition to an environmental factor or an etiological agent, such as a virus, fungus or bacteria," he said.
A scientist's role model
Rachel Lottes, a research technician working with Stetler, said that no matter how the disease started, something needed to be done.
"I do hope there will be some type of treatment and that there will be a better concept of the disease or determining how it originated since it's so devastating to the body," she said. "I feel like I'm making a contribution to humanity in a very small way."
She said Stetler's high expectations of the research team helped to reach that goal.
"He gives a lot of guidance, but he doesn't force you to work at his pace." she said. "He has a humble approach to what he does. He's very down to earth."
Harold Dickensheets, a Las Vegas graduate student who is also part of the research team at the University of Texas.
He is not the only one.
"I think he's a good role model for scientists," he said. "You have to be devoted to science, but you have to know when to give time to other things. That's one aspect I'd like to develop while I'm here."
Stetler's 18-year-old daughter, Amber, plans to attend KU this fall and follow in her father's scientific footsteps. But she wants to become a secondary school science teacher because she says what her father does takes too much time.
"I suppose that will work out nicely because she can send me her best students,"
His youngest daughter also shows an interest in science and occasionally goes with
"My enthusiasm and interest in the subject rub off on them," he said.
It seems to have the same effect on many others as well.
We Wrote the Book on the Jayhawks
Your college days are captured forever in the 1991 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK, from the first week of classes to walking down the hill in May. You don't want to pass up this piece of KU history. Grab your KU ID and purchase your JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK in front of the Kansas Union or on Wescoe Beach from April 22-May 3, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. each day. A small investment of $25.00 is all it takes. While you're getting your yearbook, have it personalized by everyone there. The JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK--this is one book of text you won't want to sell back.
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
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Prices subject to availability. Offer open to students enrolled in sk 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.
12
Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
School's out! Temporary work's in!
The paying assignments are waiting for students who need immediate summertime work. Learn all about the advantages of working as a Manpower temporary. Come visit our booth!
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Arts
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DON'T WALK
9:00am till 4:30pm
001
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april 24 1991
RUN
fulfill your cultural fantasies on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall
Arts on the Boulevard is a free indoor/outdoor arts festival planned to circulate art and music among the rest of the campus. The festival will feature works from the university art students and there will be a World Beat music spin from KJHK in front of the Kansas Union from noon till 1:30.
NO admission fee
A
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
Wings
Chris Hardin, Lawrence graduate student, tests an error on his circuit board. Hardin was working yesterday on a digital flap actuator control system in the wind tunnel at Learned Hall. Hardin his thesis research involved trying to control stalls in airplanes through the use of flaps on the front edge of the aircraft's wing. Hardin said flaps would help delay stalls in fighter aircraft during steep vertical climbs.
Alleged terrorist accused of attacks
The Associated Press
NATO forces in Europe.
KARLRSUHE, Germany — An alleged member of the leftist Red Army Faction terrorist group was indicted yesterday on murder charges and 30 counts of attempted murder, including attacks on U.S. generals Alexander Haig and Frederik Kroesen.
In September 1981, Beer allegedly helped terrorists in an attack on Kroesen, then commander of U.S. forces in Europe.
Hening Beer, 32, was accused of participating in an attack on Haig in June 1979 in Oboug, Belgium. At the time, Haig was chief commander of
Neither general was hurt seriously in the attacks.
Beer also allegedly aided a carbomb attack in August 1981 at the U.S. Air Force base in Ramstein, Germany. Seventeen people were injured in the attack. Beer is accused
of falsifying license plates for the vehicle used in the bombing.
In November 1979, Beer allegedly shot and killed a woman and wounded a police officer in a bank in Switzerland. The robbed netted $33,000.
According to the Justice Ministry, Beer joined the Red Army Faction in October 1978. He left the group in March 1982 and went into hiding in the former East Germany.
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4. ONYKO $300 - YAMAHA (TK-330)
5. SONY ES $350 - DENON (AUTO REV) (DRR-680)
6. NAD $450 - NAKAMICHI (CAS-21)
7. JVC $450 - DENON (DUAL) (DRW-850)
8. TECHNICS $400 - SONY ES (TC-WRYTES)
9. MITSUBISHI $900 - NAD (<4300)
10 PHILLIPS $1,800 - YAMAHA (CR-7A)
BY 1991 TOP MODELS
PRICE CLASS
1. NAKAMICHI $225 - ONYKA (TA-901)
2. DONOV $285 - YAMAHA (TAR-350)
3. YAMAHA $280 - YAMAHA (AUTO REV) (TA-R301)
4. ONYKO $300 - YAMAHA (TK-330)
5. SONY ES $350 - DENON (AUTO REV) (DRR-680)
6. NAD $450 - NAKAMICHI (CAS-21)
7. JVC $450 - DENON (DUAL) (DRW-850)
8. TECHNICS $400 - SONY ES (TC-WRYTES)
9. MITSUBISHI $900 - NAD (<4300)
10 PHILLIPS $1,800 - YAMAHA (CR-7A)
Total Brands considered:58 - Total Models Considered 161
KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 23, 1991
13
Oilers draft former KU linebacker
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Former Kansas linebacker Curtis Moore was selected by the Houston Oilers in the 10th round of the NFL draft yesterday afternoon.
Moore, 6-foot-1 and 235 pounds, was the 1st pick in the 10th round and the 187th pick.
"There are always different people telling you different things," Moore said. "As far as my own personal life is concerned, I was a late rounder or a free agent."
The Oliers selected Moore despite the fact that he had missed playing time last season with an injured knee in 1980 season with an injured knee.
"Houston asked about that, and I had been cleared." Moore said.
"That's a standard thing the teams ask about, so I wasn't concerned."
On the other hand, the Kansas football coaching staff was worried that Moore's previous injuries affected his draft value.
Kansas defensive coordinator Bob Fello said, "We were all hoping he would get drafted, but you never know what's going to happen. With Curtis' injuries, we all had our fingers crossed."
After the Oliers' selection, Fello said he liked Moore's chances to make the Houston roster despite his relatively short by NFL standards.
"There's guys of all different sizes playing now," he said. "Curtis has good body weight, good speed and good instincts."
Moore said he was glad to be drafted by anyone, but Houston especially pleased him.
"When they came down to talk to me, I really liked both of their guys," Moore said. "Houston seemed to like them, and he needed to make me a part of their team."
Moore, a Wichita native, registered 350 total tackles in his career and was the Big Eight Conference newcomer of the year in 1987.
The Oilers might want Moore to attend a mini-camp in May. Otherwise, he is not expected to report to the Houston camp until June 1.
He was the only Jayhawk drafted this year and the first Kansas defensive player drafted since Alvin Walton, a selection by the Washington Redskins.
The Associated Press
Chiefs draft defensive backs
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs loaded up on defensive backs yesterday, hoping to stretch their lower-round winning streak through one more draft.
But the pickings may be leaker in this third draft under general manager Carl Peterson and coach Marty Schottenheimer since last fall's 11-5 record has them picking 12 or 21 in every round.
"But I feel very good about it," Schottenheimer said at the conclusion of the two-day NFL draft.
"I think the reason we've had the success is we've continued to follow the board.
You always look up and say,
'Is that the highest-rated guy on
the board?' And when you look up
there and that's the guy, it makes
the choices easy.'
Without a fourth-round choice Sunday, the Chiefs had plenty of time to contemplate their first decision yesterday in round five. The Giants blew Mincy, a 5-foot-11, 187-pound cornerback from Washington.
Kansas will face SMSU third time
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas junior third baseman Camille Spitalier said the Jayhawks game against Southwest Missouri State at 3 p.m. today in Springfield. Mo. would be just as physical game as it would be physical
She said that SMSU was not a top-20 caliber team. Nevertheless, the Jayhaws were defeated in the teams' last two meetings.
Spitaleri said Kansas' hitting would be the key to winning the game.
"We're facing a better pitcher." Spitaleri said. "We had something like 13 chances to score this weekend. We won't have that many against her. She has pitched really well."
Spitaleri said she thought the Jayhawks were hitting better now than they did in the last two games against SMSU.
"If we score early, we have the ability to win," Spitaleri said.
She said Kansas' pitching and defense were on track.
"Pitching can improve with every game," Spitaleri said. "The
Softball
better our pitching is, the less we have to depend on our defense."
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said today's game would be a good test for the Jayhawks because SMSU's Debbie Day would be the team's coach. Kansas would see at the Big Eight Conference tournament May 3.5.
"We're going to try to beat Debbie Day," Haack said. "We have not been successful hitting all the balls, so this fall and at Texas A&M."
Haack said he had told the Jayhawks they needed to take advantage of all of the scoring opportunities against SMSU because there would be fewer there had been in recent games.
Because today's game will be the last time Kansas will face SMSU this year. Haack said the team has not been prepared to break their leasing streak
"They'll be ready to play," Haack said. "They won't look past them."
Fifth-year members look past final serve
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
But, as the season and their careers are nearing the last serve, their minds can wander a bit.
After five years with the Kansas men's tennis program, it is difficult for fifth-year seniors Jeff Gross, Craig Widley and Chris Walker to think about many things outside of tennis.
"The fifth-year seniors seem to have the same thoughts," Walker said. "It's going to be sad when it's over, but that's reality."
His tennis future will be decided after he has arm surgery later this spring
Reality for Walker could take one of two paths after his Kansas career is over.
Walker's academic future, however, will be determined when the winner of the Walter Byers Post-Graduation Scholarship is announced today.
"I'll either continue playing or go to graduate school," said Walker, a business administration major.
Regardless of his plans, Walker said he fondly would remember KU, especially those he shared with Goss and doubled time friend and doubles partner.
"It's a special kind of friendship that a lot of people aren't privileged to have," Walker said. "We're still in the process of finding out what we'll Be around each other for a long time."
time."
"My whole experience here has been great," he said. "I've had a great time. I'll probably miss the competition most."
Competition and his two teammates, that is.
"We've been through a lot together." Gross said of his fellow seniors. "We years is a long time to go, and that will carry on for a long time."
Wildley has been an important part of uniting the three seniors off, as well as on, the court.
Perelman said the presence of Walker, Wildey and Gross was like having three assistant coaches on and off the court.
For now, however, the only future event the three seniors are concerned with is the Big Eight Conference on Thursday and Friday in Okahanna City.
Wildey plans to complete his sports management degree in December before making any decisions about his future.
The Jayhawks enter the tournament in second place, just three points behind Oklahoma State.
"The three of them are the backbone of this team," he said. "Myself, as well as the whole program, will miss those three guys."
Kansas men finish second
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas golf and rotten weather are becoming synonymous.
For the second time in three tournaments, the men's team played in less-than-ideal conditions. This time the cold and clouds followed Kansas Firestone Intercollegiate Tournament, where the Jayhawks played last weekend.
"It was rainy and cold both days," Ross Randall, Kansas coach, said. "We never got out of the rainsuit, and the umbrella's never went down."
"I wouldn't be surprised if there had been some ice coming down Sunday," he said. "I don't think it ever got out of the high 30s."
TOMMY HARRIS
After dealing with rain, sleet, hail and snow this year, Kansas may be starting to thrive in conditions like those in Akron.
The team finished second in a 36 team field and beat 14th-ranked Kent State for the third time this year
Sophomore Matt Gogle had the low score for Kansas with 221 and placed fourth overall
Sophomore Brad Bruno finished sixth with a score of 222.
Gogle said his goal for the tournament had been to use it as a tune-up for the coming Big Eight championship.
"I am happy with the way I played," he said. "Anybody can play in nice weather, but when you play in cold weather, have been, you really become better."
Casey Brozek and Jim Young of the men's golf team practice putting at Alvamar Golf Course in preparation for the Big Eight tournament April 29-30 at Hallbrook Golf Course in Leawood.
Better is exactly how sophomore Jim Young played.
Young regained his spot as the team's fifth man and played as if he intended to keep it, shooting a team low second round of 72.
"It was the first time all year we have gotten the help we needed from the fifth man," Randall said.
Randall said he thought the team was playing better.
"I think we are just about where we need to be going into the Big
Eight." he said.
Kansas will play in the Big Eight Championship April 29 and 30 at the Hallbrook Golf Club in Leawood.
UNLV reportedly broke rule
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- While the NCAA was scrutinizing UNLV's basketball recruiting practices, UNLV was using an outside representative in apparent violation of NCAA rules in the recruitment of a player on the team this season, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Vic Deauvoo, who at one time served as an unofficial strength and conditioning coach at Salt Lake Community College, steered Love to UNLV and then arranged special tutoring in Las Vegas to help Love become eligible to play for the Rebels, the newsaper reported.
businessman in the recruitment of Melvin Love, a backup center.
Citing interviews with people familiar with the situation and court and state records, the Times said in today's editions that UNLV basketball staff members accepted the assistance of a Salt Lake City
Love spent two years at Salt Lake Community College after leaving Cajon High in San Bernardino in 1987, the times said.
appeared in 19 games for the Runnin'
Rebels, two in the NCAA Tournament,
and is expected to be a part of a
rebuilt UNV team next season.
NCAA rules prohibit representatives of a university's athletic interests from being involved in recruiting as well as providing certain benefits, including tutoring, for prospective student athletes.
Although Deauvoir has no obvious ties to UNLV, he had frequent dealings with UNLV basketball staff and included coach Jerry Tarkanian.
Love, a 6-foot-9, 225-pound junior.
Royals handed fifth loss in six tries
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Cleveland rookie Charles Nagy pitched six perfect innings before faltering in the seventh last night as the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 10-4.
The 23-year-old Nagy (1-1) was perfect until Jim Eisenreich led off the seventh with a line drive double just inside the foul line in right field.
After Eisenreich's hit, Kansas City loaded the bases on an error and a walk, and Danny Tarabtallu's sacrifice fly ended Nagy's string of 19% groundouts followed with a three-run homer, his fourth home run of the season.
Before that, the Royals' best chance at a hit was George Brett's飞 to left field in the first, which Beau Allred caught high against the wall.
for Cleveland, which ended a three-game losing streak and sent Kansas City to its fifth loss in six games.
PARA
Steve Olin and Doug Jones finished
Chris James, who drove in three runs, gave Cleveland the lead in the first with an RBI single. The Indians added six runs in the fourth when Joel Skinner and Jerry Browne both hit two-run singles and James hit a 414-foot, two-run homer off Luis Aucoin.
Eyes on the ball
Mark Heidebrecht, Wichita senior, practices hitting softballs to fellow residents of Oliver Hall
Knee injury sidelines Brett
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — George Brett will fly back to Kansas City today to have his right knee examined after he injured it while running out a groundout in the eighth inning of last night's 10-4 loss to Cleveland.
Royals manager John Wathan said there was no way to gauge the extent of the problem vet.
"He felt a sensation coming out of the box his last at bat and took himself out of the game," Wathan said. "It's the same type of sensation he got when he faced four problems with his knees. We want our people to look at him."
Brett has had injury problems with both knees during his career. In 1989, he missed 35 games after tearing the
medial collateral ligament in the right knee.
"I don't think it's fair to say anything about it until our doctors look at it," Wathan said. "They have the history of his injuries, the X-rays. He's had a couple of knee operations. He's had a knee scoped.
"You try not to worry about things you can't control. But it sull bothers you when one of the greatest players when one of them goes down, no matter for how long."
The 37-year-old Brett was 0-for-3 in the game, dropping his average to .170.
Last year, he won the American League batting title with a .329 average despite a slow start.
'Hawks get honors for 'ugly' wins
Chris
Oster
Associate
sports editor
For those of you who weren't one of the 1,500 or so people in on last night's "exclusive" basketball banquet, let me try to catch you on up the last gasp of this year's season.
First, the good news.
Assistant coach Jerry Green later elaborated on Williams' job refusals.
Yen Very good news
"Yesterday I told another school (Notre Dame?) that I was not inter-tested in their coaching position," he said. "The way I did that is by making a statement: 'I have the job I want.'"
Becoming a bit sentimental about the season and harkening back to his hiring as an unknown three years ago, Coach Roy Williams gave an example of his feelings about Kansas.
The Irish job presented another problem.
He said that when Florida inquired about Williams' availability a year ago, Williams couldn't take the job because he would have had too much trouble with sand traps on Florida's golf courses.
"When Notre Dame called, I knew he didn't know anything about the Catholic religion, so I knew we were to be here at least another year."
First on the humble-wagon was Williams.
While he was redirecting the credit toward his players, it's doubtful that anyone in the audience bought into Williams' analysis
Although the guys in the shorts got the credit, they were also the subject of some left-handed compliments as Williams recalled the season.
"I've gotten way too much publicity, much too much praise for my coaching." Williams said. "It's the tale of the shorts who deserve the credit."
Back to his original intention, Williams talked about how this team won ugly, but always fought to win.
"This was an ugly team, and I'm not talking about works," Williams said, but rebutted his qualifier as he felt the need to "of course if the shoe we fit, wear it."
The awards and their recipients were:
After some playful roasting of players and coaches — most of which was directed at Green, the man identified as Kansas' free throw (shot put, heave, bonk) coach — the awards ceremonies began.
- Ken Koenigs Academic Award:
Mark Randall and Mike Maddox
Kansas 'two academic all-Big Eight
Conference selections.
Dutch Lonbong Free-Throw Percentage Award: Adonis Jordan, who was introduced by assistant coach Steve Robinson as a Greek goddess (Should Marian Washington know about this?)
Cedric Hunter Assists Award; Jordan, who credited teammates such as Mark Randall for hitting their shots.
Clyde Lovelette Most Improved Player Award: Again to Jordan. At this, Jordan explained how hard he worked in the off season to improve and how that work paid off, because "I'm the most improved player."
Ted Owens Defensive Player Award; Alonzo Jamison.
■ Bill Bridges Rebounding Award:
Another for Jamison
Dick Hart Pair Field Goal Percentage Award: Mark Randall, who threw credit back to Jordan and the rest of his teammates.
■ James Naismith Captain's
Award: To the four seniors: Kirk
Wagner, Mike Maddox, Terry Brown
and Mark Bardall.
"Phog" Allen Most Valuable Player Award: Mark Randall.
During the ceremony, the players shifted the credit from one to the other. Randall finished the series by asking making of the role of his teammates.
This kind of humility with athletes is not new, of course. Almost every type of award received requires the applicant to show credit, thus looking like a nice guy.
But with the Jayhawks, it's 'belle- this is not new to them — it's not just the way they receive awards, it's the way they play basketball.
Chris Oater is a Topeka senior majoring in journalism.
14
Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Nolan Ryan card will be auctioned
The Associated Press
WHEATON, Ill. — A long ownership dispute came to an end yesterday when Nolan Ryan — or at least a retired rookie card — was his last a free agent.
Both parties in the dispute agreed that the card would be auctioned off and talt the proceeds would be split between two charities.
Thirteen-year-old Bryan Wrzesniski of Addison, Ill., and baseball card store owner Joe Irmen announced their out-of-court settlement yesterday morning, minutes ahead of judge was to issue a ruling in the case.
The teen-ager and Irmen had battled in the courts for months over the card, which Wrzesinski bought last year for $12. Irmen, owner of Ball-Mart Baseball in Itasca, Ill., said the card was worth $1,200 and was sold by an experienced clerk who insured the "1200" price marked on it.
Irmen had sued for return of the card or the $1,188 difference between what Wrzesinski paid and what Irmen said it was worth.
Instead, the two say they will set up an auction for the card in a couple of months, split the proceeds and give them to the lawyer. Irwin's lawyer, Karen Delaveux, lmps.
Ryan. baseball's all-time strikeout
leader, appeared on the 1968 card as a member of the New York Mets along with pitcher Jerry Kooiman.
No matter what the outcome, Irmen is still losing $1,000. Delveaux said. That is because he was offering the card for sale on consignment from its actual owner, and Irmen now owes $1,000 to that owner.
As for Wrzesinski, the junior high school student said he learned something from the dispute.
After disclosing the settlement, Wrzesinski and Irmen shook hands Irmen says Bryan is welcome to shop because he would not know whether he would.
"I've learned a lesson that maybe people should settle their disputes themselves rather than let other people do them and settle pep for them." he said.
"You always go for the best bargain you can get," the teen-ager said of his plans to continue collecting cards.
With the settlement, the case was dismissed and DuPage County Circuit Court Associate Judge Ann Jensen said she was pleased with the outcome.
Irmen said he was glad the money would go to charity because he had pursued the case for the principle, not profit.
"This wasn't about the money," he said. "If it was, I would have quit a long time ago."
Patriots tell Grogan he won't be playing
The Associated Press
OTTWA - New England Patriots all-time leading passer Steve Grogan says that after 16 years with the team, it appears his career is over.
The Ottawa native said he had been told by the team that he no longer figured into its plans and would not be asked to return to training camp.
Grogan said he had considered approaching other teams, but he conceded that his days in the NFL likely have come to a close.
"The they (the Patriots) pretty much told me that I'm out of the picture there," Grogan said in Ottawa this spring. "They were the Commerce promotional event."
"They've had a lot of changes in the front office and the coaching staff," Grogan said. "They're heading in a youth direction, and they more or less told me that I'm not going to be a part of their plans.
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
"I'm doing some checking around to see if anybody would be interested in having me come in as a back up, or I could be open any interest, so I may be done."
Grogan joined the Patriots in 1975 after graduating from Kansas State
But Grogan started in only four games in 1990, when the Patriots finished in last place with a 1-15 record.
He threw for 26,888 yards and 182 touchdowns and is the only 26 player in NFL history to have thrown for more than 25,000 yards.
Injury and the emergence of rookie quarterback Tommy Hodson left him on the bench for most of the second half of the season.
Jayhawk Discount Card
In the off-season, the Patriots hired a coach and a new general manager.
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Alvaram area. Live in optional. Room and board
provided. 749-8358 after 6.
SUMMER-FALL PART TIME JOB in personal care attendant for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Mature bright eyes and hands are required for afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU vacation a plus good job for OT, PT, or SEP. Must have高中或高中学历 or students or persons with like interests. Related car and phone required. U. Citizenship desired. 442 1681 between team kumusa applies
SUMMER-Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp
Camps, Arts & Crafts Camps,
Craftsmera, Soach Coach,
Theater Aster, Gymnasium, Upper Classman
preferred Carine ASAP | 800-443-6428
Summer and fall sales help wanted Background preferred in HPER 35-40 hrs/week Apply at Athlete's Foot 922 Mass
COLLEGE GRADUATES
Wanted for Management
Trainee and Marketing positions. Interviews will also be given for other positions waiting to be filled.
Large national manufacturer is NOW HIRING people to staff our factory distributorship here in Lawrence.
Expect $2,500/MO Plus
To Start
All corporate benefits available
- Major Medical
- Paid Vacation
- Car & Clothing allowance
- Liberal Bonuses
New divisional outlet, large customer base and our corporate expansion necessitates those openings Applications and personal inter
Thursday, April 25th
Burge Union
Frontier Room
Ask for Mr. Lozier
DRESS FOR SUCCESS
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 7,000 openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Stamp For Free Details. Sullivan's. 113 E. Wyoming. NYF. 590-3280
Testbook Clerks: KU Bookstores. Part time $4.25 per hour; position could possibly last until September 16, 1991. Must be able to work weekdays between the hours of 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods, understand English, and be willing to employment and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant have interest or knowledge of books. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office. Level 5
THE INFO is looking for a few dedicated in-
ventors to join us on the job site in New York,
applicants must win the summer, and have own
transportation. Casual business attire will be re-
quired. Formal attire is also required. You
will be helpful. Placement available within
New York. Apply at www.infosco.com.
225 Professional Services
Want a summer job where you can lose weight, feel great and earn lots of money? Please call Debbie (816) 444-2251.
School Education offered to mid-Western Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Government photos, passports, immigration
portraits, senior portals, modeling & arts porti
folios/BAW, color Call Tom Swellis 749-1611
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(319) 491-6087
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-402-3 / free initial consultation
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5916
Tissue Dissertations
Copying hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street
843-6000
TRAFFIC·DUPS
TRAFFIC - DUTS
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1. a page-double-spaced Accurate, Fast Word Processing, Call Theerase At 841-9776
10. Word Processing: Term Papers, letters,
resumes, etc. Call 842-4754. 3:30 10:30 pm wkdys,
an awkend time.
A- Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana
Pipes. Give your words the professional
appearance they deserve. #427 838.
CALL J.U.J- Typing Services 841.9142. Term
Processing Call Number 841-676-71
I. Deroman Word Processing Former editor
transforms your scrubbed into easily spelled
letter form. You can correct the right
letter quality (931-265-03) or days of
evenings.
i. dollar per double-spaced page. Rush jobs no
laser Printed word processing. 749-648-
Transcriptions
Resumes
• Professional Writing
• Cover Letters
• Laser Printing
Transcriptions
012 Mass. 842-4619 upetairs (suite 200)
Damn Good Typing
Ry Dixie
843-5853
FAST. ACCUATE TYPING - 41-50 per page. In PC and DEL are望 in city limits. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Man.: 842-8828.
ibona's quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term paper, terms, dissertations, letters
resume application, mailings. Laser print
Mtl. ma m., f Msl. ma m. f Msl. ma m. 842 724
MT. tha m., f Msl. tha m. f Msl. tha m. 842 724
1 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 H. 842 6253
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more Graphic Ideas Inc. 927\*1
Mass. 841-1671
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call
842-3203
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone: 843-8568
Research Project $^2$ Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call Key Works, 842 8376
Word Processing *Typing*: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing composition. Have M.
S. Degree. 841-6254
Word Processing $1.00 pg, Spell check, etc Call
443-469-2878
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1986 Honda Aero 50 Runs great, looks good, 90 plus
price; $300 MHO, 86-3530
12x36 Mobile home 2 bedroom W/D, stove,
refrigerator $1500 842-0794 message 2 cats free to good home
[1987 Camdonald racing bike Shimano 600, hardly used. $400 arg. Call Sam. 865-1510.]
1974 Chevrolet Spectrum, 4.5k; 5,500,250 miles
Suburb condition. $360 or best offer. Call 841-8222.
1986 Honda Elite. Low mileage. Like new. $490,
841-6066.
66 Ninja under 10,000 miles. New Dunlap $2300
obo. 749-060. leave message.
Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
Everything But Ice 936 Massachusetts
CHEAP Plane ticket KC1 to College Station, Texas or to Houston April 26-28. For more info call 864-1628
Custom box with two 12" Ogrion norten subwoffers $300 Rockford Fongate Punch 75 HD amplifier $200 Call after 842-8048
For sale SUIKUR 1G45 1980 New front tire, headlight, headlight. Reliable. $500. Caul 84-9309
GOVT SURFLR'S Sleeping bags, backpacks, tent. camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
combat jungle
counsel firefighters
MARK OF KEARNE. Mon-Sat;
447-2724 St. Marys Surplus Sales. St. Marys, MS.
Harleyquay Honda Rebel 40. Silver Anniversaire. Neon brakes. battery. Garage kept in garage.
Honda Elite Moped 50cc. 70 miles, almost new
699. Call before 12:00 am. 865-6677
Imagewriter-Compatible printer for any Macintosh computer. 5 months old, accessories included. $225 firm. 749-4201.
Moving, storage and trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Welcome. Call 843-8111. Ask for sales/service department.
NEW RALEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GUAGE) $258,842-9146.
Neon Lights-Busch, Buldight, BuGuitar $100
...749-8177.
One-way ticket, KCI to DFW on May 16th. $100
obc. Call KKl-8417. Millennium
360 Call Reno, 866-6111
Rockford Fosgate car stereo equipment for sale.
Call 864-2942
Step-by-step manuals that can make you up to $128 at most weekend. Few remain. Send $5 (refundable) to P.O. Box 442142 Lawrence, KS 60044
REK 560 Road Bike. Mint Condition. 22 in. Must
ell. Jason 865-197.
Waterbed 5 a side. Super single, padded side rails,
boardhead with mirror. $90. 841-2720.
360 Miscellaneous
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
40 Auto Sales
1980 Plymouth Horizon, auto. a/c. am-fm. 13,000 miles, like new interior. $6,200 negotiable. Call 452-0411
Sales. 75 Celica GT, PS, PB, AC, am/fm cass
food condition, $490.00 b, Call 864-2874.
For sale, 1961 TOYOTA CELICA GT. Always starts, runs great, no hail $1400.00 $81-4409
**JOYOJY THE SUMMER with this beauty!** 18W Chevy Cavalier convertible, white / w black top. 60 miles, automatic. 2.8 V 4, ac, stereo cassette. OM X 9.5, Call 89-378-5288 today.
Loaded 1884 Toyota Celica GTS Coupe. Metallic alloy wheels, immaculate condition. High freeway miles $4,500押金. 1-863-2235.
On TVs, VCX's,珠宝, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Vista/MC/MEM Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1804 W 8th 749 1919
Lawrence Glass Tinting. Special rates for students. Call anytime. 7am to 10pm. 737 E. 22nd B417 7019
370 Want to Buy
Wanted. CD+ $4.00 and down. Records and tapes-$2.00 and down. Top dollar for collections Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts, 855-622-
House
405 For Rent
1 bedroom basement apartment, walk to campus
and KU1. Available mid-August; $235, utilities incl,
non-smoker: 842-498.
1 BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! for rent or buy $275/mo 842-9136
2 bedroom/2 bath summer suislease in
Meadowbrook. We rent for $70/mo. We'll rent to you for $70/mo. Water, cable pailed pool? No, no pets. Call 841-6597.
2 Bdr apt available August. Walk to KU or downtown. Wood floor, washer/dry hookups Water nets No water$440 mm 841-1074
1 BHR. Summer term, 14th and Tennessee Area
Rentable. No pets. For appt. 841-5797.
After s.p.m. call 865-4237.
1 or 2 females for summer sublease. Great location, nice, spacious, pool, AC, DW, MW, Rent negotiable! Please leave message. 865-2223
2 br apt available in new building of West Hills
building, cooler room, ceiling fan, cooling fan,
walk-in closet, energy efficient gas heat. Great
new campus. 100 Emmer Hd. 4950 no. No pets
available.
4 HR ap for summer sublease. 2 bath: W/D. DWC.
AC microwave, water tennis, court buses, onboard.
Sunrise Village. Call Kim. 865-0625. leave message.
3 b r house available Aug. 1 Full basement, central air, no pets, no IGs. 13th. Call 841-0855 for appt. $60/room.
- owitemph. 2va, b/w, da, dg, garage, low utilities, avail/ 6.1 / Sunrise Village. 843-4903
- studio apt. for rent starting at $205.00. No. Call: 749-7588
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 21th Ohio new construction; and 2 BR (Formally Vista Cap) renovation. NEW FORMATION. new construction; 2 BR-1 bath, 3 BR-2 bath, all with washers drives. Access from Memorial
- 541 Michigan 8 plexes 1 yr old IBR-3 BHR-2
bathroom 1 yr old IBR-3 BHR-2
Square Republic Square Apartments
BHR-1 bath and 3 BHR-2 bath. Great prices.
Call today First Management 7454.106 Open.
house every Saturday from 12 a.m. to Bradford
Square, 50 Colorado * 4 C. Office hours Mon-Fri
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, national 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 advertisement on this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
A PERFECT sublease. June and July. Female roommates need. Close to campus/downtown.
AC wash, d.microphone. 865-3601
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower
House 1486 Tennessee 740-671 or 814-0484
Available June or August. Efficiency 1 bedroom
pairs in nice older houses. Walk to KU or
downtown $285 and no. Ups pets 814-1074
Available June and July for sublease. 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown.
842-9045
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$309-415/ms. Call 843-2116
Cocoa has been part of KU since 1919. Cattle a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun, social responsibility, environmentally conscious and easy to manage. Cocoa grounds House. House. 749-8711 or 814-8448.
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people) Clean and efficient, large deck. 843-3961
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water, two bathrooms, large one bedroom and large two bedroom, $293.50 Some with utilization. Cediling fans, min bimbis, bedding. Two bedrooms. From campus at 1413 and 1423 Ohio 862-7644.
Excellent Location: 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom in 4 pipec, dishwasher, WD hookup. CA, no pets. available June 1. $360 Af 1341 Ohio. Call 842-492-492.
Giant one bedroom apartment in nice, older
wooden, house windows, sun room, a/c, gas
and water paid. Available June. $430. No pets.
841-1074
Got Married, need subletter. 1 bedroom apartment with fireplace, wet bar, full appliances. Water and cable included. $90, 834.802
GREAT SUBLEASE 2 BR w/ microwave. May rent paid. Close to campus. Call now. 843-5412. Great welcome for KU and downtown Studio audit.
gas and water账付 $300/mo. Call 841-251-611.
Great location. Quiet and close to campus;
2 bedroom apartment with sunporch. CA, wood-
floors, not pet. Available June 1, $80 at
http://www.carolinacampus.com/
Hey KU. Med. students-move in June 1 and receive $2 off your rent for 2 months. *Studies, i and 2 bedrooms apartments.* Heat and water paid up. Med. Center. Rainbow Tower Runs. i 831-950-6911.
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and
hey! KU med. your off rent for 2 months. *Studies,
1 and 2 bedrooms* $1. Heat and water paid. *Access*
Center, Rainbow Tower Ages 913-893.
Huge 2 bedroom summer sublease. Free furniture use if necessary. Gas/water paid. 865-1387. Leave message.
international Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms at the sunny Dayfellow House stay on 365 days a year and is a great place to live. 146 Timber Ridge 749-807 or 814-0484
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 23, 1991
15
Large studio apartment for summer sublease
Rent $280 per month. Call today 841-9133.
Leasing to forw for Fall or Summer. 2 B apt. in
4P,12ex lease DA, CW. D开, Concamps.
off street parking. Low Utilities. Call 842-8784
for Tracy or leave message
Lestarim Townhouses, 3811 Clinton Parkway Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new. Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru May.
may buy or for 12 months. Inc.
Nice, one bd apartment close to campus. Hard-
wood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-2919
or 842 8007 evenings
Nice, spacious 3 bdr duplex. Has all kitchen appliances, central air, W/D hookup, garage, low utilities. Avail in June. $450/mo. No pets. 843-288-760
No hill to climb! Large 1 bedroom at 11th
Louisiana. Central air, laundry facilities,
maintenance staff. Avail. May or June
through Aug. $245; Call Breslau, 865-3576.
Nice two bedroom home with all applicances.
New carpet and paint. Blinds, binds, guard area,
no pets, prefer long term tenants. Available immediately.
$435, $485, 2888.
Now leasing 1 and 2 bedroom aps at Southridge Plaza Apts. 1 bedroom; $75.2 bedrooms start at $33.5, 10 month lease. Water and cable paid. remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-160-169
**Kingston** Making for all seniorier, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments For all younger renters. Newly装修 Ceiling Fitting. Water said Walk to cam shopping centre.
August 1st, 1B for two. One block from Kansas Union. For rent to serious graduate students, upstart colleges or KU employees. One HR furried with $280,000. One HR furried with $260, mo/1323 after 6P m
Roommate needs for sublease for 4 bedroom
bathrooms at $185.00 per month.
uillages 81,25 (81,25)
roommate needs for sublease for 4 bedroom
bathrooms at $185.00 per month.
uillages 81,25
Studio Apartment available now in like new con-
trol. $3000 up. 814-692-7500. Water, gas, cable
studios 814-692-8000.
Studio apt at 1029 Mississippi. Available now
$205.00 plus deposit. 749-7568
SUBLETP 2 rooms in br. townhouse Avail early. 30% off $750. Reservation required. No Extra Deposit! Please contact 842 7233
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Orchard Corners.
1-4/brd available, furnished, pool, bus route
clean $170/mo (person Call 843/6280)
HOLMES SUPLEASE, 2 bedroom, garage, AC
2012 Heatherland B44 9107-6
MUMMER SUBLEASE with option
bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid. All
electric. 1517 Lynch Ct, Sundance. 842 5255 or
843-6614
SUMMER SULLEASE: Beautiful 2 bedroom for 2 people in Sundaland. Furnished private pool. $549 per person.
In a superior location at a superior price. 2
bedrooms, 2 hours. Call 812-3360 (24 HOURS)
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D. Call
814-7654. Rent $35.00 mo.
Sublease two bedroom appt May 15-Aug 15 $34 per month. 749-2681 or 842-3420, ask for Jennifer Sublease 3 bldm townhouse from mid-May or October to December, replace $50 mo+ $- on bus route. 749-3407
Sublease Three bedroom apartment close to campus Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 865 297
Sublease. N! BRE $1 ASAI? Water pad, w/d./a microwave, dishwasher, on kU bus range $200/month beg. w/ lease renewal at end of July. Please call 865-0190
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2
bedroom apts. 1 bilk from KU with off street park-
ing, no pets. 841-580
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilised paid 1.8k from KU with off street parking. No pets. 841-500
Summer Sublease - 3 rooms available May 1- July 3. Unifurded 4-dbm townhome in Snowville Village Female non-smoker $800 plus $140 refundable deposit 749-1989
Summer Sublease. V. cool studio near 9th and 10th Deck. $250/mo. 865-389-38
Summer Sublease Reduced Rent 3. Br Washer/dryer, Microwave, Dishwasher, A/C Call 865-165
dance H 4pms Fm and M 10pms
Summer Sublease-2 bedroom, incredible location,
great balcony. Call Mike or Mark. 749-3404.
Summer Sublease - 2 bedroom, incredible room, great hallway, Call Mike at MK-740-3644
Summer Sublease - own bedroom. Very close to the hotel. 180 plus units, utilizes Cell at 841-1854
Summer Sublease: Three roommates needed
very nice apartment & $66/mo plus utilities.
Sunday 21 Aps. 7th and Florida 843 2185
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $350 2 bedroom
$390 and 1 bedroom $250 Heatherwood Valley
Apts. #43-4754
Summer sublease. Really nice studio apt, water and basic cable paid. Pool and laundry facilities $110 mo. Call 749-4235
SummerSubway available. May 15-Aug 15 at an option to renew. Clean 2 bedroom apartment with balcony, breakfast food, and other entertainment. Laundry facilities included. Anyone needing a place to stay for summer sessions is welcome.
Summer sublease with option for 1. fall. Bedroom in large, beautiful Home Close to Campus. Prefer non-smoking upperclassman or grad student $70/o月. Call Maillard. 865-362-329
Summer sublease starting in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Each apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carpentry available
- 1 bedroom $450
- 2 bedroom $440,
- 3 bedroom $560
at Haredee's
611 Michigan Street
(across from Harddee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Westchester Fairway
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
by Kaw Valley Mgt. Inc.
summer sublease Spacious four bedroom ownhome, pool, tennis, microwave, dishwasher lent negotiable. 749-240.
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
...
Pool
Free cable
**CHEAP:** 2 bedrooms available for summer sublease. Completely furnished, great location, super pool. Rent negotiable! Call 749-8213
Water paid
Sunflower House Student. Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 146 Tennessee
Close to KU bus route
APPLE
Whole house 3 bedrooms plus walk to KU or downtown, wood floors, a/c, weather/drive hookups, dishwasher, sunshade, off street park available, June 6400 $99 peek. bp1-814-702
bg. availadude.com
Want to live in a non-sexist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Sunflower House, the locally responsible living alternative. 146 Trench Street, New York, NY 10027.
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
SouthPointe APARTMENTS
1 & 2 Bedrooms
for Summer & Fall
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- mini-blinds
- large rooms & closets
- central air & gas heat
- refreshing pool
843-6446
2166 W.26th
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
apartments
Boardwalk
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- Large closets & living space.
- Clean & well maintained
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
Summer sublease. Spacious 3 bdm, new kitchen,
dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups, good price
829-4003.
Summer sublease. Semi-furnished 2 br, jacuzzis
nic & clean, rent negotiate. Also, female room
mate needed for next year, non smoker 185
804-659
Showing Units Daily 9-6 842.4444
- Unfurnished with
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
- 2 on-site bus stops
- appliances
- Water & trash paid
S
appliances
524 Frontier
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F.1.5 p.m.
Sat, 11:3 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Double Take
Georgetown Apartments
Swan Management
- Walk to grocery
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Gravstone
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Low Security Deposit
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT
630 Michigan 749-7279
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
HANOVER PLACE
MASTERCRAFT
meadowbrook
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes among a peaceful country
Experienced Professional Maintenance
Laundry facilities in most buildings
Visit Meadowbrook Apts
Wide range of CREAT
KENTUCKY PLACE
Lighted Tennis Courts
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
- Carports/Garages available
* Plumbing
841-5255 * 7th & Florida
MON-FRI 8-5:30 SAT 8-5
8A2 A200 SUN 1-4
749-2415·10th & Arkansas
TANGLEWOOD
Sorry No Pets
atmosphere
Free Basic Cable
841-1429·1145 Louisiana
CAMPUS PLACE
Playgrounds Water Paid
It's Time to Step Up to
MEADOWBROOK
Ouverture !
MON-FRI 8:35:00 SAT 8:55
842-4200 SUN 1-4
ORCHARD CORNERS
It's Time to Step Up to
749-4226·15th & Kasold
842-4455
Summer sublease. Large studio apt. Bus route. Bedroom. paid pool spot. for full km. 686-339-2150 available. Summer sublease, male roommate needed. Two level, own bathroom. Furnished. Nw 'camp' spaces.
ORCHARD CORNERS
---
Summer water sublease, male roommate needed. Two bedroom apartment, $180/mo. Call Dave 865-382-3682. Mail resume to: John J. McNeil, Inc., 1141 W. 79th Street, New York, NY 10020.
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!!
- Volleyball Court
- Space for Fun.. Yellowball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
HEY, COCKER,
DID I TELL YOU
THAT I MADE IT
INTO SUMMER
WHERE ALICE NIKI WERE
BY THE WAY.
$355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun.12-4 p.m.
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
842-5111
1301 W.24th
FEDERAL RESERVE OF CURRENCY
BEEN THAT BAD.
BED.
gone down at Naismith! NEW LOWER COSTS
OH, I DON'T KNOW YOU TELL JOKES WITH THE SAME DISREGARD FOR SUBTLETY THAT YOU BRING TO
NAISMITI HALL. Living anywhere else doesn't make cents.
- Free utilities
HEART OF TRAVEL
- "Dine Anytime"
More fun for less funds!
Sunrise Apts.
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
CITY OF NEW YORK
- Convenient location
- Great social events
NAISMITH HALL
- Luxurious Town Home
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
LOOK, PALY, IF I HAD A DIME FOR EVERY EVENING YOU FOUND TO SCREAMY ME I WOULD BE AN ABURDLY RICH PERSON! GO, DON'T GET SMUG WITH ME!
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 834-8559
MUSIC BY MICHAEL J. COLEMAN
1. 2,3 & 4 Bedroom
Excellent Town Hom
& Apartment Living
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas Sunrise Village
by Tom Avery
- On Bus Route
- 841-1287 or 841-8400
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
Open House Daily
6th & Gateway
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill
--town. big room on deal rent, Robert, 842-
one roommate wanted for nice, spacious two-bedroom two-bath apartment in K.C. Rear Mall.
Sublease use for Call 813-236-9077
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate summer sublease. Own bedroom, close to campus, non-smoker $200/month, 1 unitities. 865-3822
Female, non smoking roommate need for Fail
912 Share 2 br trailer, own bedroom, w/central
room. Bachelor's degree plus $120/month + t₁+ t₂ utilities. Prefer grad student
or upperclassman Amnette, 864-343-1313
Female no smoker wanted for summer to share
2 BR apt at Northwinds. Own room. Brand new
$187.50 mo plus 4ilities. 842.3511
Formate non-smoker to assume $^1$ ₂ lease 6-1 in lg sunny apt. $182.50 plus ^1$ ₂ utilities. 843-6136 or 842-3040
Female roommate required to share a room at Corneres $12.00 a month. Roommates: 794-838.
Female roommate wanted for summer! One bedroom in house. Share kitchen and bath. May rent FREE. $215 mo + 3 suites / 5/1-7/31. Located on 138 Vermont. Phone 865-0813.
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share
spacious house. $160/month plus utilities. Alison,
865-2578.
Female roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in
Brown River, Water cable paid. Pool Call:
855-0929
Female subleaser needed over the summer. Call Lisa S. 841-6090.
Looking for a mature respectful non-smoker with healthy approach to life to share my furnished two bedroom apartment. Call 841-6923.
Quiet, tidy roommate with sense of humor for $1 big house $281-853. West Lawrence
Roommate needed. $150 a month. No use. No lease required. Call 832-1438 after 6:00 pm.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate for fall in non-smoker wanted, organized, mid to late twenties. Apartment has all conveniences, 5 minute walk to campers; $300 monthly includes everything. Call Mike at 866-721-2940.
- Policy
Roommate wanted: House bordering campus,
non-smoker, clean, responsible. Rent: $225.00
total. Call Richard at 749-254
Summer sublease. Option to take over lease in fall. Brand new 2 br. One female roommate wanted $10/month. City La Janney, 841-1149
Summer sublease. Two roommates needed
Large furnished apartment $160/m², 1+ utilities
130 Kentucky. Nurse Campus. 843-229-229
Broommate wanted urgently * 7 bus trowhouse * 2 baths on bus route W,DW, DW, PW, MN Summer $20 utilities included Fall $210 plus 3 utilities 841.383 Call for Ken.
Summer Sublease, 1+ 2 people (male or female) to need share 2 bedroom/ 2 bath at ORCHARD CORNERI Pool. A/C, cable on bus route 915/plus month plus 9 titals. Call Enquiry 841-212-817
Summer sublease. Roommate wanted. April 26th.
route $186 plus utilities. Call 841-841 or 843-7435.
Route $225 plus utilities. Call 841-841 or 843-7435.
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer sublease. Call Rebecca. 865-0574
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Wanted May 1st - Non-homophobic female room
accommodations. $2000. Two rooms, 2 busail lids. WD bookups. CA, fireplace,
carport. $165.00 mo plus *4* utilities. Must
sublease immediately, will negotiate on the
downsizing.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Words set in AH Caps & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 7 words
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LWN KSANSW NBOIIC
University Dailian Kansan
191 Staffer-Finn Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Loo
A UFO flies above a snowy house.
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
4. 23
a
16
Tuesday, April 23, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
$8.00 PER HOUR
FINANCE YOUR COLLEGE CAREER
WITH
UNITED PARCEL SERVICE WE CAN OFFER YOU:
• M-F (NO WEEKENDS)
• POSSIBLE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
• MEDICAL, DENTAL, AND VISION CARE BENEFITS
• SHIFTS TO FIT YOUR SCHEDULE
• PAID VACATIONS / HOLIDAYS
We will be interviewing ___4/24/91___ on campus for part-time loader/unloader positions. 3-4 hour shifts.
Immediate openings for 11:00 am and 11:00 pm shifts.
Contact the placement office
ups
110 Burge Union
to schedule an interview
WORKING FOR STUDENTS WHO WORK FOR US UPS DELIVERS EDUCATION
EOE M/F
Protesters lock themselves to train to prevent dumping of tainted dirt
The Associated Press
SUMTER, S.C. — Three Greenpeace protesters yesterday locked themselves to a train carrying 2,400 tons of contaminated soil from Michigan, the latest move against the toxic train's search for a disposal site
Greenpeace said the dirt should be returned to Michigan and not dumped on unsuspecting communities by CSX Transportation Co. The rail company has moved the train through at least five other states but has not been able to find a landfill to place the tainted soil.
The 32-car train pulled out of Sumter after authorities broke handcuffs and a chain used by the environmental activists. The three were arrested and charged with trespassing, along with three other Greeneapace members who climbed atop the train to hoist a banner. All six were freed on bail.
CSX Transportation representative Norm Going refused to reveal where the train was headed, but it flew back to Columbia, S.C. northwest heeded
The soil was contaminated by acrylic acid that spilled in a train derailment in July 1989 near Freeland, Mich. The chemical was bound for Midlands Dow Chemical Co. and Dow Corning Corp. in Michigan when the wreck occurred.
Most of the acid burned in a subsequent fire CSX excavated soil around the deraliment site after being the ground was contaminated.
Acrylic acid is a flammable substance that can cause severe burning of skin and eyes and might cause birth defects.
the train has traveled through Michigan, Ohio West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee in search of a place to dispose of the dirt. The train had been on a siding in a CSX Transportation railway near Sunset since April 11 as company officials scouted for disposal sites.
Greenpeace representative Bill Walker in Washington said environmental groups would continue to trail until it was sent back to Michigan.
"They can run, but they can't hide," he said.
The tram's cargo has generated protests in other states
Bush administration urges minority voting federal rights protection for judge elections
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON The Bush administration, clashing with officials of Southern states, urged the Supreme Court today to apply key federal voting rights protections for minorities to the election of judges
But an attorney for Louisiana said judges were not elected to represent segments of the population.
office Judges are quite literally representatives within the dictionary definition of that term.
Solicitor General Kenneth Stair, the administration's top courtroom lawyer, said the federal Voting Rights Act was designed to include judges as representatives covered by the law.
" (Judges) are elected," Starr said. "They are candidates for public
Lawyers for Louisiana and Texas disagreed.
Robert Pugh, an attorney for Louisiana, said judges were elected to render justice, not to represent the interests of segments of the popula
"The blindfolded lady with the sword. That's the constituency of a judge." he said.
Pugh said that if the court decided judges were representatives, it would be a new decision.
"If they are, they ain't been in the past." Pugh said.
The court heard arguments in three cases from Louisiana and Texas that test the scope of the voting rights law and could determine the future chances of scores of African Americans and other minorities to win judicial elections
The key issue is whether judicial elections are covered by a provision of the federal law that bar states from diluting the voting power of minorities. The provision has provided a big boost to minority candidates seeking election
The Bush administration is supporting efforts by civil rights groups to extend the same opportunities to judicial hopefuls.
All members of the University Community invited to.
An open forum on Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues in our Community
7:00 p.m.
Tuesday, April 23 7:00 p.m.
Pioneer Room, Burge Union Sponsored by The Gay & Lesbian Concerns Study Committee
Last Chance Students-
Are you interested in saving time during Fall fee-payment? Then fill out your 91-92 Options Card during enrollment.
KU on Wheels Pass Jayhawker Yearbook Sports Combo Package All-Arts Card Board of Class Officers
- Fill out an Options Card to reserve any of the above options.
- Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
- You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
- Must be enrolled to fill out Options Card; Please present enrollment card and KU ID.
- No options card will be available in the Fall; Student will have to visit each individual vendor.
V
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE UNIVERSITY KANSAIN
VOL. 101. No. 138
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Two KU alumni supervise Discovery payloads
Bv Patricia Roias
/NEWS: 864-4810
Kansan staff writer
When space shuttle Discovery next orbits the Earth, two KU alumni will be helping supervise the payloads, or experimental equipment, aboard the flight from Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.
Mary Randolph, a 1990 KU graduate, and Eddie Terrrell, 1987 KU graduate, both work for NASA Payload Operations and will be assisting the seven astronauts in five scientific experiments aboard the Discovery.
The Discovery will carry Pentagon cargo worth more than $260 million. Its scheduled launch yesterday was rubbed because of equipment failure.
Between the two main payloads that Randolph and Terrell will help
monitor during the eight day mission
to assess the Defense Initiative for
the Strategy of Defense. Initiative
The crew, commanded by Michael Coats, is expected to release an SDE spacecraft from the shuttle on the second day in orbit and operate it by
The SDI spacecraft will carry television cameras that will look at the gases that the shuttle releases, Randolph said.
"They want to be able to know how missiles might look like as they come in."
A second main payload Randolph and Terrell will help supervise during the Discovery's mission is a collection of scientific instruments that will take infrared, ultraviolet and x-ray measurements of stars, the
northern lights and the atmosphere.
brown lights and the troposphere.
This data is expected to help SID
scientists construct a spatial missile-detection system.
Besides Randolph and Terrell, there are about 10 other KU graduate working for the NASA payloads operations in Houston who have assisted the space shuttle crews of previous flights. Randolph said.
"When I came down here, whenever they would introduce me, people would say, 'Oh, oh, not whom would KU person," Randolph said.
She said that KU's School of Engineering was among those in the nation with the highest number of students attending at the space center in Houston.
David Downing, chairperson of the
department of aerospace engineering. said KU's program was ranked among the top 10 in the nation.
He said part of the reason the program had been so successful was that all of the faculty members had experience in governmental aerospace laboratories.
Downing said he worked for NASA for 11 years before coming to KU.
"We can relate real-world experiences to our students because of our experience," he said.
There are seven professors in the KU aerospacen program. The school is trying to recruit two more professors, Downing said
"We are planning to strengthen the astronautics offerings, which are more directly applicable to the shuttle program," he said.
Indian Center will meet to discuss Sevier's death
Kansan staff report
The Indian Center of Lawrence is organizing a community meeting Sunday night to discuss the dead death of Greg Allen Sewer.
Sevier, 22, was shot Sunday morning at his home, 1627 E. 18th Street Terrace by police officers in a scene by relatives of the victim.
Family members of the victim asked police for assistance in dealing with Sevier, who was armed and distraught about personal problems. Lawrence police reported
Editor's note: Because of an editor's error, a Page 1 story in yesterday's Kansan included incorrect information. Ron Olin, Lawrence Police Chief, said Monday that he did not think the shooting of Gregory Allen Sevier was accidentally motivated. Because of it, Olin's comments were misrepresented in the Kansan. The Kansan apologizes for any misunderstanding the error may have caused.
Grads to get ceremony in rain or shine
Budig approves plan to move ceremony indoors if rain falls
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Gene Rudig approved a plan yesterday that would move commencement ceremonies inside if inclement weather made a ceremony.
If heavy rains do not allow an outdoor ceremony by 5 p.m., the ceremonies will be at three separate times and venues.
Jim Scaly, vice chairperson of the commencement committee, said that if it was raining at the May 19 ceremony's scheduled start time of 2:30 p.m., commencement would be delayed. At 4 p.m., an announcement will be made about whether the ceremony will be moved indoors.
Ailen Field House at 5 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, in Murphy Hall, at 7 p.m.
The committee will announce next week which schools will be placed in which location.
Scally told members of the University Senate Executive Committee.
which also met yesterday, that the main goal of the new plan was to make an outdoor ceremony as likely as possible.
'It's going to have to be raining
pretty damn hard for us not to walk
through it.'
Wait, there's a word after 'hard' in the second line.
Is it 'walk' or 'walking'?
It looks like 'walking'.
William Bayne, who had planned a rally for today if the committee did not find a way to put the ceremony off, said he was pleased with the new plan.
The commencement committee ruled earlier that the ceremony would be canceled rather than conducted in Allen Field House, as it was in 1981, if rain prohibited it from being in Memorial Stadium.
But, Bayne said, it was too late to cancel today's rally outside Strong Hall because he had put up a number of posters that could not be taken down, and so it would go on as planned.
"It looks like it's going to be a party," he said. "It sounds like good music."
Kansan reporter Eric Nelson contributed information to this story.
Downtown minstrel
SAMBURY
Lawrence resident Craig Bertholf plays the guitar for cigarette money on Massachusetts Street. Bertholf learned how to play the guitar in the early '70s, and then taught himself how to read
music. Bertholf said that he liked to play music outside when the weather was nice and that he enjoyed giving lessons on the street.
KU changes policy wording; GLSOK prefers 'orientation'
By Lara Gold
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
'If gay and lesbian people have a choice, then there is no reason to provide protection to them.'
The words "sexual preference" will be changed to "sexual orientation" in KU's anti-discrimination policy in future University publications, the interim executive vice chancellor said yesterday.
"I think gay and lesbian students have indicated they are more comfortable with 'sexual orientation,'" said Dell Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor. "We are pleased to concur with their wishes in this
Shankel said the administration
graduate assistant for gav and lesbian concerns
and students in Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas were working to make positive changes at KU.
All University publications will have the changed wording in the anti-discrimination clause.
preference" to "sexual orientation"
was necessary because "sexual
preference" was outdated language.
Mike Sullivan, co-director of GLSOK, said the language change was a step in the right direction.
He said the change from "sexual
Emerson said the difference between "sexual preference" and "sexual orientation" is that "prefer" sex has one choice, one chooses to be gay or lesbian.
Tom Emerson,graduate assistant for gay and lesbian concerns, agreed.
"If you choose to be this way then you can choose not to be this way," he said. "If I gay and lesbian people are gay, it is a reason to afford protection to them."
"Many people in the administration and in the community have reported a disturbing related phrase is embarrassing for an enlightened institution," he said.
Emerson said that being gay or lesbian was a characteristic, and that the language change took away the myth that being gay or lesbian was a choice.
Iraq calls for U.N. possession of camps
UNITED NATIONS — Baghdad complained yesterday that the Kurdish refuge camps the U.S. Army is setting up in northern Iraq violate its national sovereignty, and it asked the Kurds in Nations to take possession of them.
The Associated Press
U. N. representative Nadia Younes said the United Nations had just received the request from Iraqi Foreign Minister Ahmed Hussein, and had relayed a copy of it to Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cueillar in
The U.S. Mission to the United Nations had no official reaction, but officials said privately that Washington always has intended for the United Nations to take charge of the camps as soon as possible.
Western diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the
United States, Britain and France would begin discussing the transfer of authority with Perez de Cuellar this week, when he returns from Paris.
The Iraqi letter called the U.S. military effort "a serious, unjustifiable and unfounded attack on the territory and territorial integrity of Iraq."
About 450,000 Iraqi refugees, most of them Kurds, have fled to Turkey since the Kurdish rebellion was crushed by Saddam Hussein. Another 400,000 are at the Turkish border.
It also said, however, that Baghdad had not taken any steps to block the establishment of the camps around the town of Zakho.
Even as the United States was moving last week to begin setting up a new campus, other colleges in New York and
Refugee relief may be flown to Iran
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration raised the possibility yesterday that it would authorize humanitarian relief flights to Iran, where an estimated 1 million Iraqi refugees have fled to safety.
The Associated Press
Approval of such flights would be a rare display of cooperation between Iran and the United States, diplomatic relations for 11 years.
ern Iraq, Baghdad was negotiating with the United Nations to set up U.N.-run camps
Iraqi officials signed an agreement Thursday with Prince Sadruhdin Aga Khan, the top U.N. official for relief efforts in the gulf region, that calls
Most of the U.S. relief effort has been directed at the region along the Turkish border, but there are almost twice as many Iraqi refugees and displaced persons inside Iran or near the Iranian border. The great majority of the refugees are Kurds.
The United States has been providing relief supplies to Iran through third parties.
for relief stations in northern Iraq as well as camps in southern Iran
Kampa in southern Iraq
An estimated 1 million Shiite and Kurdish Iraqi refugees have fled south and east to Iran and another 500,000 have moved to the southern border area.
Senator says problem
Legislators consider plans to cut deficit
has no easy answers
TOPEKA — The 1991 wrap-ip session begins today, and legislators face either a last-minute tax increase or a delay in approving that already have been approved.
The Legislature has spent almost $130 million more than the state has in resources, and the legislators have yet to agree on how to raise that money, said State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R.Lawrence.
Kansan staff writer
Winter said that there were no easy resolutions for the problem of the excess expenditure.
"I think the chances that we will raise taxes are favorable. We need to take this opportunity to make some significant reforms."
we can solve that problem by cutting further," he said. "But that would amount to a $1 per across-across-accountation is to raise taxes by $130 million.
Winter, who unsuccessfully fought to have $20 million in cuts restored to the Board of Regents budget, said a letter last month that affirms finance the Regents schools.
The Regents budget remains in conference committee, with the House and Senate versions of the bill $12 million apart. The Senate side is led by State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, who is not in favor of restoring the money. The House side is led by State Rep. George Teagarden, D-LAcYgne, who favors restoration.
The tuition increase approved by the Regents last week will raise $12.3 million. But State Rep. John Solbach, chairman of the state budget revenue increase did not necessarily
'The Regents cannot spend the fees unless the Legislature appropriates the money out of the State General Fund.'
— John Solbach State Rep., D-Lawrence
Solbach said the conference committee would need to request that the Legislature approve the spending of the funds by the Regents. If the Legislature does not approve the spending, the fees will be used to replace general fund spending for other programs.
"The fees are simply a source of revenue for the Regents," he said. "The Regents cannot spend the fees unless the Legislature appropriates the money out of the State General Fund."
mean a spending increase
"I would hope the Regents are raising fees to fund higher education and that we don't take those fees and replace the general fund," he said. "I'm sure there will be such a temptation by some legislators.
"But I'm not sure that Sen. Bogina would be so blatantly anti-student as to do something like that."
Bogina said that although the Legislature had used fee increases to replace general fund spending in the past year, that it would do the same this year.
He said that he did not think the tuition increase would be an issue when discussing the $12 million difference between the House and Senate stance in the conference committee.
2
Wednesday, April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
HAPPY SUN
TODAY
Sunny
HI:70'
LO:54'
TODAY
55/41
60/48
57/43
68/42
65/53
78/60
88/74
Today's Forecast
Starting off a little cool this morning, but it will warm up rapidly by this afternoon. A chance of showers this evening
Salina 65/51 KC
Dodge City 68/53
62/47 Wichita 68/55
3-dav Forecast
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Thursday - Cloudy with morning showers. High 68/ Low 50.
Friday - Mostly sunny with a chance of afternoon showers. High 76/Low 55.
Saturday - Lingering morning showers. High 71/ Low 51.
forecast by Rodney D Price
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.
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Senate to vote tonight on executive nominees
Fulcher will present choices at joint meeting
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
In the joint Student Senate meeting tonight, Darren Fulcher, student body president elect, is scheduled to present his choices for executive positions to the new Senate for approval.
Fulcher said he selected Troy Radakovich for executive committee chairperson, Toi Willis for executive secretary, David Hull and Joe Cinalli for associated Students of Kansas co-directors, Stu Comfort as treasurer and Kevin Sigourney as administrative assistant.
The appointments require a majority approval of Senate.
Sigourney, if approved by Senate,
might be treasurer in two years.
Comfort was the administrative
assistant this year, and Carl Damon.
Senate treasureur was also admin-
istered the year before he became treasurer.
Sigourney said he had thought of that possibility when he applied for
On campus
Office of Foreign Student Services will have a "Practical Training Workshop" for foreign students at the Regionalist Room in the Kuwait Union
University Forum will sponsor a luncheon lecture with Henry Buck, who will speak about "Sexually Transmitted Disease on Campus" at 11:40 a.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
- KU Welness Center will sponsor "Stress Management" workshop at 12.10 p.m.at 138 Robinson Center.
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
the position.
HYPNOTHERAPY
LOOK BETTER • FEEL BETTER
R.W. McClure
842-7504
Comfort said he was certain that he and Sigourney could work well together if Senate approved the appointments.
He wants to get a masters degree in business and said dealing with Senate finances would be good experience.
"I'm going to be doing things that would help me in the future," Sigourney said.
INSTITUTO SALUD MEDICINALES DE ALACRUZ
Fulcher had not decided on his appointment to community service director and said he would announce his decision today.
Cinali, Salina junior, said the decision to create two ASK positions was a good one.
In other Senate news, the Facts coalition senators will be allowed to participate in tonight's meeting, even though the coalition is five days late in paying the first installment of its campaign violation fines, said Curt Winegarner, elections commission chairperson.
Summer, fall editors chosen for Kansan
The Kansan Board has selected the University Daily Kansas editors for the summer and fall. Mike Brassfield, Shawnee senior, was chosen for Coach, and Holly Lawson, Oklahoma City senior, was chosen for the fall.
Police report
A KU student was battered in 1 and 2 a.m. yesterday in the 1100 block of Indiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
- Messages were left on a KU student's answering machine between 2:30 and 3 a.m. Sunday in Ewells Hall. The messages said that the student was dead, KU police reported.
A door was spray-painted, a window broken and rocks were thrown over the door. day at the Chancellor's residence. 2350 Llac Drive, KU police reported.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
3
'Call me Ishmael'
'Moby Dick' read to honor Melville
3y Jonathan Plummer
b
"The novel has come into Ar can culture," she said. "Every knows the name, the great t whale. 'Call me Imael.' But those who have read the book care, it resonates with meaning.
Charlie Kim, Kansas City,
senior, said his passion for
the what lead him to sign up for
reading at 2 a.m.
"I hope this sparks an inter-
people," he said. "It's not ji search for a whale, it is rea metaphysical voyage. It is a se for the 'ungraspable phantot life.'"
As Kim spoke of the love to book he found last semestre Schultz's words on class the r in his words to express his emotions.
SELL I
POWER PLANT 3 901 Mis
KU is seeking tuition relief
Budig says endowment programs will provide scholarship money
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
KU officials are looking to the Kansas University Endowment Association for relief from tuition increases.
Last week the Board of Regents increased tuition by 8 percent for residents and by 15 percent for non-residents for the 1981-82 academic year.
This increase will be followed by a proposed increase for 1992-93 of 8 percent for resident students in smaller regional schools, 10 percent for residents in research schools such as the University and 72% percent for all non-residents.
After the Reaction action, Chancellor Gene Budig said, "I do not expect the state to increase student scholarships and walk in the immediate years ahead."
Along with approving increases, the Regents tabled a proposal by the student advisory committee for new scholarships.
Budig said the University would rely on programs such as Campaign Kansas to carry the burden of finding scholarship money.
"We must be sensitive to the magnitude of these increases," he said. "This action places great pressure on the University of Kansas to raise more private funding for student scholarships. It is important that we
tunities at KU."
Todd Seymour, president of the endowment association, said the association had already received a grant from this year for student scholarships.
"Scholarships are one of the main things we're raising money for all the time," he said.
He said that small amounts donated may go directly to scholarships, while some larger amounts go to special funds. The income generated from funds' investments go to scholarships.
John Scarffe, director of public relations for the association, said that when endowment funds began counting toward Campaign Kansas in 1867, the goal for scholarships and fellowships was set at $20 million.
GPA not only ingredient for job
As of January 1991, $30.9 million had been pledged or committed to scholarship funds, he said. Money will continue to count toward the fund until June 30, 1992, even though the association has already exceeded its goal.
"It's a popular item to give for," Scarfe said of the scholarships.
"That has always been one of our priorities," Scarfe said. "Even after
By Jack Yeo
Students who graduate with a substandard grade point average or what seems to be a dead-end major should not count themselves out when weighing career choices.
Randy Withrow, a graduate student and career counselor at the Career Resource Center, said he suggested various avenues for graduates with stagnant majors and /or low GPAs.
Withrow said finding opportunities can be a bit more difficult for the average student, but openings still exist for people who will work hard to open up their own opportunities.
Withrow said that KU students can take the skills assessment test at no charge. All one
"There are various different avenues people in these situations should pursue, for instance networking, contacting the placement center and I would definitely recommend and push a skills assessment test." Withrow said.
The skills assessment test that Withrow highly recommended is designed to identify a person's interests so as to determine an individual's strengths. However, the most important advice Withrow gives is, "interview, interview, interview."
has to do is make an appointment at the Career Resource Center.
"Obviously, the more opportunities and learning experiences one has, the better the chance one has to attain a job," he said.
Withrow said that the more self-motivated a person was, the better the chance he or she had of getting a job.
"The process of finding a job is a full-time job in itself," he said. "A person who only looks for an hour or two a day just is not going to be successful."
Withrow's message is, do not give up and keep an open mind.
"Even if you have to hold down a job that merely lets you get by, by all means do so you can work to achieve what you want," he said. "The bottom line is you just can not count any idea out. It is better to be able to pick and choose your options rather than face a closed door."
Recent KU graduate John Hetler was a mediocre student with a psychology major. Now, Hetler is a successful young entrepreneur in Lawrence. Hetler is the majority owner in both Pup's Grill and Bencharmers Bar and Grill.
"While in school, I took a skills assessment test," Hetler said. "The test was helpful in that it reassured my desire to be my own boss. It is quite
possible that the test somehow influenced me or reinforced ideas I had already had.
"My ultimate goal in getting into the restaurant business was to hopefully gain enough practical experience and contacts that someday I might be able to get into the distributing business."
One question Hetler is often asked is, "Is running your own business everything you thought it would be?" The answer is yes.
"Just like I expected, it has been tons of work, but I did not expect the work to be so managerially intensive, and for sure, I would never have known how tough quality control was," he said.
As one might expect, Hetler has made many contacts and had many learning experiences which should prove helpful in his future.
"In this business, I have met a lot of people and, if I ever decide to change occupations, I'll have many network possibilities," Hetler said.
Finally, Hetler offered some advice for graduating seniors who are now looking for jobs.
"Go after what you want, keep yourself focused and get into a field you'll enjoy because to be happy you have got to enjoy your job," he said. "Don't let anything get in your way."
Local car dealerships expect profitable spring
By Steve Ammerman
Commencement means more business for auto dealers who say they see the slumping auto market rebounding this summer, the prime shopping time for students wanting their first new car.
The number of seniors buying cars has steadily increased over the past few months, according to Dana Smith, a salesperson at Ellena Honda in Lawrence. Smith attributed the increase to new manufacturer's programs and better financial stability among seniors.
Students who are buying cars today are more knowledgeable than in the past. They have read consumer guides, checked on current interest rates and are generally more educated than the normal customer, according to Bowe Gribble, a salesman at Sonny Hill Motors Inc., of Lawrence.
"I have noticed an increase of seniors purchasing automobiles," he said. "It is easier to get an automobile now than it was a few years ago."
What seniors look for in a car has also changed. Dealerships see the commencement car trend moving away from sportiness to safety features, fuel efficiency and environmental safety.
"Students want a good, reliable, professional looking automobile," Smith said.
Car manufacturers recognize the buying potential that many students have, and are offering special deals for graduating seniors.
"GMAC wants to solicit college graduates because they have the best credit ratings in the future," Gribble said.
Many of the dealerships in Lawrence offer a manufacturers program. Ellena Honda does not require a co-signer if a student can show proof of a job in their field of study upon graduation. Also, a student may buy a car without having any previous credit. The car may be financed through Ellena Honda.
Honda also recognizes the purchasing power of the students. Smith notes that many times graduating seniors have more money to spend than the middle class. They offer more security by getting better jobs after graduation, he said.
"We try to sit down and work out what is best for them," he said. "I have seen students buy a car with no more than $100 down."
Sonny Hill Motors also offers a special plan for students as well. Student buyers are guaranteed a set interest rate and may defer payment up to 90 days. The student also receives an additional $600 rebate.
A customer may only select from a certain line of cars, however, including Geo, Cavalier, Corsica and Lumina models.
Chevrolet is reworking their current program. The changes should expand the six month period around graduation and include graduate programs. The changes will not be in effect until at least next year.
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KANSAN/Where Do We Go From Here/Abril 24, 1991
11
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
3
'Call me Ishmael'
'Moby Dick' read to honor Melville
By Jonathan Plummer
Canean staff writer
Today may be the first time that a whale has appeared on Wescoe Beach.
A 24-hour reading of "Moby Dick" will take place today in front of the museum to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the death of Herman Melville
Elizabeth Schultz, professor of English and the event's organizer, said 70 people would read from the novel for 20 minutes at a time.
Schultz said the readers were KU students, faculty and staff, as well as members of the Lawrence community.
'There are more people interested in this than I ever anticipated. I hope those who are not reading come by just to listen.'
— Elizabeth Schultz professor of English
Among those reading, she said, will be a KU English professor who is returning from his leave in Chicago and a former member of KU's English department who now teaches at the University of Missouri-Rolla.
Schultz said the number of people who asked to join the reading was so great that she had had to shorten the reading times from 30-minute *most*
"There are more people inter in this than I ever anticipated," said "I hope those who are reading come by just to listen."
Though the event is near coincide with a speech tome about Melville by Richard B head, Yale University visiting fessor. Schulz said she welcome chance to read the novel aloud.
"It takes on new meanings w read aloud," she said. "Melv language is so rich, and the sty based on the epic, the drama lyric poetry, all of which are n to be heard."
Schultz's passion for the nov reflected in the decoration of Wescoe office.
It is decorated with Melville ers, cartoons about the great t wale, and a hanging mobi le and a huge dragon. navigate past to sit by her *e*
late picture of the “wheelbarrow” has come into A can culture,” she said. “Every knows the name, the great ‘whale,’ Call me Ishmael. But those who have read the book care, it resonates with meaning
Charlie Kim, Kansas City,
senior, said his passion for the
was what lead him to sign up fi
reading at 2 a.m.
As Kim spoke of the love to book he found last semestre Schultz's honors class on the r answer, "He loved words to express his emotions."
"I hope this sparks an inter-
people," he said. "It's not i jsearch for a whale, it is rea metaphysical voyage. It is a s for the 'ungraspable phanto life.'"
SELL I
POWER PLANT
3
901 MI
M
KU is seeking tuition relief
Budig says endowment programs will provide scholarship money
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
KU officials are looking to the Kansas University Endowment Association for relief from tuition increases.
Last week the Board of Regents increased tuition by 8 percent for residents and by 15 percent for non-residents for the 1991-92 academic year.
This increase will be followed by a proposed increase for 1992-93 of 8 percent for resident students in smaller regional schools, 10 percent for residents in research schools such as and 12% percent for all non-residents.
Along with approving increases, the Regents tabled a proposal by the student advisory committee for new scholarships.
After the Regents action, Chancellor Gene Budig said, "I do not expect the state to increase student scholarships," and "way in the immediate years ahead."
Budid said the University would rely on programs such as Campaign Kansas to carry the burden of finding scholarship money.
"We must be sensitive to the magnitude of these increases," he said. "This action places great pressure on students and staff, and more private funding for student
tunities at KU."
Todd Seymour, president of the endowment association, said the association had already received $24 million this year for student scholarships.
"Scholarships are one of the main things we are raising money for all the time."
He said that small amounts donated may go directly to scholarships, while some larger amounts go to special funds. The income generated from fund's investments go to scholarships.
John Scarlie, director of public relations for the association, said that when endowment funds began counting toward Campaign Kansas on July 1, 1987, the goal for scholarships was set at $20 million.
As of January 1991, $30.9 million had been pledged or committed to scholarship funds, he said. Money will continue to count toward the campaign until June 30, 1992, even if education has already exceeded its goal.
"It's a popular item to give for." Scarfe said of the scholarships.
"That has always been one of our
He said the association always had worked hard to help students meet financial needs.
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12 KANSAN/Where Do We Go From Here/April 24, 1991
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
3
'Call me Ishmael'
'Moby Dick' read to honor Melville
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
Today may be the first time that a whale has appeared on Wescoe Beach.
A 24-hour reading of "Moby Dick" will take place today in front of Wescole Hall, to commemorate the death of the death of Herman Melville.
Elizabeth Schultz, professor of English and the event's organizer, said 70 people would read from the novel for 20 minutes at a time.
Schultz told the readers were KU students, faculty and staff, as well as members of the Lawrence community.
'There are more people interested in this than I ever anticipated. I hope those who are not reading come by just to listen.'
- Elizabeth Schultz professor of English
Among those reading, she said, will be a KU English professor who is returning from his leave in Chicago and a former member of KU's English department who now teaches at the University of Missouri-Rolla.
Schultz said the number of people who asked to join the reading was so great that she had had to shorten the program. She added segment segments to fit in more readers.
"There are more people interested in this than I ever anticipated," she said. "I hope those who are not reading come by just to listen."
Though the event is meant to coincide with a speech tomorrow about Melville by Richard Broadhead, Yale University visiting professor, Schultz said she welcomed the chance to read the novel aloud.
"It takes on new meanings when read aloud," she said. "Melville's language is so rich, and the style is based on the epic, the drama and lyric poetry, all of which are meant to be heard."
Schultz's passion for the novel is reflected in the decoration of her Wescow office.
It is decorated with Melville posters, cartoons about the great white whale, and a hanging mobile of heroes. She must navigate past to sit by her desk.
"The novel has come into American culture," she said. "Everybody knows the name, the great white whale. 'Call me Ishmael.' But for those who have read the book with care, it resonates with meaning."
Charlie Kim, Kansas City, Mo,
senior, his passion for the book
what was lead him to sign up for his
reading at 2 a.m.
As Kim spoke of the love for the book he found last semester in Schultz's history class on the movie, "Gone Girl," sheville's words to express his emotions.
"I hope this sparks an interest in people," he said. "It's not just a search for a whale, it is really a metaphysical voyage. It is a search for the 'ungraspable phantom of life.'"
1984
Lawrence resident Joan Van Nice samples the new McLean Deluxe burger at McDonald's. Van Nice and two co-workers were at the restaurant yesterday during their lunch hour.
Burger offers low-fat choice
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Dennis Kerkman did not know what to expect when he tried the McLean Deluxe burger yesterday.
"It seems OK," he said after he took his first bite of the low-fat sandwich. "It doesn't leak grease on your hands when you eat it."
Kerkman, Lawrence resident,
said he saw the new item on the
menu board at the McDonald's at
901 W. 23rd St., and ordered the
burger because the sign stated that
the burger had a low-fat content.
"I also like it because it doesn't come in a styrofoam package," he said, crumpling the paper wrapper.
Jerry Guffey, senior store manager, said the sandwich had been selling well since it was first offered in Lawrence in early March. McBaldary's began advertiser leaner bagger nationwide Friday.
"Customers say they can't tell the difference between the McLean
and the other burgers," he said.
Anti-cholesterol crusader Phil Sokolof — who last summer took out full-page advertisements in the *New York Times* and nald's for the fat content of its food
— said McLean Deluxe was a marked improvement over the other hamburgers McDonald's Corn sold.
"This is not a health food," Sokolot said. "But Americans are going to eat hamburgers, and this is a revolutionary hamburger. It has less than half the fat of the conventional burger."
Ann Davis, registered dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center said that offering a leaner meal to patients deep in the right nutritional direction.
"Anytime you can get a lean and healthy burger, that's a healthy choice," she said.
Even so, the McLean sandwich,
including trimmings, contains 320
calories and 10 grams of fat. Those
amount compare with 580 calories
and 36.8 grams of fat in the McDLT
sandwich.
The sandwich resembles other McDonald's offerings; a beef patty on a sesame seed bun with lettuce, tomato, pickles and ketchup. But
the difference is in the beef. It is 91 percent fat-free after cooking, said Chuck Ebeling, a McDonald's representative.
One reason the lower fat content is an ingredient McDonald's has added to the burgers of a seaweedman — a seaweed derivative.
"Hamburgers are a substantial part of our business," he said. "We expect McLean to be a substantial part of that."
The new sandwich costs $1.79 without cheese and $1.89 with cheese.
Ebeling said the new burger was selling well, but declined to provide sales figures or comparisons with the fast-food giant's other burgers.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
KU is seeking tuition relief
Budig says endowment programs will provide scholarship money
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
SELL IT FAST IN THE DAILY KANSAN
KU officials are looking to the Kansas University Endowment Association for relief from tuition increases.
Last week the Board of Regents increased tuition by 8 percent for residents and by 15 percent for non-residents for the 1901-92 academic year.
This increase will be followed by a proposed increase for 1992-93 of 8 percent for resident students in smaller regional schools, 10 percent for residents in research schools such as and 12.5 percent for all non-residents.
Along with approving increases, the Regents tabled a proposal by the student advisory committee for new scholarships.
After the Regents action, Chancellor Gene Budge said, "I do not expect the state to increase student scholarships in a way in the immediate years ahead."
Budig said the University would rely on programs such as Campaign Kansas to carry the burden of finding scholarship money.
"We must be sensitive to the magnitude of these increases," he said. "This action places great pressure on the University of Kansas to raise more private funding for student scholarships. It is important that we be in a position to assist deserving students who seek educational opportunities at KU."
Todd Seymour, president of the endowment association, said the association had already received a grant from this year for student scholarships.
"Scholarships are one of the main things we're raising money for all the time," he said.
He said that small amounts donated may go directly to scholarships, while some larger amounts go to special funds. The income generated from funds' investments goes to scholarships.
John Scarfe, director of public relations for the association, said that when endowment funds began counting toward Campaign Kansas on July 1, 1987, the goal for scholarships and fellowships was set at $20 million.
As of January 1991, $30.9 million had been pledged or committed to scholarship funds, he said. Money will continue to count toward the campaign until June 30, 1992, even though the association has already exceeded its goal.
"It's a popular item to give for," Scarffe said of the scholarships.
He said the association always had worked hard to help students meet financial needs.
"That has always been one of our priorities," Scarffe said. "Even after the campaign, I'm sure it will continue to be."
Forum addresses gay needs at KU
Committee seeks to improve gay life
By Patricia Rojas Kansan staff writer
The Gay and Lesbian Concerns Studies Committee sponsored an open forum last night at the Burge Union to gather additional information on problems affecting the gay, lesbian and bisexual community on campus.
"We would like to hear from your ideas, experiences, issues, concerns, as well as hopes, aspirations and recommendations that you may have to share with the team at Salesley, committee chairperson, told the 12 people in the audience.
The Gay and Lesbian Concerns Studies Committee, formed by the administration, first met in January.
Saleebey said it was the committee's task to submit a report to the administration recommending ways to improve the lifestyle and protect the rights of gays, lesbians and bisexuals on campus.
"I think it's the feeling of the members of this committee that the chancellor's office is serious about this," Saleebey said about the committee's task. "The report is not implemented, not to be admired."
The 13-member committee plans to file a preliminary report by summer, Salehey said.
Tom Emerson, committee member, encouraged gay, lesbian and bisexual members of the audience to share their experiences in interactivity, which commonly heterosexual community.
"Don't trivialize your own experiences," Emerson said. "Your experiences are unique because you experienced them. Let us hear what you've seen, what you've heard or read or felt, all of those things."
Some members of the audience said they were concerned about the kind of lives they would have if they were to come out of the closet. How would that affect their interaction with colleagues or students, they asked
■ Will students be influenced by the fact that their instructor is gay or lesbian when filling out instructor evaluation forms at the end of the month.
Other concerns the audience raised in yesterday's forum;
- Will be labeled as gay, lesbian or bisexual affect one's ability to find a job after graduation?
- What can be done to eliminate degrading comments about homosexuals?
Saleebey said the committee planned to advertise future forums better in order to increase the attendance. He said it was important to get as much input from the gay community on campus as possible.
"We need to help them help us fashion recommendations that will be an effective way of improving their quality of life," he said.
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Wednesday, April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kennedy scandal
Decision whether to reveal names to the public should be made by rape victims, not the media
A woman who says she was raped has to decide whether to report the crime or even publicly speak out about it.
But for a 29-year-old Palm Beach, Fla., woman, the choice of whether to go public was made for her.
Thanks to several news organizations last week, the woman now will know the price of being subjected to public scrutiny.
Because of the unfortunate stigmas society has about rape, the woman's humiliation could intensify by being identified in the media.
Rape victims' names should not be reported unless they approve, no matter what the circumstances are.
The woman has accused William Kennedy Smith, a nephew of Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., of raping her at a Palm Beach villa March 30.
A Boca Raton-based supermarket tabloid, the Globe, published her name and a photo, after which NBC News broadcast her name. The next day her name was published in The New York Times and other newspapers. In most cases, the journalistic practice is to
withhold the identities of rape victims.
The celebrity status of the Kennedy family should not have been a reason to reveal this woman's identity.
A victim is a victim and deserves to have the choice of whether she wants to remain anonymous.
While withholding rape victims' names could imply unwarranted shame on the victim's part, revealing names without consent is not the way to diminish society's stigmas.
Already, nine out of 10 raps go unreported, and according to a poll taken last week by the Boston Globe, about half of the women questioned said they would be less likely to report a rape if they thought their names would end up in print.
It is unfortunate that news organizations have chosen to exploit the Palm Beach woman because she accused a Kennedy clan member of rape. The serious nature of her accusation has been lost in the sensationalism of yet another Kennedy scandal.
Amy Zamierowski for the editorial board
GALA Week
Awareness may bring acceptance of homosexuals
The gay pride movement developed in the 1960s at the same time as the emergence of alternative curriculum at many U.S. universities and progressive thinking elsewhere.
What the '60s offered the gay and lesbian movement was a foundation, a hope.
But fears about the AIDS epidemic — many unfounded — seem to have killed any progress leading to the understanding of gay and lesbian lifestyles.
Last week, Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week kicked off another attempt by the gay and lesbian community to bring understanding to those who need it.
meaning to those who most need it.
But the gay and lesbian community
Students recently received threateneng phone calls after their photographs appeared in the Kansan. The students simply carried signs announcing the military's policy discriminating against gays and lesbians. Clearly, ignorance toward gays and lesbians remains strong here. GALA Week was a challenge to the KU community to learn about and accept its gays and lesbians. The steps for making changes outside the homosexual community now must come from outside the circle.
cannot force people to accept it.
A full-time commitment to do so will eliminate the need for the week.
Rich Cornell and Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
MAXELEY Chicago Tribune
MIDEAST
POLITICIANS
Boots and Coots
Black South Africans deserve the same attention as Kurds
The situation with Kurds in Iraq is a topic whirlwinding many emotions in political, religious and economic circles these days.
Ardra
Tippett
Staff columnist
Some people strongly believe that our government should intercede and eliminate the Kurds' present situation by force, if necessary. Some believe the United States should send aid to the Kurds, and others believe that the plight of the Kurds is simply an intolerable, inhumane situation, socially as well as politically, that just should not exist in the world on the edge of the 21st century.
My heart and prayers go out to the Kurds. What is happening to them is terrible, and should not happen anywhere to anyone.
However, I cannot help but ask: What about my people? Has the U.S. forgotten what the system of apartheid is? It is not a new concept by any means; it has been flourishing ipso facto since 1654, legally since 1958. It is a legal system where people are separated, discriminated against and oppressed because of the color of their skin.
It is not that simple. The undesired skin pigmentation is, of course, brown. These brownskinned human beings, often referred to as Black Africans are beaten, killed, impoverished, ill-educated, under-paid, if employed at all, and not allowed to vote.
population. Apartheid allows everything that is happening to the Kurds to happen to Black Africans on a daily basis, and it has been allowed to continue for centuries.
Black South Africans are not considered human by the ruling body of the country, and they are much more than the majority of the
The overwhelming support for the kurds, the actions recently taken by the U.S. government and the consistent, outright disregard of the situation in South Africa and its degrading, inhumane regime of apartheid is unquestionably one of the boldest actions of racism I have ever seen. I feel nauseated every time I think about America and each time I listen to the world news and to our presidents and politicians talk about foreign affairs. "A kinder and nationally." For whom?
Every day I witness more and more disrespect and disregard for my people, race and our situation throughout the world. If indeed actions speak louder than words, the United States has certainly shown its ugly disposition of inherent racism. And no one says a word.
Anyone that says this has nothing to do with him or her is either stupid, blind or evil and does not deserve to live. To those of you who are not members of the race that rules this nation and believe in your hearts that this all has nothing to do with you, you are disgusting
fools, I say to all of you, regardless of whether you accept your position in all of this or not, if you are not consistently doing something to change this government and the conditions under which this society exists, then you are a direct perpetuator of this injustice, yourself.
My intentions are not to insult the Kurds or their plight at all. I have seen their relatives in the United States on television, crying all week on every station.
But I also have seen my grandmother cry, and my brothers and sisters all over the world tremble and shake. I have seen people rallying in large numbers in support of the Kurds. I have seen the U.S. government take immediate action in Iraq.
On the other hand, I have seen nothing beyond insufficient steps of trivial tokenism and blatant disregard for Blacks around the world. With some pressure, troops and complete sanctions, the United States could bring an end to apartheid in South Africa by the end of the week.
Am I implying that we should not help the Kurds or that we should ignore them? By no means. What I am saying is, be consistent with your help, words, military support, finances and full sanctions, or else admit your hypocrisy and your true feelings.
Ardra Tippett is a St. Louis senior majoring in African studies
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Donated organs crucial
On Oct. 29, 1989, I received the gift of life from a family that cared enough to donate their deceased family member's organs. My mother and I both suffered from End Renal Stage Disease and both received kidney transplants. Knowing how important it is to consider donating organs and tissues, and because it is National Organ and Tissue Donor Awareness Week, I would like to challenge each KU student and faculty
member to consider giving the gift of life through organ and tissue donation. More than 100,000 Americans could benefit today if enough organs and tissues were available. One person could save up to 10 lives if he or she donated his or her organs and tissues. The heart and liver both are a matter of life or death to a patient who is in need of a transplant. Donated kidneys could eliminate dialysis treatments for patients and prolong lives. A pancreas that is donated could actually cure a person's diabetes. Donated eyes not only provide corneas for sight-restoring corneal transplants, but also vital eye tissue for other surgical procedures and for research into blinding eye disorders.
As you can see, organ and tissue donation is a very important topic when you are talking about saving thousands of lives. Many myths and
fears about donating organs and tissues do exist, but are deteriorating by education. Don't just sign your driver's license, but inform your family about your decision. I urge each student and faculty member to consider this delicate topic because someone considered it for my family. If you need more information about organ donation and transplantation call 1-800-24-DONOR, and for tissue donation call 1-800-227-7704.
Emma Marie Gray Kansas City, Kan., senior
KU is not South Africa
I wish Ardra Tippett had identified more precisely the "certain segment of this society that does not want to discuss (police brutality)" I infer from the tone of
her column that she means whites at large, and I think it rather irresponsible of her to make this claim in light of a few relevant facts. The video of the beating of Rodney King by white Los Angeles police officers was both taped and presented to the media by a white male. Clips of the video were actually displayed both on national television and in newspapers, two forms of media that I suppose are owned and operated by more whites than Blacks. And any excuse, no matter how far-fetched, by a white person possessing large-scale social influence to exonerate the Los Angeles policemen and explain their actions, has yet to be offered.
In obtaining data on police brutality, Tippet prefers to limit herself to the opinions of one police officer, thus denying herself access to broader and perhaps less-biased
information. I would agree that police brutality perpetrated by whites against Blacks is commonplace in many departments and that it is quite easily and frequently swept under the rug. But to hold the opinion that police brutality perpetrated by Blacks against whites does not occur is unrealistic.
I am unable to grasp why Tippet feels she is in South Africa. Are there large groups of machete-wielding Blacks running about campus, seeking to hack her into bits, which I haven't seen? And I don't understand why Tippet feels she is in a place like Tiananmen Square. Since her letter appeared in the University Daily Kansan, I can only conclude she is not being stifled, although her letter may have been edited by someone. I do feel, though, that Blacks and other
minorities in this nation, and Palestinians in Israel, deserve a fairer set of circumstances than what they, generally speaking, now hold
It seems apparent from the tenor and tone of Tippet's letter that she harbors a good deal of animosity toward whites. It's especially sad to read the veiled threats in her closing paragraphs that if I don't do something to fix her problems, she will feel compelled to affect "change by any means necessary."
Though you would not have it, Miss Tippet, I offer you this advice: When you graduate from this facility of higher learning, apply to the Los Angeles police academy. I'm sure you would make a damn fine officer.
Evan Watson Wellington junior
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON Editor
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
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Editors
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Business manager
MINDI LUND
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Editors
News. Melanie Mathes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wehbe
Editorial. Tiffany Harrass Regional sales mgr. Daren Creech
Planning Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
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Pam Sollier Production mgr. Rich Harshbarger
Sports. Ann Sewell Kater Sleek
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Einbinder
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chryst Hitsy
Features. Jill Harmington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name, signature, name address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas can submit their letters to kus.edu.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Scalffer Flam Hall.
must include class and bureauten, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
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A man with glasses and a bandana sits at a desk, looking surprised.
by Tom Michaud
HE'S TALKING TO HIMSELF AGAIN?
YEP.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24.1991
ROCK CHALK
Winning canoe
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
Civil engineering students carry their concrete canoe over a cameraman from University Relations. Steve McCabe, assistant professor of civil engineering and faculty advisor for the American Society of Civil Engineers, said the cameraman was making a promotional film for the University. The KU canoe team, which defeated teams from 10 other schools last weekend in Manhattan, will attend a national competition June 20-23 in Orlando, Fla.
Marine wins AIDS suit against hospital
The Associated Press
BOSTON — A judge yesterday awarded more than $2.7 million in damages to a Marine whose wife and son died after she was given an AIDS-tainted blood transfusion at a Navy hospital.
The judgment ended the second phase of a non-jury trial in a lawsuit filed by Chief Warrant Officer Martin Veldman that tested positive for the AIDS virus.
"The they just awarded more money than I ever would have seen in my lifetime," said Gaffney, 42, a computer specialist.
Last year, U.S. District Judge Rya Zobel found that doctors at the Long Beach, Calif., Naval Hospital were negligent and awarded Gaffney
Testimony in the second phase of the trial in Boston federal court focused on economic damages. Gafney's 7-year-old daughter, Maureene, has tested negative for the AIDS virus, and Gafney has said he filed his $55 million lawsuit against the Navy to provide for her.
$750,000 in emotional damages. She ruled that it a Caesarean section had been performed in time on Gaffney if the mother's condition would not have been necessary.
Attorneys for the government had proposed a $1.5 million settlement. During the trial, Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Elizabeth Carmody said it would have been when Gaffney would no longer be able to work because of his disease.
Boy drowns in farm pond near Baldwin
Kansan staff report
A boy drowned in a farm pond yesterday evening, according to a Douglas County Sheriff's office report.
The boy, 4, was found in a pond west of Route 3 near Baldwin.
Police would not release the name of the boy until all family members were notified
Police responded to a call at 5:19 p.m., according to the report.
The boy was transported by ambulance from Baldwin to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The boy was pronounced dead on arrival.
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The Macintosh Classic fits your needs perfectly. This is your chance to buy the computer system you've always wanted at the perfect price. Only until May 16th. And only at the KU Bookstore Computer Store, Level 2 Burge Union.
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6
Wednesdav, April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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[Treat Yourself!]
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents the
(2)
Miami City, Palmetto
Edward Villella, Artistic Director
A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
"...dances with expansiveness, wit, and speed... make it look easy and fun"
it look easy and fun. The Boston Globe
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
student tickets available at the SUA Office, Kansas
Union; all seats reserved; public $15 & KU and
K-12 students $7.50 & $6; senior citizens and other
students $14 & $11; to charge by phone; call
913.864.3982
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 24, 1991
Hoch Auditorium
Partially funded by the Mid-America Alliance through the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, additional support provided by the KU Endowment, the University of South Dakota Society, and the KU Endowment Association.
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners
Halmark Cards, Inc.; Pierset Shells; and Saline Mile.
{Step Out for Great Entertainment.}
Religious conflict causes 80 deaths
The Associated Press
Muslims and Christians fight in Nigeria
LAGOS, Nigeria — Muslims and Christians clashed in the northern Nigerian city of Bauchi yesterday. Witnesses said at least 80 people were killed and a dozen churches were set ablaze.
The state's military governor, Lt. Col. Abu Ali, imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew. In a radio broadcast, he expressed sympathy for the families who who had lost their lives, but did not say how many people were killed.
Witnesses reached by telephone from Lagos said bus terminals were filled with thousands of Christians trying to flee from the Muslim-dominated north to the mainly Christian south.
The witnesses, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they counted at least 80 bodies at the city's morgue.
The deaths were the first reported since an outbreak of Muslim-Christian clashes last week. Some reports said the latest violence began in Iraq, and many Christians should whether Christians and Muslims should use the same slaughterhouse.
Security forces used tear gas last week against Muslims who began rioting in towns and cities across the region.
The clash came as 3,000 athletes were in Bauchi for the annual National Sports Festival. They were out of the city, the witnesses said.
The festival was opened Saturday by Nigeria's military ruler, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, a Muslim.
In Nigeria, fragile truces between followers of rival religions collapse periodically Mosques and churches are closed regularly, and thousands have died.
Muslims are thought to outnumber Christians in this nation of more than 100 million people, Africa's most populous country.
Tensions have increased as more and more young Africans have flocked to fundamentalist Islamic sects.
Their leaders have been demanding the shutdown of breweries and the use of a strict Muslim code of law, under which habitual criminals are punished by the amputation of limbs and adulterers are stoned to death.
Special FBI session will address racial problems
Day-long meeting scheduled for today The Associated Press
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — FBI Director William Sessions is bringing the chiefs of the bureau's 56 field offices to headquarters to discuss the discrimination complaints of African-American agents, the bureau said yesterday.
The unusual day-long meeting set for today was the latest move by Sessions in a personal campaign to the FBI's simmering racial difficulties.
Earlier this month, Sessions met with some 250 African-American agents representing every field office in the country. He has met twice with a smaller group of African-American agents who have outstanding discrimination complaints against the FBI. And he has ordered hiring, assignment and promotion data turned over to their attorneys in an effort to head off a lawsuit charging the FBI with job bias.
With the field office chiefs, Sessions, Deputy Director Floyd Clarke
and other top headquarters officials plan to discuss personnel policies and practices, equal employment opportunity programs and the concerns raised by African-American agents about recruitment, promotion and job bias complaints. FBI representative Tom Jones said.
An FBI report this month said there were 122 unresolved equal opportunity complaints by agency employees. The African-American agents said some dated back to 1986.
Sessions said it was "imperative to solicit the input of field managers, have the opportunity to discuss equal employment opportunity initiatives under way and attempt to determine what additional steps can be taken to address these vitally important topics."
An attorney for the African-American agents, David Shaffer said, "This meeting shows they recognize that we raised are serious and legitimate.
"Either they are preparing for litigation or trying to come up with solutions. I hope it's the latter."
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
7
World briefs
New York
Contraceptives protect fertility
Regular use of contraceptives does more than prevent pregnancies, a report says. It also can protect fertility by staving off sexually transmitted diseases and pelvic infections.
In contrast, only about 2 percent of women who use a diaphragm, condoms, spermicides or vaginal cream are infected.
The report released Monday by the Alan Guttmacher Institute says 4 to 6 percent of women in relationships that are not mutually monogamous who do not use contraceptives are likely to develop tubal infertility over a five-year period.
Also, women who have used a diapragm, condoms or spermicide are about half as likely to develop cervical cancer as women who have never used these methods, the report said. And women who had the pit have at least a 50 percent lower risk of developing ovarian or endometrial cancer.
Washington
Police power expanded by court
The Supreme Court today bolstered the power of police to chase people, even when officers have no reasonable suspicion that a crime was committed.
By a 7-2 vote, the justices ordered reinstatement of the cocaine possession conviction of a young California man named Hodari D1), who was charged with dropping a crack cocaine rock during the chase.
Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the court,
said the cocaine may be used as evidence
Hodari D., now 19, was sentenced by a juvenile court to incarceration for five years and eight months for possessing cocaine with an oil. A state appeals court threw out his conviction.
Washington
Senate can't debate debt interest
The federal budget the Senate began debating yesterday contains an undebatable $210 billion item — the third largest amount in the bill — that buys no federal services at all.
It's the ever-increasing interest on the national debt and a figure that rarely comes up.
As the Senate began debate on the $1.45 trillion budget for next year, most of the discussion focused on him by Sen Daniel Patrick Durham, D-N.Y., to slightly cut the Social Security payroll tax.
From The Associated Press
Soviet lawmakers pass plan to boost economy
Budget cuts, privatization part of Gorbachev's plan
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The Soviet legislature yesterday passed President Mikhail Gorbachev's program to pull the country out of its economic crisis through measures and steps to introduce a convertible currency.
Lawmakers, meeting in the Kremlin, also recommended creation of a committee of representatives of all 13 Soviet republics to coordinate efforts against a terrorist装置, the state news agency Tass reported.
Gerbachev warned this month that the nation was heading toward economic collapse and proposed the package of anti-crisis measures to avert catastrophe.
Among the recommended measures is a large reduction in government spending to cut the budget deficit, which is expected to balloon from about $6 billion in 1980 to more than $230 billion in 2015.
However, the economic reform program does not include a specific target on how much the budget is to be spent.
The Gorbachev program also proposed to begin
selling off some small state enterprises. Under his plan, two-thirds of all small businesses in the service and consumer sectors would be in private hands by the end of 1992.
The program calls additionally for faster steps to establish stock and commodity exchanges and would make the ruble a freely convertible international currency. The ruble exchange rates are now artificially set by the government.
Prime Minister Valentin Pavlov presented the program to the legislature Monday with the warning that if it was not adopted and the current national income would fall by 29 percent this year.
Answering questions yesterday, Pavlov said the program's authors did not try to make it comprehensive or detailed. "It is impossible, for public life is so complex... that neither the government nor a whole data processing center can tackle all questions in one program." Tass quoted him as saving
Tass did not report the legislature's specific vote.
Gorbachev suggested a nationwide moratorium on all strikes, rallies and political demonstrations. Lawmakers are scheduled later in the week to vote for an amendment to labor laws that would ban strikes.
Japan to deploy minesweepers
The Associated Press
TOKYO – Four Japanese minesweepers are to set sail for the Persian Gulf on the military's first overseas mission since World War II. The planned deployment has set off intense debate here.
S Japan was widely criticized in the United States for not sending personnel to aid the allies in the Persian Gulf War. Stung by that, Prime Minister Narendra Modi appealed to the United States for way to Tokyo to recount some of its lost status.
Barring a last-minute hitch, Kaiti is expected to make a formal announcement today of the deployment of the vessels and about 500 crew members to the ship. A few days later, sailors say the ships could leave port this weekend.
"Because (the gulf) is an indispensable shipping route for Japan and the Japanese people, it would not meet international standards if we let other countries pass through it." Kaito told reporters yesterday.
Opposition parties and pacifist groups fear the move could open the door to full-fledged Japanese military activity overseas. Kaifu worked yesterday to try to allay the concerns, but only the tiny Democratic Socialist Party voiced support for his plan.
Takako Doi, chairperson of the Socialists, Japan's largest opposition party, said sending the minesweepers would violate the constitution, which bars the use of military force to settle international disputes.
The government rejects that argument, saying the gulf is no longer under threat of war. "We do not think there is any problem with legality," said Foreign Ministry representative Taizo Watanabe.
Still, about 250 people asked the Tokyo District Court yesterday to immediately stay any orders sending the minesweepers to the Middle East.
Since World War II, Japanese soldiers have been sent abroad only for training. Tokyo has been reluctant to order its troops abroad for other missions for fear of offending China, South Korea and other Asian countries that suffered Japanese aggression during World War II.
Those nations remain extremely sensitive about any move that hints at a re-emergence of Japanese
Foreign Minister Taro Nakayama will discuss the issue with his counterparts in China and South Korea this week, said a ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
EXERCISE SENIORITY!
FOR SENIORS ONLY
April 24
Bring your KU ID and verification of age to the Adams Alumni Center between 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. for FREE burgers and drinks served by KU's administrators and deans.
KLZR will be live!
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8
Wednesday, April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
We Wrote the Book on the Jayhawks
Your college days are captured forever in the 1991 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK, from the first week of classes to walking down the hill in May. You don't want to pass up this piece of KU history. Grab your KUID and purchase your JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK in front of the Kansas Union or on Wescoe Beach from April 22-May 3. from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. each day. A small investment of $25.00 is all it takes. While you're getting your yearbook, have it personalized by everyone there. The JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK--this is one book of text you won't want to sell back.
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
City finances fair housing program
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
But program still needs more financial support, director says
The Lawrence City Commission took measures last night to keep the city's Fair Housing Assistance Program out of the red, but its director says the program needs more financial support from the city to be effective.
The commission voted unanimously to continue financing a part-time human relations specialist for the remainder of the fiscal year. Until now, a federal grant, which expires May 17, had sponsored the position.
Although the commission's decision will save the fair housing program from deficit spending, Rehelio Samuel, director of the Human Relations Department, said it would need more money next year to deal with the overwhelming number of complaints it received.
"As the city grows, we're going to lag behind," he said. "You end up creating a ghetto situation. It's not just the need of the Human Relations Commission, it's the need of the community as well."
The Lawrence Human Relations Commission origi
nally asked the city to sponsor a full-time human relations specialist. A part-time specialist now works in the fair housing program to deal with complaints of discrimination.
Samuel said one reason the department needed the city's support was because city officials requested several years ago that the department try to settle complaints informally without processing them into cases. However, the program only receives financing from the Department of Housing and Urban Development for cases it officially processes.
"The HUD contract and the city's desire are in conflict," Samuel said. "If we cannot process any more cases, our contract with HUD will be terminated."
City Manager Mike Wildgen said the $9,020 the commission approved was only an estimate of how much the program actually would receive. The city manager's staff will study the present budget to determine from where the money could be taken.
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The Miss Haskell Dancers & Singers
Mutt Finicky
Zoom
Two Guitars & A Short Guy
Now See Hear
FREE!
Brought to you in part by: B.S.U., UJIJMA
Black Men of Today, NASA & KKFI
IN-PERSON
Jay
LENO
Friday, May 17, Salina Riecentennial Center
MasterCard
Leno P.O. Box 1727 Salinas, KS 67402 or Charge by Phone 913-823-2288
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
9
Customer Appreciation Sale!
Join in the savings during our customer appreciation sale! Youll find huge savings in every aisle on all your favorite brands. Pick-up an in-store flyer loaded with our green tag specials for your shopping convenience. This special sale is our way of saying.. Thank You For Saving Money At Food 4 Less!"
Light fast well my
KINGSFORD
Charcoal
Briquets
Charcoal
Briquets
Valuable Food 4 Less Coupon
KINGSFORD
CHARCOAL
$248
10-lb.
Bag
Limit 1 per customer, 1 per coupon please.
Coupon Expires 4-30-91.
KINGSFORD CHARCOAL
$248
10-lb.
Bag
it 1 per customer, 1 per coupon please.
10-lb.
Bag
$248
---
Quinnard
Safeway
Quinnard
NORTHERN
NORTHERN
Valuable Food 4 Less Coupon
NORTHERN
BATH TISSUE
69¢
4-Roll
Pack
Limit 2 per customer, 2 per coupon.
Coupon Expires 4-30-91.
NORTHERN BATH TISSUE
69¢
4-Roll Pack
Limit 2 per customer, 2 per coupon.
Coupon Expires 4-30-91.
4-Roll Pack
69¢
Limit 2 per customer, 2 per coupon.
Coupon Expires 4-30-91.
{
Compare our prices, quality and selection! Nobody beats our everyday low prices on the freshest meats...Nobody! And we offer you even greater savings in our family pack sizes. We save on labor and packaging...you save more money!
You'll find over 600 green tag items like this—every time you shop food 4 Less!
BEEF & POTATOES
100% Guaranteed! We offer a 100% guarantee on everything we sell. That means if you are not completely satisfied with any product you buy at Food 4 Less, just return it and we will cheerfully refund your money.
Automatic discounts Every pre-priced item we sell at Food 4 Less is automatically discounted 10% before we put it on our shelf, like potato chips books and magazines. Greeting cards are discounted 50%. Just one more way Food 4 Less saves you more!
No Chip Can Eat Much One!
Ruffa
America's Bite
Potato Chips
Green Tag Special
CHUCK ROAST
$138
Family
Pack
lb.
Green Tag Special
Florida
SWEET CORN
5 ears for $1
Fresh Bakery!
Fresh Bakery!
2525 Iowa St.
in Lawrence
OPEN 24
HOURS
FOOD4LESS
Prices Effective April 24 thru 28, 1991. Quantity Rights Reserved.
10
Wednesdav. April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
642 Mass. LIBERTY HAIL 749-1912
Cyrano de Bergerac 7:00 Nasty Girl 9:45
VISIONS an optical dispensary
- Eyeglass Repair
- Sunglasses
- Over 500 Frames
- Contact Lenses
- Bollé
806 Massachusetts 841-7421
10-5.30 M,T.W/F/10-3 SAT
2-8 THUR
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
MARRYING MAN (R) SAT. SUN, 2:30
SAT. WED, 7:30, 9:45
WED, THUR, 10:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
842-8400
DEFENDING (B)
BVLFS (P) 8:45, 9:00
MORTAL
BVLFS (P) 8:45, 9:00
THOUGHTS (B)
BVLFS (P) 8:45, 7:00, 8:30
REACHING
BVLFS (P) 8:45, 7:15, 8:30
RIVELY WINNING
BVLFS (P) 8:45, 7:15, 8:30
WOLVES (P) 8:45, 9:00
SILENCE OF
BVLFS (P) 8:45, 9:00
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 842-6400
**MUTANT MANGY**
SAT SUN 10:30, 1.30
NINJA TURTLES (JD) SAT SUN 7:30, 9.15
**SLEEPING WITH THE**
**ENEMY (R)** SAT SUN 2:30, 1.30
NINJA TURTLES (JD) SAT SUN 7:30, 9.15
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Dickinson
23rd & IOWA 841-8600
$300 PRIME TIME SHOW (+)
SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME
NEW JACK CITY (R)
5.20 7.45
MERMAIDS (P-13)
5.20, 7.40
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES (P-13)
IF LOOKS COULD KILL (P-13)
WEDDINGS, Ltd.
CLASS ACTION (R)
5:25 7:40
HOME ALONE (PG)
5:10; 7:25
1410 Kasold, Orchard Corners
Lawrence, KS 66049
842-0056
@your business!
SALE - 25% Off
10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Thurs. until 8:00 p.m.
Sat. 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Sun 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Monday
In-stock prom and party formalss
All jewelry
Other accessories:
(formal and bridal)
50% Off selected shoe styles
Seamstress in Shop for Custom Sitting
Summer Employment Johnson County
Clerical Positions
File Clerks
Typists
Word Processors
Data Entry
Receptionists
Call Ann
(913) 491-0944
11015 Metcalf
Light Industrial
Packers
Assembly
Warehouse
General Labor
Lawn Maintenance
Call Joanne
(913) 384-6161
6405 Metcalf
Applications accepted Mon-Fri 9-3 p.m. NO FEES
Bossler Hix
TEMPORARY SERVICE
11015 Metcalf Overland Park, KS
Going to Kansas City, Kansas City here I Come.
Planning on attending KU Medical Center next semester? Cambridge West Apartments are only a short walk from KU Medical Center.
We offer
- 1,140 sq. ft./2 Bedroom/2 Bath
- Track Lights
- 3 Glass Patio Doors with Verticals and Tie Dows
- Clubhouse/Laundry Facilities
- Sauna/Pool/Tennis/Weights
- Off-Street Parking/Security Gates
Cambridge West Apartments 3600 Rainbow Blvd., Kansas City Kansas (913)722-1319
Godfather's Pizza.
Regular Price $1.99
Godfathers
Pizza
Some colors may not be available in your city.
WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
FREE
WITH ZIP SIP CUPPON AND REGULAR PRICE MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA PURCHASF
ZIP SIP
32 OUNCE — REFILLABLE
SEE DETAILS ON COUPON
DROUGHT TO YOU BY:
AND
Enjoy
Coca-Cola
CLASSIC
843-6282 711 W.23rd, Malls Shopping Center
BIG TIME
MEDIUM
DELUXE
$5.99
NO LIMIT AT $5.99 EACH
Topped with Beef, Storage, Onions,
Black Olives, Mushrooms & Peppers
NO SUBSTITUTIONS.
Original Cust Only.
No extra charge. Add 15
pieces. Not valid on other
pieces. Valid only at Godfather's
Pizza.
EXPIRY DATE: 5-5-91
MIXED BURGS
EXPIRY DATE: 5-5-91
BIG TIME MENU
MEDIUM DELUXE
$5.99
NO LIMIT AT $5.99 EACH
Topped with Beef, Sauce, Onions,
Black Olives, Mushrooms & Peppers
Heavy-Topping Original or Golden Crust
$4 OFF
Any Large
or
$3 OFF Any Medium
PICK ONE MEDIUM
$5.99
NO LIMIT AT $5.99 EACH
CHOOSE FROM
* Super Pepperoni • Classic • Deluxe
* Meat Ears • Dessert • Garden Delight
FREE
32 OZ. REFILLABLE ZIP SIP
(Filled With Coca Cola)
When you present this coupon with the purchase of any heavy tapping medium or large pizza at regular price.
NO SUBSIDIUMS
Original Coca Cola Only
Can be served with Beef, Sauce, Onions,
Black Olives, Mushrooms & Peppers
Add 1 to delivery
Godfather's Pizza
Not valid with
Succulent Lemonade,
Big Box or other discounted desserts and drinks.
Add $1 to delivery
Godfather's Pizza
Not valid with
Succulent Lemonade,
Big Box or other discounted desserts and drinks.
Add $1 to delivery
Godfather's Pizza
NOT SUBSIDIUMS
Original Coca Cola Only
Can be served with Beef, Sauce, Onions,
Black Olives, Mushrooms & Peppers
No valid with
Succulent Lemonade,
Big Box or other discounted desserts and drinks.
Add $1 to delivery
Godfather's Pizza
ONE FREE REMITTLE
The coupon valid only
with the purchase of any heavy tapping medium or large pizza at regular price.
COUPON NO VALID WITH BIG WEEKEND COUPON. Coupon no valid with
**Mark McMeley, study abroad adviser, said he contacted the adviser in charge of the students in his university yesterday morning after the quake.**
"They definitely felt the quake," he said. "But the students are fine."
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
The earthquake late Monday night in Costa Rica spawned concern for the 50 KU students currently studying at the University of Costa Rica.
Students OK after quake hits Costa Rica
McMeley the adviser told him that most of the destruction was on the east side of Costa Rica. The other living in San Jose on the west side.
BIG VALUE
MENU
BIG VILLAGE
PICK ONE
MEDIUM
The earthquake measured 7.4 on the Richter scale and killed at least 50 people in Costa Rica.
The last earthquake in Costa Rica was in December 1990, he said. The current group of study abroad students arrived in late January. The last group left before the December make.
McMeyle said he thought that classes at the University of Costa Rica would be canceled until the buildings could be inspected for damage.
The KU study abroad program to Costa Rica is in its 3rd year. MeMel
PICK ONE MEDIUM
$5.99
NO LIMIT AT $5.99 EACH
FREE
32 OZ. REFILLABLE ZIP SIP
(Filled With Coca Cola)
When you present this coupon with the purchase of any heavy tapping medium or large pizza at regular price.
DINE IN AND CARRYOUT ONLY
NO SUBSERVICES
Original Coca Cola Diet
Super Popcorns • Classic • Deluxe
Meal Favor Deals • Garden Delights
Godfather's Pizza
Not sold with Sunday FREE orders or other benefits.
Add $1 for delivery.
EXPIRES 5-5-91
One FREE RM10 off this coupon valid only when you order one Godfather's Pizza menu on a table, menu card or other delivery on delivery.
EXPIRES 5-5-91
FREE
32 OZ. REFILLABLE
ZIP SIP
Roberta Cavitt, Stilwell graduate student, spent five months in Costa Rica last year. She came back to the United States in December.
FREE
32 OZ. REFILLABLE
ZIP SIP
(Filled With Coca Cola)
When you present this coupon
with the purchase of any
heavy tapping medium or
large pizza at regular price.
DINE IN AND CARRYOUT ONLY
DINE FREE FOR VISIT
When you present this coupon
with the purchase of any
heavy tapping medium or
large pizza at regular price.
Godfather's Pizza.
CODIGO, COUNTY OF NEW YORK
COPRINTED BY GODFATHER'S PIZZA.
COPRINTED BY GODFATHER'S PIZZA.
EXPIRES 5-5-91
"My first thought after I heard that there was an earthquake in Costa Rica was, 'Where was it? How are the people I know?' she said. "My second concern was for the other students studying down there."
Cavitt said the first time she experienced an earthquake was in Costa Rica. During the five months she was affected, she fell at least three earthquakes.
JINE IN AND CARRYOUT ONLY
ONE FRIER PER VISIT
This coupon valid only
on the first Friday of each month.
Not valid with any other
pizza purchases on valu-
able delivery.
Goodfathers' Pizza
EXPIRES 5-5-91
"I was lucky because we didn't have any severe earthquake," she said. "I thought it was a big bus the first time I felt a quake."
Roads, villages damaged in Costa Rican earthquake
U. S. aid is on the way to earthquake victims in Costa Rica and western Panama. At least 74 were killed, 830 injured in Monday's quake which measured 7.4 on the Richter scale; 300 aftershocks followed. Thousands are left homeless.
Nicaragua
Costa Rica
San Jose
Limon
Pan American Highway
Landslides cut off roads; 12 bridges closed
Map area
San Jose: Population of 890,000 Severely damaged:
National Theater
Culture Building
Folk Art Museum
Pacific Ocean
Relief efforts:
- Nicaraguan helicopters
- 15-person British rescue team with high-tech equipment to find survivors
- $25,000 in U.S. relief aid, C-130 cargo plane, helicopters
Recent quakes in Latin America
El Salvador: 1986; 1,500 mile (5.5)*
Mexico City: 1985; 9,500 mile (8.1)*
Guatemala: 1976; 23,000 mile (7.5)*
Nicaragua: 1972; 5,000 mile (6.2)*
Earth's plates and earthquakes Earth's crust moves slowly in huge plates. Many quakes occur near plate boundaries, where rock is being torn or compressed.
Costa Rica earthquake
North American plate
Caribbean plate
Cocos plate
Nazca plate
South American plate
Pacific plate
African plate
Antarctic plate
Signage on higher ground National Earthquake Information Center, Red Cross, Office of U.S. Foreign Distance Assistance, research by WENDY GOVERI
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/BILL BAKER
Your environmentally conscious University Daily Kansan is printed on recycled paper with soybean ink. Thank you.
Arts
on the
WALK
Boulevard
DON'T WALK
9:00am till 4:30pm
april 24 1991
fulfill your cultural fantasies on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall
RUN
Arts on the Boulevard is a free indoor/outdoor arts festival planned to circulate art and music among the rest of the campus. The festival will feature works from the university art students and there will be a World Beat Music spin from KJHK in front of the Kansas Union from noon till 1.30.
NO admission fee
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
11
Thrift store to help veterans
Proceeds will benefit Disabled American Veterans fund
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
A new thrift store that benefits
disability veterans opened in
Lawrence this year.
The Disabled American Veterans
Thrift Store, 1601 W. 23rd St., suite
116, is a community operation, said
Jersey Jerry Conway, store manager
"Proceeds from the store are designed to help Kansas veterans and designed to help Kansas veterans."
John Hill co-operating officer, said the non-profit store was owned and operated by the state office of Disabled American Veterans.
"The money from the store goes into the state fund for disabled veterans."
98,000 disabled veterans in Kansas.
98,000 disabled veterans in Kansas. The store opened without fanfare April 5. Hill said. There will be a grand opening in a few weeks.
The money will go specifically to provide for the rehabilitation and welfare of disabled Kansas veterans. They dependents and survivors, he said.
Hill said the Disabled American Veterans of Kansas had been trying to open a thrift store in Lawrence for victims of homelessness and successful because of zoning problems.
Now that the store is open, it will benefit Lawrence because its merchandise will stay in the community, said. The goods will stay in the area.
The store also will benefit
Lawrence by employing 12 to 14 people from the community, he said. A disabled Vietnam veteran is working for the store and, if possible, the store will hire more veterans.
The store deals mainly in clothing, he said, but it will take any usable merchandise such as furniture, lawn chairs, working tools and working appliances.
Charlotte Dart, Lawrence resident, donated dishes, furniture, books and records to the store. She said she donated the items because the store would pick up her donations anytime, but she did not have to be left on the curb.
"I don't know any disabled veterans," she said. "But I like donating to their store."
VAN CITY
E
Charlotte Dart helps David Curtiss load donated books and games onto the D.A.V. delivery truck.
RIGHT: Edward Craig puts shades on the store's windows.
Photos by Michelle Myers
THE CITY OF BENIDOR
P. J. G.
Veterans Edward Craig and David Curtiss set up a clothes rack in the store.
Hurry In Today!
COLONY WOODS
1 Bedroom $355
[10 mo. or 12 mo. Leases Available]
3
1035
2 Bedroom
2 Bath
$425
AFTER HOURS
842-5111
MISSION VALLEY SQUAD
Come Home To Us!
- Exercise Room - On Bus Route
- Microwaves
- Microwaves Walk To Campus
- Walk To Campus
103
- Great Maintenance. We Care!
1301 W.24th
Owned and operated by Corning Inc., Corning, NY
CORNING FREELY STORE REVERF
Wide assortment of replacement parts for CORNING WARE* and VISIONS* Cookware, and PYREX Ovenware.
- CORELLE* Dinnerware plus coordinated accessories.
- REVERE WARE Cookware
products, cosmetic seconds at substantial savings.
STAINLESS STEEL
Gifts with value that cost less!
VISA
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
Suite 316 - Upper Level
749-4855
"We Ship"
12
Wednesday, April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Mon-Sat: 10 a.m.-7:30 p.m.
Sun: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
東洋食品店
SHIN ASIAN SUPERMARKET BIG SALE!
We cut down the price on many items! Purchase $30 or more & receive 10% off. (except rice and soy sauce)
- Jasmine Rice: Best Quality, New Crop
- Fresh Vegetables & Fish: Come in Every Thurs.
- All International Foods
- Video Tape Rental: Japanese, Chinese Korean & Indian
Holiday Plaza 2449 Iowa Suite R 841-0140
Slide into Benchwarmers for great drink specials.
Wednesday $1.50 Strike-outs $1 Shot-of-the-day ado-style acoustic Jam every Wednesday night!
Plus Live Colorado-style acoustic Jam every Wednesday night!
BENCHWARMERS
Southern Hills Mall
1601 W. 23rd St.
841-9111
WATKINS
(STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES)
O
G
INTERIM HOURS
MAY 20 - JUNE 2
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Every Day
(Closed May 27, Memorial Day)
No special clinics open
SUMMER HOURS
JUNE 3 - JULY 28
8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday - Friday
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Saturday & Sunday
Wart Clinic - Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Allergy Clinic - Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
SUMMER HOURS
G
INTERIM HOURS
JULY 28 - AUGUST 18
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Every Day
No special clinics open
Q
We Care for KU.
Health Education 864-9570 Health Center 864-9500 Serving Lawrence Campus Students
Watkins places 290 holds
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Immunization record required to enroll
An automatic hold on enrollment has been placed on about 290 students by Watkins Memorial Health Center. It is not because of money owed, but because they have not shown proof of immunization.
Watkins first began automatic holds for non-vaccinated students in Fall 1989. Students must provide Watkins with proof of their mumps, measles and rubella vaccination, said Gloria Woods, office assistant at Watkins. The hold is for the next semester's enrollment.
At the beginning of this semester about 900 students had a hold on their enrollment. This happens every semester, she said. The holds usually are placed on freshmen, transfer students and return students that
have not attended classes at the University of Kansas since Fall 1989.
University of Hawaiian School and Tank
"Once we remove them from hold,
that is supposed to be good forever."
Woods said.
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins, said the hold was started because of the contractibility of measles.
"Measles is probably one of the most contagious diseases," he said.
Jim Boyle, assistant director of Watkins, said letters were sent to all KU students informing them of the immunization proof requirement.
Wooms said students could use a note from a doctor, medical record or a high school transcript with the information as proof of immunization. Students can take in or mail the information.
If a student does not provide proof of immunization, Watkins offers a
free immunization, she said.
"We've had a lot of them, because it is more convenient for them to go ahead and get the shot," Woods said.
Diane Hendry, radiology supervisor at Watkins, said not every student was required to have the immunization. Exemption is granted for those born before Jan. 1, 1963, or born after Aug. 1, 2003. Disease Control, people born before then have a natural immunity to the diseases.
Exemptions also are allowed for certain religious faiths and medical conditions, she said. Both must be vaccinated. Charles Yockey, chief of staff at WKJWkc.
A second immunization is required if an immunization occurred before the student's first birthday or between 1963 and 1967, Hendry said.
Health survey results fall short
Lack of data leaves board disappointed
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
A survey by the Student Health Advisory Board produced results that fell short of what was expected, but the board will try again next year, said Mike Lambert, chairperson of the board.
It was planned that members of Student Senate and the advisory board would telephone 500 students for the multiple choice survey, said
The board started the survey with the intention of obtaining a representative sample of what students would be interested in at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Cindy Snyder, chairperson of the Senate Patient Relation Subcommittee. But only 157 students were actually surveyed.
The 36 question survey asked students whether they had used certain services of Watkins and whether they were satisfied with the services. It also asked about the students' grade, age, marital status and hours of enrollment.
"With 157, we pretty sure it's not a representative sample," Lambert said. "We disappointed in that We have brought enough people to call that list of people."
He said the study still was useful because it showed 157 student opinions that otherwise might not have been known.
Despite the lack of students
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins, said he also hoped there would be a survey next year.
surveyed, he said he hoped another survey would be conducted next year.
"We need more student input and information, and this is by far one of the best ways to do it," he said.
Jim Boyle, assistant director of Watkins, said the center would continue to conduct its own surveys about two to three times a year.
"The survey we do is a little bit slanted because the people we do are already in the building," Boyle said.
Watkins will try to conduct another survey before students leave the campus for summer vacation, he said.
Juniors and seniors to be surveyed
Kansan staff writer
By Sarah Davis
Students who began their careers at KU in 1987 have a chance to voice their opinions.
In 1987, the college implemented new degree requirements, such as having all incoming freshmen take an English during their first college year.
A requirement evaluation will be sent to the 112 juniors and 357 seniors who were randomly selected from the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Susan Twombly, director of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences curriculum evaluation project,
Now those students who were by the requirements can evaluate
helped design the seven-page questionnaire.
"There's some things the college wants to know from the students about those degree requirements," she said. "In a sense we are asking students to grade the education they got."
Twombly said the results of the survey could be beneficial to the college.
The data from the survey will be examined by administrators in the college and members of the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and
James Muyskens, dean of the college, said student input was important.
"I'm eager to see what is said about the successes or failures we
made," he said.
Pam Hounston, director of the college undergraduate services office, said she had attended several CUSA conferences. The final report of the survey's findings.
"CUSA will look to see if the requirements are doing what it originally wanted them to do," she said.
Bonnie Johnson, Shawnee, Okla.
graduate student, helped design the survey, which asks questions such as whether skills learned in English were used for writing. So much students learned about a foreign culture in a language class.
We expect to find out what the students are getting out of the required courses," she said. "Mainly we see to if we are being successful."
PIZZA HUT DELIVERS Meat Lover's Pizza
...
NOW HIRING
In Lawrence Call: 843-9341
DOE MFHIA
DINE-IN OR CARRYOUT
1606 W 23rd St 843-3516
804 Iowa 842-1687
934 Massachusetts 843-7044
FAST FREE DELIVERY
Deliver Hours:
Sunday-Thursday
11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Friday-Saturday
11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
IN LAWRENCE CALL
843-2211
Get 1 Medium Meat Lover's* for $8.99
or get 2 Medium Meat Lover's for
Offer expires May 25, 1991
Get 2
Medium 3-topping Pizzas for $12.99!
Pizza Hut
DELIVERY
*Warehouse locations are based on existing U.S. company sites per unit of product; prices shown are based on retail U.S. locations at 102.3 KHz, 80 KHz and 40 KHz. And delivery locations are Lawrence, MA 90217 and Burlington, VT 90265. Prices shown are based on delivery locations.*
Offer expires May 25,1991
Pizza Hut
DELIVERY
Signed by the Client, Custant or Director. Please ensure that customer name
is clearly printed on card. This customer is not an authorized retailer of
products sold to the client W. Child, M.D., 1260 East Fifth Street, N.W.
and will be held at the client's location until the next business day.
Please include your CUSTAR NO. in CAULIFLORIS 83211. Code No. 28.
$2.50 OFF
any Large
pizza!
Offer expires May 25,1991
Pizza Hut.
DELIVERY
Please contact customer service directly. Phone #1-800-725-9340.
Once customer has paid for and received the package, please include:
Identification number 971-672-1034 999 Mass. Number and Delivery
Date. Call 971-672-1034 to receive a free shipping offer.
Phone After Delivery can be called at CALL 971-672-1034.
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
13
Jayhawks shocked in 15-run Wichita rally
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
WICHTI - The Kansas baseball team amazed the 5,300 fans at Eck Stadium last night by winning Wichita State after 3-1/2 innings. Wichita State after 3-1/2 innings.
But, it was the Jayhawks who were left with their mouths agape after the Shockers post 15 unanswered runs en route to a 15-6 victory.
Two batters later, Moore advanced to third base when Kansas first baseman Jeff Niemeyer singled up the middle. Green's next hit was Doug Mirabelli and Moore raced home with Kansas' first run.
The Jayhawks started off red-hot when Kansas center fielder Chris Moore led the game with a center foot off Shocker ace Tyler Green.
With Niemeyer standing on second, Kansas right fielder Denard
Baseball
Stewart bounced a ball between Wichita State shortstop Chris Wimmer's legs. Niemeyer came all the way around to score and Kan-
Shocker errors 15
Kansas left fielder John Wuycheck drove in the two runs with a bloop single to left.
The Jayhawks added two more runs in the top of the second, thanks to three hits and two Shocker errors.
On the mound, Kansas lefthander Rory Ramsdell was virtually untouchable after three innings
After the 'Hawks increased their lead to 5-0 in the fourth, Ramsdale cleared an invincibility with seven hits and the Shakers with seven hits and five runs.
Kansas right hander Chris Corn relieved Ramsdell, but surrendered another run before the inning was over. The Shocker rally tied the score at six heading into the fifth
"It was a miserable performance at the start for us," Shocker coach Gene Stephenson said.
From that point on, the Shockers were all take and no give.
Wichita State racked up six more hits and nine more runs in their last four innings.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said the Jayhawk pitchers did not help the Kansas cause by walking 13 Shockers.
"We were flirting with disaster from the start by walking hitters of that caliber," he said. "I don't mind giving up home runs, but I do mind giving up three-run home runs."
The two teams will play again at 7 tonight in Lawrence at Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
KU keeps regional tourney
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
The United States Volleyball Association is so pleased with the way the University of Kansas and Lawrence put on a tournament that they have decided to the regional volleyball association for a fourth consecutive year.
The tournament will be Saturday and Sunday.
"The region seems to be happy with the way we are running the tournament, so they are not anxious to take it away from us." said Ed Lechyse, KU men's volleyball club coach.
Lecluyse said KU had an advantage over other schools because of the many gymnasiums in the area.
Volleyball
including Robinson Center, the Holcim Sports Complex, Haskell Indian Junior College, Allen Field House and West Junior High School.
The regional tournament in the past was moved every two years.
For the area club teams, this tournament will be a springboard to the zonal and national tournaments that will be in May.
For the Kansas women's varsity volleyball team, it is the end of the season.
Kansas coach Frankie Albizt said that no matter how well the Jayhawks did in the tournament, they could not advance to zonal meets.
"There are NCAA regulations that prohibit us from going." she said.
She said that rules restricting the number of tournaments that one team could play in were one reason the team would not continue after the tournament.
The women's varsity team has fared well in its three previous tournaments, finishing in the top four at each one, including a fourth place finish at an April 13th tournament in Lawrence.
"There are also rules about playing in the summer after school is out." she said.
"We have been right up there with the top dogs every time," Albitz said.
Royals shut out Cleveland
CLEVELAND — Storm Davis got a little spoiled during more than two years with the Oakland Athletics. It adjusted to a different style of baseball
The Associated Press
Davis, using a new delivery that he developed during spring training, in 1985 last night as the Kansas City Royals beat the Cleveland Indians 6-0.
"Every time out in spring, I got more comfortable dropping my arm down to three-quarters," Davis said. "There comes a time in your career when you need to make adjustments. Fortunately, Pat Dolson came along at the right time."
"In Oakland, I was able to pitch up in the strike zone a little more." Davis said, explaining that Oakland's defense made the offense more capable of offense made life easier on a pitcher.
"That's about as good as Storm has pitched for us," manager John Wathan said. "He liked I likeled him. Pat has been working with him on himkeeping it down."
In Kansas City, it's been a different story. After going 19-7 during 1889, his final season with the A's, Davis stumbled to 7-10 last year, the first of his three-year contract with the Royals.
Pitching coach Pat Dobson, signed by Kansas City last October, helped Davis modify his delivery so that he could hit the ball as an angle instead of straight overhand.
It was the fourth time the Indians not been blanked in 12 games this season.
The new motion helps Davis keep the ball low.
Davis, 2-1, pitched his first complete game of the season and only his third in the last five years, yielding five hits, walking none and striking three home runs. His shutout was a three-hit, 6-0 victory against Seattle on Aug. 30, 1985.
Davis is 10-2 lifetime against Cleveland, including 6-1 in Cleveland Stadium.
"Davis threw strikes," Cleveland
Royals predict knee injury keeps Brett out for a month
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A knee injury will keep George Brett out of action for about four weeks, the Kansas City Royals said yesterday.
Brett suffered a partial tear of the medial collateral ligament in the right knee, said Steve Joyce, the team physician.
Joyce said his examination revealed no damage to the cartilage or cruciate ligament and surgery would not be necessary.
Brett, who won the American League batting championship for a third time last season, was injured while running out a grounder in the eighth inning of Monday's 10-4 loss to Cleveland.
Brett said he slipped on loose dirt as he came out of the batter's
The Royals said Brett would likely be placed on the 15-day disabled list today.
box after hitting a sharp grounder up the middle.
"It made a real loud pop. The same thing's happened to me four times before, twice to each knee. This was a very similar sensation. Each time it's happened, I've torn a ligament."
"I felt something when I was running, but it didn't seem real bad," he said. "Then it popped when I went out to play first base.
Ligament tears in the same knee caused Brett to miss 24 games in 187 and 35 in 1989. Staying healthy last season, he rebounded from a miserable start with a crown-buckling crown with a 329 average.
Brett is off to another slow start this season, hitting only .170.
Joyce said the knee should be immobilized for two weeks, and Brett would need about two weeks of rehabilitation after that.
manager John McNamara said. "That's his reputation. You give him that kind of a lead and he's going to throw strikes."
Kirk Gibson had three his including a home run, his fifth. He has homered in three consecutive games.
Warren Cromartie also had three hits, including an infield single that started the Royals' four-run second inning.
Loser Eric King, 1-2, lasted $4^{1/3}$ innings, giving up six runs and 10 hits.
Kansas City scored four runs on six hits in the second inning. Mike Macfarlane doubled the first run, and Kevin Hearn hit a single and Keenan Seltzer hit a RB1 single.
The Royals single runs in the third on Kurt Stillwell's RBI single and in the fifth, on Gibson's 420-foot home run to right center.
Notes: Kansas City center fielder McRae flaged down several long fly
balls in center field, including deep drives by Brook Jacoby and Joel Skinner. McRae had plenty of room to work because the Indians pushed the center-field fence back 15 feet during the offseason, to 415 feet from home plate. . . Gibson last homered in three straight games Sept. 17-19, 1985, against the New York Yankees at Tiger Stadium. Those home runs were off Ron Guidry, Phil Niekro and Rod Scurry. 'Davis' last complete game was Aug. 19, 1989, when he beat Minnesota 5-4 for Oakland. . . Indians reliever Shawn Hillegas pitched 3% scoreless innings, striking out five. The Cleveland bullpen has given up one run in its last 21½ innings. . . Cromartie started at first base in place of George Brett, who will be out about a month because of a partially-torn medial collateral ligament in his right knee. Brett hurt the knee Monday night while leaving the batter's box on a grounder.
Direc
Ron Klein/KANSAN
Ruqby maul
Tom Smith, Wichita senior, grips the ball as he begins a rugby play with teammates (from left) Mike Meenahan, Lawrence
Kansas Rugby Club trounces Kansas City
Sports briefs
resident; Don Harris, Lawrence resident; and Paddy DeLarge,
London senior.
The Kansas Rugby Club traveled to Kansas City last weekend where it played the Kansas City Rugby Club. Kansas won the match 40-4 and avenged last fall's loss to Kansas City.
Kansas will travel to Dallas tomorrow, where the team will play in the Western Union Club Championship. The winner will advance to the National Final Four in San Diego. The Kansas Collegiate.
The Kansas Collegiate side, made up of only collegiate players, beat the
the Johnson County Rugby Club 32-0. The Kansas Collegiate and Reserve teams will finish their spring seasons at home against the Topeka/Washburn Rugby Club this weekend.
Kansas City Rugby Club's B-team by a score of 18-4.
Kansas softball team goes 2-0 against SMSU
The Kansas Reserve team lost to the Johnson County Rugby Club 32-0
The Kansas softball team went 2-0 yesterday against Southwest Missouri State in Springfield, Mo.
Kansas freshman pitcher Stephani Williams was credited with the first game victory.
The Jayhawks defeated SMSU 2-0 in the first game and 11-1 in the second.
Junior pitcher Shelly Sack grabbed the second game victory, which boosted her record to 11-0.
Junior third baseman Camille Seiell was Kansas' star hit in both games against SMSU. She had a game and two games and two triples in the second.
The 'Jayhawks' next game will be the Big Eight Conference Round Robin on Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
Suspension upheld for shot-put record-holder
INDIANAPOLIS — A two-year drug-related suspension of Randy Barnes, the world record-holder in the shot put, was upheld by an appeals panel, The Athletics Congress said yesterday.
Barnes, 24, tested positive for methyltestosterone, a banned substance, at a meet in Sweden on Aug. 7, 1990. His suspension began in November and runs through Nov. 1, 1992.
From staff and wire reports
Boxers' camps trade stinging word blows Sides don't agree on bout terms
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Evander Hollyfield and Mike Tyson have not agreed to fight yet, but their camps already are engaged in a war of words.
Tyson's promoter, Don King,
started the verbal volley yesterday
with a barrage of challenges and
charges against Hollyfield and his
three closest associates; promoter
Joe Dava and manager Shelly Finkel.
During an informal luncheon with reporters, King repeatedly called Finkel and the diars and deceivers, accused Holyfield of ducking Tyson and challenged the heavyweight champion to a winner-take-all against Tyson in September or October.
"We'll fight him anytime, anywhere, anyplace." King said. "The winner goes home with everything, the loser goes home with nothing."
King said, "The public wants this fight, I want this fight and Mike Tyson wants this fight, but Hollyfeld and his people are trying to avoid it. It's a bravacity. Boxing fans are tired of being treated like Bozo the Browm."
Informed of King's comments, Dan Duya launched a counterattack.
Dua said Friday's Holyfield George Foreman fight breathed fresh air into the sport.
"Now Don King has gone back to polluting the environment." Duva
King said a 50-50 split was fair because Tyson was a bigger draw than Holvfeld.
"When I was the challenger, Tyson was going to get 75 percent and I was going to get 25," Hollyfield said.
Dua dismissed King's winner-
take all challenge, as well as an
alternate offer of a 50-50 split
champion and No.1 a challenger.
Holyfield, who won a unanimous decision against Foreman, criticized King's 50-50 proposal Monday night on the "The Arsenio Hall" show.
"Evander Holfyde can't draw flies to a dump," King said. "Just because he's the champion doesn't mean he should get the most money. When Muhammad Ailu fought Larry Brown, his money got $3 million even though he was the champion. That's because people came to see Ali, not Holmes."
Dan Duva said he was wining to negotiate the spurse pilt, but was not going to debate it point by point in the media. If the two sides cannot settle their differences by June 1, the payouts would be decided in a "purse bid" by one of boxing's three main sanctioning bodies: the World Boxing Council, World Boxing Association and International Boxing Federation.
"They're both ridiculous," Dua said. "Fighters work too hard for one guy to come away with nothing."
Spinks considers return to ring
The Associated Press
Spinks, 37, would fight Harold "Hackie" Reitman, a 41-year-old doctor from Plantation, Fla., who began his professional boxing career two years ago and has a record of 8-1-2
"This is not a done deal," matchmaker Tommy Torino said. "I've been told by the state boxing commissioner that Spinks will have to undergo a medical workout, and we have to make sure he's clean from
"But if he meets all the requirements, he's going to be Hackie's opponent."
The fight would be May 23 at War Memorial Auditorium, on the same card as actor Mickey Rourke. Rourke's ononent hasn't been selected.
Spinks, the 1976 heavyweight Olympic gold medalist, is younger than Larry Holmes, 41, and George W. Bush, 43, who come-back bouts earlier this month.
Spinks beat Muhammed Ali in February 1978 to win the heavy-weight title, then lost it to Ali in his next fight in September 1978. He has since been involved in several well-publicized motoring mishaps, filed for bankruptcy protection, tended bar in Detroit and, more recently, moved to Chicago and apparently resumed training.
He was suspended by the Nevada state boxing commission in June 1986 for testing positive for an unspecified depressant after a March 1986 fight with Dwight Qawl.
Reitman has sparred with former heavyweight champion Trevor Berbick and, in February, met former lightweight champion Roberto Duran in a three-round exhibition in Hollywood, Fla.
14
Wednesclav April 24. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Environmental studies program grows at KU
The environmental studies program at KU has grown tremendously during the last several years and is one of the most rapidly growing of all institutions in existence, Jerry DeNoyleys, professor of environmental studies.
Kansan staff writer
By Katie Chipman
DeNoylems said that the program had been in existence for 20 years but that only in the past several years had they met with 60 students matched in the field.
"I now we have over 20," he said. DeNoyelles said there was an increasing environmental studies trend at some universities but not with the intensity that is present at KU.
"Five years ago we had 50 majors,
I knew we have 990." he said.
"I pretty sure we're the fastest growing major on this campus as far as the numbers of students go," he said.
The environmental studies program is an interdisciplinary program, DoNeyleys said, which means the study of natural areas in an area from different areas of study.
"We draw upon resources throughout the University," he said. "Our majors take history, geology, biology and urban planning, among other things, because environmental problems touch upon different areas."
"The problems of the environment are not scientific," he said. "They
Clark said the program trained students not only to be academicians but to be hands-on environmentalists.
John Clark, professor of history,
said that he taught two classes in the
program this semester but that next
semester he would divide his time
between history and environmental
studies.
Clark said the program maintained a balance between social sciences and humanities and did not stress science as much as it had in the past.
"Science isn't going to solve all of our problems," he said.
John Powell, St. Louis junior, said he was originally an engineering major but changed majors when he learned to aware of environmental problems.
Powell said the interdisciplinary program was beneficial because the problems of the environment could not be solved by one field of study.
"The multidisciplinary program gives students a broader understanding of the world, and it trains you a little in a lot of fields."
"There are problems with the way people relate to the world around them," he said. "They don't respect the environment."
News staff applications are due Thursday, April 25th. Please turn in the application to 111 Stauffer- Flint Hall by 5:00 p.m.
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Final week of quitting business sale at the Book End, in Quincantón. FInet Market. All hardback books $1-no exceptions. Friday Sunday 10-30.
BATTERY can be emotional or physical WTUS Campus Support Group for battered women night monday 7-9pm. Call 841 6476 for help.
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Freshmen, Sophomore,
and Junior males
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Registration for
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(April 27-28) is due
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KU Graduation Announcements still available dark's Bridal 843-7628
In Honor of Mother's Day
Gay & Leishan Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice Free, confidential referrals (called reunion by counselors) Headquarters 841-234 or KU Info 844-3506 Sponsored by
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or Soda 1-8 pm
Registration forms can be picked up at any of the residence halls or
Hillel לולה
To inquire contact the WTC at P.O. Box 633, Lawrence, NS 60444, or call 841-6887 by "my" to order delivery by Mailing Address.
Have you been censored by a professor? Have you been disciplined or penalized for using language that others find objectful, racist, sexist, etc. If you have please contact David at 841-7290.
The Lawrence Women's Transitional Care Services is offering specially designed Mothers Day cards to express your sincere feelings. A gift of 15 # or more to WTCS will help support services for battered women and families. WTCS organizes communities. In return for your tax payment, WTCS volunteers Gina Marcuco to honor the strength, love, and commitment of her family.
W
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER! **There are there with AIRHITCH for $160 from the East Coast** to the Midwest (when you reach Atlanta) **Times & Leaf for AIRHITCH** to **$121 864-2000**.
the residence halls or
the IFC office,
424 KS Union.
Any questions call 021-263-2272.
Events of the Week
Thursday, April 25
Hillel Elections
6:30 p.m. Hillel House
It was a day! I advertise. No messages! Dead machine. Now it works. Call and see what I can do for you. 1-800-879-4021
An agency of United Way of Douglas County
Friday. April 26
Any questions.. call 864-3559
Friday, April 26
Final Shabbat Dinner of semester
6 p.m. Hillel House
R.S.V.P. by Thurs. April 25
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Jane Doe
140 Lost-Found
130 Entertainment
awrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
41.2752. R. N. 1
FOUND. Cat, white paws/tail. Dark gray and brown-striped white triangle on face with brown.
Call 864 2531 864 2582 to claim/adopt.
Found: Keys, second floor lobby in Dole, April
22nd Call to claim, 749-4323
Found: Pearl earring in Wescoe on 4/19. Call
864-4523. Describe to claim.
LOST PARROT' Green with red forehead. Valued companion. If seen, call Kevin at 749-3707 or 841-529. $19 Reward
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CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach swimming, canning sailing, water skiing gymnastics, swim lessons, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, $100 or more; plus RIB Maree, Magee 1768, Maple Nild, MP
Aggressive GM Import dealership is seeking positive self-steer, female or male, for an exam. The applicant must be possible for the first year, excellent math skills and an appointment 106-341-152. Ask for Mike or Rock
Attendant needed for disabled woman. Some lift-
ing required. Approx. 7 hrs. a week. $4.50/hr.
842 1794
Camp Counselors
BANNER DAY CAMI
- XEN MAST * Soccer
* Baseball * Basketball
* Baseball * Gymnastics
* Floor basketball * 21 yr old dancers
* Please decorate your summer play at our lake Forest Camp (25 miles N of Chicago).
CLINTON MARINA is hiring restaurant help. Positions open include grill cook, water waitress. Must be 18 yrs old. Apply Tuesday and Wednesday at 9 am at the Marina.
KCU Bookskeep. $4 per hour, part-time,
no fringes, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday
at 8:30 p.m. could work vary days and hours
and have previous experience in job-
have previous, verifiable employment record as a
carrying or handing money and able to stand for
long periods. App Kauai Kansas Personnel OE
475-235-6900
EARN $5,000-$10,000. Now hiring-managers and
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Ic call 800-401-COLEGE. Mr. Gannon.
Here is an opportunity to earn money, see the country, and keep physically fit all in one exciting place. You can to drive a truck and move household goods. You can call 747-817 East 10th street or call 843-688 right away.
GRADUATING *STUDENT* NEEDED-CAREER
Training. Provide training in business/
personal/management. Benefits include excellent startling salary, company car at the resorts and restaurants, professional experience a must call collect, Mr. Schwartz,
Mrs. Schwartz, or both.
Earn up to $800-$1200/mo. part time this summer at home. To schedule an interview, call Straight Enterprises, 842-9190.
Fun & Exciting-Plus you can make $18/hour waitressing. Must start part-time now 18 yrs and up. Apply 1:30 w/ 94 at Mississippi
COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERNS Deadline:
10% Salary $50-$60k月 Jutures include
working in IT or computer science to
support data communications and networking,
working primarily in "C" on MS DOS, UNIX, and
Linux. Required: proficiency with
documentation, and maintenance of ex-
isting software systems. Install communicat-
ion hardware and software, including
insulting with staff and users in computer com-
puters. Provide areas to apply. Sub-
ply application of offer to a recruiter.
Athena Hirkenau, Person Officer, Computer
Center at USK, Kansas, Lawrence, KS
EMPLOYEE ONLY
LPN's wanted for group home program serving developmentally disabled adults. Requires extensive organizational, supervision, and assess requirements. Req. 1821 K; Call P. Sirius 913 - P. (455) 760-4200 required. $1821 K; Call P. Sirius 913 - P. (455) 760-4200
Excellent pay processing hand-made items for national company. Start immediately! Call 504-641-8003 Ext. 3444
NANNEES - year long. East Coast, Airfare, great
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NANNEIS immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida Excellent salaries plus benefits, 1 year commitment. Call area representative. 913.627.3044.
Housekeeper for summer and next year, experience and own transportation required. 842-1343.
Need a break? Be a nanny! Earn good money, go to interesting places for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency, Lawrence 842-4443
Part-time secretary/bookkeeper needed beginning 20 May 2019. p 5 am/5 pm. wk knowledge of word processing, general accounting procedures, data analysis skills required, 4 p 22 hour. Send letter of interest, resume, and name and phone number of references by 1 May to Edge Enterprises, P O 248 NW 32ND ST, ATLANTA, GA 30306.
Need money fast! Make up to $125.90 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary. 1-800-695-2789
Need person to show apartment, answer phone and general office work. Full-time in summer with possible part-time in fall. Must have car and be work study eligible. Call Carm B 941-840-1603.
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. 9t. *Large apartment, furniture, W/D, summer storage.* 841-3300.
Sitter needed for summer for 12 yr old boy, Alavar area. Live in optional. Room and board provided. 749-8358 after 6.
Work available in K.C. area. Secretarial-word processing, data entry and secretarial skills required for position with experience. Apply 13 pm May 6th or 20th. Packing materials will be required plus fixes. Flexible schedule apply. Apply online at https://careers.northwestkc.edu/5725NorthwestKC婷 Terse 9th (12 & 18) e-mail jobs@northwestkc.edu Part-time position available for technician at
COLLEGE GRADUATES
Part-time time available for technician at Microtech. Requires some knowledge of IBM PCs. Training provided. 841 9513, ask for Raymond Dana.
Wanted for Management
Men and Women
Trainee and Marketing positions.
Interviews will also be given for other positions waiting to be filled.
Large national manufacturer is NOW HIRING people to staff our factory distributorship here in Lawrence.
Expect $2,500/MO Plus
Thursday, April 25th
Burge Union
Frontier Room
Ask for Mr. Lozer
DRESS FOR SUCCESS
Available:
1
Car & Clothing allowance
New divisional outlet, large customer base and our corporate expansion necessitates those openings.
Applications and personal interviews.
Social Services - opening available for married couple to live in and direct treatment program for 8 youths aged 12-17 Must enjoy working with children who are eligible to apply to applicants in which one person has a social science degree *Starting salary* $300 plus荷包 benefits package *12 days off per day*. Must be 21 years old and have valid Driver License. Outside of USA, visit us at 913-754-287-Mon EOE
Social Service Community Living opportunities seek motivated, energetic people to teach daily living and vocational skills to developmentally disabled adults, shifts, PT and FT and weekend needs. Excluded preferred. Excellent advancement opportunity: 112-6 S K Callmore (911) 863-2080
Steerermaster Assistant, Kansas Union Food Service. Monday-Friday, 12am-1pm. $4.25 an hour, part-time. no fringe. Must have valid phone number. Please include previous inventory or stock clerk experience preferred, money handling helpful. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office, 13th and Level 4.
SUMMER-FALL PART-TIME JOB as persona caretard attentive for disabled, restrained KU staff member in family setting. Mature lifestyle, intelligence, experience and morning afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU vacation a plan good for OT JEFF. Job offers in various locations of students or persons with like interests. Reliable car and phone required. U. C. citizenship desired. 842-798-1461 between 1:30am-7:00am weekdays to apply.
SUMMER-Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counselors in WSI, Tennis, Arts & Crafts/Ceramics. Soccer Coach, Technical Coaches. Call 1-800-443-6288 for information. Call ARISE Call 1-800-443-6288
Summer and fall sales help wanted. Background preferred in HPER 35-40 hrs/week. Apply at Athlete's foot. 92 Mass.
TENNIS COUNSELLO'S - Boys' resident camp in Berkeley Mountain, western waits, looking for new students. The campus courts, court and hard surfaces. High salary, room and board from 6/18/18. Call Mr Lee坐
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests. Fire Chews. Send Stamp For Free Details. Saltwater. 113 E. W. Wyoming, Kalispell, Mt. 59901.
**Testbook Clerks:** KU Bookstores. Part time $4.25 per hour; position could possibly last up to September 16, 2018. Must be able to work weekdays between the hours. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods of standing. Must have a valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant have interest or knowledge of books. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Level. 5 Level.
-
Driver Education offered mid-Timelaw Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
225 Professional Services
THE INFO is looking for a few dedicated individuals to assist with merchant subscriptions and customer service for our transportation. Casual business attire will be required. Travel arrangements will be helpful. Failure placement available.
Government photos, passports, immigration,
senior portrait, modeling & arts portfolios/BAW, color. Call Tom Swells 749-1611
Want a summer job where you can lose weight, feel great and earn lots of money? Please call Debbie (816) 444-2251.
Interested in good health? Let us help you lose/ gain weight with our natural body synchronized formula "Diet Disc Program." 100% guaranteed. Call (933) 748-0900.
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TRAFFIC - DUI'S
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DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street 843-6000
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
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235 Typing Services
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Processing Call Therese at 841-0776
1. Layer Paper processing with paper processing.
2. Word Processing. Term Papers, letters,
resumes, etc. Call 843-4754, 3:30 to 30 pm wkdys,
anytime wkdys
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25 double-spaced page: Call Mrs. Mattila 10 am 6 p.m.
441-1219 841-1229
A - Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pigs. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. #427-7831
Call I.J. Rl. *Typing Services 841-5942*. Term paper, legal secrets, ect. No calls after 9 p.m. Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, term sheets, dissertations, letters, and memoirs. Free on-line typing and spelling corrected. 2001 G W 218th S.B. 8a m. 4p m. F. 5a m. 4p m. B4 8274
FAST ACCURATE TYMPING 49.5 per page. Includes PU and DI, elsewhere in city limits. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Mae at: 843.3822
Resumes
* Professional Writing
* Cover Letters
* Laser Printer
Transcriptions
2012 Mass 842-4619 upstarts (suite 200)
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you to produce your best possible答案. Phil, 824-6255
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable fast service Call after 1:00 pm 841-6345
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting,
typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927*
Mass. B41-1071
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call
842 3203
Research Projects! Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call KeyWorks. 842.8307
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. 841-6234
Word Processing $1.00 pg. Spell check, etc. Call
843-4698
300s
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
12x50 Mobile home 2 bedroom W/D, stove,
refrigerator $150. 842-0794, leave message. 2 cats free to good home
1986 Honda Aeros 30. Runs great, looks good, 90 hrs
worth; $300. MBO 865. 93-390
1975 Cannondale racing bike. Shimano 600, hardly used. $400. reg. Call Sam. 885-1510.
1870 Chevrolet Spectrum, 4.4f, 25.0, 2000 miles
Subber condition. $850 for sbd. Call 914-9022
1886 Honda Elite, Low mileage. Like new. $480
841-6136
94 Jeep CJ-7. Hardtp. AC, 4-spd. Good condition.
Asking $500. Call 865-0629.
'86 Ninja under 10,000 miles. New Dunlop $2300
obo 749-0300, leave message.
BAFGAIN One-way ticket. KCI to NYC LaGuar
da on May 14th, XMN. Carl Dawle, 864-2694.
Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
Everything But Ice. 936 Massachusetts.
Custom box with two 12" Orion extreme subwoofers $300 Rockford Foggate Punch 75 HD amplifier $250 Call after 5am at 842-8048
For sale SUZUKI 450KS 1980, New front exe, laux-
head headlight. Sleeping bag Call 841-2831.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks.
test, cannulation clothing, wet weather gear, shoes.
TOWEAR, WORKWEAR. Mat Sun-4/31 7:24/24 7:24/24 Marmy burpies Sales St. Mary's Hospital. Shoes. Boots. New brakes. brakes. Garage keep. New brakes. brakes. Garage keep.
Honda Elite Moped 90cc. 70 miles, almost new.
Call before 12:30 am. 865-0677.
Must sell 1988 Bianchi Allante Mountain Bike Shimano Components. Good condition. $150 obo. Call 865-2778.
final rate a$upoq $bwr. w/ hrs. ban.
6900 Call before 12:48 am. 805-667-871
MariageGolf Club, less than 1 yr old. 2-SW
buy offer B42-7011
Stillwater Kicker CTF Supersport. 150W. Barely used. $85 new, asking $185. 843-4233, Mike
Waterbed a 5 sale: Super-single, packed side rails,
headboard with wallpaper. $90. 841-2702.
NEW REALEIGH BIRKE WITH SCHWINN 100
PUMP (INCLUDES GAUGE) $250,842-914-6
Neon Lights - Busch, Budlight, Buph Guitar $100
Rockford Fosgate car stereo equipment for sale.
Call 864-2902
Sony CD $150, AKA1 Amp and tape $180. Equalizer $249. Marantz receiver and speaker $150 HP 40XS $249. 843-7309
340 Auto Sales
1980 Ford Fairmont, Low mileage, no hail damage. Good condition, good stereo. $1800 obo
749-2435
1989 Plymouth Horizon, auto, a/c, am-fm, 13,000 miles, like new interior. $6,200 negotiable. Call 842.8041.
9KK, 94K, 96K, 97K, 108K, Amazon Precs.
39K, $3400, 843-7580 after 6pm.
Civic Wagon 9KK, 99K, am/fm, good, $1849. 8am
Civil Wagon 84, 9K am/fm, good $1049.8m
84632 or leave message.
Loaded 1984 Toyota Celica GTS Coupe...
alloy wheels, immaculate condition. High
five miles, $4,500 request. 1,633-2252
For sale 1981 TOYOTA CELICA GT. Always
starts, runs great, no hail. $1400.00 841-4449
evenings.
Mazda EX-7 X 5 spd, A/C, sunroof, alloys $2500
841-5184
360 Miscellaneous
T
400s real Estate
370 Want to Buy
On TV, VCS, vcky's, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Vista/MACMEM Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry 1804.W 6th.749-1919
405 For Rent
Wanted C$6.99 and down Records and tapes $2.99 and down. Top dollar for collections Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts. 865-022
1 BR, CA WD hookup, quiet! For rent or buy
$275 mo. 842-9136
1 bedroom basement apartment, walk to campus and KU. Available mid-August. $205, utilities incl. non-smoker. 842-4968
1 bedroom bedroom for sublease May 15-May 16. Will pay $1, May and August rent. Like new, air conditioning. Call 865-3278. Leave message
1 or 2 females for summer sublease. Great location, nice spacious, pool, AC, DW, MW. Renoteable. Please leave message. 965-2222
Signature: P. T. McMahon, inc., 800 S. Broadway
2 and 3 bedroom. Downtown, apps for rent. Greg at
843-6855 8am-5pm. Available May 15.
2 Bdr apt available August Walk to KU or downstream Wood floor, washer/dryer hookups Water paid no. pets $440/mi. 841-1074
2 bedroom / 2 bath summer sublease in Meadowbrook. We rent for $70/mo. We'll rent to you for $70/mo. Water, cable paid-pool! Sorry, no pets. Call 841 6947.
2 bt apt setup in new building of West Hills
college, 2 bt apt setup in new building of West Hills
cloak room, ceiling fan, dishwasher, walk-in
chairs, energy efficient gas heat Great location
near campus. 100 Emery Ave. #450 no. No pets.
www.west hills.edu
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, disability, 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.
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option.
Spacious. Economical. AC, DW, on bus route. Call 749-3477
3 br house available Aug. 1 Full basement, central air, no pets. n194 E. 13th. Call 841-0855 for appt. $400 monthly
br threehouthe, 2 b/a, w/b, d驾, garage, low utilities, available 6/1. Sunrise Village 843-4591. 3 studio apt, for rent starting at $205.00. No calls. Pet #749-7588
4 BR apt for summer sublease. 2 bth., W/D, WC,
AC, microwave, phone, tennis courts, on bus route
Sunrise Village. Call Kim, 865-9625, leave
message.
4 bedroom, 2 bath. AC. $600 a month. Available after May 16th. A3-849-480.
- Chamberland Place Apartments, 12th Ohio (new construction) and 1 & 2 BR (Formerly Villa Capri) in the city of Columbus. (new construction) 2-BR-1 bath, 3-BR-2 bath, all washers (dryers) from Memorial
- 541 Michigan. 8 yr. I班 - 3B- BR- 3H bath. All with washer/dryer. Bath 1, Bath 2, Bath 3, Bath 4, Bath 5, Bath 6, Bath 7, Bath 8, Bath 9, Great prizes. Call today, First Management 740-156, Open house every Saturday from 12s to 15d. Boardroom 30, Colorado College - C-1) Offices Monday Mon-Fri.
APARTMENTS: Kansas City; Small, large walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfinished. Quit, secure building, many extras. 816-361-9228
A PERFECT sublease June and July. Female roommates needed. Close to campus/downstreet.
AC wash/did microwave. 865-381.
Available June or August. Efficiency: 1. bedroom
apts in nice old houses Walk to KU or
downtown. £285 and up. No pets. 841-1074
Available June and July for sublease. 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown.
842-9045
Available June 1, option for fall: *bhard apartment with loft in Orland Park* Spacious, beautifully furnished, pool, on bus route. Extra furniture free. 841-1454.
Available for summer sublease. Surise Village
townhouse, AC microwave, pool tennis courts,
on bus route. Price negotiable. Call 855-369-
Bar Hoppers!! Summer sublease for a righteous party palace.少 than block from Hawk, Bull, and Wheel. 4 br apt. For info, call 841-9603.
Cheap summer sublease. Furnished 1 and/or 2 bedrooms. No deposit. $120/mo plus utilities.
865-3606
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$304-415/mo. Call 841-216-911.
Downtown 1 bedroom (large enough for 2 tolerant people). Clean and efficient, large deck. 843-3961
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 24, 1991
15
Coops have been part of KU since 1919. Come a long tradition of a cultural living that is fun, social responsibility, environmentally conscious, community oriented, and home-like. House: 406 Tennessee, 749-0711 or 814-0484.
EMERY PLACE
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water费, $225 per month. Available summer students. Some with utilities paid. Ceiling fans, mbi lights, lamps. From campus at 1491 and 1482 OH 804-7644. From campus at 1491 and 1482 OH 804-7644.
Excellent location. 1 block to bedroom 2
up in 4+ spaces, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA,
no pets, available 1 June. $30. At 1141 Ohio, CA.
842-4242
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice townhouse $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and much more! May Call Ann (evenings best) 814-4584
Female wanted for summer sublease at Orchard Corners. Rent negotiable! Call Cristina. 841-1426.
Got Married, need solider, 1 bedroom apartment with fireplace, wet bar, full appliances Water and cable included. $380.843.802
Female winwed for summer subleases at Orchard
Firm. Ten bedroom apartments in nice, old-
house, wooden floors, sun room, a/c gas,
and furnishings. Available Date: 540 No. 300
per suite. Avail. Date: 11/17/98
A ENABLE TABLE. 2 bw / microwave. May rent paid. Close to campus. Call us 843-4124
TORNAN HOUSE - Subsumer suite 3 bedroom. Laundry, washing, garage. Great call. Call 841-5138
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water paid $200. Call 841-253-6111.
Bright, modern apartment in bedroom apartment with sunporch. CAB, flats, no pet. Available June 1, $99; at 180
Hey KU Med. students-move in 1 and receive $t_2$ off your rent for 2 months at *Studios* and 2 bedrooms apartments. *Heat and water* paid by the Med. Center. Rainbow Towers Apt. 911-836-6313.
Hey!) KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and offer you a lift for rent in 2 months. *Studies, and 2 beamed aisles *Heat and water paid *Access to Rain Center Rainbow Tower Apts 931-891-983
Huge 2 bedroom summer sublease. Free furniture use if necessary. Gas/water paid. 865-1387. Leave
International Students: Tired get kicked out of the dorms with the sun? Holiday! House stay 365 days a year and is a great place.宿舍 146 Tentrees 794-867 or 811-0844
Large studio apartment for summer sublease
Nest $280 per month. Call today 841-9113
Leasing now for Fall or Summer, 2 Br apt. +
4Plex 12-month庭院 CA, DW Close to Campus,
Off street parking, Low Utilities, Call 842.8748
At Tracy or leave message.
Lormar Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new. Available now 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thus May, July or for 12 months. 841-7843, 844-7843
NAISMITH PLACE APTS
*Jacuzzi in every apt.
*Paid cable TV.
*Central Kitchen.
841-1815
25th St. Ct. at Ousdahl
Nice. one bdr apartment close to campus. Hardwood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-2919 or 842-9007 evening.
Nice studio at 1032 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts Water paid 843 5272.
Nice two bedroom home with all appliances
New carpet and paint. Blinds, garage, quiet area
no pets, prefer long term tenants. Available im-
mediately. $435, 847-2888
Now leasing, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southbridge Plaza Apt. 153, rented room, $75; rooms starts at $35, to十月 leave. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1968.
New leasing for June and August. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kit (beds, baths, closets, gas, heat, carpet, draps and blinds). Low 20% down payment. $110 SPRING CHAIR APARTMENTS
August 1st, 1 HR for two. One block from Kansas Union For rent to graduate students. upper-class students or KI employees. One HR for rent to students. One HR for rent. $260.00 mi. 841-352-6394 after 6 PM
Roommate needed for sublease for 4 bedroom townhouse with 2 bathrooms. $185.00 per month, $1.Utilities_841.2832
FOR RENT: Professor s 2 BR house, $500 June
1919-1992 841-8844
Perfect Location one bk to town, 3 bks to camp
2 bedroom apartment in fourplex. C/A No.
pairs. Available Aug 1 $80 At 1104 Tennessee
Call 882-842-942
Studio apt at 1029 Mississippi. Available now.
$205.00 plus deposit. 749-7568.
SUBLASELE: BIR 1 (1 or 2 occupancy) $55 plus
usages, pool, room weight, laundry, on-complex,
available mid-May thru July Call Kathy,
961524 leave message
Roommate needed to share three bedroom three story townhouse for summer. Close to campus: 841-1468
Spacious 30-inch duplex available June 11 and August 1. New carpet, paint and blinds. All kitchen appliances, central air, gas heat. Wheelchair hookup, garage. No pets. #843-28388.
SUMMER SUBLEASE, with option for fall. 1 bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid. All electric. 1579 Lynch Ct, Sundance. B252 or 840-6614.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, garage. AC 2012 Heatherwood. 841.9707
SUBLET 2 rooms in bt. townhouse. Avail early May to end July $180/mo + utilities. Will negotiate. No dep. Extra incentive. Please call 842-7335 Kerrie.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beautiful 2 bedroom for
2-4 people in Sundance F. In furnished, private pool,
more $468. Call now 863-2816, leave message
SUMMER SUBLEASE. HUGE 3 BEDROOM
APARTMENT. Fantastic location close to
campus. Upper 2 floors of house. $500 per month
call Obj-61-0283.
Sublease two bedroom apt with W/D. Call
841-7645. Rent $355.00 mo.
Sublease two bedroom apt May 15-Aug 15 $145 per month, 748-769 or 847-890, ask for Jennifer.
Sublease 3 bdm townhouse from mid-May or June 1 to July 19 $1 bath, fireplace. $50/mo utilities. On bus route 749-3407
Sublease: Three bedroom apartment close to campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 885 297-9
Sublease. Nice 1 BASE iRA$4 Water pad, w/d p/c airc,
microware, dishwasher on KU bus r/c route.
$500 month neg. w/ lease renewal option at end of Job.
Please call 853-69100
Sublease for summer apt. Non-smoker. Close to campus. Call 832-2013, leave message.
Cohort begins Monday, May 7 at sun.
Apts. Price negotiable Call 665-2995
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2
bedroom aps. 1kb from KU with off street parking,
no pets. Kaii 840-500.
Summer and Fallailing Furried rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bk from UK for of street parking. No pets. 84-5060
Summer Suburbs 3. rooms available May 1-July 11. Unfurnished 4-bdrm townhouse in Silvirage Village. Female non-smoker $180/mo plus $140 refundable fee. 78-106-2500.
Summer Sublease. V. cool studio near 9th and
Olympic Deck. $250/mo. mug 389-389.
Summer Sublease-Reduced Rent. 3 Br.
Washer/dryer, Microwave, Dishwasher, A/C.
Call 865-1655
Summer Sublease: Three roommates needed.
Very nice apartment, $166 plus utilities. Sundance II Apts. 7th and Florida. 842-2135.
Summer Suite-2 bedroom, incredible location, great balcony. Call Me or Mike 749-3604 Summer Suite-Bedroom - Own bedroom. Very close to City center. 1890 plan plus a unit'sfill at 841-1563
summer sublease in June at Orchard
corners. Call for more info 841-4278
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $550 2 bedroom
$900 and 1 bedroom $250 Heatherwood Valley
Apts. 843-4754
summer sublease. Semm furnished 2 br, jacuzzi it & clean, rent negotiable. Also, female roommate need for next year, non-smoker Jill, 65-0549
summer sublease. Spacious 3 bdm, new kitchen,
fishwhaler, washer/dryer hook ups, good price.
42-4603
Summer sublease. Large studio apt. bus route.
pool, water paid. Option for fall. Call Kim,
KIM319. Leave message if not available.
summer susebbe, male roommate needed. Two
equal, own bathroom. Furnished. Near campus,
water paid. $180/mo. Call Dave 865-2932. June-
ly.
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Free cable
Water paid
苹果
Close to KU bus route
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
4:00 6:00 Test - Fri
ach apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- Dryer Room
- Carports available
1 bedroom $350
2 bedroom $410
3 bedroom $560
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
9:00-12:00 Sa
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt.
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Swan
Summer sublease. Spacious four bedroom townhouse, pool, tennis microwave, dishwasher. Rent negotiable. 749-283.
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Swan Management
- Graystone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
CHEAP! 2 bedrooms available for summer sublease. Completely furnished, great location, super pool. Rent negotiable! Call 749-0213.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
Sat. 11-3 p.m.
South Pointe APARTMENTS
11:53 p.m. 2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Only $250. Call 865-262-7 Leave messages.
Only $250. Call 865-262-7 Leave messages.
Sub on Indiana. Price negotiable 841-3234.
Sub on Indiana. Sale room bedroom house
VERY close to campus. W/D, A/C clean.
Very close to caret of Bent treatment.
865-0945
West School
APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
apts. - furri
and unfurnished
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft $280 to $335 per month
- water & trash paid
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
apartments
- large rooms & closets
- plush carpets
- Water & trash paid
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft 3265-3415
1:00-4:30 p.m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
$365 to $415 per month
(water paid!)
Boardwalk
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- Clean & well maintained
OPEN HOUSE
Great location
- Large closets & living space
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
for Summer & Fall
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
842-4444
- central air & gas heat
- refreshing pool
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- 2 on-site bus stops
524 Frontier
Walk to grocery
2 on site bus stops
Laundry room-50a
Georgetown Apartments
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- On Site MGT./Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- KU Bus Route-Holidom
refreshing po
843-6446
2166 W.26th
- Fenced pool area with
Call about our Summer Special
Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 or 12 Month Leases
630 Michigan 749-7279
Now leasing for summer & fall
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS . RV ADPT
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
- Low Security Deposit
- No pets
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
Pool
for summer & fall
2&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
TRAILRIDGE APTS
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-6871 or drop by 146 Tennessee.
Enlarged to Show Texture
Summer sable! June rent paid. $478.75/month plus 4 yrs licenses. 2 cases of beer free. Call Brad at 865-0031
Summer sublease: Big house, close to campus,
for 3 people. 13th and Ohio. Call 865-1360.
Whole house 3 bedrooms plus walk to KU or downtown, downtown floors, a/c, washer/dryer hookups, dishwasher, sun deck, off street parking, available June. $69.00 No. Pets. b41-1074
studies 3 pools
1&2 BR units 1,2
2500 W.6th 843-7333
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Penchwarm)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
841-5444
Affordable Price!!
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
meadowbrook
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Wide range of GREAT studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts. 2 & 3 bedroom homes among a peaceful country
Visit Meadowbrook Apts
Widowman of CREAT
atmosphere
Lighted Tennis Courts
- Laundry facilities in most
Carports/Garages available Playgrounds
Free Basic Cab KU Bus Stops
Free Basic Cable
Experienced Professional Maintenance
MON-FRI 8:5-30 SAT 8-5
842-4200 SUN 1-4
Sorry No Pets
MEADOWBROOK
It's Time to Step Up to
LOVE
BON EVANS
TICK
TICK
TICK
BOOM!
COMPETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Dedicated with you in mind!
1-5 P.M.
OPEN DAILY
MASTERCRAFT
HANOVER PLACE
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-5255 7th & Florida
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
CAMPUS PLACE
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana
641-1429 - 1148 columns
ORCHARD CORNERS
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
2 leave 64 l in lip sunny apn. *t* = $182.50 plus *t*2 utilities: 843-6136 or 842-0040.
Female roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in Meadowbrook, Water, cable paid, Pool! Call 865-0829
Female subleaser needed over the summer. Call
Lisa S. B41-6000
Looking for a mature respectful non-smoker with healthy approach to life to share my furnished two bedroom apartment. Call 841-6233.
Male roommate needed. Duplex S.W. part of town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robert. 842-4225.
Roommate wanted: House bordering campus,
non-smoker, clean, responsible. Rent: $22.90
total. Call Richard at 749-264-263
Bathroom warranted urgently, 8 rpw. brk townhouse.
Baths on bus route W.D, DW, PW, MN, Summer
$200 salaries included Fall $210 plus t4 salaries
841-3813 Call for Ken
Summer sublease Two roommates needed Large furnished apartment $160 mo. 4 utilities 1310 Kentucky. Near campus. 843-2298
Three mature male roommates need to share large modern home on bus route. W/B, D/C, a large living room, kitchen, deck, etc. MUST SEE $215 plus *u*4 utilities. Call Brian, 843-2100.
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer call. Rebecca, 865-0574
Very quiet place. 2 bedroom house w/ lot in North Lawrence. Rent includes utilities. Call for appl. 841-1729. Steven Lloyd.
Wanted May 1st - Non-homophobic female roommate to share nice, new, a bedroom house close to the office. Required carport, carport, $610.00 plus *u*₄ utilities. Must sublease immediately, will negotiate on
By GARY LARSON
Un-oh. Rain squall's a-comin... My knee is actin' up.
I'd say more like a blizzard, judgin' by my hand here.
Well somethin's happenin'. There goes my head.
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
4. 24
Front porch forecasters
16
Wednesday, April 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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VOL.101.No.139
THE UNIVERSITY DAIL KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA; KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA
ADVERTISING:864-4358
THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Documents show that studio was unsafe
Officials knew about problems in Fall 1989 but didn't close glass-blowing barn until now
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer.
KU officials knew about safety concerns at the glass-blowing studio one and a half years before closing the barn temporarily for safety inspections, according to KU documents.
Channee Barn, situated on West Campus, was shut down Tuesday to glass-blowing until results from an inspection yesterday could be analyzed, said Joe Zeller, chairperson of the department of design.
In Fall 1989, Zeller requested a safety report on Chamney Barn from the KU Environmental Health and Safety Service.
Steven Cater, environmental health and safety officer, complied with
The four-page report, which cited safety concerns such as poor ventilation of carbon dioxide and unprotected live wires, recommended several repairs for the equipment and the building.
The document was distributed to
the department of design, facilities planning and University safety officials
Jim Modig, campus director of facilities planning, said he did not think the barn had been inspected since Cater's evaluation.
Modig said that although he
thought the barn was not entirely safe for glass-blowing operations, repairs at other University buildings had higher priority.
About 30 students used the glass blowing barn this semester.
The decision to repair particular buildings and equipment is based on how the facility benefits the student population, he said. If many students use a building, then it has a better chance of getting part of the repair budget.
Modig said the barn was 42nd or 43rd on a list of about 200 buildings needing major repairs for fiscal 1992, which begins July 1. He expected that only the first 30 projects would be financed by the Board of Regents.
We don't have enough money to
repair everything that needs repairing." he said.
The Legislature needs to allocate more financing for repairs because repair requests are so backlogged, he said.
Modig said that if 25 percent of a building was remodeled, the entire building would have to be brought up to current code. If a building is not remodeled, it falls under the safety规定 that were in force when it was built.
Bringing the barn up to current codes for a glass-blowing studio would cost more than the repair budget could allow. he said.
Chamney Barn has not been remodeled since it was built and still feels like a farmhouse.
rather than the codes for a laboratory, he said.
"As a barn, it's fine. But as a glass-blowing barn, it's probably not." Modig said.
The studio should have been brought up to current codes when the glass-blowing program moved in, he said. The wooden barn, which contains furnaces that operate at temperatures between 2,200 and 2,550 degrees Fahrenheit, opened as a glass-blowing studio in the early 1970s.
Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said he inspected the barn yesterday, but he did not comment on the evaluation.
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Boulevard browser
Mei Rinzieni, Lawrence senior, studies caricatures drawn by Alex Hami, Prairie Village junior. Works of art were displayed in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall yesterday for Arts on the Boulevard, an exhibition by art and design students. The display is sponsored annually by Student Senate to promote culture on campus.
JRP resident assistant dies from breathing difficulties
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie
A KU student died last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital after experiencing breathing difficulties, KU police said.
Brian Meliah, 22, was leaving Joseph R. Pearson Hall, where he was a first-floor resident assistant, about 8:30 p.m., when he what appeared to be an asthma attack, said KU police L1. John Mullens.
A friend encountered Meilah just outside the building and helped him into the hall cafeteria. KU police were called, and when they arrived at 8:33 p.m., residents were administering CPR. Mullens said.
Police took over the CPR until an ambulance arrived. Mullens said that he did not know when the ambulance arrived but that the normal response time for ambulances was four to five minutes.
At 9:08 p.m., Lawrence Memorial Hospital was notified that the ambulance was on its way.
'He had a very powerful impact on that floor and with the students on that floor.'
About 11 last night, first-floor JRP residents met in the floor's lounge with hall personnel, members of the law department, Center and the Rev. Victoria Krische
A hospital representative said Meilahn was pronounced dead at 9:33 p.m.
An autopsy is scheduled for today.
Dave Platt JRP hall director
"He had a very powerful impact on that floor and with the students on that floor," he said.
Meilahn was a senior from Greee
He enjoyed working with computers and was instrumental in upgrading the computer room at JRP, Platt said.
ley, Colo., who was studying architecture.
Dave Piatt, hall director, said the hawk residents were in shock after the attack.
Mellahn also was responsible for the construction of a sand volleyball court outside the hall.
Meihla had just been inducted into the National Residence Hall Honorarium, an honor society for the college's residence hall residents. Platt said.
"He did an incredible service for our building." Platt said.
Rodger Woods, Hutchinson freshman, said he had lived next to Meilah last year.
"He was really always helpful with people who lived on the floor," he said.
Senate begins debate on bill to raise taxes
A memorial service for Melihah is scheduled for 8 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, Platt said.
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Senate will begin debate on a tax bill this afternoon that would increase State General and revenues by almost $120 million.
The bill would raise the sales tax 14 percent to 4.75 percent and increase corporate and personal income-tax rates.
However, a mistake by Democrats revealed in the House yesterday may adversely affect the outcome of the election and money to the Board of Resenis budget.
The House rejected an amendment that would have corrected a technical flaw in the school finance for reform. John Finney signed into law April 13.
The flaw allows local school districts to increase their budget lids by three times more than the amount they might have were voting on originally.
But State Rep. Bill Bowden, D-Godard, chairperson of the House Education Committee, and Speaker of the House Marvin Barkis, D-Louis
burg, said they were aware of the flaw when the House approved the bill almost one month ago but the Senate did not intend to avoid a slowdown in the session.
The revelation angered Republicans, who responded by voting down the correction that took the form of an amendment on a different education bill. The amendment to correct the flaw now will be part of a trailer and could reopen debate on the entire school-finance formula.
Because of that, there is concern that Republicans will push to freeze school-district budgets and kill any kind of tax increase, giving them a large victory in the Democrat-controlled Statehouse.
Even though they were deceived,
Republicans tried to downplay the
event.
"I was one of four Republicans that went in with a group of Democrats to talk to the governor to convince her to sign the bill," said State Rep. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence. "Now I feel kind of foolish for having been a part of that. Especially if the governor knew, as we have been told.
Bowden said, "We were trying to get something resolved in the body early on so we could have a focus to our discussion."
"We're talking about a pretty significant event in terms of the whole session. Let's hope cooler heads prevail and we correct the bill."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who is pushing for a tax increase, said the event in the House could kill the Senate sales and would end any hope of restoring financing to the Regents budget.
"Right now, I've gone from being relatively optimistic to pessimistic," he said. "It hurts the chances of the tax bill."
But State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, said he thought there was a 50-50 chance that the tax bill would pass
"it's close," he said. "I don't know if it will pass or not, but if it does it will be a 21-19 vote.
If I will pass of the test, but if I does not
will be a 21-19 vote.
"But I will debate against it, and I
But I won't debate it will vote against it."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Fighter jet contract promises to fuel demand for engineers
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
A $12.1 billion contract awarded to Lockheed Corp. on Tuesday could be a boon to KU aerospace engineering graduates.
The Pentagon selected the Marietta, Ga., company to build the Air Force's new advanced tactical fighter jet.
David Downing, chairperson of the department of aerospace engineering, said the Pentagon contract could provide opportunities for aerospace graduates.
The contract is expected to generate about 2,000 new jobs for Lockheed's Marietta plant during the next three years.
The Lockheed plant in Calabasas, Calif., is expected to add 4,000 jobs under the development contract. Some parts for the jet will be built in Fort Worth, Texas, and Seattle plants.
"We're all very excited about it," he said.
Not all of the new jobs would be filled by recent graduates, Downing said. According to Lockheed, 5,000 students have recall rights on their jobs.
Downing said more jobs would have been available to KU graduates if the contract had been awarded to McDonnell Douglas in St. Louis.
About 30 KU students graduate each year with aerospace engineering degrees. Downing said.
Dwayne DeSylva, Windsor, Colo. senior, said he was pleased to see Lockheed get the contract because he had applied with Boeing Co. Lockheed's partners on the project are General Dynamics Corp. and Boeing.
"I'm hoping the contract for Lock-heed will up my chances for getting the job with Boeing." he said.
"I applied for an internship at McDonnell, but I probably won't get it now." he said.
But Steve Smith, St. Louis sophomore, was not pleased with the Pentagon's choice. He wanted McDonnell Douglas to get the concession.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Stealthy, agile, fast new fighter Lockheed's YF-22 will become the Air Force's new stealth fighter plan
Speed with efficiency
Cruises at 1,200 mph without using fuel-hungry afterburners
Speed with efficiency Cruises at 1,200 mph without using fuel-hungry afterburners Two powerful engines Fuel, missiles, cannon inside aircraft wings as on
More agile than current jets
Computer-controlled nozzle can point engine exhaust up or down
How YF-22 sneaks up on enemy Angular shape, hidden engines, partly plastic surfaces deflect radar, make it difficult for enemy to detect with radar, infrared, other sensors
Deflected radar
YF-22
Enemy plane
How YF-22 attacks enemy
YF-22's radar locks in on the enemy plane;
plot fires missile
Deflected radar
YF-22 Enemy plane
How YF-22 attacks enemy
YF-22's radar locks in on the enemy plane;
pilot fires missile
YF-22 Radar detecting plane,
returning to YF-22
Enemy plane
SOURCE: Atlanta Journal-Consitution,
Popular Science, Aviation Week and Space Technology, Lockheed Corp.
Research by RAT CABR
Radar detecting plane,
returning to YF-22
Enemy plane
YF-22
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/BILL BAKER
2
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI:74'
LO:56'
50/42
65/38
68/50
81/45
66/54
84/63
87/77
Today's Forecast
A series of storms will move quickly through the state bring clouds and thunderstorms into most of the weekend.
3-day Forecast
Salina
73/53
KC
Dodge City
73/53
Wichita
74/56
Friday - Partly cloudy with a chance of severe storms toward the evening. High 76/ Low 57.
Saturday - Cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms. High 73/ Low 53.
Sunday - Clearing skies and cooler. High 68/ Low 49.
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
forecast by John Winter Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 605-640) 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. 60044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $50 Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
3
Interim appraiser appointed by county
Kansan staff report
An interim appraisal coordinator has been appointed to fill the position of the resigning commissioner in county officials said yesterday.
Sharon Dominik, who has worked in the appraiser's office since 1987, will act as appraisal coordinator until a permanent county appraiser is hired, said Chris McKenzie, county administrator.
McKenzie said that the appointment had been made immediately because Don Gordon, resigning county appraiser, told him earlier this week that he would take his vacation leave today, one week earlier than he originally told the Douglas County Commission.
During a 24-hour reading marathon of Herman Melville's "Moby Dick," Kenda Sessions, Overland Park park, follows along with Peter
Readers have a whale of a time
MOBYDICK
MARATHON
Gordon, who resigned earlier this month after property-value notices were sent to taxpayers, has said he still will help the appraiser's office during the transition period, McKenzie said.
McKenzie emphasized that Dominik's position was only temporary; the Douglas County Commission decided to advertise for a permanent appraiser earlier this month.
'Moby Dick read-a-thon attracts many
Bv Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Students rushed by Wesco Hall yesterday, some only glancing at the speaker who stood behind an amplifier.
But many turned their heads two at the hand-printed sign that said "Moby Dick Marathon." And some who stopped to listen and seek the deeper meaning heard a reader say, "This is his search for a creet white whale.
Seventy people took turns in a 24-hour reading of the Herman Melville's *Moby Dick*. The participants began with the entire novel at 8 a.m. yesterday.
Readers, keeping their place in the novel as their time to read arrived, wasted no time changing hands at the library and their readers tagging up in a team match.
Cheryl Towns, Tonganoxie graduate student, had reached a pivotal point in the novel — when Captain Kane rescued—and as her 3 p.m. reading ended.
Mancall, assistant professor of history. Seventy volunteer readers were scheduled to read for 20 minutes each yesterday and last night.
Towns said she was up to the task of standing before a crowd to read for 2015.
Elizabeth Schultz, professor of English who organized the event, sat in one of five folding chairs in front of the podium for most of the day, wearing a floppy hat to keep out the sun went behind clouds.
Mark Hansen, Prairie Village senior, was asked to read but had not read the novel before. So, he said, he thought he could not read in good
"I'm a graduate-student teacher, so I'm used to reading aloud. Plus, I have a 3-year-old to whom I read every day." (I did get kind of dry toward the end.)
About 20 people seemed to be listening intently, some following along in their own copies of the book at any given time.
conscience without listening to the whole novel.
"It's like Professor Schultz said
withe all over, I will have taken in
the whale."
Beside his yellow lawn chair, Hansen kept an insulated blanket, an umbrella and a cooler with a gallon jug of iced tea. As the reader continued, he followed along in a paperback copy he bought before the
Hearing began.
He began turning down corners of pages he found especially good or moving, he said. His favorite passage was just before the beginning of Chapter 33. "The Specksvinder."
reading began.
Although he found he liked the book, Hansen said the reading would prove to be a test of will rather than of endurance.
will to be in one place for 24 hours," he said. "It might become kind of surreal tonight."
"Because someone else is reading aloud it is much easier than if you read it yourself," he said, "You can get a little lost and then get back into
Hansen said the reading gave him a chance to enjoy a book that he liked.
"It's not so much the time as the
RIZZ
106
McDean burgers
Chef Joe Reitz, associate dean of business, serves hamburgers to John Hamilton, Bellevue, Neb., senior, and Sheri Reed, Wichita state. Reitz volunteered with other deans and administrators to work at a party for the senior class at the Adams Alumni Center last night.
Planning commission OKs first step for Wal-Mart's move to larger store
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Wal-Mart store officials last night received the first in a series of approvals they will need from the city to relocate to a larger Lawrence store.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission voted 94 to rezone about 98 acres on the east side of Iowa Street at 33rd Street from agricultural to commercial use. It was Wal-Mart's second rezoning request in two months.
Planning Commissioner Mary Pewitt cast the dissenting vote, saying that Wal-Mart was moving after only seven years at its headquarters in New York. "I think that the store did not have any estimates
about how long it would stay at the proposed site.
"I'm convinced that we are all here tonight because Wal-Mart did such a poor job in planning in the first place," she said. "Now I must ask myself, some of these sight, could have been avoided."
Prewitt's vote reflected the concerns of some of the other planning commissioners, who said they hoped Wal-Mart would come back next month with a site plan that would address traffic issues and aesthetic concerns.
Dave Evans, planning commission chairperson, said, "What Wal-Mart did on the current site plan is atrocious. I hope they don't asphalt areas that are supposed to be
green."
In February, Wal-Mart requested the rezoning of about 26 acres on the west side of Iowa Street at 33rd Street. Upon the planning department's recommendation, the commission denied the request because the tract of land did not conform to the city's plan and infringed upon a neighboring residential area.
However, both the planning department and commission agreed last night that Wal-Mart had met all of the plan's requirements this time.
Commissioner Bernard Judge said, "Apparently they very carefully read minutes of the last meeting and came back with a careful plan."
Study shows herbicides used in Midwest are spread through rainfall to other areas
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Herbicides that are used primarily in the Midwest are being spread by rainfall to other parts of the country, according to a new government study.
The U.S. Geological Survey in Lawrence is participating in a 23-state study in which rainwater samples are taken for herbicide testing.
The study, which began in March 1990, has shown traces of herbicides in all 23 states that were tested, said Michael Pomes, a student who works at the Geological Survey.
"We're receiving sub-samples from the
"They've evaporated or blown up into the atmosphere as dust and been transported by the wind and redeposited somewhere," he said.
Mike Thurman, a research hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, said herbicides were found in states in the Northeast that did not use the chemicals.
Pomes said the highest amounts were found in Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois.
The maximum amount of herbicide that can appear in a sample before being considered is 20,000 mg.
were found to have 0.3 parts per billion, which is below the maximum contaminant level set by the Environmental Protection Agency.
He said the three sites tested in Kansas
Pomes said the concentrations of the herbicides found in the rainwater increased in the months following the applications of them and then decreased in the following months.
Dave Rhoades, park manager of the Corps of Engineers at Clinton Lake, said studies had been done in the past at the lake in which traces of the herbicide altrazine were found.
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Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fighting poverty
New study challenges common assumptions when trying to solve the problems of the poor
For the urban poor, teen-age pregnancy is on the rise, violent crime is rampant and schools are failing.
A recent Brookings Institution study refutes these myths and calls into question basic assumptions by conservative and liberal politicians alike of how to solve the problems of the poor.
Overall, violent crime has decreased. A greater percentage of high-school students are graduating.
The findings included the following surprises: Teen pregnancy rates have declined sharply since the mid-1960s.
Some findings could be expected:
Income has dropped for young men, particularly
for minority men and those who did not finish
college.
Young African-American men are more likely to take part in or be victimized by crimes than in years past.
Most disturbing is that liberal and conservative
theories brought forward to eliminate poverty have not worked. Liberals who blame poverty on a decline of quality full-time jobs will take exception to the study's argument that individual behavior has more importance. A disintegration in the traditional family structure among the lower and middle socioeconomic groups has left those who need the most help with the least.
Conservatives who claim that welfare benefits discourage people from working also will find the study disheartening. For example, the dogma that low-income women benefit financially by having more children and going on welfare simply is untrue.
Experts faced with eliminating poverty have a new problem. To combat the cycle, poverty must be attacked with a new and more realistic vigor. If poverty is to be beaten, it first must be understood.
. Rich Cornell for the editorial board
Healthy reputation KU School of Medicine ranking deserves praise
accolades to the University of Kansas School of Medicine.
A survey done by U.S. News and World Report ranked the school sixth in the nation of schools that specialize in primary care.
The school was ranked above 60 other universities and shared the top 10 with schools such as Brown University in Rhode Island, Michigan State University and George Washington University in Washington, D.C.
The rankings were based on surveys of medical-school deans, heads of the family care departments, deans of academic affairs and inter-residency directors. The KU medical school had an overall score of 92.8 out of a possible 100 nort.
The survey was designed to assess the academic reputation of the schools whose main mission is primary care. As the survey indicates, the University of Kansas School of Medicine's reputation is unblemished.
Rod Griffin for the editorial board
The Kansan editorial board members are Juli Watkins, Stacy Smith, Brent Maycock, Amy Zamierowski, Melanie Bottis, Tiffany Harness, Rod Griffin, Chris Siron, Rich Cornell, Melanie Matthes, Clare McGinn, Eric Lilia Hill, Jennifer Schultz, Debbie Myers and Carol Krekeler.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Watch out for ACUS
Be aware of the long-distance company you choose! I, for instance, made the terrible mistake of choosing the ACUS service offered by the University residence hall system. It is not the residence hall's fault, but I want other students to come in to a course of that they are getting into. I am a foreign student from Mexico and got one of those cards, which basically came with the room.
The first problem that arose was that the card did not work. It took four calls to the ACUS base to get them to correct that problem. After getting the calling card activated, I made one call to my homeland. I live near the border of Texas, right across from El Paso, and maybe I did get a little carried away. The call lasted 88 minutes. The biggest surprise came when I got the bill! I called one cost $82. I also should say that I have an AT&T calling card which I received after I made the caller call, which by the way, can be used from any phone, not just your hall phone. I made a call with the AT&T calling card for 90 minutes, and there was no comparison. The call was only $44.
Afterward, I called the ACUS service to ask them about this inconsistency. They told me that the contract the University's phone system had made with them stated a fixed rate for calls, and even if AT&T's rates varied through the year, these rates would stay as they were, even if it meant charging a little bit more than AT&T.
I also discovered that they were charging me as if I had called Mexico City from Chicago. So I went to the negotiating table with them because even though I am not a native of this land, I hate to be taken advantage of as much as someone from this land. After some time of not hearing anything from them, I got this letter and thought it was after me. I never objected to paying, but I objected to paying $82 for a $40 call. I am now in the process of continuing negotiations, and I hope to be successful. So beWARE of the ACUS service, especially if you have to call overseas, and only from your room.
Bernardo A. Gonzalez Chihuahua, Mexico, senior
Philosophy disturbing
Reading Louis H. Liechtenstein's April 18 letter titled "Should we help the Kurds?" was a frustrating experience for me. In refusing my column, which appeared in the April 10 edition of the *New York Times*, I sent sents and selectively represents my statements to suit his attacks. Anyone who conducts a direct comparative
analysis of Lieuten's letter and my article will discover this for themselves.
Even more disturbing than Lieuten's half-truths, arrogance and outright insults is his overall political philosophy. It is not difficult for clear-thinking individuals to understand that the current slaughter and suffering of rebels in Syria was a result of bombings, not an indirect consequence as Lieuten might imagine. This fact burds us with a very specific moral responsibility.
Lieten warns of creating a power vacuum through U.S. intervention while failing to realize that we already have created a power vacuum in Iraq. Obviously, this was a motivating factor in the uprisings. Again, we should accept responsibility for the Kurds, far beyond current relief efforts, instead of pretending that the situation is none of our doing and none of our business.
Lietzen argues that "once you start directly intervening in the internal affairs of nations" it may be difficult to assume responsibility for the unpredictable outcome. Whether he realizes it or not, we agree on this point. But weeks of raining bombs on Baghdad already constitutes a major blatant intervention in Iraq's internal affairs. This is our government choice to cross that line months ago, which makes Lietzen's current endorsement of a wily game of political strategy in the face of massive suffering simply obscene.
Jeff Listerman Lawrence senior
Recession
JUST LOOK AT THAT. NOTHING BUT SMOOTH SAILING. VES SIREE, SMOOOTH SAILING AHEAD.
FLAXMAN
University Daily Ranson
Ex-design major remembers process, finds it to be unfair
If you were to journey to the second floor of the Art and Design building right now, you would no doubt run into many students who have revised projects before their design review at the end of the semester.
It is doubtful that this would have been their first all-nighter, and this probably will not be their last.
If you were to ask them if it was worth it, most probably would answer "yes."
The process of the review begins when you are accepted to the school and are placed in the Basic Studies classes for one year. These courses include Drawing I and II and Design I and II. After these two semesters, each student is placed in Visual Concepts and Twography.
But after going through the review myself, I would say that "yes" is the answer.
For the past three years the design department has decided the best way to reduce the increasing number of graphic design and illustration majors is to conduct a portfolio review after the graphics and illustration program.
In these two courses, especially Visual Concepts, the students are given the same assignments and are allowed to revise throughout the semester. The goal is to show the steps the students should take in order to project and what techniques they used.
Praveen K.
At the end of these two classes, there is a portfolio review which lasts from one day to a weekend. The time limit varies as the department professors have not made up their minds yet as to how long they need to review the portfolios. Even the time period for the review has changed from semester to semester. The professor in the department are in charge of choosing students they feel have demonstrated they are ready to continue in the program.
Seems like a pretty fair system, right? Wrong.
Traci Moore
The outcome of the review is not based on grades from the two design
courses or from any other classes.
Students have passed the review with low Cs in both courses and with lower overall GPAs than those who didn't get
The only consistency the program offers is the Visual Concepts and Typography classes. However, the content of these vary from teacher to teacher and, in the end, are judged on the same basis.
The only alternatives offered to an unsuccessful student are retaking the courses and going through review again, choosing another major or going to another university. The department provides no collective help in finding answers to homework problems or unsuccessful, though students can get help on an individual basis.
The students who are unsuccessful and try to continue in another major usually are left a year or two behind because art courses do not transfer to prerequisites for other majors except art.
Here are a few tips to those who are in the process of thinking of becoming a design major from someone who knows:
Don't begin the program thinking someone is looking out for you. Seek out every professor and ask. And don't give any criticism you receive personally.
Don't think grades will help. I had a B in both Typography and Visual Concepts, as did about one-third of those who didn't pass.
Keep other schools and other majors in mind. If you don't pass, you are looking at three semesters of art credit that won't transfer into very much the degree. Don't miss this pass is, "Have you thought of any other majors or any other universities?"
My answer to that was, "Gee, no.
I've kinda spent the last five months thinking of design. I just haven't had time to think of much else." To credit them, "I don't know who he is, he does try to prepare you."
Don't think that because your teacher and the rest of the class think your projects are the best they have ever seen, you will pass. Remember, you are competing with about 60 people. And most of them were in their group, 80 students went in and 26 passed. Some odds. Even the worst gambler wouldn't place a bet like that.
Finally, don't let the outcome ruin your life, I, and hundreds of other students, have survived and gone on to lead perfectly normal lives.
I would like to make a request of the design department before I finish. I think the department should consider starting the process of reviewing at the end of the semester, so students have a chance earlier on to decide on other possibilities than design.
There also should be a person or department in charge of helping place those students who do not pass. Several of those students end up leaving KU for other universities or drop out completely, but many still paint or lithography degree, no offense to those in these majors, are left to graduate un to two years late.
My last piece of advice is to those going through review right now.
To those who pass, I wish you all the
luck and hope you find what you are
looking for.
To those who are unsuccessful, you are most likely very good artists and have a lot to offer, so don't stop because you didn't pass this one review
Move on to something else. Then one day, when you feel you can look back objectively on the whole process, you can write a letter to the newspaper girlggg because you're graduating in one year with a degree that isn't design.
Traci Moore is a St. Louis junior majoring in journalism.
Other Voices
Bush fails to end war
It is clear now why President George Bush made Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf up.
Schwarzkopf said he wanted to wipe out Iraq's military while we
The Persian Gulf War was fought brilliantly.
Finally, on April 16, Bush agreed to send troops to protect the refugees.
KANSAN STAFF
The aftermath, however, is shameful.
From the Wausau (Wis.) Daily Herald
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
If Schwarzkopf had his way, maybe Iraqi President Saddam Hussein would not have been able to attack and starve the Kurdish rebels.
We did not finish the job militarily. When there were refugees, we did not give them aid promptly.
Editors
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... Jill Harbinger
Sports... Ann Sommerslath Kate Stader
Photography... Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Egain Ebinder
Graphics... Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chris Hays
Features... Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
had the chance.
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing advisers
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the wizard's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas will be required to use the University Kansas
Great characters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
photographs
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
Sketch
TED BROWN
I'M KIND OF WORRIED ABOUT GRADUATING!
MY BOYFRIEND TOOK A JOB THAT WILL KEEP US APART FOR THE FIRST TIME.
THE FOLKS DON'T WANT ME MOVING BACK IN WITH THEM...
AND THE JOB MARKET SUCKS...
I'LL PROBABLY WIND UP WORKING IN SOME FAR-AWAY TOWN WHERE I WON'T KNOW ANYONE...
SO, HERE I AM, ON THE VERGE OF A LONELY, MISERABLE EXISTENCE IN THE COLD, CRUEL WORLD...
>SIGH<
I WOULDN'T MIND IT SO MUCH IF I HADN'T WORKED ALL MY LIFE TO GET HERE!
by Davld Rosenfield
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
5
Recruitment process brings Hispanic 8th-graders to KU
Program designed to lower number of high school dropouts
By Lara Gold
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Marsiol Romero thinks bringing Hispanic junior high school students to KU is an important part of the minority recruitment process.
"They need to get a feel for university life," said Romero. Topeka freshman and Hispanic American Leadership Organization member. "It gives them an incentive to get through high school."
Romero, along with other HALO members, the office of minority affairs, the office of educational services and the office of admissions brought 43 Hispanic eighth-graders from junior high schools in the Kansas City area to the University of Kansas yesterday as part of a Hispanic-American recruitment program.
Loue Lopez, HALO president, said that targeting junior high school students encouraged them to stay in school. Their grade levels so they could go to college.
He said that exposing eight-graders to university life and to positive Hispanic role models would give students a chance to stay in high school and go to college.
"The statistics are up there and against us, but we can change that," he said.
Eladio Valdez, an employee of the office of admissions, said that many of the eighth-graders did not want to go home because they liked the interaction with KU students.
KU students from various professional schools spoke to the eighth-graders about subjects such as medicine, law, journalism and education.
Valdez told the students that they could succeed at whatever they wished.
"The program was one way we
thought to curb the drop rate." he said.
He said the skits that HALO members performed helped break negative labels that guidance counselors use on Hispanic-American students.
He said that the program showed the eighth-graders that college life should not be feared and that many Americans were succeeding at KU.
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Thursday, April 25th-Lipsynch Contest. 1st Prize $50, 2nd Prize $25, 3rd Prize Free Membership All interested contestants call 832-039 between 7.pm.-9.pm. Before Tuesday, April 23rd. Friday, April 26th-Live Band, Cry Out "Come Check em out."
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6
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Kansas City SPOTLIGHT
Your friends will laugh at you.
But in a good way. You'll look unbelievably clever when ComedysPortz teams improvise hysterical scenes around your witty, absurd or downright silly suggestions. And hey, just to make you look even better, we'll give everyone in your group $2 off admission if you bring this ad to one of our 10:30 shows. Now, how could your pals help but be impressed?
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
7
Nation briefs Anchorage, Alaska
Exxon plea bargain thrown out
A judge yesterday rejected a plea bargain in the $1 billion settlement of the Exxon Valdez oil spill, saying a $100 million criminal fine was in violation of the damage Exxon Dixon did to Alaska's environment.
Under the plea agreement negotiated by Alaska, the Justice Department and Exxon, the company would have paid $50 million to the California and $50 million to the federal government.
A separate proposed settlement of civil claims provides $900 million in restitution to clean up Alaska's shoreline. With rejection of the fines, Exxon could withdraw that agreement.
Washington, D.C.
Bush will review travel policy
President Bush said yesterday he would review the White House travel policy, suggesting Chief of Staff John Sununu's extensive government planes had left a perception problem.
However, Bush said Sunum had his full confidence.
"I don't like this jumping all over Gov. Sununu when he has complied with the policy and he's made full disclosure. What more can you ask him said in impromptu comments to reporters.
"If that policy leads to a perception problem, then I'll take a look at it. That's exactly what I'm going to do, get Boyden Gray and others to take a look," he said, referring to White House legal counsel Gray.
Los Angeles
Rodney King case affects trials
The oft-broadcast videotape of Los Angeles police pummeling an African-American motorist seems to be undermining jurors' traditional perception in favor of police in civil and criminal trials.
Some lawyers who defend police in lawsuits are settling cases out of court rather than facing suspicious juries, and some prosecutors are delaying or soft-pedaling cases in which officers are key witnesses or police use of force is an issue.
Polls indicate that about eight of 10 U.S. citizens have seen an amateur cameraman's videotape of baton-wielding policemen beating Rodney King on March 3. The video has sparked nationwide outrage against police brutality and put law enforcers on the defensive in court.
From The Associated Press
British forces enter city, protect Kurdish refugees
ZAKHO, Iraq — More than 300 British marine commandes entered the northern city of Zakho yesterday and began protecting Kurdish refugees who have been accused of hindering relief efforts.
The Associated Press
Two British officers said the United States had told the Iraqis to leave the town by tomorrow morning. A U.S. military representative and a Pentagon representative denied that an ultimatum had been given, but a Bush administration official who said the crime was being considered and might be imposed.
The allied show of force came as Iraqi President Saddam Hussein conducted talks with Kurdish rebel leaders. Rebel sources said Saddam offered aid and granting authority to Iraq's 3.5 million Kurds.
At 1:30 p.m. (5:30 a.m.) CDT) yesterday, three companies of British commandes landed by helicopter and took up key positions in the northern, southern and eastern parts of this town, which is near where U.S. troops are setting up a secure haven for tens of thousands of Kurdish refugees.
The commanders reported encountering no resistance from the Iraqis, who still were patrolling Zakho yesterday despite U.S. demands that they stay clear of the relief effort.
The British soldiers will patrol the town along with other allied troops. Fear of the Iraqis has made some refugees reluctant to move out of their mountain refuges along the Turkish border.
"The Iraqis were given 48 hours to get out," said Capt. Jeff Mason, whose 100-member company took over a three-story building that belonged to the Iraqi army.
He said the U.S. military had given the ultimatum within the last 24 hours, meaning that the Army must leave immediately.
"A deadline was imposed, and if by that time they haven't withdrawn we can assume military action will continue," said British Maj. Baj Fanshawe, representative for the Royal Marines.
He said the ultimatum was given during daily meetings between the U.S. military liaison, Col. Dick Naab, and Iraqi Staff Brig. Gen. Nushwan Danoun.
However, a U.S. military representative denied that an ultimatum had been given
"There has been no deadline set for the police to out of town," said Army Col. Bob Flocke.
At Incribil, the U.S.-Turkish base that is leading efforts on MH. Michael Maher said, "We have a lot of work to do."
In Washington, Pentagon representative Pete Williams said. "There been no such warning glues."
But a Bush administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the White House was considering setting such a deadline and that such an ultimatum would likely be issued.
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater
One thousand tents erected at camp
Dust storms slow construction of the Kordish relocation camp near Zalato. Alies hope the first refuges may move in this week. The camp will shelter 10,000 people.
1. U.S. plans to build read from Cukurca into Iraq to transport refugees
2. North Iraq faced shortage from pest indian crops, Saddam Hussein meets Kurdish leaders
3. U.K. camp posts, 5,000 U.S. troops remain, 40,000 displaced persons
Turkey
Cukurca Dzakho
Mosul
New camp
600 British marines amwv. 1,000 tests erected; Iraq soldiers still in area
Syria
Jordan area
Iraq
Map area
Egypt Rift
Kuwait
Saudi Arabia
SOURCE: New York Times. Research by WEST COOPER
said that Iraqi forces patrolling northern Iraq were inhibiting Kurdish refugees from leaving their mountain sanctuaries. However, he said U.S. forces were working around the problem.
He said he would check reports about the ultimatum.
Asked about the Iraqi police, he said, "They're there. Their purpose appears to be to establish a security base."
Allied troops have pitched hundreds of tents outside the northern town of Zakho in an attempt to lure some of the hundreds of thousands of refugees from the mountainsides on the nearby Turkish border.
The United States said Tuesday it was moving ships to positions off Turkey to make it clear that Baghdad had better not interfere with the refugee assistance effort.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said the United States was prepared to use force if necessary.
Bottleneck
727 New Hampshire Lawnwick Kansas
"Tomorrow we leave," said one Iraqi police officer, walking past the building held by Mason's troops.
Iraqi police remained on the streets in diminished numbers after the British marines arrived
The official Iraqi News Agency, monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus, reported the meeting between Saddam and rebel leaders but gave no details and did not say where it was conducted.
"If America is here, I am very glad," said Salim
Akurdish taxi driver. "If America is here in Jakarta."
Bottleneck
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Tonight, 4/25
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Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
PIZZA EXPRES
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KU on Wheels Pass Jayhawker Yearbook Sports Combo Package All-Arts Card Board of Class Officers
- Fill out an Options Card to reserve any of the above options.
- Options Cards can be filled out April 5-26 in the Strong Rotunda.
- You will receive a bill for tuition and optional fees at fall fee payment; make only one payment for tuition and optional fees.
- Must be enrolled to fill out Options Card; Please present enrollment card and KU ID.
- No options card will be available in the Fall; Student will have to visit each individual vendor.
8
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
El Matador Café
MEXICAN FOOD'
taco, 1 tostada, 1 enchilada, 1 quesadilla, rice & beans)
normally $5.30
NOW $4.75
NOW $4.75
EL MATADOR
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There's only one El Matador Cafe!
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Tues.-Sat. 5-9:30 Sunday 4-8
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1626 W. 23rd at april 20 1101W 6th
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Legal Services Available Free With Valid KU ID
Legal Services for Students
1626 W.23rd thru April 30 1101 W.6th
--dents need to take the initiative."
Spring Fever Bianchi Sale April 19 - 27
Nyala Mountain Bike Reg. $399, Sale $339
Advantage Cross-Terrain fitness Bike Reg. $379, Sale $339
Ibex Mountain Bike $445, including toe clips, straps, cage, H20 bottle and Bianchi t-shirt
Forza Road Bike
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Free tube with any tire purchase.
BIANCHI
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts,843-5000
Senate changes hands in last meeting of year
By Michael Christi
New executives, media board approved
Kansan staff writer
It was out with the old and in with the new last night as the 1990-91 Student Senate attended its last year's next year's Senate attended its first.
The last acts of the old Senate were to elect three holdover senators, who will join the other elected senators next year, and to appoint two students to the newly created media board.
The holdover senators are Jason McIntosh, Roger Ross and Giles Smith. McIntosh is the senior senator and has the responsibility of orienting new senators.
The media board members are Randy Reitz, Salina sophomore, and Brian Robison, Oklahoma City junior. According to media board regulations, neither is involved in Senate or in the School of Journalism.
Mike Schreiner, outgoing student body president, charged the new Senate with continuing the produce addition of this past year's Senate.
He said that the situation of higher education at the state level was not a good one.
"I can only talk until I'm blue in the face for so long," he said. "Students need to take the initiative."
The new Senate approved the executive committee nominations of Darren Fulcher, student body president. They are:
*Su Comfort, treasurer.
*Kevin Sigourney, administrative assistant.
- Toi Willis, executive secretary.*
* Troy Radakovich, Senate executive committee chairperson.*
Lance Wright and Jill Fritzemeyer, community service co-directors.
David Hull and Joe Cinalli, Associated Students of Kansas co-directors.
The new Senate also elected three students to University Council. They are Alan Lowden, student body president; Lisa Garney, business senator; and Seth Traxler, Nunemaker senator.
Fulcher, in his introductory speech, cautioned Senate against having overly high expectations.
"Please don't think that we're going to go out and cure all the ills on this campus, because we won't," he said.
"This is the time that we must begin to work," Fulcher said.
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* available some locations
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Congratulations! Mac Challenge II Winners
Men's Living Groups Beta Theta Pi
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Pi Kappa Alpha Second Place
Women's Living Groups:
Alpha Gamma Delta First Place Kappa Alpha Theta Second Place
Co-Ed Division:
Women's Softball
First Place
Robinson Center
Second Place
APPLE
The Power To Be Your Best At KU.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
9
Louisiana faces moral dilemma
The Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. — Michael Owen Perry becomes aggressive and hostile when he hears about pop singer Olivia Newton-John, who he thinks is a goddess living under the town where he killed five relatives.
He also has shaved his eyebrows so his brain can get more oxygen.
The issue is not whether Perry is insane. It is whether Perry should be medicated to make him coherent enough to be executed.
The state wants to force Perry to take Haldol, a powerful mind-altering drug, so it can strap him in the electric chair. Defense attorneys say the plan, once tossed by the U.S. Supreme Court, is cruel and unusual.
State District Judge L.J. Hymel is scheduled to take another look at the case today.
"It is contrary to what we have said we are going to do with the death penalty," said Perry's attorney, Keith Nordyke. "As a society, we have decided that we are going to
have the death penalty for certain crimes, but we are not going to execute certain people. That includes the insane."
A 1986 U.S. Supreme Court ruling
from executing anyone who is
banned.
Perry, now 36, was convicted of first-degree murder in the 1983 shootings of his parents, brother, cousin and 2-year-old nephew in the small south Louisiana town of Lake Arthur. He traveled a trailer behind his parents' home.
According to authorities, Perry said he first used a pistol to shoot the victims, then returned later with a shotgun.
During a police hunt for Perry, authorities said they had learned he had written fan letters telling Newton-John that he thought she was a goddess who lived beneath the town. Police also said Perry was turned back by security guards when he tried to visit her California home.
Perry's mental state rapidly fell apart after he went to death row. In
October 1888, Hymel ruled that Perry's mental illness rendered him incompetent for execution. But Hymel also ordered that Perry receive medication — against his will — to regain competence and be executed.
"Louisiana's interest in the execution of that jury's verdict overrides those rights of Mr. Perry." Hymel said.
But last November, the U.S. Supreme Court set aside Hymel's ruling. The high court ordered the judge to restudy the case in light of another ruling that gave prison officials the right to force inmates to take drugs — provided that it was in the prisoner's best medical interest and if the inmate posed a threat to himself or another.
Nordyke said that even with the drugs, Perry never is really coherent. However, the state attorney general's office said that the drugs helped Perry and that the state had a legitimate interest in seeing that he became sane enough to execute.
West Hills APARTMENTS
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Have YOU dined at
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Make a
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- Wide assortment of replacement parts for CORNING WARE* and VISIONS*
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- CORELLE* Dinnerware plus coordinated accessories.
- REVERE WARE Cookware.
- Overstocks, discontinued products, cosmetic seconds at substantial savings.
BREWING
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Gifts with value that cost less!
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749-4855
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Dinner Bar
Every Evening After 5 p.m.
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707 W.23rd St.
Lawrence, Ks
BUY ONE/ GET ONE FREE!
(After 5 p.m.)
PLU #50 Expires 5-31-91
NOBODY STAX UP TO Rax
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707 W. 23rd
Lawrence, Ks
Please present before ordering. One coupon per person, per visit. Not valid in combination with any other offer and not valid as participation Rim Awareness only. No photocopies allowed. Ward void whose proofs Cash amount is valid 12.00.
NO COUPON SPECIALS
- EVERYDAY TWO-FERS - 2-PIZZAS -$9.00
2-TOPPINGS
2-DRINKS
- PRIMETIME SPECIAL -
3-PIZZAS -$11.50
1-TOPPING
4-DRINKS
*PARTY "10" are on sale now at the Ticket Office in Allen Field House Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Cost: $75.00
10 • PIZZAS -$30.00
1-TOPPING
- MONDAY MUNCHIES-
PEPPERONI, SAUSAGE,
-$5.00
EXTRA CHEESE
1-DRINK
DINE-IN NOW AVAILABLE
842-1212
- PICK-UP SPECIAL -
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall
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MON-THURS FRI-SAT SUNDAY
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WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!
MI READ
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KERS
DAVID OHLE
ROGER MARTIN
SUSAN BROSSEAU
EDITORS
WITH A
FOREWORD BY
WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS
Meet editors David Ohle and Susan Brosseau in the Mt. Oread Bookshop Friday, April 26,1991 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
Ray-Ban SUNG
The long awaited book on the hippie scene in Lawrence in the 60's.
THEATRE
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tm 723 Mass 843-0611 Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving
SPORTS
KU Students
TICKETS COMBO
SPORTS TICKETS COMBO
Cost: $75.00
Sports Package Includes:
·5 Home Football Games
·16 Home Basketball Games
- Kansas Relays - 4 Days of Events
KANSAS ATHLETICS
Get your tickets now to catch all the action next year!
10
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Macintosh Classic
2 Megabytes of RAM
40 Megabyte Hard Drive
$1199.00
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(He or she who hesitates sometimes misses out.) Don't let this happen to you!
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Level 2, Burge Union 864-5697
APPLE
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Prices subject to availability. Offer open to students enrolled in six 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 cashier's check. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. Other restrictions may apply.
99¢ VIDEOS
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842-7810 Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
10-6 p.m. Sun.
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SAT: $1.25 Bottles
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Take advantage of exceptional savings being offered on Macintosh computers only at the KU Bookstores Computer Store now through May 16th. Take a Macintosh computer home with you over the summer and become a Macintosh expert. When you come back in the fall you will be working like a pro!
If You Haven't Been Lately, You're Missing Out THE MAD HATTER 704 New Hampshire 843-6189
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
11
Computer potential growing
KU professor works to improve complex intelligence systems
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Artificial intelligence sounds like a concept restricted to high-tech robots, but it actually can be used in simple everyday objects.
Such as in Campbell's soup.
Artificial intelligence is simply a means to simulate human expertise in a certain area by the use of a computer program.
Through an expert system, the Campbell's soup company can control the temperature of huge vats full of soup perfectly.
"Expert systems are already a part of our lives, and we don't know it," said Costas Tsatsoulis, assistant professor of electrical and computer
engineering, who has been researching the area of artificial intelligence. "It can take a human experience and encode his or her knowledge and be able to send a thousand copies to companies."
Artificial intelligence began in the 1960s and the concept became more popular through the '80s. Today, AI is being used in many industries and by the government.
The space shuttle Discovery as well as some telephone companies use expert systems.
But Tatsoulis is trying to make use of a new type of system called a memory-based system.
human experiences that are used in problem-solving
It is different from an expert sys-
em because the program is based on
"Expert systems can't learn, but in memory-based systems, every new experience adds to its knowledge," said Tsatsonlis, who has been working on the theory of memory-based systems for nine years.
"It is the development of intellectual systems that are based on the encoding of human experiences," he said.
He said that these kinds of artificial intelligence would have a place in the future, but only as a means of assistance.
For example, instead of reading the Wall Street Journal, a computer could scan all the news and know
which would be of interest or importance to a particular individual.
Perry Alexander, Platte City, Mo. graduate student who is working with Tsautsou, said improving complex skills would save time, money and mistakes.
But problems can still arise, Tsatsoulis said.
"I see artificial intelligence in general assisting people and making computers more accessible to people. I will help people to do their jobs better."
Even with ethical dilemmas involved in expert systems, Tsatsouls is optimistic.
"I definitely see the technology spreading more," he said.
ROTC: Program lasts despite policy conflicts
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
As the KU administration continues to work for a change in the Department of Defense policy that discriminates against gays, lesbians and bisexuals, everyday people at the Military Science Building.
Army ROTC Maj Steven Johnson said his students were continuing their activities but were staying aware of the issues.
He said he had heard no complaints or resentment from his students concerning the issue.
Although some people on camp may stereotype some of his students as being prejudiced, Johnson said he thought the vast majority understood that ROTC students just like everyone else.
"There aren't little Rambos running around." he said.
KU ROTC students understand they have no control of the policies. Johnson said.
"It is a congressional issue," he said. "It is a Department of Defense issue. It is not a KU ROTC issue."
Johnson said he thought the
administration was handling the situation properly by going to Washington and lobbying
"We like to think the way to solve a problem is to go to the element that can really solve it," he said.
But Johnson said he thought initiatives such as the one at the University of Nebraska calling for the removal of class credit for ROTC programs if a rapid change not take place a bit about.
Mike Schreiner, student body president, said he had talked to many ROTC students since the conflict about the policy began.
He said that he could understand how some ROTC students might be bothered by being stereotyped as prejudiced because of their involvement in the program. He said they would be overcome by the individual.
The University should not kick the ROTC program off campus, Schreiner said. But he would like the University to display more clearly its displeasure with the policy by posting notices of its position next to any ROTC advertising on campus.
Helping police pays off for crime-hotline callers
Kansan staff report
The KU Crimestoppers line recently paid the first cash award for crime information since the line's inception in December 1990.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said $300 had been awarded to an anonymous caller who gave information about the manufacture and sale of false drivers' licenses. The information led to the arrest of 23 individuals.
Crimestoppers is an information line that anyone can use to report information about someone who has committed or is planning to commit a crime. If the information leads to an arrest, callers may be eligible for
Mullens said all callers were kept anonymous, even in the event of an award, by using a number system to identify him. He said names were never taken.
cash rewards.
"We will set up a drop-off of some sort if there is an award," Mullens said.
At this time, KU police are hoping the hotline can help find the suspect in a sexual battery case that has been reported 7 near 14th and Louisiana streets.
Mullens said anyone with information about this crime should call 964-8888.
Flying ducks create problem for police as they crash into airborne copter
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A police helicopter search turned into mayhem when flying ducks rammed into the craft, injuring a Topeka police officer.
"It just felt like the helicopter was falling apart, with feathers and wind flying in," officer Mike McKinley said.
Mckinley and pilot Jimmy Moore were searching for a stolen truck
early Tuesday morning when the incident occurred.
"I saw black spots about one second before they impacted the wind—s held," Moore said.
He landed the helicopter on a runway at Forbes Field in Topeka. A dead mallard hen was found in the cockpit.
Rollerblade
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Housing Guide
- CHEAPI CHEAPI CHEAPI *
2 bedrooms available for
Summer Sublease. Completely
Furnished, great location, super pool.
★ Rent NEG! Call 749-0213 ★
Roommate Wanted
Mature person to share new townhouse in quiet area of Great Lawrence. $300 per week / 2/4th vacancy.
C/A, completely furnished, vaulted ceiling, min. ceiling fireplace, patio, garage D/W, microwave, dishwasher.
Call 665-2688
Now leasing for summer & fall 1901
studios -3 pools
1&2 BR apts -tennis courts
2&3 BR townhomes -KU bus route
BR townhomes -KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
(on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE APTS
(Call for appointment)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Leave Message
HUGE 2 bedroom summer sublease. FREE furniture use if you need it. CHEAP rent, water and gas paid.
Close to campus.
865-1387
Need to sublease rent or sell?
Then you need...
The University Daily Kansan Housing Guide!
H
This will be in the paper on April 29.
Talk to your account executive or come to the classified desk at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall!
We will negotiate price. Call Mindi, Cail or Nirit at 749-0976.
We Need to beLEASE this summer!
3 bedroom, but 4 people can easily fit!
3 bathrooms, microwave, dishwasher, POOL!
Sunrise Village Apts., on 6th Street
We will negotiate price. Call Mindi, Call or Nirit at 749-0976.
Georgetown Apartments
Summer Special!
June & July - $300.00 with a 12 month lease Valid only with leases beginning June 1st
-KU Bus Route - Holidome
-10 or 12 month leases/Low Security Deposit
-No Pets
-On Site Mgt./Reliable 24 hour maintenance
-Wired for Cable TV/Mini Blinds Throughout
-Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced Pool Area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Washer/Dryers or book suitable
-Microwaves & Dishwashers
Fri, Sat, Sun & eves by appt.
Office Hours;
630 Michigan 749-7279
Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available 10 or 12 month leases, low Security Deposit
...
West Hills
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments Great location - near campus!!
...furnished or unfurnished ..balcony or patio ..laundry facilities ..on KU bus route ..pool
1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800
With Our NewPrice Reductions, Living Anywhere Else Just Doesn't Make Cents.
The cost of living has gone down! You don't have to be majoring in Economics to see that our prices are more affordable than ever. Come to the residence hall that features great social events, free utilities, our "Dine Anytime" program, a convenient location close to campus and much, much more.
More fun for less funds! Now's the time to make the switch from apartment to the best in college living. Come by today and see the residence hall that makes the others look like small change
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive 913/843-8559
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
12
CD
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1420 W. 23rd St. • 843-9200
642
Mass.
LIBERTY
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BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
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SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
MARRYING MAN (R) SAT 9:00 3:30
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OUT FOR JUSTICE (R) SAT 9:00 2:45
EVERY FOUR (R) SAT 9:15, 7:20, 9:45
DANCES WITH WOLFES (P) SAT 9:00 4:50
EVERY FOUR (P) EVERY FOUR 8:45
SILENCE THE NEST (R) SAT 9:00 3:30
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ALOEIA
Look to the future
Clint Pervil, Mountain Home, Ark. senior, sculpts a model of the way he thinks he will look when he is 70 years old. Pervil said he hoped to keep the sculpture until he reached 70 to see how accurate he was.
Police urge bike registration
Kansan staff report
If you are one of the thousands of KU students who use two wheels and two pedals to get from Point A to Point B, you should consider registering your transportation.
Previous bicycle registrations expired in March. The new reflective stickers with green lettering are not only required by law, they also could save owners from added frustration if their bikes are stolen.
Burdel Welsh, KU police representative, said registered bikes had three advantages over unregistered ones.
Registration deters theft and allows police to register the serial number in a nationwide computer system. Welsh said made recovery easier.
He said registration also would allow police to contact an owner after a stolen bike was recovered.
Staff applications due
Applications for staff positions for the summer Kansan are now available in 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Applications for the position of managing editor are due by 5 p.m. today.
Applications for planning/campus editor, associate campus/sports editor, layout editor, photo editor, copy chief, editorial board and columnist are due by 5 p.m. Sunday.
On campus
- Canterbury House will celebrate the Holy Eucharist at noon at Danforth Chane.
Nihon Club will meet at 1 p.m. at Alove B in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
KU Triathletes will have a group bike ride at 4 p.m. The ride begins in front of Wescott.
Amnesty International will con duct a letter-writing session at 4 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
■ The Center for East Asian Studies and the department of political science will sponsor a public lecture at p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the building.
- Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
- KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
- KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
Baptist Student Union will have a Bible study at 6:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center.
KU Astrology Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Oread Room in the
Kansas Union
Champions Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will conduct an open meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
KU office of study abroad wants graduating seniors to see their advisers for departmental nominations for Graduate Direct Exchange Abroad.
- Lawrence Area Draft Counseling Network is available by appointment by calling 843-4833.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
13
'Hawks lose a messy one to Shockers
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The mud smeared on the Kansas baseball players' pants last night was a telltale sign of their 6-3 loss to Wichita State; it was sloppy.
"This wasn't a well played game on either side," said Kansas coach Dave Bingham. "It could have been from last night when both teams spent a lot of energy. We both have big weekend series also."
Whatever the reason was, the teams combined for nine errors as the Shockers defeated the Jayhaws for the second time in two days.
The third-ranked Shockers beat Kansas 15-2 in Wichita on Tuesday night. Last night's game was played in the rain at Hogland-Maupin Sta
"We weren't competitive at the plate, and we walked too many people," Bingham said. "The only tool was Kennie Steenstra for them."
Steenstra, the starting pitcher for Wichita State, retired the first nine Jayhawks he faced and did not give up a run until Kansas catcher Garry Schmidt scored on a wild pitch in the fifth.
However, the Shockers already had tallied five runs of their own.
It was a fairly cleanly held game to that point, but it soon turned ugly.
Wichita State committed four
Baseball
errors in the last four innings, and
Jayhawks added two in the same time.
Kansas third baseman Gerry Camara said the rain was not a factor in the teams' lackluster performances.
"We're not going to blame the field," he said. "We just came out flat."
The soaked fans found one point of interest during the evening when a terrible gale hit the oak tree, cutting it in half.
On a dead run to his left, Kansas shortstop Kevin Marozos fielded a grounder and gunned down Shocker second baseman Billy Hall by inches.
Shocker first-base coach Loren Hibbs and umpire Jerry Serrone exchanged words for about five minutes. To the cheers of the Jayhawk fans, Serrone ejected Hibbs from the game.
Hibbs' ejection seemed to put life
the Jayhawks' offense in their hats.
Kansas had two runners on base with Schmidt at the plate represented.
But the Jayhawks were denied when Shocker reliever Morgan handed Schmidt with a tight fashion and used him to pup up, the end threat.
4
Tom Buchanan, Wichita graduate assistant, and Scott Dyer, Pacific Palisades, Calif., graduate assistant, apply Diamond Dry to the pitcher's
mound. Diamond Dry is a sawdust-based compound that was used to absorb the rain that fell during the Jayhawks 6-3 loss to Wichita State University.
Royals beat Indians 4-2
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Kirk Gibson tied the game with a two-run home run in the ninth inning, and Gary Thurman won it with an RB single in the tenth as the Kansas City team beat the Cleveland Indians 4-2 last night.
Russ Morman led off the top of the 10th with a single, and Kurt Stillwell hit a sacrifice fly, which Morgan to advance to second.
Morgan scored when Thurman hit a single. Thurman continued to second on the throw to the plate. Later, he stole third and scored on Terry Shumpert's sacrifice fly, making the score 4-2.
Gibson's home run off Doug Jones tied the game and spoiled a
brilliant effort by Indians starter Greg Swindell
Swindell had a three-hit shutout and 12 strikeouts entering the ninth inning, but left after Jim Eisenreich led off with a single. Jones retired Kevin Seitzer and Warren Cromartie, but Gibson hit a pitch over the right-field fence for his sixth home run of the season.
Waddell retired the first 14 Royals battled before Morman lined a single to right with two outs in the fifth inning. Stillwell hit a single, advancing Morman to second, but back out Thurman to end the inning.
It was the fifth time in his career that Swindell has reached double figures in strikeouts and the first since he struck out 10 batters
against Texas on July 15. 1989.
Jeff Montgomery (1-1) got the victory as he worked out of jams in both the eighth and ninth games.
The Indians got four hits but only one run in the first inning. Alex Cole led off with a single but was picked off first base. Singles by Mike Huff, Carlos Baerga and Chris James produced the run. Cleveland made it 2-0 in the seventh on a single by Brook Jacoby, a sacrifice bunt and Cole's two-out RBI single.
The Royals' who lost George Brett with a torn knee ligament Monday, played most of the game without right球员 Danny Tartaro who left in the first innning because of a cramp in his right thigh.
UNLV admits some violations
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — UNLV will admit to some allegations leveled by the NCAA in a 29-count complaint charging violations in the Rinnan' Rebel basketball program, the university's legal counsel said yesterday.
Brad Booke said the university did not plan to contest certain charges. It has until June 1 to send an official reply to the NCAA.
Booke, who is handling UNLV's response to the NCAA charges, declined to say which of the allegations would not be contested or to say
"Clearly there are some allegations in the official inquiry that are accurate," Booke said. "We tried to look at the facts alleged and investigate them as best we could and make an objective determination if the facts were accurate. In some cases, we find the facts to be accurate."
how serious he thought they were.
But he said steps already had been taken to prevent the violations did not occur again.
"They're for the most part problems that can be solved with management systems". Booke said. "These problems are in place to solve those problems."
A Las Vegas television station, KVBC-TV, quoted sources as saying that the violations UNLV would admit to included setting up a system to give players rides to class and arranging a plan for players to pay their rent and utilities for off-campus apartments.
The station said the university also would admit to violations in setting up tutoring programs for recruits Barry Young and Lloyd Daniels.
ming from the recruitment of Daniels, a former New York City prep star.
In a December complaint, the NCAA charged UNLV with 29 different violations, many of them stem-
Among the allegations; convicted points shaver Richard "The Fixer" Perry acted as an agent for UNLV and paid Daniels air fare and other costs for a trip to the university in 1986.
Daniels was arrested at a crack house in February 1987 and never has played for UNLV.
Booke said that he had completed all but one interview as part of UNLV's response to the allegations and that he now was in the process of preparing the university's formal reply.
Booke said that he attempted to interview Perry but that Perry would not cooperate in the investigation.
Booke said he expected UNLV to go before the NCAA's Committee on Infractions in August or September.
KU signs three top-ranked women
Kansan sportswriter
By Lana Smith
Not only is the Kansas women's basketball team returning all of its players next season, but three of the nation's top high school players have signed letters of intent to play with the Jahwaks.
Kansas assistant coach Kevin Cook said he had been trying to recruit Angela Aycock and Alana Slatter, both of Dallas, and Caryn Shinn of Detroit for the better part of two years.
"They're all great people, and they all fit in perfectly with the family atmosphere Coach Washington has established here." Cook said.
Cook said the three main contributing factors that attracted these players to Kansas was the school's academic prestige, Coach Marian Washington's established basketball program and the current team.
Multi-dimensional player
Aycko, a 6-foot-2 senior point guard from Dallas-Lincoln High School averaged 28.7 points this season and scored 5 points during her high school career.
"She is a multi-dimensional player," Cook said. "She will be able to fill in at any position and contribute."
She knocked in a career-high 50 points against Carter High School in November.
Aycock said she was excited about bringing her attitude to the team.
"I'm so team-oriented that sometimes I get too unselfish," Aycock said.
Aycock was named in the Gatorade Circle of Champions. She was USA Today's and the Dallas Morning News' choice for Texas' player of the year and was ranked in the top five in the nation by the Blue Star Index. Aycock also was one of ESPN's top five preachers.
"Angela was contacted by virtually every Division I school in the
Women's Basketball
country," Cook said. "But she said she knew all along Kansas was the place she wanted to be."
Aycock said everyone she talked to when she came to Kansas helped her decide she should be a Jawhawk.
"They were so down to earth," Aycock said. "They respected us. They made us feel at home."
Aycock said that despite being a little nervous about graduating and leaving Texas, she was prepared to to Kansas and be a part of the team.
Defensive asset
"I kind of always knew I wanted to go to Kansas," Shinn said. "I really decided the day after the Final Four game. I told all of the other coaches that I wasn't going to go there (to school), but I hadn't told Coach Wentz that I wanted to go to Kansas. I told her on April 6th or 7th."
Shinn, a 5-foot-10 forward from Detroit-Murry-Wright High School, kept Kansas as her 1. choice throughout the season.
She also said that speaking with players whom Washington had recruited in the past and with players on the present team had convinced her further that Kansas was where she needed to be.
A prospective business major, Shinn said that Kansas' gruelling academic program and its academic aid Mal-Dalon, helped attract her.
"When I went to the school, it was like everybody was together," Shinn said. "I felt more comfortable at Kansas. I really liked the players."
Shinn also had considered Illinois University, Western Michigan and Temple.
They were a unit."
Cook said Shinn would enhance the Jayhawks' playing, especially defensively.
"She was born to rebound," Cook said. "Caryn had been like (UNL men's star) Stacey Augon. She's one of the finest-condition playwrights."
Shinn was named second team all-airy, all Public School League and all-state. She also was chosen as one of Blue Star Index's top 60 prospects.
The Jayhawks stripped the Lone Star State of another top player when they got Slatter, who was the first of the three to decide to sign with Kansas.
Power player
The 6-foot-2 forward from Dallas J. Pearce High School was rated by the Texas high-school coaches as the No. 2 woman's basketball player in Texas. She also was the Dallas Morning News' No. 2 prospect in Texas.
Shinn said that her decision to come to Kansas hit home yesterday.
It's the greatest feeling," Shinn said. "Day by day, I get more excited about going to Kansas."
Cook said that Slatter's caliber was obvious and that Kansas clearly meant a lot to her, because she ruled out defending national champion Stanford University early in her senior year.
Besides Kansas and Stanford, Slatter considered Rice, Tulane and Southern Methodist.
"I guess the main thing I looked at was academics," Slatter said.
She, too, plans to major in business and said Kansas' business program was strong.
Slatter said that next she noted the different schools' athletic programs. Again, Kansas rated at the top.
Slatter made her official visit to KU, along with Aycock and Shinn, in October. She said she was sad to leave the school
"I hope to contribute in every aspect to the team," Slatter said. Cook was sure Slatter would be a force for the Jawhacks.
"She will be able to use her strength to rebound for us," Cook said. "She's a power player on the block."
Slatter said the fact that all of this year's Jayhawks would be returning next year, which might cut down on playing time, did not concern her.
"During your freshman year, that's when you learn the most," Slatter said. "It's seniority rule. They are the better players, and when we're seniors, we'll get to play more."
Aycock said she was pleased that all of Kansas' starters would be back.
"That will give us a lot of leadership." Aycock said. "You'll guide us in the right directions on the court and off the court."
Cook said some players might shy away from a team such as Kansas, with five returning seniors and six returning juniors, because they would not see as much time on the court.
He said the recruits' realizations that they might not get to play as much said a lot.
"It shows they're confident in their own abilities to come in and be a part of the team and not be saviors," Cook said.
He said that in addition to their athletic abilities, Aycock, Shinn and Slatter were the most caring and sensitive people he had met.
Cook said none of the current Jayhawks could wait for the new recruits to come to Kansas.
"With three more impact players like Angela, Alana and Caryn, the whole team is excited and hungry for more." He wants to play with good players.
NFL players face their drug habits Marinovich allowed to play
The Associated Press
IRVINE, Calif. — Todd Marinovich, the former Southern Cal quarterback drafted in the first round by the Los Angeles Raiders, while continuing to play football, a judge said yesterday.
Marinovich, 21, was arrested Jan. 20 on misdemeanor charges of cocaine and marjuana possession. Earlier that month he was suspended indefinitely from the USC team, following his sophomore season, for missing a team game and failing to register for classes.
missed if he successfully completes the program, Harbor Municipal Court Judge Susanne Shaw said.
Drug-possession charges against Marinovich will be dis-
The drug program includes psychological counseling. Marinovich also must submit to drug testing by his counselor or NFL officials.
Marinovich's attorney, Gary Pohlson, said the quarterback had been undergoing regular psychosis and he was forced to refer the terms of the plea bargain.
The length of the six-month drug program was doubled because Marinovich will be awarded backcountry the country with the Raiders.
Bears rookie checks into rehab
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears' six-round draft choice, Darren Lewis, checked into a drug-rehabilitation center yesterday, the team said it was told by Lew's agent.
Lewis, a Texas &M halfback known for his rushing abilities, was the only player who tested positive for cocaine during the NFL's scouting evaluations in 2015. The league sent all test results to the NFL commissioner, personel director Bill Tobin said he had never seen the letter.
Burroughs did not immediately
The Bears said yesterday that Lewis' agent, Gene Burroughs, reported Lewis had gone to a rehab center in Houston, but the club declined to release further information on the subject
return telephone calls yesterday.
He said Tuesday that he hoped the Bears would give Lewis the benefit of the doubt.
Tobin learned Tuesday of the test results and said he would not have considered Lewis if he had known earlier.
"It was told to me that someone had tested positive. I marked the wrong player. I made a mistake," said Tobin, who said he never drafted or signed a player who had tested positive on a drug test.
Bears coach Mike Dikta was in Houston yesterday, playing in the Doug Sanders Celebrity Golf Tournament.
"We're going to give Darren a chance to play football as long as his act is clean," Ditka told KHOU-TV.
14
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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2 Free Tans &/or $5 off Haircut
any new customer who signs up this week
To any member who renews or brings in a new customer or
Bauch & Lomb, Bay Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sug, Retail
The Etc. Shop
713 Mass., 851604
ANNUNCING: Beauti Carel Look and feel your best! Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call 1-913-262-8629 for an appointment today!)
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and acce
nts. Honda, BMW, VISA, Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
Thrifty Thursday
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Only $3.49 for a small pizza.
(add tops only .75)
CARRY OUT only except for orders of 2 or more.
GOODEVERY
THURSDAY
Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
842-3232
300's
A
400's
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
FORMAL WEAR The Etc. Shop
If you care about your body and health, it is not if you need to be in call. We can help you.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization makes*
*the American Civil War a more Available at Jayhawk, Hawk and Town Crier*
Not just for Biker Babes anymore
Tattoo Templates
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-0611
SUMMER IN EUROPE FROM $228 each way on discounted scheduled airlines to Europe from Kansas City. Call 800-325-2026.
120 Announcements
LEAF DEMAINING DOORS 10
Final weeks of gutting business market at the Book end, in Quantubil's Flea Market All hardback books-$1—no exceptions. Friday Sunday 10-9.
BATTERY can be emotional or physical. WTCS Campus Support Group for battered individuals. 7:25 pm - 7:48 pm. Call 1-643-6877 for location and info.
**College Money** Private Scholarships, You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money requires minimum of 8 sources. Since 1981 COLLEGE LEIGH School Box 109, box 108. Joel Mo. 6402 1881 (1) 809 7578-31
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Poor Counseling A friendly interview voice. Free confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters for AU Info 844-3060 Sponsored by GLOSK
Have you been censured by a professor? Have you
been fired by a professor? Have you even
that others find objectional, racist or sexist?
Are you a student? Are you a faculty member?
HEADING FOR EUROPE. THIS SUMMER! **HERE there with ANY AIRHITCH (r) for $10 from the East Coast** to the Midwest (when there is a VISA card) and Times & Let’s Go! (r) for $212-646-000.
Hillel בִּשְׂ
Events of the Week
Thursday, April 25
Hillel Elections
5:30 p.m. Hillel House
Friday, April 26
Final Shabbat Dinner of semester Hillel House
6 p.m. Hillel House R.S.V.P. by Thurs. April 25
Johnny's UP & UNDER
Johnny's Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
is available for Engagement Parties, Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible.
Good Judgment
It was a day I advertise. No messages! Dead machine. Now it works. Call and see what I can do for you. 1-800-879-9702
842-0377
Good judgment comes from experience. And experience well that comes from having bad judgment.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Public Lecture. Come join us in understanding the importance of justice and law. Lawrence will have a lecture titled "The Death of Kashmir: Muslim Hindu Conflict in India." This lecture will be held at the Frontier Munich, Europe Union 16, Lawrence University.
K.U. Graduation Announcements still available
Mark's Bridal. 843.7628
by students and for students
1294 Oread
843-4948
Sunday Warbring 10:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
No more PMS. tamarack herbal compound is all of the stressful symptoms, completely natural, safe for everyone, inexperienced and approved by Bureau of Health. Call (314) 797-6760.
FREE ARABIC COURSE
Suspension Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 812-245 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center.
Arabic, provided enough applicants respond to this
The Saudi Student House of Lawrence, Kansas is planning to commence.
program is sponsored by the Institute of Islamic & Arabic Sciences in
announcement. The
Arabic Sciences in America (based in Washington, D.C.), which will award
program. If interested please mail your name, address, and phone # to
130 Entertainment
certificate of completion at the end of the
the Saudi Student House, P.O. Box 3749 Lawrence, Kansas 66046.
140 Lost-Found
FOUND Cat, white paws/tail Dark gray and brown striped white triangle on face with brown Call 644-2633 864-2582 to claim/adopt
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
Found. Keys, second floor lobby in Dole, April 22nd. Call to claim, 749-4323.
Found: Pearl earring in Wecow on 4/19 Call
845-4523. Describe to claim.
Lost on campus. Only silver tifine pin with turquoise
center. Only real value is sentimental $10
LAST PARKING? If you see one please call
749-3707 or 864-3178 $50 reward
Employment
Aggressive GM import dealership is seeking positive self-starter, female or man for an appointment. You will be possible come for the first year, excellent experience in your job and an appointment 364-343-152. Ask for Mike or B&J.
205 Help Wanted
Attendant needed for disabled woman. Some lift required. Approx. 7 hrs. a week. $4.50 hr.
842-1794
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, diving, scuba diving, camping, campings, drama, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, $100 per hour. Instructor: Seven, 765 Mild, NIPL, ID 1. 0002-746-4424-24
Social Services-Opening available for married couple to live in and direct treatment program for women with intellectual disabilities, training provided. Preference given to female candidates. Science degree - starting salary. $800 plus full benefit package. Tailored salary if off per month. Must be a current Littoral Care Card. Call Temporary Lodging For Children, Oiate, NY.
Social Service Community Living Opportunities seeks motivated, energetic people to teach daily living and vocational skills to developmentally disabled, shift, PT and FT and weekends needed. Experience preferred. Excellent advancement opportunity $12-19.5 M. Call Marle, 813-965-3028
Storeroom Assistant, Kansas Union Food Services Monday, Friday, 7am-12pm. $4.25 an hour; part-time no fringe. Must have valid ID and phone number. Previous inventory or stock clerk experience preferred, money handling helpful. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office, 13th and Level 5.
Camp Counselors BANNER DAY CAMP
Nice honors *Cornelius* $ specializes,
ALS
*Louis* Leaders • **Basketball**
*Song Leaders*
*Hockey Hecky* 21 yr. old drives
**Motorcycle** 21 yr. old drives or Lake
Forest Campground (25 miles of NW) or Lake
C奈尔斯 KU Bookstores. $4 per hour, part-time.
no fringes. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday
and Sunday when working days and hours
when other employees are available have previous, verifiable employment record as a
cashier or handling money and able to stand for
work in Kansas Union Personnel Office,
level 5. EOE
June 10 Aug 9
1-800-726-4901
(708) 295-4900
Elementary Summer Camp staff need at Rainier
School to participate in recreation in
brainyology, phylogy, or ecology per-
tence working with 7/12 year olds required.
Lawrence is a master of restoratian with horses.
EAIN $5.000-$10.000 Now hiring-managers and
limited opportunity, limited part-time, now.
Full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
C. Call 180-400-COLEGE; M. Gannon.
SADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-Career position for competitive candidate with degree in business management. Complete college excellent starting salary, company at Carr University of New York. Call集 collect. Mr. Schwartz, to the COLLEGE.
Housekeeper for summer and next year, experience and own transportation required. 642-1343.
Earn up to $800-$1200/mo part-time this summer
at home. To schedule an interview, call Straight
Arrow Enterprises, 842-9194.
Interested in a caring summer job as a private home care aid? Gain valuable experience being part of a dynamic team. VNA offers flexible training & bd training培训: 843-6729-7081
LPN's wanted for group program serving developmentally disabled adults. Requires experience in occupational and skill development skills. Experience preferred. On-call duty required. $182.91 CALL Steve P., #861-850-7302.
NANINES-Year-long East Coast, Airfare, great fun! Survival skills. Carefully screened family. Personal attention. PRINCIPAL NANINES-Workday #4, 46: Provision, NJ. NIU 8069 (407) 115-1156.
NANNIES immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida Excellent salaries plus benefits, 1 year commitment. Call area representative. 913-827-3644
**summers:** Coast east afflicted families seek live in nannies. Paid airfare, super salaries, excellent networking services. Sorry, no many summers. Nannies: 905-737-9748, Dollin Dunnin. 1-800-937-9748 or 937-794-868.
Need a break? Be a nanny! Earn good money, go to interest places for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency. 842-443-442
Need person to show apartments, answer phone requests. Must have a full-time in summer with possible part time in business or be work study eligible. Call Mary AT 841-6003 beginning 20 May at 5 pm d/wk. Know student processing, general accounting procedures, organization requirements, required 8.45 h/week. Send letter of interest, resume, and phone number of 2 references by M to May in Edge Enterprises, P.O. Box 9708, San Diego, CA 92110.
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary 1-800-955-2709
Work available in K. C. area. Secretarial-work processing, data entry and secretarial skills need experience. Apply 13 pm May 5th or 2nd. Parking and Unloading- Want to stay physically fit! Flexible schedule. Apply aloam月May 10th or 12th. Two-choice clothing only. 2 only-story blue and gray offer complex.
Part-time position available for technician at Microtech. Requires some knowledge of IBM PCs. Training provided. 841-9513, ask for Raymond.Dana.
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. '91. Large apartment, furniture. W/D, summer storage. 841-3330.
Sitter needed for summer for 12 yr old boy.
Alvamar area. Live in optional. Room and board provided. 749-4358 after 6.
Sitter needed for 2 weeks; 2 year old and 7 month old; 2 days a week or meal combination or combination
COLLEGE GRADUATES
Welcome to Apply
Wanted for Management
Interviews will also be given for other positions waiting to be filled.
Large national manufacturer is NOW HIRING people to staff our factory distributorship here in Lawrence.
Expect $2,500/MO Plus To Start
All corporate benefits available
- On the Job Training
- Maintenance
- Paid Vacation
- Liberal Bonuses *
- Paid Conventions
Car & Clothing
New divisional outlet, large customer base and our corporate expansion necessitates those openings.
Applications and personal interviews.
Thursday, April 25th
Burge Union
Frontier Room
Ask for Mr. Lozier
PRESS FOR SUCCESS
SUMMER-FALL PART-TIME JOB as person-career attendant for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Seeking mature, bright individual with experience in afternoons, and morning. Available to work during KU vacation a plus Good job for OT, JFK, UTA, and other students or students or persons with like interests. Reliable car and phone required U.C. citizenship desired. Phone number 642-1681, between 1:1pm weekdays to apply
SUMMER-Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counsellors in WSI, W tennis, Arts & Crafts/Ceramics, Soccer, Science, UpperTech, Technical Call Alarm A900, 1-800-443-6428
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crest, Send Stamp For Free Download. Sullivan's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kaisell, MT 59901.
TENNIS COUNSELORS - Boy's resident camp in Tennesse, 40 miles south of Nashville, staff with great enthusiasm, who love kids 12+ its courts, floor and hard surfaces. High salary, room and board from $6,980 to $18,488. Mate Lee college.
**Textbook Cliffs:** KU Bookstores, Part time 14 to 26 per hour; position could possibly last until 15.16. Must be able to work weekdays between the hours. Must speak English, have previous sales experience or be able to stand for long periods. Must speak English, have previous employment and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant to have interest or knowledge of books Applicant Uxter Personnel Level. Level
THE INFO is booking for a few dedicated individuals to assist with merchandise subscriptions. The INFO team will be responsible for transportation. Casual business attire will be required. Failure to fill placement available will be helpful. Failure to placement available
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flex, hours, meals.
Call Frank, Lawrence Country Club. 843-286-3980.
Want a summer job where you can lose weight, feel great and earn lots of money? Please call (816) 444-2251.
225 Professional Services
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Photo education, passports, immigration,
health information.
Interested in 'BAW, color: Call Tom Sweil 784-1611.
Interested in good health? Let us help you
with your medical history. Our chronicized
formula 'Diet Diet Program' 100%
works.
School Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
JAYHAWK SUMMER STORAGE
- Fully Insured
* Free Boxes
*Free Pick-up and Delivery
843-4533
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
Thesis & Dissertations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street.
813-4600
TRAFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & G alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD D. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1. a page double-spaced. Accurate. Fast Word
Processing. Call Theresa at 841-0776.
Processing. Call Theseat 841.0766
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transfers your scrublits into accurately spelled letters.
2-der Woman Word Processing of letter quality type 843.2063, days or evenings.
1-dollar per double-spaced page. Rush jobs no problem.
1-unit used worldwide. $250.00
1- Word Processing: Term Papers, letters,
resumes, etc. Call 842 4754, 3:30 to 30 pm wkdys,
anytime wkdys
A- Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. 842 7383
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 10 am 6 pm: 841-1293
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable fast service. Call after 1:00 pm.
841 6341.
Demna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term paper letters, dissertations, letters,
resumes applications mailing lists. Laser print
manuals applications F-5a 8m 94 82244
Mt 1a m4 8a 5f F-5a 8m 94 82244
ACST, ACCURATE TYPING $4.50 per page.
Includes PU and DEL, anywhere in city limits.
Transcriptions and Database Projects also
handled. CMail at: 842.3822
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting, typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927; Mass. 841-7517.
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call
HR:390
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets questionnaires. Call
Key Works. 842-8307
WordPerfect word processing, Inkjet 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: 8142654
Word Processing $1.00 pg, Spell check, etc, Call
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1987 Cannondale racing bike, Shimano 600, hardy used. $400 need. Call Sam. B55-151
Asking $300. Call 86-9629
B 86 Ninja under 10,000 miles New Dunlap $2300
obl. 749-6390. leave message
40 Jeep CJ3-7: Hartrop, AC 4-spd. Good condition
Asking $5500 Call 863-0629
Trucks.com
38 Yamaha Jog, Yello and fast, Scott, 864-8658
90 gallon "show" aquarium with all equipment.
Used $300 or best offer 841-8218
BARGAIN One-way ticket KI to NYC LaGuard
01234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
BARRAGAN, one way is KAI 10 NY CATERING
on May 17th. Call Dave. 864-2844.
Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
Downstairs P.O. Box 76, Monaco warehouse.
For sale SUIKUN 41968 New front tire, exhaust, beadlight. Reliable $560 Call 841-9892 GURP Surplus! Sleeping bags, backpacks, tent, campground clothing, wet weather gear, outdoor equipment, winter gear CARHARTT WORKEAR Mon-Sat-14:37-17:24 LSTM Surprises Sales St. Marys, HS Harleyshire Honda Rebel 400 Silver Ammerview New brakes, battery Garage kept
Brand new Fuji Road Bike Excellent condition,
$425 neg 1887 Road Bike, new frame, $125.
843-4014
Honda Elite Moped 50cc. 70 miles, almost new
$600. Call after 12:00 a.m. 865-0677.
Kayopr IBM I52M KGIA V Monitor 20 MB hard drive
5.25 disk drive $1200 offer. @84-4913.
5.25 disk drive, $1400 offer, 842-4913
MacGregor Golf Clubs, less than 1 yr old. 2SW.
Best offer. #842-7011
Must sell 1988 Bianchi Allante Mountain Bike Shimano Components. Good condition. $150 obo.
Call 645-7278
NEW LEAIGH BIKE WITH SWISWN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES GUAGE) $250.849-9146
Neon Lights - Busch, Buinight, Busch Guitar, $100 each.
748-4237
Broadway Ensemble for starred accompaniment for sale
each. 749-4327
Rockford Fosgate car stereo equipment for sale.
Call 864-2982
SONY XR7180 car stereo. Pull out, touch controls.
digital. $275.841.867. Chris.
Sony CD $110. AKA1 Amp and tape $140, Equalizer
$20, Marantz receiver and speaker $150 HP 48XS
$483, 847-7590
step-by-step manual that can make you up to
150 by next week. Fewer send. Remain $5
refundable; to P. O. Box 42124 Lawrence, KS
6944
Stillwater Kicker CTF Supersport. 150W. Barely
used, $83 red, asking $15, 843-425, Mike.
340 Auto Sales
1978 Datsun 200 3X Low miles, excellent mechanical condition, very good body $1250 obo. 749-292
1980 Ford Fairmont Low mileage, no hail
damage. Good condition, good stereo. $1800 obo.
749-2493.
1980 Honda Prelude 80,000 mi. runs great, 5
speed 850-best offer. Days 864-9310 other,
842-4723.
1989 Plymouth Horizon, auto, a/c; amfm-15. 1500
miles, like new interior $6,200 negotiable Call
647-323-9880
Civic '81, 94K, ac, $1100 Mitsubishi Precis '89.
Civic Wagon '84, 96, am/fm, good, $1040; 8am
0432 or leave message.
For sale. 1981 TOYOTA CELICA GT. Always starts, runs great, no hail. $1400.00. 841-4449 evenings.
Loaded 1884 Toyota Celica GT5 Coupe, Metallic blue, alloy wheels, immaculate condition. High freeway miles. 9,400 bargain. 1-863-2225.
Fireway mills. $4,500 negotiate. 7689-2223
Mazda EX-7: 5 spd, A/C, sunroof, alloys. $2500
841-5184
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
On TV's 'TV, jewelry, steroid music instruments,' can be found in musical instruments. You can hire Visa/MCAMEX. Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 1804 W. 6th 749-1919.
BETTER
360 Miscellaneous
HYPNOTHERAPY
LOOK BETTER • FEEL BETTER
R.W. McClure
842-7504
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
New location!
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CID - $5.60 and down. Records and tapes - $2.00 and down. top dollar for collections. Vehicle - $15-$30. To buy to a toy store to buy to a TV - $92.75 Habitat 2 d. good body. had motor. Call TOM. 749-1611
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 BR Summer term, 4th and Tennessee Area Rent Negotiable? No pets. For appt., 841-5797
After 5 p.m. call 862-4327
1 bedroom basement apartment, walk to campus and KU. Available mid-August, $235, utilities incl., non-smoker. 842-4956
1 BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! for rent or buy $275/mo 842-9136.
1 bedroom apartment in beautiful old house Available in August. Walk to KU or downtown AUC Off street parking. No pets $258, 841-7042
1 nonfemale student for summer sublease. Near university. No pets. Only 2 females or 2 females for summer sublease. Great location nice, spacious, pool, AC, DW, DM Went negotiate? Please leave message, 963, 2822
2 3 bedroom units for rent. Get egress at 2822
1 bedroom only for sublease May 15-August
16 Will pay $1May and August rent. Like new, air conditioning. Call 865-3278 Leave message
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, on behalf of a business, social 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 ads advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Sell it, buy it. trade it, find it. Kansan Classifieds work.
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT AVAILABLE
AUGUST in beautiful old house. Wood floors, french
food tuil. A/C w/ book shelves, ceiling fans. $390 No
parts. 811-704-7
2 br apt available in new building of West Hills
for June 1. Great apt with microwave, w/door
closure, energy efficient gas heat. Great location
new campus. 100 Emery Hd. 4600+ no pets.
3 Bedroom house summer sublease.
$175/bedroom negotiable. A/C, washer/dryer utilities included. 841-5488.
3 BR townhouse for summer sublease. 1½ baths room for 4 or 5 rooms. Rent negotiable. Available late May until July 31, 843-762.
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option.
Spacious, Economical. AC, DW, on bus route. Call
249-347.
3 br house available Aug. 1. Full basement, cen-
tral air, no pets, nite 914 E. 13th. Call 841-0655 for appt.
$500/mo.
3 b townhouse, 2 b, wa, b, dw, garage, low utilities, available 6/11. Surise Village 843-4583. 3 studio apt. for rent starting at $205.00. No pets. 749-7588
4 BR apt for summer sublease 2. bath W/D. DW/KAC microwave, pool water, tennis courts, bus ride. Sunrise Village, Call Kim, 865-9625, leave message.
4 bedroom, 2 bath, AC. $600 a month. Available after May 15th. 934-498-00
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 17th Ohio (now construction) 1 and 2 BR (Formerly Villa Capri) 3 and 4 BR (Formerly Villa Capri) new construction 2-BR-1 bath 2-BR-2 bath with washers/dryers Across from Memorial
- 541 Michigan, #8lex, yr old-1BHR-3-2R
* Bath All with washer/dryer.
* Bradford Square Apartments; 500 Colorado. 240
* Call today. First Management 749-1566. Open
house every Saturday from 12:30 at Bradford
Square, 500 Colorado #C-1 Office hours Mon-Fri
APARTMENTS: Kansas City. Small, Large. Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many rooms. 816-392-3928
A PERFECT sublease. June and July. Female roommates needed. Close to campus/downtown. AC wash, d microwave. 855-960.
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower House 1468 Tennessee 749-0871 or 841-0484.
Available June 1, option for fall: 4 bedroom apartment with loft in Orchard Corners. Spacious, beautifully furnished, bus on bus route. Extra furniture free. 841-1445.
Available for summer sublease. Sunrise Village townhouse. AC, microwave, pool courts, tennis court, patio. Basketball court. **Hopsters!** Summer sublease for a righton party palace, less than block from Hawk, Bull.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 available rooms, great place.
$160 plus $4 utilities. Call 885-4095.
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUITELESS
In a superior location at a superior preschool.
Sublease two bedrooms apt with W/D. Call
814/765. Rent $35.00 per month.
Sublease two bedroom up May 15-Aug 15. $345 per month. 749-269 or 842-304; ask for Jennifer.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 25, 1991
15
Sublease 3 bdrm townhouse from mid-May or June 1 to July 29 $15 bath, fireplace. $500/mo * utilities. On has bus line. 749-3402
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 1 tbl from KU with off-street parking, no pets. 841-500-9367
Sublease with Fall option. Large studio. AC, W/D,
DW, big closet. Rent $250/mo. Clark 865-735 or
Tonya 865-2249
Summer Sublease: 3 rooms available May 1-ly.
31. Unfurnished 4-bd townhouse in Sunrise Village, Female non-smoker. $180/mo. plus $140 refundable deposit. 740-1590.
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. 841-5000.
Summer Sublease: V. cool studio near 9th and
Ohio. Deck $250/mo 853-890-
Summer Subbase: Three roommates needed
either a 4-bedroom or a 5-bedroom. djEllis A17th and Fashion 843-218.
djEllis A18th and Fashion 843-218.
treat, great balcony. Call Mike or Mark. 749-3404
Summer special on 1 bedroom for $50. 250
$300 and 1 bedroom $250. Heatherwood Valley
Apts. 843-4754
Summer sublease starting in June at Orchard Corners. Call for more info 841-4278.
Summer sublease. Semi-furnished 2 br. jacuzzis
nice & clean, rent negligible. Also, female room
mate need for next year, non-smoker. J
865-0549
Summer sublease. Large studio apt. Bus route,
pool, water paid Option for fall. Call Kim.
865-319-118. Leave message if not available
Summer sublease, male roommate need. Two
level, own bathroom. Furnished. Near campus,
water paid. $180/mo. Call Dave 865-3832.
June-July.
Summer sublease. Spacious four bedroom townhouse, pool, tennis, microwave, dishwasher. Rent negotiable. 749-2483
CREAM! 2 bedrooms available for summer sublease. Completely furnished, great location. super pool. Rent negotiable. Call 744-0313
Summer sublease: 1 br. ac, good quiet location
Only $250 Call 855-2662 Leave messages
Sub on Indiana Nice. Price negotiable 841-3244
Summer sublease! room bedroom house
VERY close to campus. W/D, A/C, clean
houses taken for Rent. Costs
Summer sublease. Big house. close to campus for 3 people. 13th and Ohio. Call 865-1360.
Summer sublet: June rent paid $178/75/month plus ¼ utilities. 2 cases of beer free. Call Brad at 865-0038.
Summer sublease. Bargain! Spacious 3 bdrm.
new kitchen, dishwasher, new carpet,
washer/drive book uns. 842-4633
Summer sublease Reduced rent! 2 bedroom apartment w/ ceiling fans and AC Excellent location on quiet, cobblestone street. 749 6808
Summer sublease. Studio apartment—Exceedingly clean, quiet, and close to campus. Perfect for graduate students. Very cheap. Call 749-6025/814.2966
Summer sublease 4 bedroom, 2 full baths, left fully furnished. Campus Place Apt. Next to Crossing. Call 843-400.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-6871 or drop by 1406 Tennessee.
WALKS TO KU OR DOWNTOWN. Efficience is 1 and 2 bedroom apartment in beijing downtown, claw feet tub, w/c. w/bookups, some floors for summer attire, price. Rents start at summer of annual prices. Rents call at: 800-743-9567.
Women students. Want to live in a non-existive environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Sandhower House. 146 Tennessees, 799-0817 or alternative. 146 Tennessees, 799-0817 or alternative.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
9th & Avalon 842-3040
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus rountudios townhomes2,3 BedroomsFree cableWater paidPool
--ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
1 bedroom room 840;
2 bedroom room $440;
3 bedroom room $560
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardow's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Klein for more
tree
WOODWAY
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
Sublease. Three bedroom apartment close to campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 865-2997
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
841-8400 Open house daily
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
* On Site MGT./Reliable
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
Call about our Summer Special
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
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 by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Boardwalk
apartments
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
842-4444
- Clean & well maintained
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
- appliances
- Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
- large rooms & closets
- plush carpets
- refreshing
843-6446
2166 W.26th
- water & trash paid
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
- central air & gas heat
- mini-blinds
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
Broadway Theatre
- Two bedrooms
- Two bathrooms
- Four apartments
- Full equipped kitchen
- Full equipped laundry
- Private hideaway or patio # Paid cable TV
- Private hideaway or patio
- On-site management
- On-site management
- P.A. allowed
DUOASHL & 25th CT. 841-1815
2 blocks east of lows on 23rd to Duoashl.
NAISMITH PLACE
Sublease. N1. BASE1 AWSP4. Water pad. w/d. a/c microwave, dishwasher, on KU. bus rack. $300 monthly wg. w/ lease renewal at end of July. Please call 965-0190
*ablare for summer apt. Non-smoker. Close to ampu.
Call 832-2913. leave message.
S
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Double Take
Swan Management
- Graystone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts. Open House M.E.1.5 p.m.
Open House M:F 1:5 p.m.
Sat. 11:3 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Sunrise Apts.
Studios
-1.2,3&4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Luxurious Town Home
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- & Apartment Living
- On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
- Close to Campus
Sunrise Place 9th & Michie
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway
--among a peaceful country atmosphere
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
1-5 P.M.
meadowbrook
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mans
OPEN DAILY
MASTERCRAFT
TANGLEWOOD
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
841-5255·7th & Florida
OFFERS
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
KENTUCKY PLACE
841-1429 • 1145 Louisiana
I'M SO SICK OF THIS! I CAN'T SAY ANYTHING TO YOU WITHOUT BEING CUT DOWN. DATING YOU IS HELL.
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas?
ORCHARD CORNERS
TANGLEWOOD 749.2415
Lighted Tennis Courts Two Pools
- Laundry facilities in most buildings
Visit Meadowbrook Apts Wide range of GREAT
C
Wide range of GREAT studios, 1,2 & 3 Bdm, apts 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes
- Carports/Garages available
Playgrounds Water Paid
Free Basic Cable
KU Bus Stops
Experienced Professional Maintenance
MON-FRI 8-5:30 SAT 8-5
842-4200 SUN 1-4
Sublease a bedroom apt. Available May 17 at SApture Apt. Price. Call negotiate. Nb 852-2995.
Sublease 3 months 3 RH, 2 Bath. Offer: Fireplace. Payment: 40% of rent and evening, 81-644 0853, 2411 ask for Stk.
---
Sorry No Pets
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!"
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
10 4 6
$355 - $425
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
If doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
- Computer Center
- "Dine Anytime"
Wise up and make
- Free utilities
JAISMETHALL
NAISMITHHALL
1890 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
the move now!
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
MAVBE IT'S ABOUT TIME WE CALLED THE WHOLE THING OFF.
CALLED THE WHOLE THING OFF.
DUH!
NO, REALLY?
...
by Tom Avery
Free cable
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
CHEAP SUBLEASE NOW!! $160 for large room in 3 bedroom bd. RM424.785
Desperate for sublease- 2 b. 2 bath, pool, tennis-b. w/ball. booked-up. Available 5/21. Call 842 8389-Downtown. downstreet (large enough for 2 tolerant people). Clean and efficient, large deck. 843 7661
Coops have been part of KU since 1919. Cove has a long tradition of cooperative living that is fun, socially responsible, environmentally conscious, and diverse. The university flies Hawk-106 Tennessee 749-8717 or 841-9444.
Cheap summer sublease: Furnished 1 and/or 2 bedrooms. No deposit. $128/mo plus utilities. 853 3606.
Excellent Location, 1 location b. campus to, 2 bedroom at 4+躺, dishwasher, WD, hookup. Ca, net, availability June 1. $360. At 1341 (0) Call: 842-4324.
Available immediately, one bedroom, gas and water paid $23 per month. Available at least 2 weeks prior to the event. Some with utilities paid. Celing fans, mini blinds, ceiling fans, air conditioning, from campus at 149 and 1432 or 812-764-764.
Female non-smoking roomeat ware to share nice towhee房 $250 include spaces own bedroom, washder/dryer, and much more! May, Call Ann. Revenues best!) 814-456
Female wanted for summer sublease at orchard Corners. Rent negotiated. Calls Birch, 691-1626. Gar Married, need subletter. 1 bedroom apartment with fireplace, weat. kwar. full appliance. Kitchen. Parking.
GREAT SHLEASE! Bw r/ w microwave. May rent close. Paid to campus. Built nov. 841-4142.
GREAT VICTORIAN HOUSE - Suburban suite. Located in beautiful bayhouse, garage great.
Built 841-8155
Hey KU Med students-move in I and receive $t_2$ off your rent for 2 months. *Sundays*, I and 2 bedrooms apartments. Heat and water paid $t_1$ Med Centr. Med Centr. Rafter Towers. 943.831.6831
Huge 2 bedroom summer sublease. Free furniture use if necessary. Gas/water paid. 865-1387. Leave message.
Bey' KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and Bey' kUmed. offer your for rent at *Studios*. 1 and 2 bedrooms *heat* and water *pairs* *Across the room*. Center, Huntington Tower Apts. 813-903-838
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stays up 365 days a year and is a great place for college. Tenure: 1407-8917 740-8917 or 814-0894
Large studio apartment for summer sublease
Rent $280.00 per month. Call today: 841-9113.
Leasing now, for Fall or Spring. 2 br. apt. in
4x12, lemmy season, CA DW. Close to campus,
Off street parking. Low Utilities. Call 842-6784
For Ask Trac or leave message
Lorimar Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new.
Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until
July or for月 in 14 years. 841-7848, 841-1433.
NAISMITH PLACE APTS
*1 card came*
*Gourmet Kitchen/DW*
*Basketball Court/Laundry*
*2 BR from $96
25th St. Ct. at Ousdahl
Nice. one bdr apartment close to campus. Hardwood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-399 or 842-8007 evenings.
Nice studio at 1032 Kentucky available immediately. Walk to KU and Massachusetts Water paid, 849-3272.
Nice two bedroom home with all appliances.
New carpet and paint. Blinds, glass, quiet area,
no pets, prefer long term tenants. Available immediately.
$45.95-84.288
Non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom house immed. 832-1341.
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southbridge Plaza Apt. 183, rented. 275$ bedrooms start at $35$. 10-month lease. Water and cable paid. kitchen renovated, new carpet. Call (842) 181-8911.
New leasing for June and August. Extra nice cabinets, fireplace, stove, microwave and chen appliances, including diningware, central gar, hot; carpet; draperies and blinds. Lift cabinets from the ceiling at $10.00. SPANISH CREST APARTMENTS
THE FAR SIDE
August 1st, IHR for two. One block from Kansas
Upon Rent for to senior graduate students,
upperclass students or KU employees. One HR
for Water furnished. One Water furried.
$600/mo. 181-334 after 6 PM
FOR RENT: Professor's 2 BR house, $500, June
1991-Aug 1992 841-8844
Perfect Location one bk to town, 3 bks to kam:
2 bedroom apartment in fourplex, C/A. No
presents. Available 1. $390. At 110 Tennessee
Cat. 842-4282.
Studio apt at 1029 Mississippi. Available now
$205.00 plus deposit. 749-7568.
Spacious 3 bedroom duplex available June
and August 1. New carpet, paint and blinds. All kitchens appliances, central air, gas heat.
Reary阁套, garage, no parking. $450
443-288-298
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, garage, AC
2021 Heather Woolf. B41 9077.
Roommate need to share three bedroom threestory townhouse for summer. Close to campus. 941-1468
SUBLET 2 rooms in b3 townhouse Avail early May to end July. $185/month + utilities Will negotiate. No dep. Extra incentive. Please call 842-7335 Kerrie
SUBLEASE. 1 BR (t or 2 occupancy) $55 plus
usages, pool weight room, laundry, on.com
available, mid-may Thu July Call Kathy
861-152, leave message
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Beautiful 2 bedroom for 2-4 people in sandhance II. Furnished, private pool, more. $488 Call now! 955-2816, leave message
outside, DISLEASE with option for fall. 1 bedroom, furnished, private pool, water paid. All electric: 157 Lynch Ct, Sundance 825-325 or 843-6614
SUMMER SUBLEASE, HUGE 3 BEDROOM
APARTMENT Fantastic location close to campa-
up. Upper 2 floors of house $50 per month obo Call 841-0233
430 Roommate Wanted
A roommate wanted for 2 Br ap. CA, furnished pool, laundry 155/mo plus $3 utilities. On bus route. Call Jim 865-5288
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED!
Bare feet, clean, mature, upperclassman.
Stuare furnished. 2 BH room new campus
beginning mid May. Matures required.
665-295
Female, non-bachelor roommate needed for Fall
Share 2 bt trailer, on-room bed, w/d, central
housing, 3 bt trailers, 1 bt bedroom,
$1200/month plus $4 utilities. Prefer grad.
Middle school graduate. Amnette, 844-343 (1)
749-727 (1)
Wanted, mon-smoking female roommate for Fall
91. Call 865-3866.
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share 2 BR apt at northwinds. Own room. Brand New HIU 300 plus $^2$ utilities. 842.3511
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share spacious house. $160 month plus utilities. Aison,
865-2578
Female, roommate needed for fall, 4 bedroom duplex, cats, non-smoker, close to campus. $145 plus 1 utilities. Call 843-0238
Female subleaser needed over the summer. Call
1525 S. 811,600.
Looking for a mature respectful non-smoker with healthy approach to life to share my furnished two bedroom apartment. Call 841-6623.
Edale roommate needs to summer sublease. Edale roommate need to deal on Fax 749-6454 in Flatland. Place a deal on rent. Call 842-3701 at big room. Deal on rent. Hobert, 842-3721.quiet. eddie roommate with humor for *horses* Edie roommate needs to deal on rent. Hobert, 842-3721.quiet. eddie roommate with humor for *horses*
MALE or FEMALE to share taper 2 BW with 8
cells and hardwood floors. 1.9 feet of
cells from a 1K床 from CP M, Dad x & Joe's $65 plus
utilities. 865-157
Roostmate will urgently 1) brd townhouse, 2) bath on route W. DW, DFW, MN, Summer 280利息 included. Fall $210 plus 3利息 841-381. Call for Me
Summer Sublease-Own bedroom. Very close to campus. Nice Place. 183/mo plus $ t_2$ utilities. Call Jef at 141-1563.
Summer sublease. Two roommates needed.
Large furnished apartment. $160/mo *u*₁ utilities.
1310 Kentucky. Near campus. B43-2229
Three mature male roommates need to share large modern home on bus route W/B, D/C, large room, kitchen, room, deck, etc. MUST SEE $215 plus 4 utilities. Call Brian, C841-8903.
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom towhouse for a summer sublease. Call Rebecca, 865-0574.
Very quiet place. 2 bedroom house w/ lan in North
Riverside. Rent includes utilities. Call for app.
841-1729, Steven Lloyd
Two roommates needed for fall. Nice house, large yard. Close to bus and campus. Call 749-1890 for details. $75.00 plus utilities.
Wanted May 15- Non-homophilic female roommate to share residence, new a bedroom house close to the kitchen. Applicants must carport $650 mo plus *4 units*. Must be 21 years old, will negotiate, on behalf of the denier 842-7484
By GARY LARSON
Uh-oh... I'm entering Shrew People County, and I feel I'm being watched... What do I know of them? Think, Higgins!
Shrew People: quick, carnivorous, usually nocturnal beings; smaller but more vicious than the better-known Mole People; eat five times their own body weight every day; cannibals.
16
Thursday, April 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
handmade Jewelry
GOLDMAKERS
723 mass. 842-2770
GSP - Corbin
Fashion Sho
Corbin
Thurs
p.m 25,
7:30 p.m..
MICHAEL COOK
CALL
843-3131
Sports Talk
A radio talk show • Thursdays, 7pm • 90.7 FM
COVERING
KU
ATHLETICS
90.7 FM
Brass Apple
BrussApple
KJHX 90.7 FM
For the Best Prep
Suffering from Hail Damage?
Why wait when we can
LSAT
CMIAT
CRE
Repair your car or truck Venus Body Shop and Lawrence Body Shop are working together to get the job done quick.
THE PRINCETON REVIEW
- We honor all Ins. Co. estimates
• Student discount on all deductibles
• Free pick-up and delivery to Lawrence area
Providing quality health care women since 1974 VISA, MasterCard and insurance plans accepted.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH
FOR WOMEN
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH
FOR WOMEN
CONCERNED, CONFIDENTIAL & PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN
Toll Free 1-800-227-1918
SAFE & APPRODABLE AMBORTION SERVICES
GYN CARE - FREEPRIORITY TESTING
BIRTH CONTROL SERVICES
DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY-
INFECTED BABIES
JOHN MIKA'S
(816) 474-7900
- Foreign and Domestic
HARDWARE
VENUS BODY SHOP
dlk
SOFTWARE: Dos 3.3, Lotus Workstations, Windows 3.0
PERIPHERAL: 2400B internals, Super mouse II
HARDWARE
2MB Ram, expandable to 5MB
5.25, 1.2MB floppy drive
5.25, 1.4MB floppy drive
40MB hard disk drive, Segat ST157A, 28ms
Serial, parallel, PS2 mouse ports
16bit SVGA card with 256K, Paradise chipset
14" VGA color monitor
101 Enhanced keyboard, Fujitsu 4800 tactile
One year warranty, parts and labor, local servi
Kansas City
ROCK SOLID VALUE AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES! DTK PEER 1660
16MHz SX
$1795 everything included MICROTECH COMPUTERS DICKINSON PLAZA 841-9513
843-5124 Lawrence
OPEN HORSE SHOW
WESTERN HORSE
APRIL 28 $ ^{\mathrm{th}} $
AT DOUGLAS COUNTY TRAILRIDER ARENA
SPONSORED BY K.U. EQUESTRIAN CLUB
SPONSORED BY
UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN
Whitney Houston faces assault, threat charges
The Associated Press
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Pop singer Whitney Houston allegedly punched a man and threatened to kill him during a fight in a hotel lounge, according to a criminal complaint filed with the Fayette County attorney's office.
Ransom Brotherton of Lexington filed a complaint alleging that Houston assaulted him Friday night when he tried to break up a fight.
Brotherhood said the fight involved the singer's brother, Michael Houston, and Kevin Owens of Austin, in the Radisson Plaza hotel lounge.
In a related complaint, Owens alleged that Michael Houston started the fight. He said the singer's brother be yelling at him after someone in a group of people in the lounge velled, "It's Whitney Houston."
The complaints were filed Friday
night with the Fayette County attorney's office, the night before Houston performed in Lexington.
District Judge Kevin Horne on Tuesday authorized a summons to be served on Houston and her brother. No court date was set.
The charges carry a maximum penalty of a $500 fine and 12 months in jail.
Whitney Houston, 27, was charged with assault and making terroristic threats. Michael Houston was charged with assault.
Houston, who performed in Columbia, Mo.; Tuesday night, offered no comment after the show and was whisked away. But a Lexington fan, having her Buri McCoy, said the charges would be dismissed!
"There is no discussion right now of countercharges. We don't know if that's an option at this time," he said.
Ostrich strangulation confounds police
The Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. — Police at Louisiana State University were trying Tuesday to figure out why anyone would break into a poultry science department pen and strangle an ostrich.
The ostrich, valued at $11,000 was found dead Saturday, said police Lt.
Mark Shaw. An autopsy performed at the LSU veterinary school turned up little additional information
"The bird was strangled in some manner, we know that," said Harold W. Casey, a veterinary school official. "I think it was a prank type thing that resulted in the strangulation."
19
TAKE A LOAD OFF.
Come to The Mail Box!
We can ship anything, anywhere
from Bicycles to Desks.
Clothes-Computers-TVs-Stereos.
- Pick-up services.
Clothes-Computers-1Vs-Stereos.
Disks-in-services.
*Boxes & packaging supplies.
U.P.S., U.S. Mail, Truck Line.
$100.00 Free Insurance - U.P.S.
The Mail Box
3115 W. 6th
Sunset West Center
749-4304
East of Sonic
Open: M-F. 9-6 Sat. 9:12:30
Open: M-F, 9-6 Sat, 9-12;30
THE YACHT CLUB Bar & Grill
Monday
Daily Specials
THE IACR FOUNDATION
lunch: Bratwurst $3.25
dinner: Yacht Club Sand. $3.50
drink: Draws 75¢
842-9445
Wednesday
runch: Chicken Sand. $3.85
dinner: Chicken Sand. $3.85
drink: Domestic Beers $1.25
Margaritas $1.05
Tuesday
day
lunch: Turkey Sand. $3.50
dinner: Chicken Fingers/
Buffalo Wings $3.25'
drinks: Imports $1.50
Thursday
lunch: Admiral Salad $3.50
dinner: Top Sirlin & Steak
Fries $6.95
drink: Well Drinks $1.75
Draws 75¢
23
BECERROS
Southwest Cuisine 2515 W. 6th 841-1323
All New Menu Items & Drink Specials
Sunday - $1.25 Margaritas Monday-75¢ Draws
Party
Friday
on our
lunch: Nacho Surpreme $4.95
dinner: Nacho Surpreme $4.95
drink: Bucket of Busch / Busch Light $6.00
Bottles $1.00
lunch: Turkey Club $3.75
dinner: Fajitas $6.50
drink: Yacht Shots $1.00
(well shots, watermelon, kamikazee,
& sex-on-the-beach)
Saturday
Sunday Cheeseburger / Curly Fries & either a Draw or a Coke $2.50 (refills 50¢) open noon on Sun.
patios!
Tuesday - $1.25 Margaritas
Wednesday - $2 Frozen Margaritas
& $1.25 Imports
Monday...Pitchers $3.25
Tuesday...Schooners $1.50
Thursday - $2.50 Pitchers
BULLWINKLE'S
843-9726
Wednesday...Schooners $1.50 Thursday...Draws 75¢ Fridays...Cans $1.25
Fridays FREE BURGERS in the BULL PEN
START
University daily Kansan. [Lawrence, Kan.] Published by the students of the University of Kansas, 1912-.
v. illus. 40-66cm.
Daily (Jan. 6 - Feb. 9, 1912), 5 nos. a week (Feb. 12, 1912 - May 19, 1923), 6 nos. a week (Sept. 17, 1923 - June 4, 1933), 5 nos. a week (Sept. 16, 1933 - ).
KHi HOLDINGS: Lack a few issues.
v. 9, no. 1 -
Jan 16, 1912 -
Publisher varies.
Published during the school year except during examination periods.
"Official paper of the University of Kansas."
Continues periodical called: Kansan.
ISSN 0746-4967
WHEN THREE OR MORE DATES ARE MISSING FROM OUR FILES, IT IS SO NOTED ON THE FILM AT THE MISSING DATES. WHEN JUST ONE OR TWO DATES ARE MISSING, IT IS NOTED ONLY BY AN EXTRA BLANK FRAME.
1 CENTIMETER = 0.3927 INCHES
1 WETTER = 0.3927 INCHES
OR 0.3260 FEET OR 1.094 US - 1 INCH = 2.54 CENTIMETERS - 1 DECIMETER = 3.937 IN OR 0.328 FOOT
1 FOOT = 3.048 DECIMETERS - 1 YARD = 0.9144 METER
MAYE
N 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSA.
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL. 101. No. 140
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
U.S. prepared for conflict
American troops ready if Iraq refuses to leave refugee zone
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The United States yesterday threatened to take whatever steps were necessary if Iraq balked at an ultimatum for the withdrawal of its security forces in the refugee zone in northern Iraq.
Tomorrow is the deadline for the pullout, an administration source said.
U. S. officials said they thought that the Iraqis would comply with the ultimatum but added that American troops were prepared for a show-
"There should be no doubt in their minds about what the outcome would be." Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said.
The United States would prevail in a conflict because it has sufficient forces in the area, he said. About 7,000 American troops already are in northern Iraq and across the border in Turkey.
The United States may deploy additional forces, Cheney said.
The order for an Iraqi pullout was intended to reassure Kurdish refugees hiding in the mountains that it is safe to come down to allied protected camps, he said. The first camp is being constructed in the area around Zakho, and plans were announced on Friday center to be built 15 miles to the west.
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater called the Iraq forces an intimidating presence, saying that they impaired the possibility of confrontation.
The administration also said that a U.S. Air Force flight carry blankets for Iraqi refugees in Iran would fly to Tehran tomorrow. This is believed to be the first official U.S. flight to Iran since former National Security Advisor Robert McNamara in a secret effort to free American hostages and establish a dialogue with Iran
The ultimatum by the United States, Britain and France brings risks of a new military clash with Baghdad, which is struggling to regain control after its crushing defeat in the Persian Gulf War. However, administration officials was unlikely that Iraq would resist.
The secretary said the Iraqis were ordered to keep their security forces several kilometers back from Zakho. He indicated that the order applied to Iraq's internal security services and to military forces, but not to ordinary police.
He said that although preliminary discussions with Iraq indicated they would be responsive, the U.S. would take whatever steps were necessary.
There are now several hundred armed Iraqi security troops in the area around Zakho.
Cheney declined to say how many more U.S. troops could be sent, or when, and whether the possible reinforcements were intended to back up the allied demand for withdrawal of Iraqi security forces.
"It is our belief they do not intend to provoke a confrontation," Fitzwater said.
The ultimatum was delivered to Iraq at the United Nations by U.S. Ambassador Thomas Pickering. News of the allies' order leaked from
An announcing the ultimatum, Fitzwater said it was essential for the refugee camps to have an atmosphere of safety.
He said the United States and its allies had not encountered any problem with the security forces but that it was nonetheless prudent to have these forces pulled back in order to prevent any accidents.
rag on Wednesday but was denied at he time by the White House.
The presence of Iraqi security forces goes counter to conveying such an atmosphere," he said.
"It is also for them to pull back to create a signal to the refugees that they are safe to come down from the mountains," he added.
The administration continued to express skepticism about a tentative agreement between Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and Kurdish leader
*Filzwater also expressed confidence that the United Nations eventually would take control of the refugee camps in northern Iraq, but he acknowledged some problems in arranging the takeover.
Facts members told to pay or be barred
The Student Senate Elections Commission issued an ultimatum last night to the Facts coalition: not fines or be barred from fire.
Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said the fines from campaign violations were due by May 6, or the 10 members of the coalition who gained seats would be removed and all 33 coalition members would be barred from involvement in next year's Senate elections.
This also would prevent Jason McIntosh, Giles Smith and Roger Ross, holderover senators, from retaining their seats in Senate, which they won Wednesday night during this year's last Senate meeting. McIntosh and Smith ran for president and vice president for the Facts coalition, and Ross ran for Senate.
Kansan staff report
Facts who defended the coalition during complaint hearings, said he had hoped the commission should be involved in community service repayment.
"We'll definitely attempt to raise the money," he said.
The coalition was fined $253.
The coalition was fined $253. Peter Paukstelis, a member of
Pauksteil said Facts had appealed $133 of the fines to University Judiciary yesterday
If the appeals fail, the deadline stands. Poer said.
"They can pool their money, or a few can pay," he said.
Although Facts was fined for campaign violations, the coalition was not found in violation of two of its laws that prohibit attacks against it — fraud and bribery.
Pauksteis said that he did not begrudge the commission for its decision.
In three separate campaigns, Greater Media discovered 388 illegal converters and collected almost $20,000 in lost revenue and damage fees, said general manager Mark Shuster.
Cable TV fires bullet, wages war on pirates
"We realize that the commission has to uphold its findings," he said.
American Cablevision, with about 330,000 paid subscribers in New York's boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn, estimates it loses hundreds of thousands of dollars annually to pirates.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The newest weapon in the cable industry's war on video pirates would fit right in with the U.S. military's smart bomb and cruise
The electric bullet, developed by Jerrold Communications of Hatboro, Pa., was first fired last year by Greater Media Cable of Philadelphia.
It is an electronic "bullet," a signal fired through the cable system from company headquarters right into the addressable cable converter box on
If the box is legitimate, nothing happens. But if illegal chips were installed in a basic converter to decryble premium services such as HBO without payment of the monthly fee, the bullet uses the chips' own programs to shut down the converter and halt service.
Thanks to the bullet, American Cablevision of Queens in New York City filed a civil suit in federal court against 317 alleged cable thieves.
The defendants in the lawsuit will be offered a deal — a $500 cash payment to the company within 20 days, or face prosecution and a $100 fine of $1,000 to $110,000, said American Cablevision president Barry Rosenheim.
The company fired a bullet March 13 that covers about one third of its system, and the switchboard was destroyed. The company members whose screens had gone dark
Technicians were sent to the homes to replace the boxes, which then were disassembled and examined for evidence of illegal chins.
"It's just like department store shoplifting," said Richard Aurelio, president of Time Warner's New York City Cable Group, which includes American Cablevision. "We have ways of detecting where it is and . . . we're going to go after them."
such piracy and other methods, such as illegal hookups and black market coders, cost the industry $3 billion. People do not take the piracy seriously.
"It can be what they call a cocktail party crime ... kind of a fun thing," said Jodi Hooper of the National Crime Bureau. "I don't really think of it as a crime."
But the cable industry considers it a significant problem. Most pay services began scrambling their satellite signals in 1986, so the focus now is on catching people with illegal descramblers.
88
Philp Meiring/KANSAN
Chad Kingsley, Chicago freshman, balances his lacrosse stick on his head during the KU lacrosse team's last practice of the season. The team was preparing yesterday for this weekend's tournament against Kansas State, Missouri and St. Louis University. Game times are 2 p.m. tomorrow, and 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Skenk Center, 23rd and Iowa streets. See story Page 11.
Balanced approach
Senate considers tax-increase bill; no action taken
Bill would generate millions in revenue
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA Two days ago the prospect of the Legislature putting together any kind of spending pack-up was at the end of the session looked dim.
But after the Senate debated a $150 million tax-increase bill for more than five hours yesterday without taking any action, some legislators who favor an increase are showing signs of optimism.
The Senate yesterday passed an amendment proposed by State Sen. Sheila Frahm, R-Colby, that would give the Senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr
State Seen Wint Winter Jr., R-
Lawrence said that because Kerr backed the amendment, the tax bill had a good chance to pass.
"I think we're in a good position to do it," he said. "He's a risked alienating a lot of people, and I respect that he doesn't want me to not be" beserk. He is a major ally.
However, the Senate passed four amendments that would reduce the amount of revenue to $134 million.
The bill originally would have raised $9.3 million in revenue by increasing personal income tax rates and raising the rate from 20% to 4.75 percent lax rate (1.4%), per cent to 4.75 percent.
Frahm's measure would cut $27.6 million from the personal income tax total, and she said she would propose an amendment package to target the remaining $74 million to local school districts.
She plans to propose her amendments when the Senate begins debate on a school finance bill this morning. Final action will be taken on both the tax bill and school finance bill after the latter bill is debated.
'91 Kansas Legislature
'Why are we raising taxes?'
Let's just leave it alone and
let our taxpayers rest for a
little while. They'll love you
for it.' — State Sen. Gus Bogina
State Sen. Gus Bogina
R-Shawnee
Frahm said the outcome of the tax bill now depended upon how the school finance bill shaped up.
"Some of us don't want to vote on the tax bill until we know whether or not some of the money will be earmarked for education," she said.
Frahm said Kansans would face a $20 million instead of $159 million property tax increase if her amendment proposing tighter budget lids on local school district budgets was approved.
Kerr said that he supported the amendments because of the property tax relief measure.
"These amendments would make a great deal of progress toward solving our property tax problems," he said.
Winter said if the tax increase passed, he would move to restore $11 million to the Board of Regents institutions.
However, State Sen. Gus Bogina,
R-Shawnee, said he would continue to fight the tax bill.
"I have a very good question to ask you," he said to the rest of the senators. "Why are we raising taxes?"
"Let's just leave it alone and let our taxpayers rest for a little while. They'll love you for it."
Pilot dies after plane crashes near hospital
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A burning single-engine plane circled low over residential areas before afternoon near a hospital.
The pilot, dead at the scene, was identified by family members as Frank Kress, 67, of suburban Milwaukee. He was predeceased he was the only person aboard the plane, owned by CAUZ Inc. of Raytown. The Federal Aviation Administration said late Friday that neither whether anyone else was aboard
The pilot was speaking frantically into his radio moments before the plane went down, witnesses told local broadcast stations.
"It was a big ball of fire as he was trying to control it," she said. "I didn't want him not to hurt anybody. We were thinking he would try to jump out, but we know why he didn't. He saved a lot of lives. I think he was."
A helicopter pilot who was standing at the helicopter pad at the time of the crash said the pilot had been wearing a life jacket in the hospital and other buildings.
Demand for storage services increases when students leave
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Finals, projects and even summer subleagues are just a few of the problems students face as the summer approaches.
But one problem students often do not think of until the last minute is where to store their possessions when they leave town.
The demand for storage space when students leave town has generated a boon for local self-storage and for local has spawned a new business
Cynthia Snyder, Augusta senior,
Brian Osborn, Okulmegue, Okla.
senior, have created a business
called Jayhawk Summer Storage
that collects students' possessions
and returns them at the beginning of
'Generally we see anywhere from 30 to 40 more rentals in May. Our business normally quadruples.'
Mary Spruk manager of StorGard
next year.
Osborn said they already had been contacted by 40 students who were interested.
"It was successful, but my grades were suffering and it didn't seem
Snyder said she got the idea from a friend who ran the same type of business at other universities.
She said she originally had offered the storage service her freshman year.
worth it at the time." she said.
Fred McElhene, associate director of student housing, said he had hired many students using self-storage facilities to store large items they owned.
He said that at the end of the year the residence halls designated areas where students could put the bigger pictures in order to take with them for the summer.
---
McEhlenie said the housing department often suggested that students use self-storage companies.
Mary Spruk, manager of StorGard,
2223 Haskell Ave, said that business
picked up in May.
"Generally we see anywhere from 30 to 40 more rentals in May," she said. "Our business normally quadruples."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSA.
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66812
VOL.101.No.140
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
U.S. prepared for conflict
NEWS: 864-4810
American troops ready if Iraq refuses to leave refugee zone
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The United States yesterday threatened to take whatever steps were necessary if Iraq balked at an ultimatum for the withdrawal of its security forces the refugee zone in northern Iraq.
Tomorrow is the deadline for the pullout, an administration source said.
U. S. officials said they thought that the Iraqis would comply with the ultimatum but added that American troops were prepared for a showdown
"There should be no doubt in their minds about what the outcome would be." Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said.
The United States would prevail in a conflict because it has sufficient forces in the area, he said. About 7,000 American troops already are in northern Iraq and across the border in Turkey.
The United States may deploy additional forces, Cheney said.
The order for an Iraq pullout is intended to援教 Kurdish refugees hiding in the mountains that it is safe to come down to allied-protected camps, he said. The first camp is being constructed in the area around Zakho, and plans were announced for a counter to be built 15 miles to the west.
White House press secretary Martin Fitzwater called the Iraqi forces an intimidating presence, saying only heightened the possibility of combat.
The administration also said that a U.S. Air Force flight carry blankets for Iraqi refugees in Iran would fly to Tehran tomorrow. This is believed to be the first official U.S. flight to Iran since former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane led a delegation there in May 1986 in effort to free Iraqi hostages and establish a dialogue with Iran.
The ultimatum by the United States, Britain and France brings risk of a new military clash with Baghdad, which is struggling to regain control after its crushing defeat in the Persian Gulf War. However, administration officials are unlikely that Iraq would resist.
There are now several hundred armed Iraqi security troops in the area around Zakho.
"It is our belief they do not intend to provoke a confrontation," Fitzwaer said.
He said that although preliminary discussions with Iraq indicated they would be responsive, the U.S. would prefer to make sure the area was safe to make sure the area was safe.
Cheney declined to say how many more U.S. troops could be sent, or when, and whether the possible reinforcements were intended to back up the allied demand for withdrawal of Iraq security forces.
The secretary said the Iraqis were ordered to keep their security forces several kilometers back from Zakho. He indicated that the order applied to Iraq's internal security services and to external security forces, but not to ordinary help.
The ultimatum was delivered to Iraq at the United Nations by U.S. Ambassador Thomas Pickering. News of the allies' order leaked from
Iraq on Wednesday but was denied at the time by the White House.
Announcing the ultimatum, Fitzwater said it was essential for the refugee camps to have an atmosphere of safety.
"The presence of Iraqi security forces goes counter to conveying such an atmosphere," he said.
He said the United States and its allies had not encountered any problem with the security forces but that it was nonetheless prudent to have these forces pulled back in order to prevent any accidents.
"It is also essential for them to pull back to create a signal to the refugees that they are safe to come down from the mountains," he added.
The administration continued to express skepticism about a tentative agreement between Iraq President Saddam Hussein and Kurdish lead
"Saddam Hussein has a long record of broken promises," Fitzwater said.
*Fitzwater also expressed confidence that the United Nations eventually would take control of the refugee camps in northern Iraq, but he acknowledged some problems in arranging the takeover.
Facts members told to pay or be barred
Kansan staff report
The Student Senate Elections Commission issued an ultimatum last night to the Facts coalition: the fines or be barred from Senate.
Peter Paukstelis, a member of
The coalition was fined $253.
Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said the fines from campaign violations were due by May 6, or the 10 members of the coalition who gained seats would be removed and all 53 coalition would be barred from involvement in next year's Senate elections
This also would prevent Jason McIntosh, Giles Smith and Roger Ross, holdover senators, from retaining their seats in Senate, which they won Wednesday night during this year's last Senate meeting. McIntosh and Smith ran for president and vice president for the Facts coalition, and Ross ran for Senate.
"We'll definitely attempt to raise the money," he said.
Facts who defended the coalition during complaint hearings, said he had hoped the commission would have allowed some kind of community service repayment.
Pauktelis said Facts had appealed $133 of the fines to University Judicary yesterday.
If the appeals fail, the deadline stands. Poer said.
"They can pool their money, or a few can pay," he said.
Although Facts was fined for campaign violations, the coalition was not found in violation of two of the more serious charges against it — fraud and bribery.
Paukstells said that he did not begrudge the commission for its decision.
"We realize that the commission has to uphold its findings," he said.
Cable TV fires bullet, wages war on pirates
The Associated Press
NEW YORK – The newest weapon in the cable industry's war on video pirates would fit right in with the U.S. military's smart bomb and cruise
It is an electronic "bullet," a signal fired through the cable system from company headquarters right into the network converter box on top of the television.
If the box is legitimate, nothing happens. But if illegal chips were installed in a basic converter to descramble premium services such as HBO without payment of the monthly fee, the bullet uses the chips' own programs to shut down the converter and halt service.
Thanks to the bullet, American Cablevision of Queens in New York City filed a civil suit in federal court against 317 alleged cable thieves
The defendants in the lawsuit will be offered a deal — a $500 cash payment to the company within 20 days, or face prosecution and a possible fine ranging from $1,000 to $2,000. The television president Barry Rosenbloom.
The company fired a bullet March 13 that covers about one third of its system, and the switchboard was wired with three pairs ofembers whose screens had gone dark.
Technicians were sent to the homes to replace the boxes, then were disassembled and examined for evidence of illegal chips.
such piracy and other methods, such as illegal hookups and black market decoders, cost the industry $15 billion. But people do not take the piracy seriously.
"It's just like department store shoplifting," said Richard Aurelio, president of Time Warner's New York City Cable Group, which includes American Cablevision. "We have ways of detecting where it is and ... we're going to go after them."
"It can be what they call a cocktail party crime . . . kind of a fun thing," said Jodi Hooper of the National Guard. "I don't really think of it as a crime."
But the cable industry considers it a significant problem. Most pay services began scrambling their satellite signals in 1986, so the focus now is on catching people with illegal descramblers.
The electronic bullet, developed by Jerrold Communications of Hatboro, Pa., was first fired last year by Water Media Cable of Philadelphia.
American Cablevision, with about 330.000 paid subscribers in New York's boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn, estimates it loses hundreds of thousands of dollars annually to pirates.
In three separate campaigns, Greater Media discovered 368 illegal converters and collected almost $20,000 in lost revenue and damage fees, said general manager Mark Shuster.
88
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Chad Kingley, Chicago freshman, balances his lacrosse stick on his head during the KU lacrosse team's last practice of the season. The team was preparing yesterday for this weekend's tournament against Kansas State, Missouri and St. Louis University. Game times are 2 p.m. tomorrow, and 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. See story Page 11.
Balanced approach
Senate considers tax-increase bill; no action taken
Bill would generate millions in revenue
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Two days ago the pro-
tection of the Legislature putting
together any kind of spending pack-
ing at the end of the session
looked dim.
But after the Senate debated a $150 million tax-increase bill for more than five hours yesterday without taking any action, some legislators who favor an increase are showing signs of optimism.
The Senate yesterday passed an amendment proposed by State Sen. Shella Frahm, it Co-Chair, that would equip the Senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr
State Seen. Wint Winter Jr., R-
Lawrence said that because Kerr backed the amendment, the tax bill had a good chance to pass.
"I think we're in a good position to do it," he said. "He's risked alienating a lot of people, and I respect that." "His entry into this shouldn't be
"His entry into this stu. undersd. He is a major ally."
However, the Senate passed four amendments that would reduce the number of deaths from gunfire.
The bill originally would have raised $99.3 million in revenue by increasing personal income tax rates and raising the tax rate 1/4 percent to 4.75 percent.
Frahm's measure would cut $27.6 million from the personal income tax total, and she said she would propose an amendment package to target the remaining $74 million to local school districts.
She plans to propose her amendments when the Senate begins debate on a school finance bill this morning. Final action will be taken on both the tax bill and school finance bill after the latter bill is debated.
'91 Kansas
Legislature
'Why are we raising taxes?
Let's just leave it alone and let our taxpayers rest for a little while. They'll love you for it.' — State Sen. Gus Bogina
State Sen. Gus Bogina R-Shawnee
Frahm said the outcome of the tax bill now depended upon how the school finance bill shaped up.
"Some of us don't want to vote on the tax bill until we know whether or not some of the money will be earmarked for education," she said.
Frahm said Kansans would face a $20 million instead of $159 million property tax increase if her amendment proposing tighter budget lids on local school district budgets was approved.
Kerr said that he supported the property tax relief measure.
"These amendments would make a great deal of progress toward solving the problem."
Winter said if the tax increase passed, he would move to restore $18 million to the Board of Regents institutions.
However, State Sen. Gus Bogina,
who said he would continue to
fight the tax bill,
"I have a very good question to ask you," he said to the rest of the senators. "Why are we raising taxes?"
"Let's just leave it alone and let our taxpayers rest for a little while. They'll love you for it."
Pilot dies after plane crashes near hospital
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A burning single-engine plane circled low over residential areas before afternoon a near hospital.
The pilot, dead at the scene, was identified by family members as Frank Morris, 57, of suburban Raytown. Fire officials said it appeared he was the only person aboard the plane, owned by CAZU Inc. of Raytown. The Federal Aviation Administration said late Thursday it had not determined whether anyone else was aboard.
Witnesses said they saw the plane circling low as the pilot appeared to be looking for a safe place to land the burning craft.
The pilot was speaking frantically into his radio moments before the plane went down, witnesses told local broadcast stations.
"It was a big ball of fire as he was trying to control it," said Sharika Johnson. "He was trying not to hurt anybody. We were thinking he would try to jump out, but we know why he didn't. He saved a lot of lives. I think he was a hero."
A helicopter pilot who was standing at the helicopter pad at the time of the crash saw the pilot move out of the way and enter the hospital and other buildings.
The plane hit nothing except a light pole, reporters on the scene said.
Demand for storage services increases when students leave
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Finals, projects and even summer subleases are just a few of the problems students face as the summer approaches.
But one problem students often do not think of until the last minute is where to store their possessions when they leave town.
The demand for storage space when students leave town has generated a boon for local self-storage and even has spawned a new business.
Cynthia Snyder, Augusta senior, and Brian Osborn, Okulmegie, Oklea, senior, have created a business called Jayhawk Summer Storage that collects students' possessions and returns them at the beginning of
'Generally we see anywhere from 30 to 40 more rentals in May. Our business normally quadruples.'
manager of StorGard
next year.
Oscarn said they already had been contacted by 40 students who were
Snyder said she got the idea from a friend who ran the same type of business at other universities.
"It was successful, but my grades were suffering and it didn't seem
She said she originally had offered the storage service her freshman year.
Fred McElhenne, associate director of student housing, said he had noticed a trend toward students using cell phones to store large items they owned.
worth it at the time," she said.
He said that at the end of the year the residence halls designated areas where students could put the bigger books and equipment to take with them for the summer.
McElheneir said the housing department often suggested that students use the dormitory.
---
Mary Spruk, manager of StorGard,
said that business picked up in May.
"Generally we see anywhere from 30 to 40 more rentals in May," she said. "Our business normally quadruples."
2
Friday, April 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Youths willingly went to Mandela's home to escape abuse, witness says
The Associated Press
JOHANNEMBUD, South Africa — A witness in Winnie Mandela's kidnap and assault trial testified yesterday that the alleged victims volunteered to Mandela's home to escape abuse by a church minister.
The witness, Aubrey Nuxalmo, said he also was victimized by the minister at the Methodist Church home in Soweto, which housed homeless boys and men. Nuxalmo took the stand as defense attorneys tried to force the governor to make reason to remove youths from the home and that no force was used.
Nxumalo said he stayed at the church home from July 1988 to January 1989 and that several residents
"The four stood up and left without objecting." Numalo said.
On the evening of Dec. 29, 1988, a group of people arrived at the home and said they were going to take four of the youths away. Nxumalo said.
Prosecutors allege the four were forcibly taken from the home to Mandela's house that night and beaten so severely that their physical activity or spying for police. One of the four, Stompei Seipei, later was found dead.
Mandela and two co-defendants have pleaded not guilty to eight counts of kidnap and assault. If
convicted, they could receive anything from a suspended sentence to the death penalty.
Nxumalu said Falati was one of the people who took the youths away.
Mandela, the wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, said she was out of town at the time of the alleged crime. Co-defendant Xoliswa Falati testified that she brought the youths to the vacant Mandela home to protect them.
Prosecutor Chris van Vuuren questioned Nxumalu about why he did not leave the home if he was being marketed.
him finish school.
Nxumalo also said he stayed in the same bed with the reverend after the alleged abuse, but only because the reverend ordered it.
Falati and Mandela both have testified that they thought the youths were being victimized at the home and sought to protect them by taking them elsewhere. Mandela has said she was not aware of the alleged abductions and learned later that the youths had been brought to her house.
Earlier, another defense witness, Nora Moahloli, concluded three days of testimony by disagreeing with nearly everything on a police statement she signed.
U.S. will review China's trading status
But Chinese officials caution U.S. about bargaining for human rights
The Associated Press
BEIJING — Chinese officials, facing a U.S. review of Beijing's most favored-nation trading status, warned Washington yesterday not to try to win human rights concessions in exchange for the trade privileges.
Putting human-rights conditions on China's special trade status with the United States would hurt both countries, a Foreign Ministry representative said.
Obviously, it will not benefit the development of the bilateral relations between the two countries to
take the issue of human rights as a condition." Wu Jiainman said at a weekly ministry briefing "it will not only target people or the American people."
China's most-favored-nation trade status, which allows the lowest possible tariffs on exports to the United States, will come up for review in June.
President Bush is expected to extend the trade preferences, although Congress could overturn the rule if both chambers act within 30 days.
The House voted by a large margin last year to halt the trade preferences for China, but the measure died when Congress adjoined without action by the Senate.
Since China's violent suppression in June 1989 of the pro-democracy movement, critics of the country's human rights record have pushed for the favorable trade status to be revoked.
Some U.S. critics of the Beijing government say attaching human rights conditions to the trade status would force China to address international concerns regarding treatment of dissidents and prisoners, which China deems as undue meddling in its affairs.
Hundreds of people were killed when the Chinese army opened fire on student-led protesters urging the government to put the death toll in the thousands.
"It is obvious that China and the United States have different views on the issue of human rights because China and the United States have different situations, historical backgrounds and social values." We said.
A mounting trade deficit with China and concern about use of Chinese prison labor for export-producing goods in the Pacific for punitive purposes against China.
The United States also has warned China that it must eliminate piracy of computer software and other copyrighted works on its computers with prints on exports to the United States.
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Long bus route will be split to make round trips shorter
Three buses now cover the route, and this number should not change, she said. There may be a need to add a bus during peak times, she said, but this would cost only about $4,000 a year.
route because it takes too long, she said. The quicker routes should add new riders.
The price of bus passes is scheduled to increase in the fall to $45.
"Our contract went up last year, but we had excess money, so we waited to raise prices," she said.
Freshman honor student, Air Force ROTC cadet dies
Two routes of 15 and 20 minutes round trip would replace the existing 40-minute route, she said.
Henderson said the 24th Street and Ridge Court route would be split because it took too long to complete.
Many people in the south part of town do not like to ride the current
a bus route that has been deemed too long is scheduled to be divided into two smaller routes in the fail. The bus driver will announce Wheels director, said yesterday.
Services for Luedke were last week at the Friskell Funeral Home in Frontneac.
Kansan staff report
Ha Ha Hair
Prep
809 Vermont
(913) 843-8808
Luecke was an Air Force ROTC student on scholarship majoring in mechanical engineering.
"He wanted to be a pilot," Margaret Luedke said. "It was one of his big dreams."
He graduated from Frontneac High School, where he played football for four years
Brian Luedek, 18. Frontone freshman, died in Pitsburgh early Sunday morning, April 14, his mother said.
Officials could not be reached for comment and his mother declined comment on the cause of death.
He is survived by his mother, Margaret Lueke of Frontneac; his maternal grandparents, Bill and Blajta Blattner of Humboldt; and his paternal grandparents, Robert and Ruth Lueke of Colony.
Kansan staff report
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His mother said he enjoyed working on computers and playing golf and guitar.
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Open Horse Show
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For more information call Jeff at 841-7059
Timely lawncare
Larry Grammer, an employee of facilities operations, mows the hill above Memorial Stadium. Grammer said that the mowing was a routine groundkeeping task and that it would be completed for tomorrow's Day on the Hill. The event, which begins at noon and runs until 8 p.m., will feature the music of nine bands, including four local bands. See Page 9.
Dog's unnecessary death leads director to resign
Bucksnort, a 3-year-old pit bull-Laborador药, was separated from her owners April 5 when a bus slammed into their car on Interstate 4, scattering their possessions across the highway.
45
The Associated Press
Johnny "Jeep" Caillouet, his wife,
Brecca Baker, her 10-month-old child and the baby's nanny were hospitalized.
Don Westfall, director of Orange County Animal Control since 1986, said Wednesday he would leave his $47,000-a year job in July.
ORLANDO, Fla. — An animal control director is resigning in the wake of a mistake in which his staff put a performing dog to death in spite of calls by the dog's owner and a front page newspaper story about the
Jacqueline Miller, supervisor of the county's Professional Standards office, cited two of Westfall's employees for incompetence in the death of the dog, named Bucksnort. She said the dog could have been returned to
The family, street musicians from Aapen, Colo., were on their way to Key West. Bucknort was part of the group collecting money from the audience.
On campus
Lawrence Region Men's and Women's Widowed Group will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Templin Hall Government and All University Residence Halls will sponsor "The Templin Hall Casino" p.m. tomorrow at Templin Hall.
Political Science Graduate Students will sponsor a talk by professor Abbaas Male of Howard University in Washington, D.C., at 5 p.m. today at the University Women's Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Equestrian Club will conduct a
horse show at 9 a.m. Sunday at the Trailriders Arena.
■ Voice will sponsor a peace vigil at noon Sunday at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Roger Boyd will lead a trip to the Bake Wetlands at 2 p.m. Sunday. Anyone interested should meet at the east end of the Wetlands.
The University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra and Choirs will perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Hoch Auditorium.
MICROSOFT ACADEMIC PRODUCTS (AED) for Departments,Faculties,and Students
KU Triathletes will meet at 1 p.m. Sunday in front of Wescoe Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 26, 1991
3
Service exults life of student
Friends say he encouraged them to work hard
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Friends of Brian Meilahn gathered last night to share their favorite memories and celebrate the life of an acute asthma attack.
His friends had a memorial service for him at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
Susan Dwyer, Mr. Meilahn's girlfriend for the past seven years, said he had been a big person who opened his life to all those around him.
"Brian is just huge. He was overpowering," said Dwyer, Greecley, Colo., graduate student, to the group he helped with, what quality he added to your life.
David Platt, director of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said Mr. Meilahn had been an objective person.
"I have documentation to prove it," he said, holding up a green form. Platt related a story in which Mr. Meilhan turned in a self-critique, as was required of all resident assistants.
"Brian Meilah wrote his self- appraisal in the third person." Platt said as laughter erupted through the crowd.
One by one, friends walked to the podium to share stories of Mr. Meilah. They painted a picture of a person who was interested in people
Brad Stuhlsatz, Derby junior, said that Mr. Meilahn had always believed in people.
and who always encouraged them to try their hardest.
people.
"I don't know how many times I heard him say, 'I think you can do it.' " he said.
Melisa Moore, Mr. Meilhan's sister, said yesterday from Greeley, Colo, that he had been dedicated to his job as a resident assistant.
"He absolutely loved being an RA." Moore said.
She said that he had been scared at first when he became an RA but that he worked hard at it like he did at everything else.
"He always did things perfectly," she said.
Mr. Meilian was born July 20, 1968, in Newapolis, Minn. He grew up in Greeks.
He was a fifth-year senior major in architecture. Moore said he had come to the University of Kansas specifically to study architecture.
He studied at the University of Colorado before transferring to KU.
He graduated from West High School in Greeley and attended University High School.
His hobbies included bike riding, rock climbing, sailing, tennis and volleyball.
that a sand volleyball court was placed behind JRP, his friends said.
myebun.
Mr. Meilahn was the sole reason.
He was described by Jeff Hickman, Overland Park sophomore, as a determined volleyball player who had a lack of physical prowess with guts.
"Anything he did, he put everything into it." he said.
P. S. BORNES
Mr. Meilhan was a member of the KU Sailing Club, the National Honor Society, Key Club and the Golden Key National Honor Society.
He belonged to the American Institute of Architectural Students and the Association of General Contractors.
He worked as an intern in Chicago at Destefano Goetsch Ltd. during breaks from college. He was awarded an internship for the sum
He had won two scholarships, the George Beal scholarship and the Gold Win and Gold Smith scholarship.
Brian Meilahn
Mr. Meilian had just be induced into the National Residence Hall honorarium, an honor society for the top 1 percent of residence hall resi-
He leaves his parents, Marcus and Nancy Meilahn; two sisters, Melisa Moore and Paige Meilahn; and a
niece, Alexandra Moore, all of Greeley.
He leaves four grandparents:
Alvin and Hilda Frantz, and Raymond and Edythe Meilahn, all of Plymouth, Wis.
Funeral services for Mr. Meilhan will be at the First Congregational Church of Greeley at 11 a.m. Monday
The family has not yet selected a memorial to which friends may contribute.
Asthma fatalities can be prevented
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The asthma-related death Wednesday of a 22-year-old KU student was one of thousands of U.S. deaths caused by asthma each week. The Yockey, chief of staff at Walkins Memorial Health Center.
Brian Mellahn, Greeley, Colo,
senior, was pronounced dead at
9:39 p.m. Wednesday at Lawrence
in the hospital, a hospital rep-
resented said.
Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner, said Meliah died of an acute asthma attack.
Pat Pringle, a family friend, said Meliadh had asthma since he was one year old and had taken asthma medication since he was 10. He was treated for a severe asthma attack at Lawrence Memorial Hospital last year after a bicycle ride.
Yockey said Watkins was treating several hundred KU students for asthma. But this has not been a particularly bad year for her. He said Meliah had not been treated for asthma at Watkins.
Asthma is the most common chronic respiratory condition in people under 40, he said.
Yockey said that if a person died from a severe asthma attack, it was probably because the victim ignored the asthma symptoms or did not seek proper treatment in time.
"Anytime someone so young dies from an asthma attack, it almost always was preventable," he said.
Yockey said students with asthma were afraid of letting others know about the asthma for fear of stigma.
"Asthma is a very treatable condition with proper education, treatment and intervention," he said.
Early intervention is the key to minimizing asthma attacks, Yockey said.
Causes of asthma attacks include respiratory infections and breathing irritating and noxious air, he said. Once an acute attack occurs, the victim becomes oxygen-generated and goes into cardiac arrest.
一
Mike Turner/KANSAN
John G. Sayler, president of the Charles Robinson chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution, presents the Sons of the American Revolution award to cadet Alexander Hill, Wichita freshman. The Army ROTC Spring Awards Ceremony, honoring students for academic excellence and outstanding leadership, was yesterday in the Military Science Building. About 40 students received awards.
CLAS plans alum weekend activities
Kansan staff writer
By Sarah Davis Kenyon staff writer
In conjunction with Alumni Weekend, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has several activities planned.
Tought, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Alumni Club will host a reception to honor three college groups.
Lowya Gilbert, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said this was the first time the college was conducting its activities separate from graduation ceremonies. TraditioI column Weekend is at the same time.
"It will be nice to have it away
from commencement so alumni that combs are the coming back for them.
College graduates of the class of 1941 and college faculty and staff who are retiring will be honored tonight. CLASAC also will present the first student award, a academic adruer award for one of the seven college candidates.
A tour of the new college undergraduate center in the west wing of Strong Hall will be given tomorrow. Although the complex is not completely finished, alumni will have a room to do, Gilbert said.
"It would be good for the alumni and active faculty to get acquainted with us and to feel more like they're there," Ms. Browne said. "It's just an informal get-together."
CLASAC board member Betty Lesenden said she was looking forward to the event.
together but also will recognize some people."
College alumni also will have the chance to talk with officials who work in various college offices to learn what they do to help students.
A reception will be given from 9 to 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at 208 Strong. All college alumni are welcome to attend.
Misdiagnosed infections can cause complications
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Women may be getting what they pay for when they buy an over-the-counter medication to treat yeast infections.
Patsy Denning, a physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said she had seen women who had bought Gye-Lotrimin, a treatment for yeast infection, when they actually had a sexually transmitted disease.
"It will not hurt them, but it isn't treating them properly," she said. "They are mistaking their symptoms for yeast infection. I think there is a great potential for this problem to flourish."
The problem is that the women do not get the treatment they really need, she said. If an STD is not treated, it can lead to chronic infections.
Melissa Lowenstein, a pharmacist at Dillons, 3000 W. Sixth St., said Gyne-Lotrimin had become available about a month and a half ago and had been selling well.
"The reason it's selling so well is because it's such a common infection for women," she said.
A second product for yeast infection, Monistat, also is available without a prescription. Both are available in cream and suppository form, Michels said.
Larry Michels, a pharmacist at Wal-Mart, 2727 Iowa St., said, "we've sold a substantial amount."
Denning said that the problems that were occurring now may be caused by the treatment that was available to anyone and that some women might be trying to themselves, when in the past a prescription was necessary.
"The average person and even physicians can't tell by the discharge if this is yeast or something more serious," she said. "Any female student who is sexually active who has noticed a change in her discharge should have an examination," she said. "It's money that is very well spent."
If the student health fee has been paid, medication for a yeast infection is about $13 at the Watkins pharmacy, she said.
Gyne-Lotrimin costs $17.99 at Dillons.
Housing may fill spare space
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
The department of student housing has proposed temporarily to increase space in residence halls to KKK hotels for those needy.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said he had made an informal offer to the University space committee at its meeting yesterday.
Linda Mullens, a member of the space committee, said the committee was still in the process of finding out what information was needed.
"We get a lot of space requests," she said. "It is just a matter of making recommendations and seeing if the team needs it."
Stoner said residence hall occupancy had decreased, partly because the number of high school seniors had decreased across the state.
"We experience a flux," he said. "The scholarship halls and married student housing are always strong."
"But five years ago the residence halls were packed, and the Javahawk Towers were a little low. Now it's
packed in Jayhawker Towers, and there is room in the residence halls."
Stoner said that because this normal fluctuation has left the department with unused rooms, the space could be used by departments that did not need to dramatically alter the rooms.
Stoner said the department tried to keep all the unused rooms in a hall on one wing in order to shut off utilities
"We temporarily remove wings from service just to maximize space," he said.
In the past, Stoner said, requests for use of these wings by other departments has been informal.
"We get a variety of inquiries every year, but the discussions fall apart," he said. "Usually they want more than we can provide. Sometimes they have a function that is not directly related to the lobby, or they want a five- to ten year guarantee."
"The University has a critical shortage of all kinds of space," he said. "We just want to make a cooperative
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Don't forget to disconnect your cable service and return your converter box to Sunflower Cablevision.
Converter boxes may be returned to Sunflower Cablevision,
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Attention Students Living in
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Friday, April 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan in
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Civil rights bill
Legislators and White House should re-evaluate dismissal of legislation providing bias protection
A group of about 200 big business leaders last week surrendered any hope of drafting a federal anti-discrimination bill that would protect minorities from unfair employment practices.
The group, known as the Business Roundtable, has been working with civil rights groups on the bill since December. They have dropped negotiations not because a compromise seemed unattainable or because the bill was destined for a White House veto. Rather, under pressure from White House officials John Sununu and C. Boyden Gray, the businesses have ended talks with civil rights leaders.
The White House has dealt a tremendous blow to civil rights groups and businesses that were working toward improving employment opportunities and conditions for minorities. Without these efforts, minority workers have no legal recourse against job bias.
Negotiators reported that they had reached agreement on nearly all points of the bill and that they had resolved concerns that the bill would create hiring quotas. President Bush cited an aversion to hiring quotas when he vetoed anti-discrimination legislation last year. But the bill appeared to be nearing a form that would garner enough congressional support to
pass with a majority that a presidential veto could not override.
The chairperson of American Telephone & Telegraph, Robert Allen, who initiated the talks and led the pullout, said he ended the negotiations because his efforts were being undercut on all sides. But civil rights groups say Allen's decision was largely influenced by White House pressure.
A representative for the Business Roundtable said the issues surrounding the bill were clouded by partisan differences. And some congressional Democrats, who originally supported the legislation, have raised concerns that the bill could damage Democratic candidates in coming elections.
The White House has chosen to ignore the need for civil rights legislation in favor of partisan consensus. But rather than attempt to resolve these differences, it has given up on the legislation altogether.
Legislators and White House officials should re-evaluate their decision to drop the legislation. The lack of such a bill would be detrimental to a segment of society that needs federal insurance against unfair employment practices.
Meelanie Matthes for the editorial board
Ill-advised bill
English as Missouri's language is discriminatory
J Jim Crow-type laws are back, but this time it is Hispanics who are the victims. A bill that would make English the
A bill that would make English the official language of Missouri was passed by the state's senate last week. The creation of an official language discriminates against those citizens who do not speak English, particularly members of the Hispanic population.
The one-line bill simply states, "The English language is the official language of the state of Missouri." An earlier version of the bill specified that it would apply to "the ballot, the public schools and all government functions and actions." In other words, none of these would be made accessible to non-English speaking citizens.
Voting rights would be limited to only those who speak English, a blatant violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and reminiscent of the Jim Crow laws in the South. Public school and government records would be available only in
English, which would put the non-English speaking citizens at an obvious disadvantage. Their awareness of important events in their communities would be limited.
Fortunately, the first version of the bill was revised after few senators supported it. However, rewording the bill does not make it any less biased; it only conceals its discriminatory nature.
This "English only" bill is an anachronism in a country that calls itself the "melting pot."
Even if the bill is only a symbolic one, as its supporters say it is, the confusion and discrimination created are not worth any bother. The bill now will move on to the Missouri House of Representatives, where it is expected to pass.
Maybe the House members will see through this effort to stamp out diversity, and block this unjust bill.
Juli Watkins for the editorial board
NEWS ITEM
JAPAN AGREES TO SEND MINESWEEPEERS TO GULF IN ITS FIRST FOREIGN VENTURE SINCE WORLD WAR II:
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The reality of the situation differs greatly from Tippet's version. Bottom up, a single line is used.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
$ \sqrt{a} c 4-2 5-9 $
She compares the plight of the Kurds in Iraq to the daily suffering of Blacks in South Africa, saying that she feels "nauseated" whenever she thinks of the United States and its allies. She also describes an apartheid. Anyone who ignores the suffering of Blacks around the world is "either blind or evil and does not deserve to live." I believe Tippett needs to spend less time trying to analyze world politics and more time understanding the disturbing personal views, ideas that are inflammatory and have no place in the Kansan.
Tippett is intolerant
The University Daily Kansan has a serious problem which must be addressed immediately. The problem is Arda Tippet, staff columnist. I refer specifically to her column in the April 24 issue, the one in which she proceeded to put not only herself, but the entire Black race, on a pedestal. It is a shame she is allowed to voice her disturbing hatred of white people in a large university newspaper. If she had felt the comp屈ses of racial tensions, she would understand that she is only worsening the problem of racial oppression and alienating herself from the rest of her community.
South Africa, but the United States is not evil by choosing not to militarily liberate the victims of apartheid, as Tippett would prefer. Presently, the Kurds are suffering more than Blacks. They are starving in mass numbers. The United States is correct in trying to give them humanitarian aid, rather than interfering in the internal affairs of South Africa.
Cameron Meier
Lawrence freshmar
Spraying done safely
I was surprised at Julie Waters letters in Monday's Kansan. I found out that she finds much of her information from others around her.
I was the one driving the tractor that day. Yes, these chemicals could be dangerous if sprayed directly on a person, but not on what we are spraying. We are spraying the trees to protect them. One of my jobs, while working in the open hills, people so they do not get sprayed accidentally. But, this would be done out of courtesy even if we sprayed only water.
I am not an expert on the chemicals used, but the supervisor of spraying is. If they were not willing to spray them, I know I would not be out there from midnight till dawn with them.
The crab apple trees in front of Watson Library were infested with flat head apple borers that had made them unsafe. If you would have paid attention, you would have noticed that two had fallen from the big winds a few weeks ago, and if you look now, you will see that four new ones are in their place. You do not realize how much of campus would be consumed by insects if we did not spray.
Earth Day. I think I have picked up trash and planted enough trees and shrubs on campus to last many Earth Days. At the end of this week, I will put the trash left behind by those showing their support for Earth Day.
In answer to your question about
James Bland Overland Park senior
Yearbook misspellings
As a senior, I was excited to get my yearbook to be able to look back in print at my last year at the University of Kansas.
However, as I flipped through the pages, I became more and more disappointed with the 1991 Jayhawker. My name was misspeelled, which upset me, but the misspeelling is a little bit better. That was my name misspeelled, but more than half of the people I know had their names misspeelled.
We are not just talking about transposed women, either. One of the women in my sorority whose last name was Balasivalis with the last name of Baltasivalis.
One of the HOPE award winners has the wrong name with the wrong face. The list goes on. I used to be on a yearbook staff, and we were able to check galleys returned by the printers, but they don't not have that opportunity and was sloppy the first time, or it did not take the time to proofread the galleys.
I would gladly have waited a few more weeks to get my yearbook with fewer mistakes and spellings. But I will have to settle for a yearbook which costs $25 and is riddled with preventable mistakes.
Molly Wiegman Hays senior
Sununu's travels ridiculous, give new meaning to 'costly'
H how much money is $30,000? If you have to work all year for it, it's a bundle. For some who are better off, it might be what they pay in income taxes, so they think it's a bundle too.
But if you look at $30,000 as part of the massive federal budget, it's less than a trifle. It's like one grain of sand on a long beach.
And that appears to be the way John Sununu, the White House chief of staff, sees $30,000. It's hardly pocket-injuring money.
Sununu is an important man, of course, and we wouldn't expect him to hop a Greyhound or stand out on the highway-thumbling rides.
So he goes first class. No, even better than first class. It could be called super-luxury class. When he travels, he uses U.S. Air Force passenger jets, which are similar to private corporate planes.
A. R. Miles
Mike
Royko
Syndicated
columnist
operate. And that doesn't include the paychecks of the five-person crew.
So any time Sununu hops a jet for even a short junt, it's at least $4,000 to get there and $4,000 to return.
Some snoops say that since Sununu became a big cheese in the White House, he's used the planes about 140 times. If each flight was only an hour long, the cost would be well over $500,000.
But it's safe to guess that many of the flights ran much longer than that, because Sununu is said to have traveled all over on political missions, out West to ski and to other parts for the country to swat golf balls. So
we're probably talking upward of $1 million in travel costs. Not counting the cost of the crew.
One of his ski trips is reported to have cost $30,000. That's just for the travel. I assume he uses his own money for ski lift tickets.
As I said, $30,000 can be big money or chicken feed, depending on how hard you have to work for it. For someone who puts in a year of training as a nurse or riding around in a hospital, a car or fire, in a hospital, $30,000 might look like an impressive stack of currency. I have no idea how well Sunnies ski, but I did see a TV shot of him hitting a golf ball. And although he keeps his head down, it isn't a swing that I place a $30,000 price tag on.
Some mischief-making Democrats in Congress have been looking at Sununu's travel expenses, and they are calling for a thorough investigation to see what benefits U.S.
Members of the White House staff are indignant at the mere suggestion of impropriety. They say that every time Sununu uses one of the Air Force passenger jets for vacations and holidays, he reimburses the government. The only problem with that system is that the reimbursements don't appear to cover even a fraction of the actual costs.
taxpayers are getting from all these travel expenses. Especially those trips that have nothing to do with his salary, sliding a bail to a prison or hashing campaign strategy with an instant Republican politicians.
For example, on the $30,000-plus ski trip, Sununu is said to have chipped in about $1,100, which was the price of a first-class ticket on a commercial flight. So if you add the salaries of the crew, we're still talking about $30,000 or more that the taxpayers spend to let Mr. Sununu
slide down a snowy hill. The same system, paying for a commercial ticket, is used by the Republican Party.
'I have no idea how well Sununu skis, but I did see a TV shot of him hitting a golf ball. And although he keeps his left arm nice and straight and his head down, it isn't a swing that I'd place a $30,000 price tag on.'
The White House says there is no other way it can be done. Because Sununu is big so heat, it is necessary for him to always be available for immediate contact with the White House and other government agencies has to fly in a plane that has sophisticated and secure communications.
That makes sense. At any moment, the phone could ring and he might be asked: "CNN is showing more of those cold, miserable Kurds in the mountains. What should we do now?"
On the other hand, I don't know whether we should be so casual about spending what for many families Mr.er's income for a ski or golf outing.
Maybe the answer would be for Sununu to limit his golf to the courses in Washington, of which there are many.
There aren't any skiplies nearby, but he might consider taking up bowling. Many people find it enjoyable. And they might be able to bowl often if Sununu didn't spend their money on $4,000-an-hour jumps.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
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 . Jennifer Reynolds Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Sollin Production mgrs. HR harbinger
Sports. Ann Sommermath Kale Stader
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gall Embinder
Graphics. Meissa Unterberg Creative director. Christy Hitsha
Features. Jih Hartington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing advisers
by Tom Michaud
serters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homestown, or faculty or staff position. Guest簋umes should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kenan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kenan newsroom, 1115 Snuffer Flint Hall.
Loco Locals
A man in a suit and hat speaks to another man in a suit and hat. They are facing each other, with the background consisting of a rough black scribbled texture.
MICHAEL COTT 1926
A
A
MUSHAID CORTT 1930
'WHERE THERE'S A WILL, THERE'S
A WAY TO GET TOWN HIGHER
LETTER GRADE ... CHAPTER 2:
HAVE A ONE TO ONE WITH THE
TEACH ... ESPECIALLY AT THE
END OF THE SEMESTER...THEY'll
REMEMBER YOU ON SAYER..."
DONE...
TO BE EXTIMATED
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 26, 1991
5
Job market still shrinking Seniors advised to be patient flexible when looking for jobs We've noticed we've to'
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
When KU graduates walk down the hill in May, it will mark the end of their college struggle and battle within the system.
If they have not found out already, their battles have only begun outside the system.
According to an article Monday in The New York Times, the job market is "the bleakest job market in a decade or more, especially in the New York region and the rest of the Northeast."
The article by Robert McFadden said the market had shrunk up to 30 percent.
KU officials who work in job placement agree that times may be a little more difficult.
Terry Glenn, director of the University Placement Center, said it would be difficult to know how well KU graduates would fare until after the summer, when all positions would be filled. He said some jobs, such as those in education, were not offered until in the year.
But he said it was a slower market than usual.
"It's a little more conservative market, I think, than what we had before."
"They need to be willing to look at all the options," Glenn said.
He said students waiting for jobs had to be patient and flexible.
Susanne Shaw, associate professor of journalism, said that although in the past graduates had looked for full-time positions, they now were being advised to accept internships andships evolved into full-time positions.
"Even people from the newspapers are saying that," she said. "Times are still difficult. Advertising is still down. That one's of the keys."
Fred Madua, director of the business placement office, said he had noticed the thinness and caution present in the market.
"We've noticed we're going to be down on the number of companies coming to campus," he said.
Early signs reveal that business students are doing all right in finding
director of the business placement
work, Madaus said. It is also not uncommon for a surge of positions to open up late in the year.
He also stressed that flexibility was important in landing a position.
"June Unnungman, director of an engineering career service center. Students in the department students would be drastically affected by the recession.
"It doesn't so far look like we're going to see any difference from any other year," she said.
The recession appears to be hitting certain majors and parts of the country, she said.
Cunningham said that despite the situation in the market, students with high grade point averages and who have an easier edge have an easier time finding work.
"Those students are always in demand no matter what," she said. "They're kind of recursion-proof."
Bush calls for lower interest rates
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration, confronting further weakness in the U.S. economy, yesterday pressed for reductions in U.S. and foreign interest rates as a way of the world out of a global recession.
The administration effort came as the Labor Department reported a big surge in the number of U.S. citizens filing unemployment claims. The National Bureau of Economic Research said that the recession officially started in July — meaning a downturn was under way even before the oil price shocks that came after Iran's invasion of Kuwait.
ing our own
Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, President Bush said, "We want to see these interest rates down a little bit, and I think that would be good for the world economy, includ-
The president's call for lower interest rates came as the Labor Department issued a bleak jobless-claims report, saying the number of new Americans seeking unemployment by 47,000 in the second week of April.
The sharp increase brought the number of first-time claimants back to the half-million mark and was viewed as especially disappointing to economists who had hoped to see a third straight week of declines in the unemployment rate. In said, would have been a clear signal the recession would soon be over
"I think that we buried the recession prematurely, and the data is now showing that the recession is over," said the chief economist at Nikko Securities.
called for lower interest rates as a way to fight the recession, and in a series of moves last fall and early this winter, the Federal Reserve did drive interest rates lower to stimulate economic growth.
Bush and his aides repeatedly have
However, the Federal Reserve's easing efforts came to a halt in early March amid reports of a deep split inside the central bank regarding further easing might trigger higher inflation once the recovery began.
Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady and other administration officials have insisted that the Federal Reserve economists were being overly concerned about inflation and the real problem was making sure the U.S. economy is united States did not deepen and in turn drag the world economy down.
POWER PLANT
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FREE Buffet Following Commencement
Bring Your Family & Friends - Leave The Party To Us!
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Fri & Sat
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75¢ Draws
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ALUMS
COME HOME
II
GREEN ROOM
A JAYHAWK
PLAYING -
MAY 2-4,1991
Presented by the University of Kansas Theatre
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.
642 Mass.
HALL 749-
1912
"MIRACULOUS"
CYRANO
DE BERGERAC
ONLN
Fri. - Sun. 4:00, 6:45, 9:30
Mon. - Thu. 7:00 ONLY
KAY DENNIS
BLAUCH & ED WILSON
LIBERTY HALL 749-1912
"MIRACULOUS" BY CYRANO DE BERGERAC
Fri. - Sun. 4:00, 6:45, 9:30
Mon. - Thu. 7:00 ONLY
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the nasty girl
Fri. & Sun. 4:30, 7:00, 9:45
No Showing Saturday
Productions nightly at 8:00 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
"**** Exhilarating"
- Two Tone JOURNAL NEWS
The nasty girl
P.O. Box 30754 NASHVILLE, KY 40219
Fri & Sun. 4:30, 7:00, 9:45
No Showing Saturday
Club 21 Calendar April 25th-28th
Crown Cinema
They are great:
Saturday, April 27th-Top 40's
Sunday, April 28th-Blues
Thursday, April 25th-Lipsync
Contest. 1st Prize $50, 2nd Prize
$25, 3rd Prize Free Membership
All interested contestants call
832-0393 between 7 p.m. - 9 p.
Before Tuesday, April 23rd.
Friday, April 26th-Live Band,
"Cry Out" Come Check em out
VARSITY
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
Open 7:30p.m.-2:00a.m.
106 North Park
(across from the Courthouse)
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
A KISS BEFORE SAT, SUN 2:45
DYING (R) EVES 5.30, 7.30, 9.30
HILLCREST 925IOWA
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 842-6400
DEFENDING
YOUR LIFE (PG)
SAT SUN 9:30 -
EVERY SAT 10:40 -
SUN 11:30
THROUGHS (PG)
SAT SUN 7:30 -
EVERY SAT 8:10 -
OUT FOR JUSTICE (R)
SAT SUN 2:45 -
EVERY SAT 3:10 -
842.6400
DANCES WITH
WOLVES (PG.13)
WOLVES (PG.13)
SILENCE OF
THE LAMBERS (R)
LAMBERS (R)
EVERGROUND
EVERGROUND
EVERGROUND
TEENAGE MUGANT
NATURE TURTLES (RV)
5:30 SAT, 11:00-13:00
8:30 SAT, 14:00-16:00
MISERY (R)
5:30 SAT, 11:00-13:00
8:30 SAT, 14:00-16:00
Dickinson
23rd & IOWA 841-8600
$300 PRIME-TIMER SHOW (*)
SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
TOY SOLDIERS (R)
5:20, 7:40
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5:20 7:45
CLASS ACTION (R)
5:25, 7:40
SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY(R
5.15 7.20
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1445 W. 23RD
841-8002
832 IOWA
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5:15, 7:30
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5:10, 7:25
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11am - 4pm only valid with other offers
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
coupon required * limited time offer
- - - - - BONUS COUPON - - - -
6
Friday, April 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
STORAGE
6 Sizes: 5x5 - $25/mo
5x10 - $35/mo
5x15 - $42/mo
10x10 - $50/mo
10x15 - $65/mo
10x20 - $80/mo
- COMPARE OUR PRICES!
- Conveniently located at the Eudora exit off K-10( 5-10 min. from Lawrence)
KANSAS SELE STORAGE
505 E.15th,Eudora,Ks
542-3393
Catch Our
Spring Truckload Sale.
ROSES
$6.95
dozen
selected color
dozen selected colors limited quantities
A
- 6" Tropical Foliage Plants $6.95
- 10" Tropical Foliage Plants
- Arrangements
$9.95 & up
$3.00 bunch or
$.50 each
- Cut Iris
Full Line Florist
- Delivery
- Worldwide Wire Service
- Wedding Arrangements
Funeral Arrangements
FLOWERS 4 LESS
Lawrence
1901A Mass
832-0700
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
m-F 9 to 7
Sat. 9 to 5
Sun. 1 to 5
PS
The University of Kansas Printing Service
The Kansas Union Duplicating Center will be open Saturday, April 27
and Saturday, May 4 from 9:00 am - 4:00 pm 864-4908
Our Canon Color Copier is available for your semester final projects.
We are here to serve your needs at your convenience!
Nuclear plants still pose safety hazards
But advocacy group points to declining accident numbers
WASHINGTON — The nation's nuclear power plants reported nearly 2,000 safety-related incidents last year, reflecting continuing safety risks, a citizen advocacy group said yesterday. But industry officials said the numbers were lower than previous years, showing steady safety improvements.
The Associated Press
Public Citizen, a non-profit advocacy group founded by Ralph Nader, said the 111 commercial nuclear reactors in the United States had 192 safety tests last fall and had to be reported to the Nuclear, Regulatory Commission.
Among those incidents were 177 in which plants immediately had to be shut down, 894 cases involving violations of federal safety regulations and 404 reports of safety system failures, the group said.
The number of incidents in which there was concern about a potential threat to the health and safety of the public declined from 85 in 1989 to 38
last year, according to the group's review of NRC records.
Nevertheless, report co-author David Trickett said the statistics showed there was an on-going risk of a Chernobyl-scale accident in this country, referring to the large Soviet nuclear accident in 1986.
NRC representative Foe Jouchand didn't dispute the statistics. However, he said the agency believed the atomic power plants were safer because of increased scrutiny because of increased scrutiny by both industry and federal regulators.
"There's been steady improvements in the last few years." Fouchard said. "Our performance indicators show automatic shutdowns are down, safety system interruptions are down, significant events are down, collective radiation exposures are down."
Industry officials, although not challenging the numbers, criticized Public Citizen's characterization of the statistics.
"Public Citizen is again trying to recycle misleading claims about the safety and performance of U.S. nuclear energy plants," said the U.S. Energy Awareness Commission, communications clearinghouse for the nuclear industry.
Worst nuclear power plants
A new report ranks the nation's 111 commercial nuclear power reactors according to safety, economics and radioactive waste generation. The 20 worst.
Note: Two reactors tied for 20th place
Reactor locations
Southport, N.C.
Russellville, Ark.
Baptle Platform, B.
Gravel Neck, Vea.
Toma River, N.J.
Scruby, N.J.
Saint Paul, N.C.
Southport, N.C.
Plymouth, Mass.
Russellville, Ark.
Morrill, Ill.
Surry-2
Trojan
McGuire-1
Fitzpatrick
Duane Arnold
Robinson 2
Turkey Point-2
Palsades
Salem-1
Gravel Neck, Va.
Prescott, Ore.
Cowans Ford Dam,
N.C.
Scriba, N.Y.
Palo Alto, N.
Harvillock, S.C.
Florida City, Fla.
Zion, Ill.
South Haven, Mich.
Salem, N.J.
SOURCE: Public Citizen
Knight-Ridder Tnbune News/JUDY TREIBLE
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Clothing & Apparel
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Costumes
WALK MC AM EXP. DISCOVER CARD
732 Mass. 843-6011
Plan your Graduation Party Now!
Call Toni at:
Modern Cuisine Catering
11560 W. 95th St. Suite 303
Overland Park, KS 66215
(913) 599-7920
Come see us at the Taste of the Bayou Cajun-Creole Cuisine Booth at the Celebration of Cultures on April 20th!
Hoch Auditorium, Sunday, April 28, 3:30 p.m.
10% discount to KU students
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance
Presents
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AND CHOIRS in a commemorative concert featuring works of
Mozart (1756-1791)
Bernstein (1918-1990)
Copland (1900-1990)
THE ISLAMIC CENTER OF LAWRENCE presents Dr. A.Rauf Mir Spokesman for Kashmiri Muslims
"The Death of Kashmir : Muslim-Hindu Conflict in India"
Place: Frontier Room Burge Union K.U. Campus, Lawrence Time: 7:00 p.m. Friday, April 26th, 1991
Open to the Public Free Refreshments For more information call 841-9768
SAVE A PLEASE RECYCLE!
ACNE?
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3-week skin care program
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For Free Consultation Call:
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842-9140
Studio, 1&2 Bedroom heat&water paid
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 26, 1991
7
Nation/World briefs Washington
Famine sweeps African nations
Famine has reached crisis proportions in Sudan, where up to 11 million people face severe hunger and hundreds of thousands may die, U.S. officials said yesterday.
Sudan is the worst off of six African nations experiencing severe food shortages, the officials told a House panel on hunger. Between 33 million and 35 million Africans are at risk in Sudan, Mozambique, Angola, Liberia, Ethiopia and Somalia.
Rep. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said the news from Africa had gone virtually unnoticed while the world's attention focused on the plight of Kurdish refugees fleeing Iraq.
He urged the U.S. government and its allies to move quickly to find solutions for feeding cattle.
Washington
U.S. offers $1 million to Hanoi
For the first time since the Vietnam War ended 16 years ago, the United States is offering a modest amount of humanitarian aid to Homo sapiens. In addition, a State Department official said yesterday.
Richard Solomon, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia, said $1 million in aid was being sent to pay for artificial limbs for Vietnamese citizens.
U. S. policy has long encouraged providing prosthetics to help the Vietnamese warriors.
Moscow
Troops use force in Lithuania
Soviet troops used force again in independence-seeking Lithuania, seizing at least 12 buildings in eight cities, the Lithuanian Parliament said yesterday.
The troops said they were carrying out orders from Soviet Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov to guard property that the ministry said it owned, the independent Elta news agency reported.
Soldiers in paratroopers' uniforms broke into buildings, including several technical schools, a clothing factory, a hotel and a sports complex in eight Lithuanian cities, the parliament said.
From The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union's Communist leadership decided yesterday to keep Mkhail Gorbache as party chief, despite hours of criticism that prompted him to offer to quit.
Soviet leaders debate, Gorbachev retains job
Alexander Pomorov, a regional Communist Party leader from Siberia, said that the demands for Gorbachev's removal ended in a crisis of nerves on all sides.
The Associated Press
"This is not a demonstration of strength, but a demonstration of (the party's) weakness," Pomovor told an interview yesterday night at a committee said in the party's policy-making Central Committee end.
Delegates emerged from the yellow Kremlin in a chilly spring evening after more than 14 hours of work.
called a sharp and critical exchange of opinions.
Cherished to our cherished elicitation of spirituality. For two hours, Gorbachev endured tongue-lashings from 18 delegates, and many urged him to resign, Interfax said.
Then, in a tactic he has used before, Gorbachev forced the issue. The chairperson of the Soviet Communist Party said he had enough of the endless attacks and made what one delegate said was a half serious offer to resign if the Central Committee took a vote of no-confidence.
During an ensuing break in the meeting, the party Polibituro met and unanimously decided that Gorbachev's resignation should not be considered, and Kim, head of the party's international department.
The Central Committee then vote 322-13 against pursuing the idea, Falin told a news conference
New health survey released Women in Japan enjoy longest lifespan, report says
The Associated Press
GENEVA — Japan's women live longest and more people living in industrialized nations die from smoking than from any form of violence, a new survey by the World Health Organization
The figures are among thousands packed into WHO's 423-page statistical yearbook, which includes a comprehensive mortality survey based on reports from 55 countries, mostly in the Americas and Europe. The new edition, released this month, covers data through 1989.
Deaths linked to smoking total 1.8 million each year in the industrialized countries alone, the U.N. said in a report on Wednesday.
The 800,000 smoking-related deaths among people ages 15-64 included in that figure exceeds the totaled number of deaths that were related to any form of violence, including accidents, homicide or
suicide.
The U.S. death rate from cancer was 194.9 for
every 1000 people, compared with 245.3 in
the U.K.
The female breast cancer rate was 41.8 in Britain, 22.0 in the United States, 22.0 in Spain and 16.5 in France.
Heart disease claimed the highest relative toll in the Soviet Union. The rate of 360.3 was almost twice that of the United States, 188.3, four times Austria and seven times higher than in Sri Lanka.
In Japan, women's life expectancy at birth is 82.5 years — six years more than for men. That compares with 78.6 years for women and 71.6 years for men in the United States.
In Sao Tome and Principe, one of the world's least developed countries, the likely life spans are 63.1 for women and 60.7 years for men.
NATURAL WAY
820-822 Mass. 841-0100
PRAYING TO THE SUN
NO COUPON SPECIALS
- EVERYDAY TWO-FERS - 2-PIZZAS -$9.00
2-TOPPINGS
2-DRINKS
- PRIMETIME SPECIAL - 3-PIZZAS -$11.50
1-TOPPING
4-DRINKS
*PARTY "10" are on sale now at the Ticket Office in Allen Field House Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Cost: $75.00
10 -PIZZAS -$30.00
1-TOPPING
842-1212
- MONDAY MUNCHIES-
PEPPERONI, SAUSAGE, -$5.00
EXTRA CHEESE
1-DRINK
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall
DINE-IN NOW AVAILABLE
- PICK-UP SPECIAL ·
1. TOPPING -$3.50
1. PIZZA
HOURS
1·DRINK
HOURS
MON-THURS FRI-SAT SUNDAY
11am-2am 11am-3am 11am-1am
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!
All partici
nd cachelo
the commend
KJL
The University of Kansas COMMENCEMENT
Degree Candidates and Faculty: Caps, Gowns & Hoods All participants, including graduate, law, master's and bachelors candidates wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may obtain caps, gowns and/or hoods at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. weekdays April 8 through 26.
Participants may still obtain regalia on Saturday, May 18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and on Sunday, May 19 from 8 a.m. until Commencement. A late fee of $10 will be assessed. All sizes and types of regalia cannot be guaranteed after April 26.
ROCK SOLID VALUE AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES!
DTK PEER 1660
HARDWARE
2MB Ram, expandable to 5MB
5.25, 1.2MB floppy drive
3.5, 1.2MB floppy drive
40MB hard disk drive, Segat ST157A, 28ms
Serial, parallel, PS2 mouse ports
16BIT SVGA card with 256K, Paradise chipset
14" VGA color monitor
101 Enhanced keyboard, Fujitsu 4800 tactile
One year warranty, parts and labor, local servic
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SOFTWARE: Dos 3.3, Lotus Workdes, Windows 3.0
PERIPHERAL: 2400B internal modem, Super mouse II
$1795 *everything included
MICROTECH COMPUTERS
DICKINSON PLAZA 841-9513
Thanks!
You deserve the credit.
The students of J446, Advertising Copy & Layout, would like to recognize these Radio & TV students for their professional expertise and help in doing the advertising for the Citibank/Clio College Advertising Awards Competition.
J446
Jill Byron
Cathy Sutherlin
Jessmond Hong
Betsy Campbell
Dan Keigher
Tracy Koeneke
Christy Parsons
Meredith Woodhouse
Lance Hanson
Andrew Pileggi
Del Kimball
Meg Moulthrop
Monica Matyak
Jay Steiner
Starla Rabeneck
Colleen Kelley
Bob Basow
TV/Radio
TV/Radio
Paulette Krick
Jill Mosier
Tricia Kensinger
Diedra Davis
Chris Bihuniak
Paul Proia
Andy Finch
Dave Unekids
Christine Gooding
Shaun Bohs
Taju Takahashi
Brian Sexton
Laura Kleene
Julie Kravitz
Nikki Crossman
Craig Goodwin
Tim Mensendick
Mitch Gage
KU Students
SPORTS TICKETS COMBO
Sports Package Includes:
· 5 Home Football Games
· 16 Home
Basketball Games
- Kansas Relays - 4 Days of Events
KANSAS
ATHLETICS
Get your tickets now to catch all the action next year!
8
Friday, April 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Beauty
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Salon & Supplies
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WAREHOUSE
Salon & Supplies
• Paul Mitchell
• Nexxus
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(23rd & Louisiana) 841-5885
The last days of school are upon you! How about extra cash for the summer?
You can have cash for the summer while you store your stereo equip., color TV, apt. size refrig., camera, or many other valuables! Bring them in and receive a loan, then when fall semester comes, just redeem them. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY. WE ALSO BUY THESE ITEMS IF YOU DONT PLAN TO RETURN NEXT FALL.
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City, firefighters near pact
Wages, key items remain unresolved
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Despite some unresolved items in firefighter contract negotiations, city and firefighter union officials say they are still discussing about reaching an agreement soon.
After a week of negotiations, teams from the city and union met again Wednesday, this time to discuss the city work-agreement proposal. The city agreed in response to the firefighters' plan, which union officials presented last week.
Rod Bremby, assistant city manager and chief negotiator for the city, said the two parties already had reached an agreement on the work agreement. However, the
"We'll get to the point very quickly where we'll know whether it's going to be closure or impasse," he said. "The biggest items are yet to come."
most critical items, including wages reclassification, still have not been determined.
Bremby said the city had to revise parts of its proposal because some of its previous research, such as comparisons to firefighter contracts in other Big Eight cities, proved to be irrelevant to the negotiations.
"We were making some bad comparisons," he said. "Our argument was that we shouldn't."
Bob Kent, firefighters union representative, said that although the data collected from peer cities could be useful, the research did not take the local labor market of those cities into account.
'We don't regard firefighters as
having a regional market," he said. "We're not in competition with other cities, so the relevant area is the local market area. That was our argument."
Despite the unresolved portions of the work agreement, Bremby said he thought the negotiations would reach closure as soon as next week.
"We made better progress than I thought," he said. "We could have made more if we had had all of the research."
Kent said that although talks had gone smoothly so far, he did not think that union and city officials would reach an agreement by next week.
"He's a little optimistic, I think," he said. "We still have to look at the city's proposal. I could be surprised; I hope I'm surprised."
The negotiating teams will meet again Wednesday.
COMING APRIL 29TH!
BIG BILL$ FOR BOOKS!
Jayhawk Bookstore
BONUS BUCKS
AS USUAL
BAR & GRILL
HOT SHOTS
• GRILL OPEN TILL 1:30 AM EVERY NITE •
FRIDAY
$2.50
PITCHERS
FREE Taco Bar
untill 10:00
• NO COVER •
SATURDAY
NASTY HABITS
Total Male Revue
STARTS AT 9:00 PM • GUYS ADMITTED AT 11:00
SUNDAY
ALL YOU CAN
EAT TACOS-
$3.00
FISHBOWLS
$2.00
Shots
$1.00
623 VERMONT
I
SUNDAY
ALL YOU CAN
EAT TACOS-
$3.00
NASTY HABITS Total Male Revue STARTS AT 9:00 PM •GUYS ADMITTED AT 11:00
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Rain or Shine! presents Day on the Hill noon-8 p.m. Sat. April 27, 1991 Campanile Hill, University of Kansas
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Rain or Shine!
presents
Day on the Hill
noon-8 p.m.
Sat. April 27, 1991
Campanile Hill, University of Kansas
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 26, 1991
Arts and Entertainment
9
Day on the Hill to feature music from folk to rap
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan staff writer
SUA has created a monster
It will rise from the ground and come alive at the base of the Campanella hill at noon Saturday for its third consecutive year.
It thrives in the sun, ignores the rain and doesn't go away until long after the sun has set.
People will scream. They will run. They will jump.
They will not hide.
Paris, a performer from San Francisco, will lead the 1991 Day on the Hill. Paris will speak at 5 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium
And the monster has evolved this year into something bigger and better than previous beasts.
This year's monster is not just a monster of rock. It is rap, it is funk, it is dancing. It is laughs, reggae and gospel.
It is Day on the Hill, and this year’s free 10-hour music festival, sponsored by SUA, Black Student Union, UJIMA, Black Men of Today, Native American Student Association and RKFE, features more acts than ever before.
Juliane Kochenour, coordinator of bands for Day on the Hill, said that her committee wanted to bring in groups with more musically diverse backgrounds in an effort to bring older a more varied crowd for the event.
Sue Murrell, SUA program director, predicted this year's show would draw 3,000 to 5,000 people.
Headlining the show is Paris, a San Francisco-based writer, arranger and producer who plays a blend of rock, hip-hop spiced with rock and jazz.
Paris also will speak at 5 p.m. today at the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union about the message in his music.
Jimmy Carter
"It's my responsibility to avoid promoting the frateradic violence and glamorization of the drug trade in the Black community," he said. "I have got to step up and convey positive messages to the people and at the same time make the best possible music."
Opening up for Paris is the Denver-based DOPE (Disciples of Peace and Equality). DOPE consists of two rappers whose sound has been described as being like an "in-your-face slam dunk."
The band's mission is to bridge the gap between rugged rappers such as Public Enemy and Ice Cube and the Tie Called Orest and De La Soula.
Preceding DPE on the lights is Az-One. A reggae band from Kansas City, Az-One last set foot on Lawrence turf in January when they opened up for Culture at Liberty Hall.
Beginning Day on the Hill will be four Lawrence bands, chosen by a 14-member panel to kick off the show. Kochenour said that controversy about how the bands were chosen in earlier years prompted her to use a large panel. She said about 40 of them were submitted for the panel to judge.
"It worked really well," she said. "There were a lot of great acts."
The first of the four to perform will be Now See Hear, a six-man "power-
funk" outfit which uses four vocalists and diverse instrumentation
perform, Formerly a "treble band," as guitarist Mark Marken said, Zoom has completed its line-up with the addition of bassist Jeremy Sidner. The band's sound is not always danceable, Henning said, but "it will make you want to get up and do something."
Next up is an acoustic folk act, Two Guitars and a Short Guy. Guitarist/singer John McKenna said the band originally formed for last year's Rock Chalk Revue, and things went well so they stayed together. Their tape, "Dusty Road," has sold nearly 100 copies through word-of-mouth alone.
Zoom will be the third group to
The final Lawrence act is Mutt Finicky, a four-month-old trio that bassist Todd Risley said combined influences from such diverse acts as
Fishbone, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Stevie Ray Vaughn and Jimmi Hendrix. Their self-described "psy-chrizz-riddle-funk" will be unleashed on Lawrence for the first time Saturday.
Between-act shows will be FKM Explosions (comedy and music), the Inspirational Gospel Voices and the Miss Haskell Dancers and Singers.
Morrell said that Day on the Hill's ancestry could be traced back to
spring of 1978, when students were treated to the "Jayhawk Jam" on the lawn in front of Allen Field House.
In May 1979, memories of the previous decade prompted "Wheat stock."
Since then, outdoor festivals at KU have had different names and appeared at different times.
Since 1989, it has been called Day on the Hill.
Abuse theme falls flat in 'Thoughts'
SAFETY
FOR
BRAIDS
Glenne Headly, left, and Demi Moore have a moderately interesting friendship in the new film "Mortal Thoughts," which Moore co-produced.
reviews
By Amy Robinson
I blame Farrah Fawcett
First, "Sleeping With the Enemy." Now Mortal Thoughts.
Why does every new, hot, young starlet run off and play an Earth woman involved with abusive men? Farrah went off and did "Extremities" and "Burned Bed" and,poof she,is a serious actress. I know, I forgot about her days as a jiggle girl on "Charlie's Angels." I think Julia Roberts and Dern Moore said to me "We're so stupid that more than polystyrene stuff, but damn it, I'm a serious actress. I want some respect, and I want it now."
These flicks are about spousal abuse in the same way that "Pretty Woman" is about prostitution and "General Hospital" is about medicine; pretty people play-acting about serious subjects with serious consequences. Then again, probably no one would sit through two hours on the realities of domestic violence or be able to deal with such clout to haul people into the theater to see shows on real domestic violence. Maybe one of them will make such a show someday.
In "Mortal Thoughts," James Urbanski (played by Bruce Willis) beats wife Joyce Glenne Headly. Tries to rape wife's best friend Cynthia Kellogg (Demi Moore). Turns up dead OK by me. He's such an irredeemably repulsive character that the question is not so much why anyone would want him, but why didn't anyone off him sooner?
Bruce's performance is cut mercifully short by his brutal death, but it is seared forever in my brain. See Bruce swagger. See Bruce sneer. See him leeer. Bruce is so over-the-top with this sleazoid number that it is completely unbelievable when Cynthia says that James used to be a happy go-luck guy. She must be one lousy judge of character.
Bringing us to Joyce. Joyce and James actually are perfectly matched. She is violent.
her own right — paranoid, homicidal. At one point, Joyce coolly plays chicken with an oncoming truck. Cynthia is appalled. James is orgasmic.
Demi starred in and co-produced this baby. She wanted to prove that she could do more than cry on cue. Well, she does cry, but she also gets to rant and rave and butter a New Jersey accent, like a serious actress. But why is it that when Hollywood makes films about ordinary, world-weary women, it casts them with glamorous young thines?
The friendship between Joyce and Cynthia is moderately interesting, if only for its vague, purely unintentional implications of something more than a friendship between the two.
To be fair to the performers, the script by Claude Kerven and William Healy does abate its length.
Alan RudolphDid this sucker. What was he thinking? My favorite shot was the slo-
mo of Harvey Keitel drinking water. You know how you can fudge on the length of a paper by changing the fonts? Well, Alan fudged on the running time by inserting unnecessary slomoes. Come to think of it, all of Alan's stylistic touches were unnecessary. Why the hand-held camera in the bedroom? The bizarro camera angles? The fade ins, the fade-out, the inappropriate close-ups? Alan used every trick in the book to revive this pie except order a rewrite Hey, that's so crazy, it just might ve worked.
Extra bonus points for the luridness of the Christmas lights. No matter how skillfully applied, no matter how quantitate the surroundings, you won't be able to match the mood for Las Vegas, not for the holiday spirit.
To steal from “Bloom County” and paraphrase that noted film critic, Opus, “Mortal Thoughts’ may not have been that bad, but Lord, it sure wasn’t good.”
CALENDAR
■ "House Party," SUA Movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas City. $2.50
Fridav
■ Uncle Tupelo with The Wannabees
9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New
Hamshire St. $4
Ida McBeth and Friends, 9:30 p.m.
The Jazzhaus, 926½ Massachusetts St.
$4
The Hollow Men, 9:30 p.m., The Mad Hatter, 749 New Hamburg St. $3
"Rock 'n' Roll High School." SUA Movie, nightburn,木ruffruit Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
Saturday
SUA Day on the Hill, featuring Paris and other bands, noon to dusk, Campaigne Hill, free.
■ "The Gods Must Be Crazy," SUA
Movie, 4 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium,
Kansas Union, $2
**English Alternative Theater, readings from play" *Comedores/Lovers*, "about life of Walt Whitman* 8 p.m., Downs Auditorium, Natural History Museum, $2; discounts apply.*
■ "House Party," SUA Movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
■ Killibilly with Filter Kings. 9:30 p.m.
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St,
$4.
Ida McBeth and Friends, 9:30 p.m.
The Jazzhaus, 926½ Massachusetts St.
$4.
Poetic Justice, 9:30 p.m., The Mad Hatter. 704 New Hampshire St., $2.
- "Rock 'n' Roll High School," SUA
Movie, midnight, Woodruff Auditorium,
Kansas union, $2.50.
Sundav
Monday
■ "House Party," SUA movie, 2 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
$2.50
**Spring Concert Combined Choirs and University Symphony Orchestra. "A Celebration of the Lives of W. A. Mozart."**
2 p.m., Hoeh Auditorium, free.
3:30 p.m., Hoch Auditorium, free.
Open mike, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. free.
Wednesday
Helen Keller Plaid with the Mahoots,
9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New
Hampshire St. $3.
Tuesday
KU Jazz Ensemble, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $3
Thursday
"Alums Come Home Il." KU Theatre Alumni and Student Performances, 8 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall tickets, at Murphy Hall Box Office, $10 for public, $5 for KU students, all seats reserved.
■ Monks of Doom with No Man, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., $6.
Sons of Rex, 9:30 p.m., The Jazz zhaus, 926½ Massachusetts St., $3.
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Coaches seek stiffer rules
OVERLAND PARK — The NCAA should impose harasser penalties on schools and athletes who cheat, its own lawyer said, in day by a group of Division I coaches.
The Associated Press
Another idea that came out of the two-day meeting between the coaches' group and NCAA officials was a recommendation to force athlete eligibility requirements before they can even make recruiting visits.
Representatives of football and basketball coaches both said they wanted the NCAA to begin targeting athletes as well as schools and coaches who were involved in recruiting or academic irregularities.
"These are not naive people any more we're dealing with for the most part," Kentucky football coach Bill Curry said at a news conference. "Some are standing there with their hands out saying, 'What's involved here?'
George Raveling of Southern California, representing basketball coaches, said, "We want to send a message to presidents that we're reading off the same page they are, that we're interested in academic
"We want to send a message to young people that they have to show greater academic achievement if they want to be involved in the recruiting process and if they want the privilege of interacting with coaches and student-athletes," he said.
integrity and accountability
The two-day meeting was called by NCAA executive director Dick Schultz to discuss ways of simplifying recruiting rules. The recommendations will go to various recruiting committees, including the Council and Presidents Commission, which could sponsor them at the NCAA convention in January.
No specific recommendations were presented at the news conference other than forcing basketball prospects to meet Proposition 48 requirements before they can make paid camp visits during recruiting season.
"The coaches agree that student-athletes should not be permitted to visit a campus until that prospective student-athlete has achieved a minimum of 700 on the SAT or 18 on the ACT and has a minimum of 2.0 grade point average on seven core (college preparatory) courses." *Raveling*
said.
Those test scores and a 2.0 GPA in 11 core courses are the minimum standards for freshman eligibility
Raveling and Curry each reported a strong feeling among coaches for harser penalties for both schools and athletes, though they declined to name recent cases in which they felt penalties had been too lenient.
"But they are only saying what a majority of people tell us by letter every time an institution is put on probation," Schultz said. "We get two kinds of letters. One says we all want an agent who we act hurriedly and one says we three times as many letters saying that what we did was not tough enough."
Raveling said that the idea that athletes are innocent, exploited youths who do not understand the biggest myth in American sports.
"In a large majority of situations, the athlete encourages those inductions," he added. "If they accept a dollar, they should be ineligible."
When asked if the coaches who provide illegal inducements should be dealt with similarly, Raveling said, "You bet I would support that."
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 26, 1991
11
KANSAS
20
Super Hapke, Glendale, Mo., sophomore, checks Jason Rosenberg, Wichita senior, from behind during the Kansas lacrosse team's practice.
Three teams will test Kansas in weekend lacrosse tourney
Bv Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
For only the second time this season, the Kansas lacrosse team will play at home.
The tournament will begin at 2 p.m. tomorrow and resume at 11 a.m. Sunday.
The team will play tomorrow and Sunday at the fields near 23rd and Iowa streets from Kankan to Issawi and from Kanahan Lacrosse club from St. Louis.
John Armstrong, a senior for Kansas, said the Gateway club would be the better of the three teams Kansas would face.
"I haven't seen them play," he said. "But they have good lacrosse talent based on some of the scores I have seen. They beat Missouri 19-1."
Armstrong said that Kansas was not intimidated by the St. Louis club and had a chance to beat them.
"You never know what you are going up against in the Midwest," he said.
Kansas is coming off a fourth-place finish in Alabama, where they improved their overall record to 3-4 in the Great Plains lacrosse league.
'Hawks ready to bat for post-season berth
Armstrong predicted Kansas would win the games against Missouri and K.State.
Kansas lacrosse vice president Dan Hapke said the team showed improvement while they were down
He said that because each team finances its own transportation, key players sometimes are left behind because of expenses.
The Kansas baseball season still has 12 games left, but for the Jayhawks' post-season tournament hopes, only eight of the 12 matter.
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
"If we can get three of the next eight, we will probably be there," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "If we can get three of the next eight, we will definitely be there."
south.
The fourth-place Jayhawks are in a shaky position in the Big Eight Conference race. They are two games out of first, yet only one game away from slipping to fifth and out of tournament qualification.
"The mathematics are simple," Bingham said. "There has only been one team left out with 11 wins."
Kansas begins a four-game series at 7 tonight at Hoglund Maupin Stadium against a formidable Iowa State team.
The Jayhawks currently have eight conference victories, but getting to 11 won't be easy.
"The competition in Alabama was tough," he said. "We got to see different teams that we are not used to playing here in the Midwest."
The Cyclones took three of four games from then league-leading Oklahoma State last weekend, putting themselves one game behind the 8-8 Jayhawks.
Big Eight Baseball Standings
Armstrong said that the game would not count in any records or standings but that it was fun to play of so many fans in an indoor arena.
Kansas will have a warm-up for this weekend's tournament when they play the Kansas City club in an exhibition game during half-time at the Kansas City Comets playoff game tonight at Kemper Arena.
The league Kansas normally plays in consists of Missouri, K-State, Wichita State, Tulsa, the Kansas City Creighton and the Creighton Lacrosse club.
W L Pct.
Missouri 10 6 6.25
Oklahoma State 7 5 583
Oklahoma 9 7 563
Kansas 8 8 605
Iowa State 7 9 438
Kansas State 7 9 438
Nebraska 4 8 333
*Colorado has no baseball program
"They have had some kids really step up for them," Bingham said.
{"iowa State coach) Bobby Randall told me if they had a fourth starter, they would have taken four from Oklahoma State."
The Cyclone pitching staff has three pitchers with two conference victories each, but its 7.35 team ERA is the highest in the league.
Offensively, the Cyclones are led by right fielder Tom Vantiger, ISU's career hits and RBI leader
Vantiger earned Big Eight player of the week honors last week, going 11-for-20 with eight RBI and eight stolen bases.
Not only will the Jayhawks have to contend with the Cyclones, but they also will have to shake the effects of four straight losses.
However, Bingham and his players contend that Kansas is a different team when it plays against Big Eight opponents.
Team expects tough games in tightening race to Big-8 crown
Kansas third baseman Gerry Camara said. "We want to get all of them, but we won't take this affect our Big Eight performance."
Kansas to face NU, OSU
After tonight's game, the Jayhawks and the Cyclones will play a doubleheader at 4 p.m. tomorrow and the series finale at 1 p.m. Sunday.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team will not be putting any extra pressure on themselves when they play Nebraska vs. Oklahoma State tomorrow in Linchon, Neh
"That's the difference in KU three weeks ago and KU right now," jumio third baseman Camille Spitalier said. "We were trying too hard, and we were having a lot of pain."
Spitalier said that she expected a tough game from both the Cornshukers and the Cowgirls but that the State would be the harder of the two.
"We're not overlooking Nebraska, but the tougher game will be against OSU. Spitaleri said. "Last year, we swept them. We've always played them well. I hope we don't try to change anything."
Spitaler said that the Jayhawks hitting and pitching should enable them to grab four victories this weekend.
Spitaleri herself is peaking right now.
"We're peaking right now," Spitaleri said.
Softball
She leads the Jayhawks in nearly
"I've been counting down the days." Spitaleri said. "It's the toughest thing I've ever tried out for."
every offensive category, and June 14-21 she will run out for the U.S. Pan American Games softball team in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Spitalkari said she would be facing stiff competition, but she thought that if she could get past the first round she could have a chance to make the team.
"If I continue to hit like I hit now, I should make the team." she said.
Spitalier said that about 80 women of all ages would be trying out for the team and that many would have more experience than she has, but not enough. She will not have an asset. She will be trying for outfield and infield positions.
Former Jayhawk Roanna Brazier also will try out for the Pan Am games team
Kansas coach Kalum Haack said both players would be to do well at the tryouts, but he said he thought Spitaleri had a chance to get a spot on
the team.
As for the rest of the Jayhawks, Haack said that he was pleased with their performances but that they could not be overconfident because they would be facing strong competition this weekend.
"It's been a goal of hers," Haack said. "She wants to play."
"I think it's going to be a one-run game," Haack said of the Oklahoma State contest "We've got to get that right." He hoped hopefully she can steal a base.
Hacks said the team would need to score early so it could set the tempo of the game and win.
"Whoever makes the mistake is going to get beat," Haack said.
Haack said that the rivalry between Kansas and Nebraska should be enough to provoke another close, exciting game for the Jayhawks, despite the Cornhuskers' rash injuries and the Cornbusters' depth of this year.
"They're going to play the best game they've played all year against us." Haack said.
Conditions favor men golfers
He said he was expecting a good game because Kansas and Oklahoma State were even matched teams.
Kansan sportswriter
By Rick C. Honish
"The two courses are identical in some ways," he said. "The greens
The Kansas men's golf team has a few advantages over other Big Eight Conference teams going into Big Eight Men's Golf Championships.
The Hallbrook Country Club in Leawood is similar to the Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio, with the Akron course as the more difficult of the two, said Kansas coach Ross Randall. The team will play the same games recorded its best finish of the season, second in a 36-tem field.
The first one is the course.
Sophomore Brad Bruno said the tournament in Akron was the equivalent of a warm-up for this week's tournament.
Of the Akron course, Randall said, "It is rated as the fourth-hardest course in the country."
are elevated with a lot of slopes and hills on them."
According to Randall, that is an advantage as well.
"We will shoot more 73s on a harder course than 68s on an easier one." he said.
Randall said the team, made up of Bruno, senior Len Johnsen, freshman Jeff Moeller and sophomores Jim Young and Matt Gogle, would have to maintain its concentration during the duration of the tournament.
"If you let yourself slip mentally, the course will eat you alive," he said.
Another advantage Kansas may have lies in the weather forecast.
first and second rounds, a condition Kansas has grown accustomed to this season. Their success last season was achieved under rainy skies.
Rain is predicted for Monday's
The only gloomy cloud in Kan sas' sky is over Johnsen.
At last week's tournament, Johnson was hitting out of the rough on a second-round pair 5 when his 5-iron struck a hidden rock.
"I pulled some tendons and ligaments in my left hand," he said. "I got through the third round, but it really hurt."
Johnsen took Monday and Tuesday off before taking some putting and chipping practice Wednesday. He said that after hitting balls yesterday his hand hurt but that "it survived."
Johnsen said he would play through the pain at Halbrook.
Olson files suit and leaves Boston
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Sportswriter Lisa Olson filed suit against the New England Patriots yesterday, charging sexual harassment and civil rights violations he have led her to leave the Boston Herald on the city.
Olson, who has worked for the Herald for four years, will leave her job, her attorneys said. She is currently covering the Boston Bruins for the newspaper.
"She has to leave the state, at least for now," said Norman Zalkind, one of her attorneys. He would not say when she planned to leave the newspaper.
Olsen's son was filed in Suffolk Superior Court against the NFL team; owner Victor Kiam; former general manager Patrick Sulliam; former media services director James Oldham; and three players, Zeke Mowatt, Michael Timpson and Perry Rervman.
The suit also alleges intentional infliction of emotional distress and intentional damage to her professional reputation. It asks for unspecified monetary damages.
The suit stems from incidents beginning last Sept. 17 when the 27-year-old Olson said she was sexually harassed while conducting an interview in the Patriots locker room.
Zakind said that since the incident Olson has endured abuse from some of the fans at sporting events.
"A great number of times she is yelled at, screamed at, sees negative graffitf about her . . . and her car was vandalized," Zalkind said. "She's frightened all the time."
Olson said she had intended to let the issue drop after the NFI lifted the team and the players in November. But she decided to file suit after Kiam joked about the incident while speaking at a banquet Feb. 4 and because Mowatt and Perryman did not pay the fines.
"Nobody should have to go through this just for trying to do their job." Olson said Wednesday. "If anything, this suit will make it easier for others so that we can stop this won't happen to other female journalists."
He also said Olson had received hate mail and harassing telephone calls.
"What Kiam did was treat Lisa Olson like the bait of a joke instead of a person, said Michael Alexander."
"He (Kiam) apologizes and does it again, which shows he had no sincerity." Zakild said. "Kiam is older and in a higher position and should have known better than the young players."
Kiam's office at Remington Products Inc. said
he would not be available for comment yesterday. The team declined to comment on the suit.
"The Patriots organization has no comment," said Mike Hanson, a representative for the Patriots. This is a legal matter, and it would be inappropriate for us to comment on it at this
Mowitt was financed $12,500 and Perryman $5,000 after an independent investigation by the NFL.
Timpson paid a $5,000 fine last week but denied he was involved.
"The fines were paltry. They were demeaning."
Zalind said.
Zalkind said Timpson's payment had not gone unnoticed by the plaintiff.
"There's a lot of defendants, and they will not necessarily each have to pay the same amount of debt."
Timpson's agent, Brett Senior, has said Timpson was aware of the pending suit, but Senior had no
According to court documents, Olson was interviewing Maurice Hurst, a Patriots player, in the locker room Sept. 17 when Mowatt, who was naked, displayed his genitals and made sexual remarks while egged on by Timpson and Perryman.
Sports briefs
Women's tennis team starts Big-8 tournament
The Kansas women's tennis team begins the Big Eight Conference Tournament today in Oklahoma City.
Jamison selected for power, endurance team
Oklahoma State has essentially sealed the championship entering the tournament, and the Jayhawks are for second place in the conference.
Jamison bench presses 260 pounds back squats 455 pounds, power cleans
The award is given annually to male and female collegiate athletes who demonstrate exemplary achievement in the areas of physical strength, power and endurance in their particular sport.
Kansas junior forward Alonzo Jamison has been named to the National Strength and Conditioning team's All-America Athlete team.
302 pounds, has a vertical leaf of 27.5 inches and runs the 40-yard dash in 4.8 seconds. He currently is in Colorado Springs, Colo., trying out for the basketball team that will participate in the Pan American Games this summer.
Royals sign Astros veteran for one year
KANSAS CITY, Mo — Terry Puhil,
a 14-year major league veteran and
a 1978 National League All-Star.
He played for the Kansas City Royals yesterday.
The Royals said Puhl, 34, would sign today and replace first baseman George Brett, who will be placed on the 15-day disabled list.
Puhl, a 281 lifetime hitter, spent 14 years with the Houston Astros and was released by the New York Mets on April 1.
"Puhl is a veteran player who comes to us highly recommended by everyone," said Royals' manager John Wathan.
From staff and wire reports
12
Friday, April 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Black Men choose four to fill board vacancies
In Fall 1989, four KU students founded Black Men of Today as a way to unite African-American men at KU.
Kansan staff writer
By Lara Gold
"When people are united, it's easier to address the problems as a whole," said Cory Anderson, executive director of Black Men of Trefax.
Since then, Anderson, John Lewis and Darren Fulcher, along with the group's members, have worked to recruit and retain African-American students.
They also have worked on racism forums with greek organizations, and on educational forums to open lines of communication between African-American and white students.
Classified Directory
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Announcements
140 Entertainment
150 Lost & Found
200's
and Fulcher has been elected as next year's student body president. Mark McCormick, who also co-founded the group, graduated last spring.
group, he also promoted In their first election, Black Men of Today elected four new executive board members.
The new Black Men of Today executive board consists of James Baeum, Topeka sophomore; Peter Braithwaite, Evanston, III., sophomore; Mariquio Madlock, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; and Curtis Triggs, St. Louis freshman.
The three remaining founding executive board members wished everyone good luck and offered advice to continue Black Men of
"If you need any help, you can always call on me," Lewis said to the group.
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Tying Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
As graduation draws nearer there are a few people whom I love a lot to.
EK. thanks for the acceptance and all the laughs at TM. "Sweetness." Hawi 97. Panama City. Disney. Chicago. Oct 27, May 2. Thanks for the beauty. UV do forever.
L. B. & Michelle. Thank you for all the laughs this year! "H.I."; burn mark, "S. G.," up. Hart, I love you both. "Oh my gawd."
Linda B., Laura M., Hdl, & Mary M'. - Thank
you for listening to the sob story! I always did com
out laughing! —
J.K. "Someday, ooth Someday" Want some tea
Remember when you point your finger at
someone else, four of those fingers are pointing
K, H. Apr. 2, 3 years! wow! We made it. Thankx
for hanging in there. I love you..
10
P.C. - 5 yrs wow! Thanks for bringing the
wow! best work ever! qwerty, 72.5"
If I miss you all! -
- Anne Story
110 Bus. Personal
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses 20% Below Sug. Retail The Etc. Shop
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self confidence and build tech audio skills. Mastery of the 1983 NBC quiz Hypnosis and Stress Management Center
ANNOUNCING: Beauti Careul look and feel your best. Complete image update and color analysis for reasonable prices. Call 1 913-262-4829 for an appointment today!
FORMAL WEAR
400's
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Civ. "Makes sense to use it" is available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
Not just for Biker Babes anyt
Temporary Tattoos
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-6011
300's
Notice We're Back!
SUMMER IN EUROPE FROM $228 each way on discounted scheduled airlines to Europe from Kansas City, Call (800) 325-2026.
If you care about your body and health, but it's not the BEST it can be, call. We can help
Gauranteed 1-800-873-9022
Reopening Offer
Since 1906
$5 off Haircut
temporary location in Southern Hills Mall. (Near Benchwarmers and ARBY'S)
&/or
To any member who renews or brings in a new
customer or
K. E. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and ac servicing. Auto repair school. Dive, waterman & Discover cards accepted.
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
any new customer who signs up this week.
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
120 Announcements
ALL-REMAINING BOOKS-$1
Final books of quitting business sales
Final books of quitting business sales
Final books of quitting business sales
books $1 - no exceptions. Friday-Sunday 10.5
BATTERY can be emotional or physical.
WTCS Campus Support Group for battered Women Monday night 7 pm. Call 814:6876
Survival Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is calling 812-2345 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center.
Public Lecture. Come join us in understanding public world events. The Islamic Center of Lawrence will have a lecture titled "The Death of Kashmir: Muslim Hindu Conflict in India." This lecture will be presented at the Frontier Rm, Burge Union, KU, Lawrence. For more information please call 841-9586.
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
*College Money Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Finest! Since 1901. COLLEGE LSHAPER SCHOLARSHIPS. Locust Box, 101. (342) 765-6600
or any anonymous info and support for AIDS con-
cerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling - A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called回来 by counselors). Headquarters for KU Info 844-306. Sponsored by GLOSK
It was a day! I advertise. No messages! Dead machine. Now it works. Call and see what I can do for you: 1-800-972-8702.
Johnny's UP & UNDER
130 Entertainment
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER? **
there any time with ARIRCHT ($16) for $16m
the East Coast! ** from the Midwest (when
the West Coast!) ** at 212-844-2000
or ARIRCHT ($128-844-2000
is available for
No more PMS. Remarkable herbal compound relieves all stressful symptoms, completely natural, safe for everyone, inexpensive, and approved by Bureau of Health, Call 1319 749-0708.
K. U. Graduation Announcements still available Mark's Bridal, 843-7628
140 Lost-Found
FREE ARABIC COURSE
Have you been censored by a professor? Have you been disciplined or penalized for using language that others find objectional, racist, etc.'s? If you have, please contact David at 841-7676.
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841.752.8 N. J.
FOUND. Cat, white paws/all. Dark gray and brown, with a white triangle on nose with brown eyes.
at the end of the program. If interested please mail your name, address, and phone # to
Arabic, provided enough applicants respond to this
FOUND. Orange, grey, white adult cat. Friendly
at our house for 3 weeks. Call 841-9216.
interested applicants a certificate of completion
The Saudi Student House of Lawrence, Kansas is planning to offer a FREE course in
the Saudi Student House, P.O. Box 3749 Lawrence, Kansas 66046.
program is sponsored by the Institute of Islamic & Arabic Sciences in
America (based in Washington, D.C.), which will award
announcement. The program is sponsored by
22d. Call to claim, 749-4323.
Found: Dead hearing in Wescoe on 4/19. Call
Found: Pearl earring in Wescoe on 4/19. Call
845-4523. Describe to call.
LIVE DARNBUT! If you see one please call
LOST PARROT! If you see one please call
749-3707 or 864-3178 $50 reward.
Found. Keys, second floor lobby in Dale, April
27, 2011. (cid. 3492, 749-832)
Lost on campus. Silver filigree pin with turquoise center. Only real value is $10. It costs $35.
200s
205 Help Wanted
Aggressive GM Import dealership is seeking positive self-starter, female or male for an office position. The candidate may be possible for the first year, excellent benefits, full training, call for an appointment with the company.
RAAJAH HARRY'S Sato Bar and Grill in Overland Park is located for energetic people for all positions. Opening May 9th to lunch, Happyl Food, dinner and nightly entertainment and frivolous great times, great bucks, great incentives for their deserving. Cata Bahja Harry V33-881-6020
Employment
PERFORMANCE BONUSES
LOCAL ASSIGNMENTS
ATTENTION
STUDENTS!
SUMMER JOBS
A WORD PROGRAM
- MACINTOSH • CLERICAL
SECRETARIAL • DATA ENTRY
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTed for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming canoeing, sailing waterskipping, gymnastics, and soccer. Camp padders, campers, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salaries $1000 or more per week. Desk, 1765 Mascot, Nifd. 846-344-114
- WORD PROCESSING
· LIGHT INDUSTRIAL
Staffing Solutions
661-0066
Camp Counselors
BANNER DAY CAMP
- Floor Hockey * 21 yr. old drivers
Come celebrate your summer with us at our Lake
Forest Campground (25 miles N of Chicago)
Now hiring *Manager* $ Specialists!
• ALBANY • Soccer
• SLOPEN • Hockey
• BASEBAL • Hockey
• DREW • Gymnastics
Come celebrate ♥
CARRIER KI Booksellers. $4 per hour, part-time no fringes. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 10am-4pm. Could work byying days and hours have previous experience with verifiable job record as a credit or handling money and able to stand for long periods. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Of
Earn up to $800-$1200/mo. part-time this summer at home. To schedule an interview, call Straight Enterprises. 842-9140
1-800-726-4901
(208) 295-4900
EARN $5,000-$10,000 Now hiring-managers and
limited opportunity. Part time now,
full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
I call 800-4COLLEGE; M. Gannon.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED- Career position for aggravated candidate with degree in commerce or business. Req. excellent startling salary, company car at location, and commuting to college. Pursue permanent post Calt collect. Mr. Schwartz, M.S.
Elementary Summer Camp staff need at Rainbow Mountain School, degree in recreation or a related field. Send resume with reservation working with 76 year old required experience. Lawrence on a 24 month stay with horses. Contact Karen Wade at raindbowmountainschool.com
Housekeeper for summer and next year, experience and own transportation required. 849.1428
NANNIES immediate positions on the East Coast, Washington D.C. and Florida Excellent salaries plus benefits; 1 year commitment. Call area representative, 913-627-3044.
Templeton Nanny Agency, Inc
Interested in a caring summer job as a private home care aid? Gain valuable experience being part of a dynamic team. VNA offers flexible scheduling and initial training. Qualify 843-738-3738.
PNW's wanted for group home program serving in entrepreneurial, interpersonal, educational, supervision, and assessment skills. Experience preferred. On-call duty required. 14812 K 31 Call Steve P.1. 1963-8520.
Need a break? Be a nanny! Earn good money, go to interesting places for a year. Templeton Nanny Aenew. Lawrence 842-443-844
NANNEES - Long East, Coast Air, great fun. Same colors. Carefully screened families. Personal attention. PRINCETON NANNEES #48. Princeton N.A. 08560-3237
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary. 1-400-695-2728
Nannies - East Coast affluent families seek live in nannies. Airfield airfare, super salaries, excellent networking networking. Sorry, no nannies working here. Nanny calls: Dublin, Dublin 1, Nunney 940-797-6784 or 943-756-6786.
NEED A JOB? Experience America, Inc. will be hire on May 2 at the Kansas Union Centennial Room 2.4m x 5m. Plan to attend.
Work available in K.C. area. Secretary-war-
processing, data entry and secretarial skill neede-
s. Must have 6 months exp. 1 p.m to 4 pm on
2nd or 3rd day, Upload-Want to stay physically! Flex-
able schedule. Apply ilam-noon May 8th or 2nd.
Only $30 above; gray office group (mes-
s.)
Need person to show apartments, answer phones and general office work. full time in summer job offered. Send resume to be work study eligible. Call Mary PAt at 841-6003. Part-time secretary/bookkeeper needed beginning 38 May to 6 p.m. (Monday - Friday) accounting procedures, organizational skills and effective customer referral. Job includes internship, resume, and name and phone number of 2 reference by 1 M to Enterprise, P.O. Box 5090, New York, NY 10020.
Part-time time available for technician at Microtech. Requires some knowledge of IBM PCs. Training provided. 841-9613, ask for Raymond/Dana.
Sitter needed for summer for 12 yr old boy, Alvaram area. Live in optional. Room and board provided. 749-4358 after 6.
C
Attendant needed for disabled woman. Some lift
tug required. Approx. 7 hrs. a week. $45.00 hr.
842.1794
Templeton Nanny Agency, Inc.
P.O. Box 3363
Lawrence, KS 60616
call (913) 842-4443
Part-Time Summer Work!
Debra B. Templeton
Internship
Local Distributor for a large National Manufacturer is Now Hiring College people for summer and full time interns.
Wednesday/May 1st
- Paid Vacations
* Car & Clothing Allowances
**Social Services - opening available for married couple to live in and direct treatment program for 8 youth ages 12-17. Must work with adolescents, training provided. Preference given science degree or graduate science degree. Starting salary, $300 plus annual benefit package, 12 days off per year. Must be full benefits. License for Driver, Cabin, Lake Chelsea Locking For Children, Gluebe. NU 913-754-6890 MFR EO.
Sitter needed for 2 bays. 2 year old and 7 month old) 2 days a week or mornings or combination Call Lisa at 841 6600
Stormey Assistant, Kansas Union Food Service. Monday Friday, 7am-12pm $4.25 an hour, part time; no njoire. Work up to 50 hours lift over 50 lb. previous inventory or stock clerk experience preferred, money handling helpful. Apply Kansas Office, 13th Street, Level 5, LEVEL 5 EOE
Social Service Community Living Opportunities seeks motivated, energetic people to lead daily living and vocational activities in developmentally appropriate shifts, PT and FT and weeks needed. Excellent preferred. Excellent advancement opportunities 12-6-5 G. Call Marla. 18165-WALTON
SUMMER-FALL PART-TIME JOB as personal care attendant for retired, disabled KU staff member in family setting. Work on job duties such as work some evenings, afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU vacations a plus. Good job for OT. PET students or persons with like interests. Students or persons with like interests. Reliable car and phone required. U.S. Citizenship desired. Some time. Call 842-1681 between iam-qmjn
SUMMER-Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counselors in WSI, WTI. Arts & Crafts (Ceramics, Soccer Coach, Technical Asst. Artist, Casting Upper Classman)
Summer Jake Outdoors. Over 7,000 Ipepping! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Sand For Free Details. Solvans. W.I. E. Wyoming, Kalgore. NT.99891
*stk Program Student Peer Advises* (September 1991-May 1992) Responsibilities include assisting and advising minority freshmen in attending individual and group sessions for student instruction and education and attending weekly group sessions. A time student at the university for at least one year
and be in good academic standing; must be eligible for a work place; must be proficient in using campus procedures and activities, also excellent communication skills. Requires education in communications quirements available upon request. Contact Kristen Bowers at Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, MS 6004. 913-825-4814. All materials must be received prior to arrival.
TENNIS COUNSELORS-Boys resident camp in NYC offers summer camp for staff with great enthusiasm, who love looking at courts, clay and hard surface. High salary, room and board from 6/18-14/8. Call Mr. Lee Cousins.
Textbook Clerks KU Bookstores. Part-time $4.25 per hour, position could possibly last until Sept. 16, 1991. Must be able to work weekdays between the morning and evening. Must speak fluent English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods in a position, have employment and valid Driver's License. Prefer applicant to have interest or knowledge of books. Apply Kansas University Parsonsian Office. Level 5.
THE INFO is looking for a few dedicated individuals to assist with merchant subscriptions. We will be responsible for transportation. Canal business attire will be required. Travel requirements will be helpful. Fall placement available Lawrence Business Connection, Inc. 814-2244. Want a starting position? Please contact us. Please earn lots of money. *Please call
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered mid-Westm Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Wanted: Kitchen helpy help. Flex, hours, meals
Call Frank, Lawrence Country Club, 843-266-296
Government photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior portraits, modeling & art portals;
BJAW, color. Call Tom Swells 791-681
Interested in good health? Let us help you lose
weight with our natural body program.
Guaranteed Call 931 793-6400 Program - 10%
Gauranteed Call 931 793-6400
TRAFFIC - DUIL'S
TRAFFIC • DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt contraception and abortion services in I Loveport, RI-8716.
Liberty & Company
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street
803-429-0000
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
235 Typing Services
Content Management Word Processing. Former contentmanagers write serials into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 845-2635; day or evening.
1. a page double-spaced. Accurate. Fast Word Processing. Call Therase at 841-0776.
dollar per double space page. Rubin joke page
laser. L篆 printed paper word.
L篆 printed paper letters,
return etc. Call 845-8743. Term 10: 30 am wkds,
anytime wkends
A : Word Processing turns your frog into an IRA
B : Professional appearance
C : Appropriate appearance they deserve *82 7825*
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-space space. Call Ms. Mattila 10 am 6 pm. 841-1219
Typing Services 841 of the paper,
paper bags, pages 9 to 10 with a letter
to Dennis's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, dissertations, letter,
speech and spelling corrections. 2010: G W 203th St.
and spelling corrected. 2010: G W 203th St.
FAST. ACCURATE TIPPING $1.50 per page. In PDL and DUI, allow in any cities. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Mae at: 843.382
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable fast service. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6454
Professional resumes - Consultations, formating,
typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas inc., 9271
Mass. 841-1071
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call 442-300
Research Projects? Save time and frustration!
Experienced professional will enter your data file
from coding sheets/questionnaires. Call
Key Works. 842/8307
Word Processing/Typing Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations Applications. Also assistance in
spelling grammar, editing composition. Have M.
S.Degree. 841-6244
305 For Sale
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843 8568
Merchandise
84 Jeep CJ-7 Hardtop, AC, 4-spd. Good condition
Asking $500. Call 951-0629
Ninja under 10,000 miles. New Dunlop $2900
249,750. leave message
$389.00 or one order only 914-6270 BARGAIN! One-way ticket KC to NY CLaGuar
BARGAIN One-way ticket, KC1 to NY NC LaGuardia on May 14th. $59. Call Dave. 864-2804 Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
98 Yamaha jog. Yello and fast. Scott. 844-8538
90 gallon "show" aquarium with all equipment
Used $390 or best offer. 841-8218
Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
Everything but Ice 90% Massachusetts.
For sale SUZUKI 450GS 1980 New front tire, ex
haust headlight Reliable 4500 Call 814 9209
I
Brand new Fuji Road Bike. Excellent condition.
$425 neg. 1967 Road Bike, new frame. $125
843-8014.
tents, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear, combat jacket, music band shoes. Also includes Jimmy and Surgeon Sales. 147-4274 JMA, Maries Surgeon Sales. St Marys, KS Harleyeague Honda Rebel 400 Silver Anniversary New brakes, battery. Garaged kept
Honda Elite Moped 50cc 70 miles, almost new
649. Call before 12:30 am 865-0877
3.25 disk drive $100 offer, 842-4913
MacGregor Golf Clubs, less than 1 yr old. 2 SW
Rest after 842-7011
Kenovo IBM i32M KVGA Monitor 20 MH hard drive
5 kb disk drive AIX04,ARM-8013
Must sell 1988 Bianchi Allante Mountain Bike Shimano Components. Good condition $150 obo Call 865 2778.
NEW RALEIGH BREAK WITH SCHWINN $109
PUMP (INCLUDES GUASE) $126.891496
Neon Lights - Busch, Burdle, Busser Music $100
Rockford Fogate car stereo equipment for sale:
844-2902
Sony CD $101, AKA1 Amp and tape $180, Equilizer
$300. Managereceiver and speaker $150 HP 48XS
$841, 843, 7098
SONY X7100 car stereo Pull out, touch controls.
dig. $275, 841-8671, Chris
Step by step manual that can make you up to
$750 by next week. Few remain. Send $15
(refundable) to P.O. Box 424124 Lawrence, KS
6604.
Stillwater Kicker CTF Supersport. 16W. Surely,
$285 now, asking $135, 843-4253, Mike.
1978 Datsun 200 3X Low miles, excellent mechanical condition, very good body $120 obo.
749 2062
340 Auto Sales
1800 Honda Prelude 80,000 mi, runs great, 5
speed, 950-best offer, Days 864-9310, 842-
4723.
1890 Ford Fairmont Low mileage, no hair damage. Good condition, good stereo $1800 obo.
749-2483
(197) Chevrolet Spectrum, 4.dr. 5.5pd, 25,000 miles
Suburban condition. Send offer Call 841-8622
1989 Plymouth Horizon, auto. a/c am-fm. 13,000
miles, like new interior $6,200 negotiable. Call
842-8411
Civil 81, 94K, ac $1100 Mitsubishi Precis 89,
89K, $3400, 7548 after 6pm.
Civic Wagon 74.9kW, am/fm, good $1849.8m
SUV Wagon 74.9kW, am/fm, good $1849.8m
For sale 1981 TOYOTA CELICA GT. Always starts, runs great, no hail. $1400.00. 841-4449 evenings
Loaded 1884 Toyota Celica GTS Coupe. Metallic blue, alloy wheels, immaculate High way tires, $4,500 negotiable. 1,633-225.
Mazda EX. 7.5 spd, A/C, sunroof, alloys $2500
841-3184
360 Miscellaneous
10% Discount with KUID
Village Inn
Restaurant
-Open 24 hours-
Take A Study Break And Try Our Curly Fries!
Village Inn Is Now Serving Homemade Curly Fries!!
Village Inn 821 Iowa 842-3251
Regular Price: $1.99 For a limited time only
Mention This Ad And Receive A Large Platter Of Curly Fries For Only:
On TV. TVs, c Jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1804 W. 6th 749-1919
370 Want to Buy
Wanted. CD$ - 60.00 and down. Records and tapes - $2.00 and top Dollar for collections in hard to find bindings. Wanted to buy a VIP - 90.00 Rrablet 2 or goody bad, motor Call Tom. 749-1611
HOTELS
400s
Real Estate
405 For Rent
1. BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! For rent or buy
$275/mo. 842-9136
1 BR, Summer term, 14th and Tennessee Area. Brug Negotiated. No pets. For appt. 841-5397
After 5 p.m. call 653-4237
1 bedroom available for sublease May 15-August
16. Will pay $\frac{1}{2}$ May and August rent. Like new,
condition. Call 865-3278. Leave message
2 and 3 bedroom. Downtown apts for rent. Greg at
843-6855 8am-5pm. Available May 15
1 non-smoking female for summer leave. Near pool and laundry. Rent negotiate. Bank 841-3860.
1 to 2 females for summer leave. Great incentives. Rent negotiate. Please leave message. 865, 2822.
Please leave message. 865, 2822.
1 bedroom apartment in beautiful old house
2 bedroom apartment in excellent house or downstairs
A/C free dormant. No pet beds.
1 bedroom summer sublease w/ fall option
Wafer dryer and microwave. Nice installable
1 bedroom apartment available for sublease
available June 1. $50.90/month plus deposit.
Water and trash paid. Quit location on has route
841 5828
2 REEDROOM APARTMENT AVAILABLE AUGUST in beautiful old house. Wood floors, foul foot tub, A/C, w (d lockups, ceiling fans. 930 Nopes. B41-1074
合
br 2 ap lat in new building of West Hills apartm (for 2年) I great Ap lat with microwave to store, energy efficient closets, energy efficient gas heat. Great location near campus 1009 Emery Rd. $455/mo. No pets.
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, gender, 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 dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
3 Bedroom house summer sublease
$175/bedroom negotiable. A/C, washer/dryer,
install included. 841-5428
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option.
Spiacus. Economical AC, DW, on bus route Call 749 347 387
3 BR townhouse for summer sublease. 1*2 baths.
Room for 4 to 5 people. Rent negotiable. Available late May until July 31. 841-782
3 bedroom towhouse, 2 baths, microwave,
dishwasher, fireplace, garage, low utilities,
available 8/1, mo. yr. lease, Pin Oak 200
Alabama 924-8090
3 studio apt. for rent starting at $205.00 No pets.
Call 749-7568
3 br house available Aug. 1. Full basement, en-
tral air, no pets. 914 E. 13th. Call 841-0858 for appl.
$600/month.
A b4 ap for summer sublease. 2 wath, D W, DW AC, microwave, micro tennis, court on bushes. Sunrise Village. Call Kim, 865-0625, leave message
4 bedroom, 2 bath, AC $600 a month. Available after May 16th. 843-4980.
- Chamberland Place Apartments, 81th ohio new construction 1 and 2 BR (Formerly Villa Capri) on the west side of the house, new construction 2-BR 1-bath, 2-BR 2-bath with all washers dryers. Access from Memorial Parkway.
- 541 Michigan 8 yr. old, 1-plex B-3 HR-B-2
bath All with washer/dryer.
B-3 HR-B-1 bath and 3 B-2 bath. Great prices.
Call today First Management 7456-1068. House every Saturday from 12 a.m to Bradford Square 500, Colorado # C-1 Office hours Mon-Fri
APARTMENTS: Kansas City. Small Large Walk to KU Medical Center, Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many extras. 815-913-3028
A PERFECT sublease. June and July Female roommates needed Close to campus/downtown. A.wash.d.microphone. 865-360.
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower
House 148 Tennessee 749-8711 or 814-6484.
Available June and July for sublease. 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. 920 sqft.
Available duty 1, option for fall 4 bedroom apartment with loft in orchard C席space. Beautifully furnished, pool, on bus路. Extra furniture free. 841-1445
Available for summer sublease. Sunrise Village
townhouse. AC, microwave, pool, tennis courts,
on bus route. Price negotiable. Call 865-3309.
Bar Hoppers! ! Summer sublease for a rugousite party palace. less than block from Hawk, Bull, and Wheel. 4 br. apt. For info. call 841-6931.
CHEAP SUBLUE NOW! $160 for large room
In department cover, 0124-758-3676.
Cheap summer sublease: Furnished 1 and/or 2 bedrooms. No deposit. $120/mo plus utilities. 853-360-9.
Desperate for sublease- 2 br, 2 bath, pool, tennis,
b-ball, w/d hookup. Available 5/20. Call 842-3889.
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water paid $23 per month. Available summer months. Some with tuition paid. Celing fans, min blinds, some with tuition paid. Campus library. From campus at 1419 and 1423. Ohio 842-7644.
Excellent letter! 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom at + iplex, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA, no4s, available I $86. At 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4924
Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share nice kitchen. $250 includes spacious own bedroom, washer/dryer, and more much? May, Call Ann (evenings/burgers) 814-4548
Female waited for summer sublease at Orchard Courts. Rent negotiated. Call 861-1462. Hey KU. Med students-move in 1 and receive $t_2$ off your rent for 2 months. *Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms apartments. Heat and water paid*. Med Center. Med Center. Rainbow Tower. 831-851-8631.
Hey! KU Med. students, Move in June 1 and receive off for your rent at 3 months. *Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms paid* *Heat and water paid* *Across the campus* Center, Rainbow Tower Apt. 911-836-603
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 26, 1991
13
W2
International Students: Tired of getting fed out of the dorms at sunrise? Sunflower house stays on 365 days i year and is a great place to study. 148 Tennessee 749-6617 or 814-0848
Huge 2 bedroom summer sublease. Free furniture use if necessary. Gas/water paid. 965-1387. Leave message
Large studio apartment for summer sublease.
Rent $280 per month. Call today 841-9113.
Leasing now for Fall or Summer. 2 Br. apt.
4P/12 week. Inship CA, DW. Close to Campus.
Off street parking, Low Utilities. Call 943-8764.
Ask for Tracy or leave message.
Lorimar Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, space, with all the amenities. Brand new.
Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease then
July, May or for 12 months. 841-783, 848-143
841-1815
25th St. Ct. at Ousdahl
*Jacucci in every ipp*
* paid cable TV
Gourmet Kenwood/DW
Courtland Court/Laundry
* 2 BR from $90
NAISMITH PLACE APTS
*Jacuzzi in every apt.
Nice, one bdr apartment close to campus. Hardwood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-2919 or 842-9007 events.
Nice two bedroom home with all appliances.
New carpet and paint. Blinds, garage, quiet area,
no pets, prefer long term tenants. Available immediately.
$45. $43. 898-288.
Non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom house immed. 832-1341.
New leasing and 1 bed room apartments at Siprushide Flaa Apts 1 bed room; $73.2 room start at $6 month lease; Water and cable付 remodelled kitchen, $90.4 room start at new leasing for fall fall semester.
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
Aapes West Aspen $305 for 1 bedroom; $735
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camp.
Call 842-160 or 842-189
Now leasing for June and August. Extra nice. 80% off in store, plus many appliance chillings, including dishwasher, central oil heater, carpet, draperies and blind. Lots of offers on appliances $10.00 SPAIN CHISET APAUMPTIONS
FOR RENT: Professor's 2 BR house, $500 June
1991-Aug 1992, 841-8444
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. 91. Large apartment, furniture. W/D, summer storage. 843-3300.
Roommate needed to share three bedroom three story townhouse for summer. Close to campus 841-1468
Spiracion 8 duplex available June 1 and August 1. 7 new carpet, paint and blinds. All kitchen appliances, central air gas heat, water hookups, garage. No pets. 843-288-9800
Studio, 2 bedroom apartment between town, K U
841-6254
SUBLEASE. BUILED (1 or 2 occupancy) 355 plus units, pool, room weight, onlay, oncomplex available mid May thru July Call Kathy, 865-154, leave message
SUBLET 2 rooms in bt townhouse. Avail early May to end July $438 + umits. Will negotiate. No dep. Extra incentive Please call 842-7333 Kerrie
SUMMER SUBLEASE, 2 bedroom, garage, AC
2021 Heatherwood, 841-9707.
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall, 1 bedroom, innermad, private pool, water paid. All electric. 157 Lynch CL. Sundance 832525 or 84-6614
SUMMER SULEAUSE. BUGE 12 bedroom for 24 people in Boundary Hill. Furnished per room. SUMMER SULEAUSE. HUGE 13 Bedroom for 24 people in Boundary Hill. Furnished per room. SUMMER SULEAUSE. HUGE 13 Bedroom for 24 people in Boundary Hill. Furnished per room. Upper 2 floors of house $300 per room each.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Studio apartment right across from the Glass Onion. Great balcony, Murphy bed, ceiling fan. May rent paid. Cal. 665-189.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 available rooms, great place $160 plus $4 utilities Call 865-4095
Sublease. Three bedroom apartment close to campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent! 865-297.
In a superior location at a superior price,
2 rooms. 2 floors. Call 842-3328 (21 HOURS).
Sublease two bedrooms on May 15 Aug 15 $49 per
room 749-368 or 842-364, ask for Jennifer
dance APS. Price negotiate APCi 691.295
Sublease 3 months 2 BRL, 2 Bath AI. Fireplace
overlock pools, no pets, Wi-Fi and evenings
81-0448 David 831.291 ask for Stu
Sublease for summer apt. Non-smoker. Close to campus. Call 832-2913, leave message.
Sublease 1 new I.R.A.SR* Water pad, w/d. A.C.
microwire dishwasher on KU rus table
$80 month ng. w/ lease renewal option at
end of June. Please call #95-0100
Sulease 3 bdrm townhouse from mid-May or June to July 29. $12.bath, fireplace $550/mo² utilities. On bus route 749-5402.
Summer Sublease : 3 rooms available May 1- July 3. Unfinished 4-km room in township in Vrije Village. Female non-smoker $180/mo plus $140 refundable deposit. 790-1500.
Sublease with Fall option. Large studio. AC W/D/
DW, big closet. Rent $250/mo. Clark 865-0735 or
Tuna 842-249.
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2
bedroom apts 1 bkf from KU with off street parking.
no pets. B41-500.
Summer and Fall fallen, Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. b.lib from off street parking. No nets. 841-5000
Summer Sublease. Three roommates needed
Very nice apartment, &166/mo plus utilities. Sundance II Apts. 7th and Florida 943-2185.
Summer Subleaf- 2 bedroom, invincible location,
great balcony. Call Mike at 749-384-694
Summer special in bedroom 450 for 2 bedrooms
in bedroom 250. Heather Valley Valley
Apt. 843-4754
Summer nise ablase. Sem-furried 2 br, jacuzzi nise clean, rent reentgled. Also, female room mate need for next year, non-smoker. Jill 865-0549
Summer sublease, male roommate needed. Two level, own bathroom. Furnished. Near campus, water paid. $180/mo. Call Dave 653-3832. June-July.
Summer sublease. Spacious four bedroom townhome, pool, tennis, microwave, dishwasher.
Rent negotiable. 749-2493
**CHEAP!** 2 bedrooms available for summer sublease. Completely furnished, great location, super pool. Rent negotiable! Call 749-0213.
Summer sublease: 1 br. ac, good quiet location
Only $250. Call 865-2662. Leave message.
Summer sublease 3 bd, 2 bath. Behind Yellow Sub on Indiana. New Price negotiable 841.3244
Sub on Indiana. New Price negotiable 841.3244
VIRY close to campus, W/D, A/C/clean
Hookup taken for Care of rented Payee
England - Stonehenge
Summer sublease. Big house, close to campus for 3 people. 13th and Hall. Call 856-1360.
- Two bedrooms from $380
* Two bathrooms from $560
* Fully equipped kitchen
* Full kitchen with 1 BR
* Private bathroom or patron * Paid a table TV
* Basketball court * Partying like a club
Summer sublet: June rent paid. $178.75/month plus 3' utilities; 2 cases of beer free. Call Brad at 865-9083
Summer sublease. Bargain! Spacious 3 bdrm.
new kitchen, dishwasher, new carpet,
washer/day hook ups. 822-4603
NAISMITH PLACE
Summer sublease Reduced rent 2 bedroom apartment w/ ceiling fans and AC excellent location on quiet, cobblestone street. Call 749-6800
Summer sublease Studio apartments clean, quiet, and close to campus for college students. Very calm. Call 749-4253 /841-2666
2 blocks east of lows on 23rd to Oudahd.
3 blocks south on Oudahd to 29th St. Court.
1/2 block on north of 25th St. Court.
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
each apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
1 bedroom $240
2 bedroom $440,
3 bedroom $560
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tue - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Penchworm)
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR
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
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Free cable
苹果
Pool
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
WEST WELL APARTMENTS
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water pail)
Sunflower House
1:00 A-3:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts. - furnished
and unfurnished
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
Great location Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs
South Pointe APARTMENTS
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- mini-blinds
- large rooms & closets
- refreshing po*
843-6446
2166 W.26th
- Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
- refreshing pool
Boardwalk
apartments
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12n.m. 5n.m
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Showing Units Daily 9-6 842.4444
- Large closets & living space
842-4444
- Laundry room- 50$\phi$
W&D
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room 50ft
- Water & trash paid
- Unfurnished with
appliances
524 Frontier
Walk to grocery
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
S
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom, 2 full baths, loft,
fully furnished. Campus Place Apt. Next to Crossing.
Call 843-4001.
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2.3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
--atmosphere
Summer sublease with option, one room,
beautiful 4 BR, CA, DW, W/D. Space Roarke.
749-0238
WALKKS TO KU OR DOWNSTEAD. Eleviciency, i and 2 bedroom apartments in beautiful old homes. Some apartments have ceiling fans, wood floors, claw foot tub, a/c, w/hookups, on the ground floor. Prices paid. Availability for summer at sacrifice prices. Ferry rent starts at $11 a month. No pets. Bk41-1074
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 1468 Tennessee.
Wet range of GREAT studios,
1, 2 & 3 BDR. apts.
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes
among a peaceful country
- Graystone
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Swan Management
meadowbrook
- Gazebo
Lighted Tennis Courts
Visit Meadowbrook Apts Wide range of GREAT
- Carports/Garages available
* Playgrounds
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M.F 1.5 p.m.
Sat. 11.3 p.m.
- Experienced Professional Maintenance
Laundry facilities in most buildings
MON-FRI 8-5;30 SAT 8-5
842-4200 SUN 1-4
Free Basic Cable
MASTERCRAFT
It's Time to Step Up to
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
withed with you in mind!
MEADOWBROOK
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass
1-5 P.M.
OPEN DAILY
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 14th & Mace
KENTUCKY PLACE
749-0445 1310 K
749-2415 * 10th & Arkansas
841-5255 7th & Florida
CAMPUS PLACE
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
842-4455
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your
Space for Fall!!
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m
- On Bus Route
- 3 Hot Tubs
842-5111
RING!
RING!
RING!
RING!
1301 W.24th
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Enlarged to Show Texture
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbated allowed*
Dreamland
TONE AND I'LL GET BACK TO
You AS SOON AS I'M DRAWN!
SINCE I'M A CARTOON, I'M <
SNOT REALLY HERE AT ALL!
1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
9th & Avalon 842-3040
LEAVE A MESSAGE AT THE
Sunrise Apts
1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- & Apartment Living
- Luxurious Town Home
- On Bus Route
- Sunrise Place
- On Bus Route Close to Campus
9th & Michigan
BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm, at Vill.
Sunrise Village
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
6th & Gateway
by Brian Gunning
841-1287 or 841-8400
Open House Daily
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
--gone down at Naismith!
· NEW LOWER COSTS!
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
NAISMITH HALL.
MICHAEL JACKSON
anywhere else doesn't make cents.
The cost of living has
- Free utilities
- Convenient location
- "Dine Anytime"
- Great social events
More fun for less funds!
F
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Nisimith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 834-8559
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MG/T Reliable
24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
* Fenced pool area with
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Low Security Deposit
Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 or 12 Month Leases
THE FAR SIDE
Call about our Summer Special
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Office Hours. M-F 1-5-00
WKNDS - BY APPT
630 Michigan 749-7297
430 Roommate Wanted
**Women students:** Want to live in a nonexist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try *Skiffle House*. The address is 749 6927 or 149-6144. Tenure: 749 6927 or 841-0484
A roommate wanted for 2 brt. agt. CA, furnished.
pool, laundry. 155 pm plus $v_2 utilities. On run
route. Call Jim. 86-528.
Female, non-bachelor roommate needed for Fall
2012. Share 18 trailer awning, w/d, w/central
air conditioning. Req. Bachelor's degree or
$12,000 monthly plus v/s utilities. Prefer grad
or upperclassman. Annette 8643-313 (8)
490-756-7750.
Female non-smoker wanted for summer to share 2 BR apt at Northwinds. Own room. Brand new. $187.50/mo plus $4 utilities. $82.3571.
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share
spacious house. $160 month plus utilities. Alison,
803 7578
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED!
Must be quiet, clean, mature, upperclassman.
Be must ribbed to BR apartment not campus
beginning May. May references required.
865-291
Female, roommate needed for fall, 4 bedroom duplex, cats non-smoker to campus; $145 plus 1* utilities. Call 843-6028
Female roommate needed by 8/1 for very nice 2
bfrm apt. 185/mo plus $_{2}$ util. Call Christine,
841 0744
Female roommate wanted - Summer sublease.
Close to campus: $181 plus t₃ utilities. Call Jill,
965-0670.
Male roommate needs for summer sublease. Eddingham Place. Make deal on rent. Call 749-4543
Male roommateDuplex S.W part of
Female subleaser needed over the summer. Call Lisa S. 841-6090.
greeting man in front of you. Thank you.
Quiet, tidy roommate with sense of humor for $1_2
big house. $225. 841-1532. West Lawrence.
1040203586 apartmnt. Cam 644-6623
MALE or FEMA to share B bUR with 9 ft
feelings and hardwood floors $1, blocks from
the floor. C F M. Dull s's $165 plus
$865, 967, 1437
15' tall wood on deck on boat; bedframe 462-844-7900
3' tall aluminum cabinet 462-844-7900
Call tracy at 86-252-4134 4 bedroom house (fireplace garage, and back yard) 4 blocks behind Nashtmur
Quilty tinty with sense of humor for 'h'
Intelligent healthcare
nominate wanted urgently. 3 br to townhouse. 2 br to building. D W, DW. NP, NW. Summer $25 utilities included. D call $22 plus +1 utilities $813. Call for Km.
Male graduate student or upperclassen near campus. Wanted. Large, beautiful bouse near campus. $150 mo. + 1/8 meals. Available in June. Call Ken. 749-2835
Summer sublease: Two roommates needed.
Large furnished apartment (160 sq. ft. 4 units)
110 Kentucky. Near Campus. 842 229
Roommate now. Very nice, very large W/D, Pets ok. See to believe! Only $125.84-2746
Summer Sublease-Own bedroom. Very close to campus. Nice Place. 193 mo/plus t2 utilities. Call Jeff at 841-1563
3 mature male roommates need to share large modern home on bus route. W/D, C/A large room, kitchen, kitchen, deck, etc. MUST SEE. $215 *u*4 utilities. Call Bratian, K8716
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer sublease. Call Rebecca. 865-0574
Twoommates needed for fall. Nice house, large yard. Close to bus and campus. Call 749-1089 for details $175.00 plus utilities.
Very quiet place 2 bedroom room w/ lot in North Lawrence. Rent includes utilities. Call for appt. 841-729. Steven Lloyd
Wanted May 1st - non-homophile female roommate to share bedroom with me, W D bookshelf, CA fireplug carport. $160.00 no plus 4 utilities. Must be a student and will sign up on the bank. 824-7448
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Leisure Time Solutions
"Don't make any erratic movements, Miss Halloway. . . Not only is the truculent nature of this species amply documented, but, as you can discern for yourself, the little suckers can really jump."
14
Fridav. April 26. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Classic tradition on the go.
$1.59 Chicken,
Fish or Pork Tenderloin Sandwich
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
no limit coupon required
expires 5/31/91
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
expires 5/31/91
Get 'em in your car and Eat 'em hot
99¢ 1/4 lb.
Hamburger
Johnny's CLASSIC BURGERS
no limit coupon required
expires 5/31/91
You've got 'em in the bar, now available in your car!
OUTFOLLOW ITEMS
TAKE
A LOAD
OFF.
Come to The Mail Box!
We can ship anything, anywhere -
from Bicycles to Desks.
Clothes-Computers-TVs-Stereos.
• Pick-up services.
• Boxes & packaging supplies.
• U.P.S., U.S. Mail, Truck Line.
• $100.00 Free Insurance - U.P.S.
The Mail Box
3115 W. 6th
Sunset West Center
749-4304
East of Sonic
VISA
The Mail Box
3115 W. 6th
Sunset West Center
749-4304
East of Sonic
Open: M-F. 9-6 Sat. 9-12:30
Open: M-F, 9-6 Sat. 9-12:30
Poet says political struggles make writing poetry difficult
By Patricia Rojas
Soviet poet Oleg Chukhontsev waits for saturated solutions to turn into crystals.
Soviet writer-in-residence departs
By Patricia Rej Kansan staff writer
"When I have an overdose of impressions, it's good for me to put a distance between me and those ideas for the time being." Chukhontsev said yesterday through an interpreter. "Then a crystal will form and fall out even without any effort from me."
Chukhtontsey, Moscow resident, has spent the past three weeks at the University of Kansas giving poetry readings and lectures. He is scheduled to leave today for Stanford University.
Chukhouten's visit to KU was organized as part of the Soviet writer in residence program through the work of Slavic languages and literatures.
Gerald Mikkelson, program director, said that about 26 Soviet writers had visited KU since he founded the program in 1975.
He said Chukhontsew was one of the four most gifted living Russian poets.
four most gifted living Russian poets. For Chukhoutkho, writing poetry during a time in which the Soviet Union is undergoing so many political, social and economic changes is not easy.
He said those struggles had affected the political effectiveness of
"This is perhaps the most unfair time of all for poets, because we are constantly distracted by political struggles," he said. "For that reason our attention is scattered in all directions."
"Our so-called Brave Era poetry his collapsed into a state of ruin," he said of poetry that promotes political changes
Poetry is no longer as effective in Soviet politics as other forms of
'This is perhaps the most unfair time of all for poets, because we are constantly being distracted by political struggles.' — Oleg Chukhoutsev
communication such as journalism Chukhontsev said.
However, Mikkelsen said Chukhontsev's poetry was more philosophical than political. That is one of the reasons that Chukhontsev prefers not to write in times of political unrest.
Chukhoutseh said a desire to change his writing style, as well as a need to distance himself from an author he knew so much temporarily silenced the poet inexc
He said that for now he would concentrate on experiencing changes at an emotional level and would then worry about assimilating them at an emotional level.
"There is always a trade-off," he said. "You always have to make choices. There is a moment when you need to change your priorities and values."
Chukhontsek said jokingly that he would like to live for a few years in a Russian monastery where he could dedicate his time to thinking. He said Lawrence would be an ideal place to find the depth in his soul.
He said that as a living Russian poet he was pleased with the department of Slavic languages and literature, and the program in contemporary Soviet writers.
"This is an ideal place to do a comparative study of Russian and American literature and culture," Chukhontov seva.
But for now, Chukhontsev will return to Russia and wait for crystals to form.
A. J. B. S.
Soviet poet Oleg Chukhontsev, who has been visiting KU, finds it difficult to write poetry in the rapidly changing Russian society.
CORNING FACTORY STORE
CORNING FACTORY STORE REVERE
Owned and operated by Corning Inc., Corning, NY
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
MARKETS
STORE
- CORELLE* Dinnerware plus coordinated accessories
- Wide assortment of replacement parts for CORNING WARE* and VISIONS* Cookware, and PYREX* Ovenware
VTSA
- REVERE WARE Cookware.
- Overstocks, discontinued products; cosmetic seconds at substantial savings.
Gifts with value that cost less!
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
--only $299.95
Suite 316 - Upper Level
749-4855
"We Ship"
$1.69
Fill-up.
BUY ANY FOOTLONG SUB AND A MEDIUM DRINK AND GET A REGULAR FOOTLONG SUB OF EQUAL OR LESSER PRICE FOR ONLY 99¢.
SUBWAY
1720 W. 23rd St. Not good in combination
Offer good at participating
842-4782 Offer expires 5/19/19
dolores only
--only $299.95
Going to Kansas City, Kansas City here I Come.
Planning on attending KU Medical Center next semester? Cambridge West Apartments are only a short walk from KU Medical Center.
We offer
- 1,140 sq. ft./2 Bedroom/2 Bath
- 3 Glass Patio Doors with Verticals and Track Lights
- Clubhouse/Laundry Facilities
- Saina/Pool/Tennis/Weights
* Off-Street Parking/Security Gates
- Sauna/Pool/Tennis/Weights
Cambridge West Apartments 3600 Rainbow Blvd., Kansas City Kansas
(913) 722-1319
Campus Parking Permit
FREE!
Kryptonite
lock & cable
with any new
bike
with coupon
expires May 15, 1991
VOLLEY
GIANT
GIANT RINCON
Japanese cro-mo tubing
alloy QR wheels
GIANT offers affordable, quality bikes for all types of riding. TEST RIDE TODAY.
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642
BOOKSHOP
COWS ARE FREAKY WHEN THEY LOOK AT YOU: AN ORAL HISTORY OF THE KAW VALLEY HEMP PICKERS
OREAD
DAVID OHLE
ROGER MARTIN
SUSAN BROSSEAU
EDITORS
WITH A FOREWORD BY WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS
Meet editors David Ohle and Susan Brosseau in the Mt. Oread Bookshop Friday, April 26,1991 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
The long awaited book on the hippie scene in Lawrence in the 60's.
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THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
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TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.101.No.141
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, APRIL 29, 199
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Senate slays tax measure
NEWS: 864-4810
Bill would have raised millions in State General Fund revenues
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The Senate killed a tax increase measure Friday that would have raised $134 million in State General Fund revenue
The 1991 legislative session was slated to end Saturday night, but the Senate's action now forces legislators to remain and decide where to budget. The session is not expected to end until Thursday or later.
The House Appropriations Committee met yesterday afternoon and evening to discuss subcommittee recommendations that would cut $200 million from programs throughout the state.
The subcommittee responsible for the Board of Regents budget recommended a cut of almost $15 million, but authorized the use of the $5.7 million that the tuition increase will raise.
However, KU's budget could face a $3 million decrease from its present level of financing because of health care and other benefits.
The Regents budget, as well as KU's budget, could be cut even more in a conference committee before the session is complete.
One such attempt was made Friday afternoon during the House discussion of the omnibus bill, a catch-up on a loose ends at the end of the session.
State Rep, Robert Vancrum, Overland Park, unsuccessfully tried to amend the bill to implement a plan that would require 20 students to be enrolled in every class in the Regents as well as community colleges.
The plan has been submitted to every legislator throughout the session by Walt Chappell, a strong critic of the Regents system, said State Rep Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, who argued against the amendment.
"The Regents institutions and community colleges are not factories; they cannot be standardized," she said, which worse than across-the-board cuts.
State Rep. Carol Sader, D-Prairie Village, said the proposed plan was parallel to her irrational diet plans.
"Oftentimes I try to figure out how to lose weight," she said. "One of them is to cut off my legs. This amounts to the same thing."
The Regents budget is not the only program being targeted for decreased spending, however.
Cuts to virtually every program throughout the state were discussed in a meeting yesterday that brought tears to one legislator.
State Rep. Henry Helgerson Jr., D-Wichita, choked up when he announced that, in addition to the deletion of $10 million dollars from the Social Rehabilitation Services budget, his subcommittee would recommend that two hospitals be closed down in 1993.
Gov. Jan Finney said she was disappointed in the Legislature's failure to pass a tax increase, and that it would be about the scalpel in legislators hands.
"I am afraid they might do some real damage," she said. "I think they should just close up shop and wait until next year."
"Education is the answer to so many of our problems. The solution is not just to build more iails."
Finney might not have to worry about fighting new jail construction next year. Another discussion in the committee meeting centered on the
'91 Kansas
Legislature
closing of two minimum-security prisons and freeing 200 prisoners.
Although legislators know they have to cut, many different reasons have been offered as to why the cuts have to be made.
Charlton said that she blamed the 1899 income-tax bill that removed a tax bracket and lowered income-tax rates, in a windfall of profits to the taxpayers.
But State Swint. Wint Winter Jr., *J.* Lawrence, still was hopeful for a tax increase for two reasons, even after the tax bill was rejected.
Winter also said that when lawmakers actually saw the recommended cuts of state programs, they realized the need for a tax increase.
He said one reason was that he would be working behind closed doors during the weekend to perform translators to vote for a tax increase.
KU student flees K-10 kidnappers
1 man charged, to be arraigned todav
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
A KU student was kidnapped early Saturday morning but was able to free herself, Lawrence police said.
Patrick James Harris, 20, 2922 W-44th St. Kansas City, Kan. Kane and charged with kidnapping an battery, Set Ron Dalton said
Harris is scheduled to be arraigned at 4 p.m. today.
The following information was obtained from Lawrence police:
The student was walking on Kansas Highway 10 about 1 a.m. near the Knights of Columbus parking lot. 2206 E. 23rd St., when four men in a car pulled up alongside her.
The driver of the car then turned around and headed toward Kansas City.
A man got out of the car, grabbed the student and forced her into the front seat of the car.
As the car approached the Johnson County border, about 10 miles
A man got out of the car, grabbed the student and forced her into the front seat of the car.
- From Lawrence police reports
east of Lawrence, the student noticed a police car on the side of the road. She managed to hit the horn and interfere with the driver.
The men let her out of the car at that point, and she ran to the police car and told two officers what had happened.
Anger boils over at Haskell forum
The police stopped the suspects' car between 1 and 1:30 a.m., and Harris and a Kansas City, Kan., were meted.
Neither the Kansas City man nor the third and fourth men in the car were charged.
The Kansas City, Kan. man was wanted by the FBI as a witness to another crime.
According to the Douglas County jail log, FBI agents took custody of Hunter on Saturday
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Outrage over the recent fatal shooting of a local American Indian by Lawrence police and suspicion of the police department's ensuing domination, dominated discussion at a forum held at Haskell Indian Junior College
Nearly 200 people attended the public meeting, arranged by the Lawrence Indian Center in response to the fatal shooting of Greg Sevier, 22, by two Lawrence police officers April 24.
Don Bread, who served on the eight-member discussion panel, decreed Sevier's killing as the latest in a series of American Indian deaths shrouded by mysterious circumstances.
The police shooting, occurring only a month after racial slurs made by a Lawrence police representative were published in a professional journal, is further evidence of the police department's misconduct, he said.
"I'm speaking of an attitude, a philosophy, a policy that is in the minds of the decision-makers of this community, in the minds of the people we entrust to be the protectors of our safety," said Bread, whose son Chris was killed by a hit-and-run driver last year.
Bread, along with several people on the panel and in the audience, questioned the use of gunfire as the only means of disarming Sevier, who had a knife in his hand when he was killed. Family members had called
police to the Sevier home at 2:28 a.m.
April 24 to assist in dealing with
Sevier, who had been distraught
about personal problems, according
to police.
Lance Burr, Lawrence attorney and representative of the Sevier family, denounced the city's investigation and coroner's inquest into the shooting as predetermined by Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney and other local officials handling
"Flory has made it clear that he thinks this is justifiable homicide," he said. "We obviously can't allow him to conduct this inquest."
Burr said he was requesting that the announcement of the inquest results, scheduled to be released tomorrow, be postponed so that an outside authority could determine the results.
"We want a fair inquest and we demand a fair inquest." he said.
Some of the criticism and questions from the audience were directed toward City Manager Mike Wilden and other managers, who both attended the meeting.
"We've gone by the book with this entire investigation." Walters said after the meeting. "Right now my hide's a little tender."
He said he had not expected such harsh criticism, but acknowledged the frustration behind the remarks by some of the people at the forum.
"They were said with feeling," Walters said.
[Image of two people in a shallow river, with one standing on a wooden platform and the other sitting on a log, holding a dog. The dog is sniffing water.]
April showers
Cary Stegall, left, Lawrence resident, stands on top of a submerged picnic table as Megan Meyers, also of Lawrence, carries a reluctant dog over the water after torrential rains flooded Central Park just
north of Eighth and Tennessee streets. While most people were heading for cover yesterday, Stegall and Meyers found a watery playground in the flooded park.
America's casual immorality is revealed in new book
Authors designed new survey to ensure participants' privacy
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Only 13 percent of Americans obey all Ten Commandments.
Most workers admit to goofing off for about seven hours a week, and almost half say they regularly call in sick when they are not. Ninety-one percent of us lie regularly, at work and at home.
But Americans can still tell the truth when no one is watching or listening. That, at least, is the assumption of "The Day America Told the Truth," a new book based on an extensive opinion survey that guaranteed anonymity to participants.
ity before they were 13. One in six adults say they were physically abused as children, and one in seven say they were sexually abused. Twenty percent of women say they were raped by their dates. A third of AIDS carriers have not told their snores or lovers.
"There's a lot of bad news," says James Patterson, who wrote the book with Peter Kim, a fellow executive at Walter Thompson advertising agency.
According to the survey, one in five Americans say they lost their virgin-
"In looking at consumer research, we felt something was going on below the surface. For instance, you ask
people why they buy a certain luxury car, and they check off 'resale value' or 'engineering.' That's baloney. If you want to know people's darkest secrets, they're not going to tell you."
So Kim designed a survey to get people to unburden themselves of their feelings about personal and moral issues in near-total anonymity. Traditional polling methods were deemed insufficient.
"The idea of 200 names and a telephone and you've got a poll is ridiculous." Patterson said.
more than 2,000 people selected at random gathered at 54 sites around the nation. They were paid $5 or $10, and spent about 90 minutes writing answers to 1,800 questions. They completed the forms in privacy and dropped them unsigned into a locked box.
During one week late last fall.
The poll has a margin of error of 2 percent to 4 percent.
"The Day America Told the Truth" is troubling on several fronts.
Marriage: Nearly 50 percent say there is no reason ever to get married, 31 percent of married people are having or have had an affair, and
47 percent are not sure they would marry the same person if they had it to do over again.
Community: Seventy-two percent do not know their next-door neighbor. Seven in 10 say there are no American heroes.
Crime. Six in 10 say they've been victims of major crimes. One in seven carries a gun or has one in his or her car. Two-thirds favor capital punishment; one-third would volunteer to throw the electric chair switch. And 7 percent say that for $2 million they would commit murder.
The Associated Press
Bush asks foreigners to help U.S. by cutting interest rates
WASHINGTON — President Bush, confronting a U.S. economy still mired in recession, took his case directly to foreign finance ministers yesterday, trying to convince them of the need to cut global interest rates.
Bush took the unusual step of inviting the finance ministers and central bank presidents to a White House meeting on lobbying before the start of a regularly scheduled meeting of the so-called Group of Seven, the world's seven richest industrial countries.
However, U.S. allies — especially Germany and Japan — were resisting the pressure, contending that any threat from China could be the risk of making inflation worse.
The United States was represented at the sessions by Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady and Federal Reserve Chairperson Alan Greenspan. They normally meet four times a year with their counterparts from Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Canada and Italy to seek a coordinated strategy to promote global prosperity.
After day-long discussions, the group was to issue a communique that economists were predicting would do little more than cover over
the sharp differences between nations.
"I don't think there is going to be any change in interest rates as the result of this meeting." said Robert Hormats, vice president for international investment at Goldman Sachs. "The countries will essentially end up pursuing policies they feel are necessary for domestic purposes."
Earlier in the week, Bush had expressed the hope that interest rates would fall in the United States and in other nations.
The administration considered a drop in world interest rates critical to getting the United States out of the
The boom in foreign demand for U.S. products has been one of the few bright spots for the U.S. economy during the past two years.
current downturn by increasing foreign activity and thus providing stronger markets for U.S. exports.
In addition, the administration is worried that without cheaper credit internationally, the recessions in the US could worsen into a global downturn.
Such a development occurred in the 1983-84 period when weakness in one United States, which accounted for about $5 billion, was enough to trigger a worldwide downing. Robert Hormats
turn.
'I don't think there is going to be any change in interest rates as the result of this meeting.
Vice president for international investment at Goldman Sachs
However, Japan and Germany, the countries with the second and third largest economies respectively, are still enjoying strong growth and they argued that cuts in interest rates could help inflation improve by boosting demand.
Tornadoes ripped through
Wichita before hitting
Andover on Friday.
Gov. Joan Finney declares
the site a disaster area.
See stories, photos Pages 8 & 9
---
2
Monday, April 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Funeral of slain mayor sparks killing in Soweto
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Armed mobs rampaged along the Soweto Black township after the funeral of a local official yesterday, killing 10 people and causing widespread damage, police said.
The deaths brought this weekend's death toll to at least 28, police said. Fourteen were killed in the Johannesburg township of Alexandra.
There has been a sharp dispute over who is to blame for the chronic township unrest that has left hundreds dead this year. Much of the fighting has pitted supporters of the African National Congress against those of the rival Inkatha Freedom Party.
Isolated attacks were launched in Soweto, outside Johnannesburg, by
members of a 3,500-person crowd that attended the funeral of Moses Khumalu, the slain mayor of the police office on Vries street, police Col. Jar of Vries said.
De Vries said police fired shotguns to disperse the attackers. But a witness told The Associated Press that police had failed to act.
Many in the crowd wore red head-bands associated with the Zulu-dominated Ikhatha, who was killed last week in Soweto, was an Inkatha supporter.
The witness, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the rampage lasted about 30 minutes. He said most people at the funeral cared club, nurses and other weapons that Zulus control part of their tribal heritage.
38-year-old man pronounced dead after being shot Saturday morning
Kansan staff report
which occurred inside the home.
A man was shot and killed between
the afternoon and Saturday.
Lawrence police reported
Michael Kite, 38, was pronounced dead at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Police were called to a residence in the 400 block of Arkansas Street at 5:28 a.m. to investigate the shooting,
Police said more information would be released at a press briefing this morning.
The University Daily Kanese (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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60045.
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Dean Burger, vice president of KPS operations, said Friday that a backhoe dug into a 2-inch plastic gas line operating at 30 pounds of pressure. A repair crew installed temporary valves on either side of the break to stop natural gas flow.
Appointment Necessary
148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
A crew from Kansas Public Service Co. works to cap a ruptured gas main that forced the evacuation of about 30 residents near 23rd and Massachusetts streets.
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Gas leak
Residential gas service was not interrupted by the leak
Train fire ends day of rioting
Would-be refugees try to flee Albania
The Associated Press
VIENNA, Austria — Two Albanians were burned to death when frustured would be refuges set fire to a train at the end of a day of rioting in three northern Albanian cities, news reports said yesterday.
Albania's official ATA news agency said the rioting occurred Friday in the cities of Shengjin, Lezhe and Shkodra and was reported
to Albania's parliament Saturday.
ATA said the trouble began in
the morning Thursday, when about
700 people rushed to the site.
Police fired warning shots into the air, but they could not prevent some of the people from swimming to ships anchored in the harbor and it took them three hours to restore order, the news agency said.
A crowd of 1,000 people rushed security forces guarding the port again Friday. About 300 of them were escorted by military anchored inside the port and tried to
"A border ship prevented the Zadrima from reaching the ships lying off the coast. In the meantime, people on board chanted "Freedom! Democracy!" "Communism is the enemy." "The army is with us!" "ATA said."
Security force reinforcements sent from Leze intervened energetically, the report said.
use it to take over other vessels.
About 4,000 more people, many from Skhrodra, had gathered in town and began smashing windows when they could not board ships.
Prosecutor might take Kennedy to grand jury
The Associated Press
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — It's unusual for a Palm Beach prosecutor to take a sexual assault case to a grand jury, but not in high-profile, sensitive cases like the alleged rape at the Kennedy estate, lawyers say.
State Attorney David Bludworth said last week that he might take the allegations against William Kennedy Smith in the March 30 incident to a grand jury. He was awaiting completion of a Palm Beach police investigation, which Chief Joseph Terlizzee said had been delayed by difficulty identifying and contacting potential witnesses.
Smith, 30-year old nephew of Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., could testify himself in the closed-door testimony ever made public.
Paul Moyle, Bludworth's chief assistant, said that while some prosecutors elsewhere go to grand juries wanting them to indict, prosecutors here do not advocate indictments and judge prosecutors to hear all sides of a case.
He said that philosophy was both ethical and pragmatic because if fewer than 12 of 18 grand jurors do not feel there is enough evidence to prove their case, it is unlikely that prosecutors could win aamous verdict from 12 trial jurors.
While Bludworth's suggestion that he might go to a grand jury raised some eyebrows, other prominent prosecutors in Florida said they wouldn't argue.
"He would be foolhardy not to," said Roy Black, a leading Miami defense attorney.
Normally, the prosecutor decides himself whether to file charges or dismiss a rape allegation. "The vast majority of the cases that go to a grand jury are homicides," said Jeffrey Cohen, the former grand jury work. In Florida, grand jury decisions are mandatory only in cases involving capital punishment.
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3
PRESIDENT JIM FORTY
Carter offers gulf peace plan
Former president Jimmy Carter speaks to a full house at Bramlagh Coliseum at Kansas State as part of the Landon Lecture Series.
K-State speech calls for probe into 1979 Iran hostage crisis
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
MANHATTAN — Former President Jimmy Carter offered proof that there is life after the presidency when he spoke to an estimated crowd of 5,500 at Kansas State University on Friday.
Carter, the 88th speaker of the Landon Lecture Series, talked about his involvement in finding peaceful solutions to conflicts in Third World countries and in helping the homeless and the environment. He called on the United States and the Soviet Union to open a peace initiative in the Middle East.
Carter said that in his plan for peace, each Persian Gulf country
would be allowed to present its case and that the countries then would be allowed to vote.
"The war cost $70 billion. Peace might cost $20 billion."
"There ought to be a commitment from the superpowers that they will not interfere," he said. "But they raise money to sponsor the talks
Carter also addressed an accusation that former President Ronald Reagan and then-Vice President George Bush conspired with Iranians during the 1980 presidential campaign. In Iran, Reagan aides allegedly promised the Iranians weapons shipments in the event of a Reagan
victory.
"I pray that it's not true."
"I don't believe any American would delay hostages from being returned for anything," he said. "I think there ought to be a thorough investigation by a blue ribbon committee — not a congressional committee — on this.
"I pray that it's not true."
Carter added that he thought Bush should order the investigation.
Carter became a distinguished professor at Emory University in Atlanta in 1982. He also founded the Carter Center at Emory, a center that addresses world issues through nonpartisan and bipartisan study.
Gov. Joan Finney, who attended the lecture and who met with Carter after he spoke, said she was confused because Carter had been to Carter than were the years immediately following his presidency.
'I don't believe any American would delay hostages from being returned for anything. I think there ought to be a thorough investigation by a blue ribbon committee — not a congressional committee — on this. I pray that it's not true.'
Jimmy Carter Former U.S. president
Seven new members of GradEx will work under revised system
"He has a very broad perspective on the problems of our world," she said, believing that he will go down in history with the most able president in our time."
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
The first members of the reorganized Graduate Executive Committee of the Graduate Representative Assembly were elected Friday.
The seven new members of the committee are Jim Danoff-Burg, Jeff Gardner, Catherine Kesner, "Alice" Gordon, Paul Berry, Doctor Jennifer Squirt, and Debra Eldera.
Last month the assembly revised its constitution to give executive recompensies to GradEx and all legislative recompensies to the Commission, one representative from each department offering a graduate program.
The new members of GradEx will be the first members of the committee to operate under the revised system.
Gardner, Salt Lake City graduate student, said he joined GradEx because he wanted to combat the despairing apathy grade students had for obtaining financing and representation.
Gardner said he wanted to make graduate students aware of the
opportunities available to them through travel funds for presentations and journals where they could publish their work.
He also said that with shrinking budgets at the University, graduate students would be relied on heavily to carry a greater instruction load.
"I think it's imperative that funding be maintained for good education," Gardner said.
Danoff-Burg, Lawrence graduate student who was elected in absentia, said it was essential to get a 100 institution waiver for teaching passhold.
Danoff Burg also said he would like to see unionization of graduate students.
"There's a lot more strength in collective bargaining," he said.
Oscar Quiros, current executive coordinator of the Graduate Student Council, said that it was not his position to tell GradEx what issues to pursue but that he thought it should continue to build lines of communication between different graduate bodies and Student Senate.
KA 812 GM
Balancing act
Kadi Huhn, St. Louis sophomore, leans over the side of her laser sailboat as she maneuvers to the finish line of the KU sailing regatta at Clinton Lake. Huhn finished third in Saturday's competition against Kansas State. The KU team defeated the Wildcats overall with Kansas' Stephen Rudy, Naperville, ill., sophomore, winning first place.
New group wants to see more student involvement in politics
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
"We're advocating student empowerment," he said. "Young people today are not politically involved.
Students need to get more involved in politics, said the founders of a newly formed organization called Increasing Student Involvement.
"We're out to change that."
Students for Educational Empowerment in the state of Kansas, or SEEK, is mostly an informational resource, said its cofounder, Mike Schreiner, outgoing student body president.
Schreiner said that he and Greg Hughes, outgoing Associated Students of Kansas campus director, decided to form the organization after spending time lobbying on the state level for higher education
Schreiner said that being involved in student government helped one learn about the issues students but that it also was limiting.
Schreiner said that he and Hughes could provide information to groups that wanted to address issues on campus or at the state level.
Currently, Schreiner and Hughes are the only members of the organization.
"Any group that's addressing an issue on behalf of students will be able to access information," he said.
Hughes said that he saw SEEK continuing as an organization after next year, even though he and Schreiner will graduate.
The reins of power could be turned over to capable students, Hughes said.
'We're advocating student empowerment. Young people today are not politically involved. We're out to change that.'
Mike Schreiner Former Student Body President
Schreiner said that he would be happy if 50 more students got involved in ASK as a result of his and Hughes' efforts.
Students who lobby on behalf of KU cannot be antagonistic toward legislators. Schreiner said.
"ASK and the student body president have to keep a good rapport with the Legislature," he said.
"We won't be confined by the politics around student government and ASK."
Federal spending reforms may cut aid for research
By Amy Francis
Researchers at KU and the University of Kansas Medical Center may have to tighten their budgets in the future because of possible reforms in the government's indirect-cost system.
Kansan staff writer
The indirect-cost system is the program the U.S. government uses to help cover research costs, such as utilities. The government pays universities an agreed-upon percentage of the amount spent on research.
Some of the options proposed were giving universities block grants to cover all research costs, limiting funding for specific projects or requiring major research institutions to have standardized accounting systems.
Richard Kusserow, inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services, recently provided a list of options to a House of Representatives committee concerning predeath abuses in the indirect-cost system.
Mike Keeble, director of business affairs at the Med Center, said the center would not take action on the options immediately.
The committee will conduct hearings on ways to prevent abuses in the system.
"We will wait and respond to actual proposals as they come forward, as we do here," she said. See seashells floated by visible members of Congress in a year.
The Med Center receives indirect-cost payments of 48 percent of the amount it spends on research. That amount is $3.3 million last year, Keeble said.
If the indirect-cost payments were reduced, the same amount of research would continue. he said.
"It wouldn't limit the amount of research we could do. It would just make it tighter all around." he said.
The average percentage for indirect-cost payments for the top 100 universities is about 53 percent.
Kim Moreland, director of research at the University of Kansas, said the Lawrence campus received a 45 percent indirect-cost payment.
If a limit is placed on the payments, KU will not be affected immediately, she said.
Leo Langlois, assistant comptroller at KU, said, "We're locked in to 45 percent until 1993."
It is projected that the indirect-cost payments to KU will add up to $4.5 million for fiscal year 1991, Langlois said.
Moreland said the indirect-cost payments went into a general fund and were distributed by the vice chancellor's office among the many departments that conduct research at KU.
Moreland said KU was able to keep its indirect-cost payment percentage low because it maintained a conservative approach to the payments.
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4
Monday, April 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Grads on the hill
Thanks to hard work and cooperation of many Commencement exercises to be held if it rains
Rain or shine, graduates will march on.
On Tuesday, Chancellor Gene Budig approved moving commencement ceremonies indoors in the case of rain.
However, in the words of Jim Scally, vice chairperson of a commencement committee,
"It's going to have to be raining pretty damn hard for us not to walk down the hill."
A very heart-felt thanks goes out to members of the commencement committee who were willing to compromise and make alternative commencement sites possible. The committee had ruled earlier that the ceremony would be canceled if it started to rain. Graduation exercises would not be moved to Allen
Field House as they had in the past because of safety concerns.
Students who gave up time and energy to fight for an alternative solution should be commended. It gives one faith to realize that the administration is capable of hearing and understanding student concerns.
Graduation is a time of nostalgia of the past and excitement for the future. It gives friends and relatives an opportunity to recognize students for their accomplishments.
It is gratifying to see the University recognize the importance of a rite of passage: the graduation ceremony.
Jennifer Schultz for the editorial board
Sanctions end early
Lifting ban removes incentive to stop apartheid
As a tan of soccer and cricket, British Prime Minister John Major was convinced easily last week to lift the remaining trade and international sports sanctions against South Africa.
And earlier this month, the European Community lifted a 1986 ban on imports of South African iron. steel and gold coins.
Yet apartheid still continues.
During a recent trip to Britain, South African President F.W. de Klerk invited Major to visit South Africa and promised that the government would release all political prisoners by April 30. De Klerk said fewer than 200 were still in jail.
That number is much higher according to Max Coleman, a representative for the independent Human Rights Commission. He said only 535 of the 1,800 political prisoners had been released.
And Blacks in South Africa still do not have the right to vote.
By lifting all sanctions prematurely, Britain has given the South African government the green light to stall further actions to abolish apartheid. The incentive to change discriminatory practices no longer exists.
The issue was at the forefront of news five years ago, but now it appears to have fallen by the wayside. Blacks in South Africa, however, continue to live with oppression and discrimination every day.
The only way to abolish apartheid is to press the government harder with economic sanctions, not lift them to appease de Klerk.
If change is to happen, the world must not forget the plight of Blacks in South Africa or ease restrictions for the sake of a soccer game.
Stacy Smith for the editorial board
Success of education reform requires a local commitment
President Bush recently announced a national education strategy, setting forth an aggressive agenda for fundamental improvement in U.S. schools. Noting that the time for reports and studies is over, the President is using the "bully pulpit" of the presidency to call upon all Americans to work in their respective capacities toward educational reform.
The President is right. We don't need more reports and studies. Unfortunately, we already have an ample supply of data demonstrating that our school system is not living up to the standards that we need and expect. Moreover, we are being challenged in ways we have not had to address before. The world has changed dramatically, and we are having to compete in areas where the United States once stood alone.
It would be a mistake, however, to view the President's proposal—ambitious as it is —as a "silver bullet" that will single-handedly raise educational achievement. Rather, it is a set of tools, the effectiveness of which will rely on the skill and motivation of those who set out to use them.
In terms of the specifics put forward by the President, those likely to receive most attention include voluntary national testing, choice and the development of "new American
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum
schools."
Guest columnist
Volunteer national testing would involve the assessment of fourth-, eighth- and 12th-graders on their mastery of five core subject areas: English, math, science, history and geography.
School choice also is highlighted in the President's strategy, the idea that allowing parents and students to choose a school will introduce market-like competition within the system and force poor schools to improve.
Testing may do no more than reaffirm what, intuitively, we already know about individual schools. Regardless of whether a national test ever materializes, we must raise our standards and expectations for student performance.
As a nation, we have made a commitment to education by providing free public schools and requiring that children attend. To honor this commitment fully, all schools must be good ones.
Barring a massive commitment of public money, choice between public
and private schools in a large urban area is not a realistic option for those who cannot meet tuition and transportation costs.
It seems to me that it would be a mistake to divert substantial amounts of education resources toward choice plans without first having made every possible effort to improve existing public schools.
Another Bush initiative calls for the development of "new American schools," with at least one such school in each congressional district by 1996. The idea would be that a community start from scratch in terms of developing new approaches to schooling.
President Bush has made it clear that he will provide vigorous and energetic leadership to focus attention on the importance of education and to support innovative thinking and experimentation. He has also made it clear that fundamental reform will be accomplished only by strengthening the connection between communities and their schools and in renewing the absolutely vital partnerships among parents, teachers and students. Our vision for education must be national in scope, but its delivery rests squarely in hands at the local level.
Nancy Kassebaum is a U.S. senator from Kansas.
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'People With No Names' are regular feature in newspapers
Thumbling through the New York Times, I noticed that the stories contained the usual number of "People With No Names."
You have seen the People With No Names in newspapers. I have even known some They are identified as a "government official," an "administration official," a "Western official," a "Pentagon official" or a "White House official."
SCHNEIDER
Maybe you have wondered, "Why don't these people have names?"
Mike Royko Syndicated columnist
The answer is that they do, but do not want their names used in the story. Maybe they are leaking a choice of news, but they do not want their boss to know that they talk to reporters, or maybe they are saying something mean about someone else. It can be any number of reasons, most of them are for self-protection.
Whenever you see people with No Names being quoted, they are usually talking about something significant: world affairs, international affairs, war, peace, treaties, taxes. So it seems odd that respected newspapers such as the New York Times routinely give me significant information that comes from the mouths of People with No Names. Yet, the New York Times has seen fit to provide me with a name that did not do anything to make me a well-informed citizen.
A few days ago, the Times decided to publish the name of the woman who says she was raped by a member of the Kennedy clan at the family's Palm Beach estate. Not merely her name, but intimate details of her personal life.
nalistic idiocy
Newspapers just do not do that. Because of the nature of the crime, they respect the law of most rapa victims not to be publicly identified.
The Times published the woman's name because there is a Kennedy family angle, which always makes editors drool, and because NBC had already used her name on its network news show first.
NBC said it used her name because a supermarket tabloid in Palm Beach had already published it. So NBC decided that as long as every gossip in the Palm Beach area knew who the woman was, it was all right for NBC to print the name.
But in this case, the Times was part of an outbreak of galloping jour-
Naturally, the editors at the Times, the president of NBC and other papers that have suddenly revised their rape story policies, are now giving us lofty motives.
They want to remove the "stigma" from the rape. They want to help end the idea that a woman who is raped has anything to be ashamed of and is "damaged goods."
That's fine. The only problem is that there are about 250 million people in this country, and many of them are not as enlightened about rape as editors and network presidents. And publishing or broadcasting her name is not going to make them any more enlightened. Nor will public attitudes be changed by running a story as the Times did about the woman's private life. She got a lot of traffic tickets. My, isn't that significant? She is a single parent. Isn't that shocking? She goes to bars. I feel faint.
I have news about enlightenment for these editors and network biggies. In countless barrooms across
this nation, the first questions asked about the woman will be: "Hey, you saw her picture on TV. Is she good-looking?"
Now other papers are jumping on the garbage wagon. And most of them are peddling the same phony self-justification: the public's right to know, remove the stigma, treat it like any other crime, blah, blah, blah. This is the stuff journalism school deans ponder in their spare time, which is considerable.
Who says the public has a right to know this woman's name? The New York Times or NBC did not think the public had the right to know the name of the woman in the Central Park "wilding" rape case. They could have used the same justification that someone else has already made her name public.
I will tell you why they did not use the Central Park victim's name. She is from an influential segment of New York's financial community, and the editors of the Times would have had big shots screaming in their faces.
If we have the right to know the name of this woman, why don't we have the right to know the names of the "White House official," "the Pentagon official," "the reliable source" and all these other People with No Names who are always in the Times, and frequently quoted by NBC's Washington reporters.
Is it their protound editorial judgment that it is in the public's best interest to know the names of obscure women who have been hurt and humiliated, even though we really don't know the names of the prominent government officials who are talking about the great issues of the day?
■ Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Pesticides, our friends
I do not wish to present a case in favor of pesticides use on campus. However, I am compelled to respond to the letter in Monday's Kansan, "Toxins plague campus," to inform and answer some questions raised by Julie Waters.
I would first like to point out that, of course, most chemical pesticides are toxins. That is how they work. Most of the chemicals used on campus are extremely specific
Waters seems to think that somehow, toxins were responsible for the damage and removal of four beautiful crabapple trees in front of Watson Library. The truth is that in the high winds the day after the hailstorm two of those trees were blown over and the other two were so badly damaged that they were not worth saving. We do not spray crabapple trees for borers because they generally are not a problem. Actually the only chemical we routinely spray on crabapple trees is a dormant oil, which does not work
I think Earth Day is a great idea. We set aside days of the year to celebrate and honor a number of less noble things. As far as what the University community as a whole should do to celebrate, I am not sure. The traditional planting of trees is a wonderful idea but perhaps not significant enough, as we already plant hundreds of trees and shrubs yearly on campus.
David Leach
Grounds Maintenance Supervisor and Certified Pesticide Applicator for Facilities Opera-
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
When we do spray chemicals we take great care not to harm desired species, including humans.
in this nature. This means the chemicals we spray on trees for insects and disease do not have a toxic effect on the trees. The chemicals we use to control weeds are formulated even more specifically.
as a toxin. Rather, it coats and suffocate the eggs and larvae of a number of insect species.
Business staff
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNÉ HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
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 Soliller Production mgrs. Rich Harbarger
Sports Ann Semmerlath Kale Stader
Photography Keith Thorpe Marketing director Gail Eibnerbald
Graphics Meissaa Unierberg Creative director Crieth Hahsa
Features Jill Hartington 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 must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
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A man and two children stand in a grassy field, looking into the distance. The man is wearing a white shirt and dark pants, while the child is wearing a plaid shirt and a cap.
Wetlands tour
Roger Boyd, caretaker of the Baker University Wetlands,
describes drainage problems to a group touring the wetlands.
CALENDAR
Monday
- KU Wellness Center will sponsor a "Stress Management" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
- Department of Geography will have a colloquium at 3:30 p.m. at 317 Lindley Hall.
- Recycling Task Force will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
Archaeology Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at 63 Fraser Hall.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a
workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center
During the two-hour tour yesterday afternoon, Boyd pointed out the various wildlife that inhabits the wetlands.
**Women's Transitional Care Services will sponsor a campus support group for battered women at 7 p.m. Call 841-6887 for the location.**
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union
■ KU Triathletes will have a Kansas Triathletes meeting 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.
St., to elect next year's president and editor of Premise.
Wednesday
Tuesday
CENTER
The Undergraduate Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Pywacket's, 10 E. Ninth
Center
- KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop titled "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson
■ KU Wellness Center will sponsor a "Stress Management" workshop at the RBK Business Training Center.
12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
**Women's Resource Center will**
sponsor a "Resume Writing and
Interviewing Skills for Women"
workshop at 2 p.m. at the Pine Room in
the Kansas Union.
**Center for East Asian Studies and the department of economics will sponsor a lecture at 3 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.** KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
p. m. at Alcove F in the Kansas Union.
- KU Pro Choice Coalition will meet at 7 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union
- "Personal Strength and Safety," a workshop sponsored by the Women's Student Union, will be from 7 to 9 at Eight Room in the Kansas University.
Office of Foreign Student Services will sponsor a "Practical Training" workshop for foreign students at 9:30 a.m. at the Nationalist Room in the Kansas Union
Thursday
■ KU Office of Study Abroad will have a general information meeting at 11 a.m. at 203 Linnocking Hall
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop titled "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
- KU Study Abroad in French-speaking countries will have an informe
mation session at 4 p.m. at 2055 Wescue Hall
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center
■ Office of Foreign Student Services will sponsor a "Practical Training" workshop for foreign students at 4 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
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6
Monday, April 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
1234567890
Mark Henning (above) Western Springs, Ill., junior, and the band Zoom perform at the Day on the Hill concert. The event featured nine acts and attracted about 500 people Saturday. A woman (upper right) dances to the reggae sounds of Az-One (lower right) on the hill above Memorial Stadium. Photos by Mike Turner, Kansan photographer
a day on the hill
Avoice of social consciousness echoes from the music of Paris, a San Francisco-based performer. "The message I'm putting forth is good for everybody but more applicable to Black people," he said Friday to about 100 people in Alderson Auditorium.
Paris, a writer, arranger and producer who plays a blend of funk, hip-hop, jazz and rock, was the headlining act of Saturday's Day on the Hill.
Friday's forum was sponsored by Black Men of Today and Student Union Activities.
Paris and Mad Mike, a band member, wanted to dispel an misconceptions about their music.
Paris said his music reflected African-American pride, self-esteen and self-knowledge.
"Hip-hop reaches everybody, and that's why we take the stance we take." he said.
hears said he was using his music to break down people's misconceptions and stereotypes about each other.
"We are not the way stereotypes portray us to be," he said. Mad Mike also from San Francisco, agreed.
*On some level whites, Blacks, Latin Americans and Native Americans need to come together and understand each other*
1970
experiences." he said.
Mad Mike said the rage and anger in the group's music was there for a reason.
It is about African Americans' countless years of mistreatment from white society and mistreatment in their own society, he said.
But pro-Black music does not make it anti-white music, Mad Mike said.
A Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, who gave his name as Mic. T.
and everyone could learn from Paris, music.
said everyone could learn from his music.
He said the music preached self-love and education.
"He is also saying that you don't have to apologize for being African," Mic. T. said.
Jerome Mazeck, Fort Smith, Ark., junior, said Paris' music also was important for white people to listen to.
"It's about freedom," he said. "It means taking action."
Mazzyck said Paris was trying to change people's attitudes to make long lasting change.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 29, 1991
7
Nation/World briefs
Hervi Camp, Iran
50 Kurds trek to safety in Iran
Iranian medical workers, trying to revive a 1-year-old boy nearly frozen to death, used the closest they had to an incubator: a large metal tray held over the campfire.
He was one of the lucky ones last week. He lived.
The boy had spent 17 days with about 50 refugees a tree across the jagged mountains to feed them.
Led by a former Iraqi agriculture official, the 13 families fled in a tractor-trailer, using only two large stones as brakes.
But the families completed the 370-mile trek from the Iraqi town of Tuz Khurmatu to this camp near Paveh with no deaths, said the group's leader.
"The brakes were very good," he said with a wry smile.
Now settled in a small tent with his wife and five children, the Iraqi Kurt asked that his name not be used for fear that friends and relatives left behind would suffer reprisals.
Cape Canaveral. Florida
Discovery begins research flight
The space shuttle Discovery thundered into orbit with seven astronauts yesterday on a "Star War" research mission that promises to be one of the most complicated flights in shuttle history.
The spaceship roared from its seaside launch pad at 6:33 a.m. CPT, climbing through a fairly open canyon.
Once Discovery was settled in its 161-mile orbit, hush commander and veteran spaceman Michael Coats told Mission Control that everything seemed to be going pretty well.
"We've got a bunch of kids in the candy stor up here having a ball." Coats said.
"How sweet it is," gushed Michael Harrison, a research official for the Strategic Defense Initiative, better known as "Star Wars." ■ From The Associated Press
Iraq rebuilds military despite U.N. embargo
The Associated Press
LONDON — A respected British newspaper reported yesterday that Saddam Hussein was rebuilding his defeated army in defence of the United Nations in order to crush internal dissent.
The Observer newspaper quoted Jordanian sources as saying that the Iraqi leader had set up an operation in Jordan to illegally buy military weapons in Jordan supported Iraq during the Persian Gulf War.
Iraq is also smuggling in spare parts and ammunition, reportedly from North Korea and Afghanistan.
Arms factories are being reassembled to produce mortars, ammunition and armor plate for the Iraqi forces.
After its defeat in the gulf war, Iraq agreed under an April 3 cease-fire to destroy its chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missile systems under U.N. supervision and give up developing or buy such arms or nuclear weapons.
A U.N. arms embargo that was placed upon Iraq when it invaded Kuwait in August, was also extended indefinitely.
The newspaper's Jordanian sources said their country was now the principal conduit for illicit imports to Iraq. Jordan's prime minister, Muhair had been implicated in the pact, it said.
At the same time, the Iraqi leader has been struggling to retain control of the country. Two rebellions against his rule that erupted in the wake of the war have been largely crushed.
According to the Observer's sources, the arms are being shipped through Singapore to disguise their involvement.
To buy such weapons, Iraq uses money from accounts in Jordan and from funds in Swiss bank
KGB-CIA hostility flares
U.S. officials: Soviets are taking advantage of travelers
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The KGB is taking advantage of the growing flow of travelers between the United States and Soviet Union to increase its spying on citizens and steal their secrets, U.S. officials say.
The KGB also recently resumed a campaign to discredit the United States in domestic and foreign newspapers, planting stories such as one last month in a Zimbabwe newspaper that claimed that the United States was exporting condoms laced with AIDS-infected lubricants, officials say.
Nowwithstanding the KGB's splashy new image, complete with a Miss KGB contest and a TV series titled "The KGB Tells All," U.S. analysts think the KGB has as hostile as it was during its Stalinist heddy
This stepped-up activity appears to contradict a seeming lull in KGB hostility, including almost idyllic scenes of Soviet agents sharing information on drug-smuggling and on terrorism with the CIA.
Ray Mislock, head of the FBI's Soviet section, said, "The level of activity we have seen is as high as it's ever been," but that access for the KGB to U.S. targets had dramatically changed.
U. S. officials were generally skeptical of this relaxation. Now they feel vindicated.
With the easing of Cold War tensions, the number of tourists, students and business people traveling across the Atlantic Ocean has grown significantly.
Two U.S. students in Leningrad, for example, reported recently that they had been approached and told they would not be allowed to complete the study. In response they started a relationship with the Soviets, Mislock said.
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Prano de Bergerac Mon. - Thu. / Fri.
Nasty Girl Mon. & Wed. 7:15, 9:30
No Showing Tuesday
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 8 PM, ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
A KISS BEFORE
DYING (R)
SAT, SUN 2:45
EVERY 5:25, 7:30, 9:30
A42-A400
HILLCREST 925 IOWA
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 847 6400
DEFENDING SAT 8:30, 9:10
MORTAL (PD) SAT 8:45
MORTAL SAT 8:45
THROUGHBACK SAT 8:20, 7:30, 8:15
THROUGHBACK IN (PD) SAT 8:15, 7:30, 8:15
DANCES WITH WOLVES (PC) SAT 8:45, 8:00
SILENCE OF WOLVES (PC) SAT 8:45, 8:00
**TEAM MUTAGE MANY**
SAT, BUN 10:00, 1:30, 1:30
NINIA TURTLES (R) EVEN 5:30, 7:30, 9:15
MISERY (R) SAT, BUN 2:00, 3:00
NINIA TURTLES (R) EVEN 5:30, 7:30, 9:15
SHOW TIMES FOR IQDAY ONLY
Dickinson
23rd & IOWA 841-8600
$300 PRIME TIMER SHOW +
SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME
NEW JACK CITY (R)
5:20. 7:45
TOY SOLDIERS (R)
5:20, 7:40
SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY(R)
5:15 7:20
CLASS ACTION (R)
5:25. 7:40
HOME ALONE (PG)
5:10, 7:25
$4.25 per hour
part time
7 a.m. - 11 a.m.
- Summer semester 1-2 days/week
*Fall semester Mon. thru Fri.
The University Daily Kanan has a position available for a student to proofread advertising during the summer and fall semesters. Prefer to hire someone who can do both, but will consider hiring a different applicant for each semester. Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar. Requires understanding of the aesthetics of layout.
Contact Jeanne Hines Sales & Marketing Adviser
864-4358
8 am-1:30 pm
CAREER ACCOUNT
REPRESENTATIVE
We are a nationally recognized leader in tax deferred savings (annuity) programs and other tax advantaged investments. We are looking for a person
hospitals and non-profit organizations. We are already established at the University
and the Lawrence school district and want to expand.
You must have either a 1 year or longer track record of
success including strong prospecting skills and strong closing skills OR have a very high degree of sales sensitivity
Life and NASD licenses preferred, but not required to
We offer:
- Realistic targeted earnings of $30,000 first year, $40,000 plus year two
- Salary + Draw + Commissions + Bonus
- sions + Bonus
Load generation system
- Lead generation system
- Company matched 401K plan
If you meet our requirements, call or send your resume to Shelby Ernstein.
THE HOLDEN GROUP
6900 CHOICE BOULEVARD
Suite 480
Overland Park, KS 66212
(913) 491-3729
An equal opportunity employer.
8
Mondav. April 29, 1991 / University Daliv Kansan
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THE BANKSY
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U.P.S., U.S. Mail, Truck Line.
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3115 W. 6th
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749-4304
East of Sonic
Open: M-F 9,6 Sat 9,12:30
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842-4782
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Offer expires 5/31/91
Offer good at participating stores only.
Tornadoes lay towns in ruins
THE BATTLE AT THE RIVER
Ramon Garcia of Wichita watches while his family and friends sift through the rubble that used to be his house.
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
hammermill
graphiccopy
Gov. Finney declares state of emergency
Bv Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Gov. Joan Finney declared a state of disaster emergency Saturday as a result of Kansas communities Friday night.
Early Saturday morning, finney flew by helicopter to Andover, a suburb of Wichita that is hit worst by the storm, to survey the damage. It is covered by U.S. Sens. Bob Dole and Nancy Koehringa and U.S. Dan Glickman.
Carol Tucker, left, and Lillian Stowell, both of Wichita, pack glassware into boxes at Stowell's house.
"I was just heartstick," Finney said. "The city of Andover has a population of 4,300. Fifteen hundred are homeless."
She said the Kansas National Guard's 173th Infantry Battalion had been sent to Andover and was beginning the cleanup.
Finney also praised the citizens of Andover.
As the storms pouced on the south part of the state and around Topeka, the house was still discussing bills. However, members were told to seek shelter when a tornado was spotted at Billard Airport north of Topeka.
"I want to commend the Kansas people for pitching in and helping to house the homeless," she said.
And as the reports of the devastation in Andover rolled in, two Wichita Republicans, State Sen. Eric Yost and State Rep. Susan Wagle, decided to drive down to the community to help in any way they could.
However, they were not able to leave until 1 a.m. Saturday because of downed power lines on the turnout and when they did not reach Andover until 3 a.m.
Wagle said the town resembled a landfill.
"The tornado leveled everything," she said. "There are no trees. Just a
lot of metal strewn around."
Wagle also said that dogs were being used to sniff for bodies under the wreckage and that sites were used as reference points in the daylight.
Wagle held in her hand an Andover drugstore prescription receipt yesterday. She said that another representative had found it and given it to her.
"It has the name of Harry Austin, the superintendent of schools, on it," she said "He lost his house, so I knew that they both's mother and todd him I had the receipt.
"He said it had been in his house. He told me he wants it back."
The last days of school are upon you! How about extra cash for the summer?
You can have cash for the summer while you store your stereo equip. color TV, apt. size refrig., camera, or many other valuables! Bring them in and receive a loan, then when fall semester comes, just redeem them. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY. WE ALSO BUY THESE ITEMS IF YOU DON'T PLAN TO RETURN NEXT FALL.
Lawrence Pawn and
Shooter Supply
718 New Hampshire, 843-4344
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MICROTECH COMPUTERS
DICKINSON PLAZA 841-9513
The Etc. Shop
723 Mass 843-0611
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Marines
Marines We're looking for a few good men and women
We're looking for a few good men and women.
It doesn't always take a man to do a Marine's job.
PRESENTLY SEEKING APPLICATIONS FOR THE WOMEN OFFICIAL COURSE TRAINING
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-748-7274
University Dailv Kansan / Mondav. April 29, 1991
9
RICHFIELD
Joseph L. Lees KSAS
Even this Richfield Street sign sustained damage caused by the tornado that ripped through Wichita and Andover on Saturday.
Troubled students check on relatives
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Although Kevin Grace was not in Wichita when tornadoes struck the area Friday, the destruction still hit close to home.
Kansan staff writer
Grace, Wichita freshman, said a friend of his family was killed while driving a car into Andover, a suburb of Wichita, when the tornadoes hit.
Grace's friend was one of at least 29 people who were killed when about 30 tornadoes ripped through southeast Kansas on Friday evening.
Grace said that he had been in contact with friends and family from the area since the storm but that he had had trouble getting through to others because of downed telephone lines.
He said that he had cousins who lived a quarter-mile outside of Andover and that they had seen the documents that struck the town of 4,300.
Grace said that although he had no immediate plans to travel to Wichita, he would like to be there to help those who were affected most by the twisters.
Lance Tanner, Wichita freshman,
said that his friend's house was
separate from the school.
"I heard it's just not there anymore," he said.
'I'm glad they're OK. They're helping clean up the town now and feed those whose homes were destroyed.'
- Kevin Grace Wichita freshman
Elizabeth Miller, KU alumna, said she saw a tornado for the first time Friday. She was at home in Wichita with her husband, Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor of administration at KU, when the storm struck.
"The whole thing seemed to go in slow motion," she said. "You could see the debris flying as the tornado passed, and it felt like it was right on to us."
She said she opened some windows and collected pets and precious possessions before going to safety in the house, with her husband and neighbors.
The house was not damaged, she said, but the power was off for about three hours after the storm, and the houses have been on the blink ever since.
THE CRASH. A CONFLICT IN THE MID-ATLANTIC RANGE. A CONFLICT IN THE MID-ATLANTIC RANGE.
Mounted Wichita police patrol the area devastated by a tornado Friday. A 9 p.m. curfew was imposed to protect homeowners' property.
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Graduation Recreation in Kansas City
HAPPY
KJHX
TOP
10
TONIGHT AT 7:00 ON 90.7FM
SUBWAY
Get a 6 foot Party
Sub for only
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(Feeds 25-30 people)
1720 W. 23rd Street
842-4782
Expires 5/31/91
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology
University of Kansas
HOURS: 10-4
SIDEWALK SALE MAY 1 & 2
--for more info call us at 864-4848
Laredo County
K
VIDEO SING ALONG
7 to 10 p.m.
Laser Karaoke-
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75¢ Draws
Holiday Inn
200 McDonald Drive
Lawrence, Kansas
(913) 841-7077
RumTree WEDNESDAY
YOUNG PEOPLE
International Students Association Announces The Election of Officers for1991-1992
April 30,5:30 p.m. Governor's Room, Kansas Union
Duck Head
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VISA-MC-AMEX-DISCOVER CARD
732 Mass. 843-6011
To stay in a suite every time you get away for the weekend, you either have to be very rich. Or very smart
$69*
"Graduation Get-away"
Did you know you can enjoy the 'suite life' in only 30 minutes! (Embassy Suites-Overland Park, Kansas 30 minutes from)
downtown Lawrence)
DOWNTOWN LAWYER
You don't have to spend a ton of money to have a
Just spend your weekend at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Overland Park, Kansas.
You get a beautiful two-hour suite, free full made-to-order breakfast, *free manager's reception and snacks* from 5 to 10. an indoor pool, sauna and whirlpool; all for only $69 a night; no tips please. and extra guests stay free.
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EXCLUSIVELY SUITES
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*Price is per suite, per night
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EXTRAORDINARY STAYS
Hampton Inn
Overland Park Graduation Rate $49*
- Continental Breakfast Included
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- Swimming Pool with Whirlpool
- Easy Access to KU; just off I-435
90 E. Metcalf Frontage Roo-
Overland Park. KS 66207
913-341-1551
- Up to 4 people per room. Rates effective 5/18 & 5/19.
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THE CHARLIE HOOPER LABEL CO. LONDON
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CITY HALL
FOR
THOSE WHO
E TO WICHITA
Now's your chance to make more of that summer visit!
Whether you are an undergraduate or
graduate student, you can earn additional college credit but enrolling in Summer Session courses at
by enrolling in Summer Session courses
Wichita State as a guest student.
Wichita State offers five Summer Session options.
Presession: May 28-June 7
8-Week Session: June 10-August 2
First 4-Week Session: June 10-July 5
Second 4-Week Session: July 8-August 2
Workshops Throughout the Summer
For more information, call (316) 689-3085;
For more information call:
in Kangaroo 1-800-362-2594
or return the form below.
BE OUR GUEST FOR THE SUMMER
Cut Here
Yes! I am interested in attending WSU as a guest student.
Name___.
Phone( )___
Address___
City ___ State ___ Zip___
Please send me additional information and the Wichita State Summer 1991 Schedule of Courses.
Mail to the Office of Undergraduate Admissions,
Mail to the Office of Undergraduate Admissions. The Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas 67208-1595
DCCC
-
---
10
Monday, April 29. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
The Etc. Shop
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920 E. 11th Street
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Ask for Sales/Service Dept.
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
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841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
[background image]
MOVING?
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841-6868
[One Block E. 27th & Iowa]
HEY!
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Do we have a deal for you!!
Move in June 1
receive 1/2 off rent
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JERUSALEM — Israel freed a leading Palestinian activist from prison yesterday, three months after he was jailed on suspension of spying for Iraq
The Associated Press
Palestinian released after three months
Sari Nusseibeh was declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International during his imprisonment, and he said on his release that he appreciated the human rights group's concern.
"It really made me feel people believed in what I stood for," said Nusseibeh, a Harvard and Oxford-educated philosopher who teaches at Bir Zeit University in the occupied West Bank.
Nussebie, 42, was detained Jan. 29 and had been held at Israel's Ramage
The Israeli Defense Ministry said in a statement at the time that Nussheb was collecting security intelligence, especially after the missile defence, especially after the missile
Nusseibeh denied the allegation and said in a statement from prison that he thought his arrest was an insult to silence the voices of moderation.
The Defense Ministry had ordered him held for six months under administrative detention rules, which the Palestinians without charge or trial.
The Jerusalem District Court in February cut the detention to three months. The decision was based on a file that never was made public.
Nusseibel has been a leading voice in the three-year Arab uprising against Israeli rule, and his name has been raised as a possible Palestinian participant in any Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
Pilot says he knew jet was S. Korean airliner
The Associated Press
attacks on Israel.
The pilot, Gennady Osipovich, had told the Soviet newspaper Izvestia in January that Soviet military officials lied about details of the incident. But the U.S. mission was the first quoting Osipovich as saying he knew he was firing at a commercial plane.
SEOUL, South Korea — The Soviet pilot who shot down a South Korean airliner in 1983, killing all 269 people on board, says he knew at a commercial plane. South Korea television reported yesterday.
The account contradicted Moscow's official stand on the downing of Korean Airlines Flight 017 and the report Soviet reaction to the report.
The Flight 007 incident is still a diplomatic issue between Seoul and Moscow. President Roh Tae-
Iraq fired 39 Scud missiles at the Jewish state during the Persian Gulf War.
Call (913) 865-0278
Moscow said that the South Korean plane had no markings indicating that it was a commercial jet. The fighter had fired warning tracers
On Sept. 1, 1983, the Boeing 747,
on a flight from New York to
Seoul, was shot down after sway-
ing during a crosswind. 269
people on board were killed.
woo and Soviet President Mihail Gorbachev discussed it in talks earlier this month.
The Soviets initially kept silent about the incident but then alleged the plane had been on a spy mission.
Ask Carol Wirthman and her Staff to explain the many options available to students today.
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Oisipovich said matter-of-factly in the MBC interview that he fired two missiles at the plane. The Korean network, which translated his remarks from Russian and gave subtitles, quoted him as saying he knew at the time that it was a commercial aircraft.
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BSU LAST MEETING OF THE SEMESTER!
6:30 p.m. Alderson Auditorium Monday, April 29 $ ^{th} $ ,1991
Finance Committee Publicity Committee Programs Committee Newsletter Committee Dreams Committee
Chairmen for :
appointed tonight!
"IF YOU ARE NOT HERE, DON'T COMPLAIN ABOUT APATHY..."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 29, 1991
11
TV show helps investigators find man suspected in killing
Program has aided FBI in 148 arrests
LOS ANGELES — In the end, a TV show helped accomplish in five days what investigators had not been able to do in 14 years: locate the man suspected of detonating the bomb that killed a Chilean dissident.
The Associated Press
On Wednesday, Virgilio Pablo Paz Romero was arrested as he pulled up in his pickup truck to the landscaping site near West Palm Beach, Fla. six years near West Palm Beach, Fla.
The Cuban exile was the remaining fugitive in the Sept. 21, 1976, Washington, D.C., deaths of former Nicaraguan leader Sando Leteler and adeen Robit Moffitt.
The arrest came after someone watching Fox TV's "America's Most Wanted" on April 19 recognized Paz' face on the face of landscaper Frank Baez.
Paz, 39, was arrested on charges of conspiracy to murder a foreign official and conspiracy to manufacture explosives
"For us, this is a big capture," said
John Walsh, host of the 3-year-old series based in the nation's capital. Past accomplishments include the 1989 arrest of John Emil List, who murdered his mother for 16 years after killing his mother, his wife and their three children.
Of 347 fugitives profiled on the Fox show, 148 have been arrested as the direct result of viewer tips, said program representative Jack Breslin. Eight of those were on the FBI's most wanted list.
"America's Most Wanted" and NBC's "Unsolved Mysteries" have put new muscle into the long arm of the law.
"Unsolved Mysteries" mixes crime stories with searches for missing loved ones and segments on mysterious legends. About 40 percent of its criminal profiles have resulted in arrests, a series represented say.
Despite their popularity, these shows have not escaped criticism. Some say they blur an already arbitrary line separating entertainment from them and that they encourage vigilantism and Big Brother spying.
"If they actually lead to the capture of a suspect, they become the story themselves, said Phil Guts, of the American Civil Liberties Union.
"Although these programs are about actual crimes, they can foster a vigilante atmosphere where neighbors can keep an eye on the hopes of getting some publicity."
In the case of "Unsolved Mysteries," a quest for public placed NBC's hugely successful series in the uncomfortable position of unknowingly broadcasting an elaborate hoax
An October segment featured Los Angeles disc jockeys Kevin Ryan and Gene "Bean" Baxter re-creating their June 13, 1990, radio show during which an unidentified caller confured to murdering his girlfriend.
The confession generated about 400 calls from people who thought they recognized the caller or the case.
Six months later, the Los Angeles Times reported the confession was faked and that Baxter and Ryan admitted to orchestrating it to boost ratings. The two apologized on the air and were suspended for six days.
BODY
BOUTIQUE
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NO ENROLLMENT FEE!
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Level 2, Burge Union 864-5697
The Power To Be Your Best At KU.
Prices subject to availability. Offer open to students enrolled in six 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 cashier's check. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. Other restrictions may apply.
We Wrote the Book on the Jayhawks
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12
Monday, April 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Heat forward calls in safe after absence spurs search
But Vitevitch said, "This does illustrate a point that all boaters should tell people where they're anchored or to the shore to send communication to call, they should call."
The Associated Press
Kessler and his two friends from Georgia, Mark Davis and Scott Johns, were planning to scout out possible locations in the Bahamas for basketball players in Tampa, said the basketball player's father, Jay Kessler of Roswell, Ga.
MIAMI — Miami Heat forward Alec Klec turned up safe and sound last night after his failure to check in with family during a boating trip in the Bahamas prompted a two-day search by the Coast Guard.
Kessler's fiancee, Rhea Harrelson,
notified the Coast Guard about 7:30
p.m. yesterday that Kessler had
finally called her on a cellular phone
to say he is in the Abaco Islands
in no danger, a representative said.
Kessler, 24, and two friends left the Miami area area Thursday afternoon, heading for the Bimini Islands, about 100 miles to the east, after
loading camping gear on Kessler's 33-foot speed boat at Baker's Haulover Marina.
The wedding is planned for May 11.
Jay Kessler said he had
dressed his son to check in regularly
with the couple. "They always
do what they're informed."
The Bahamas Air-Sea Rescue Association was called in to help, and planes tracked the Gulf Stream from Fowey Rocks southeast of Miami Georgia coast, before the search was suspended at nightfall yesterday.
The Coast Guard launched an aerial search that eventually covered 28,000 square miles of Atlantic Ocean after Harrison called late Friday to report that she had not heard from Kessler as she had expected.
Coast Guard representative Carl Vitevitch said everyone at the Coast
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University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 29, 1991
Sports
13
Rain, hail put series on hold
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas and Iowa State baseball teams had the final game of their four-game series put on hold yesterday afternoon at Hogland-Maupin Stadium because of heavy rain and hail.
The two teams will continue the game where it left off at 1 p.m. today.
The Cyclones beat the Jayhawks 7-5 in the first game of yesterday's doubleheader and were leading 5-1 after one inning when the rain hit.
"At 5:1, I don't feel that it's over yet," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "If we can just stop them offensively, we have a chance."
Because the two teams split a double header Saturday, a Cyclone victory would give them three in the Big Eight Conference in the Big Eight Conference.
The Jayhawks postseason chances weigh heavily on the outcome of the suspended game
The Jayhawks, consequently,
would drop into fifth place with one
series left. Only the top four finishers
will be Big Eight postseason play.
"We've got four games and part of one left," Bingham said. "If we can get this game somehow, we'll still be in great shape."
In yesterday's first game, the Jayhawks jumped out to a 1-1 lead in the first inning off first baseman Jeff Niemier's RBI single.
Kansas pitcher Curtis Schmidt stifled the Cyclone battles through three innings, when the Jayhawks seemingly put the game out of reach.
'If we can get this game somehow, we'll still be in great shape.'
- Dave Bingham Baseball coach
In the bottom of the third, Kansas designated hitter Mike Bard drove in one run and second baseman Jeff Berblinger plated two more as the Jahyhaws built a 4-load.
After a scoreless fourth inning, the Cyclone batters put an end to Schmidt's shutout in the fifth with four quick runs to tie the game.
Included in the Iowa State scoring flurry was a three-run home run off the bat of Cyclone right fielder Tom Vantiger.
Schmidt said that he wasn't in the game mentally like he should have been.
"The home run was something I usually don't do," he said. "I got the ball up, and he made me navy for it."
The two teams traded runs in the sixth and entered the ninth tied at five.
As in the fifth inning, Iowa State suddenly came to life offensively and touched Schmidt for two more runs and a 7-5 lead.
In a last-gasp chance to win the game, Kansas had two men on with two outs when Kansas third baseman Gerry Cramer came to the plate.
Jackets
16
Camara hit the ball sharply, but right at Iowa State second baseman Mark Elsinger who flipped to first, ending the game.
Kansas' Curtis Schmidt reflects after giving up a three-run home run in the first game of a double-header with Iowa State yesterday.
Henderson ties bases-stolen record
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Ricky Henderson tied Lou Brock's all-time record of 938 career steals yesterday when he stole second base in the sixth inning in Oakland's game against California.
Henderson, activated from the disabled list Saturday after missing 14 games with a strained muscle in his left calf, stole the record-tying base against pitcher Jeff Robinson and catcher Lance Parrish.
in the first inning, Henderson led off with a single, but was caught
leaning by pitcher Jim Abbott. Henderson broke for second base and was thrown out, from first baseman Wally Joyner to shortstop Dick Schofield. It was the fourth time Henderson had been either picked off or caught stealing since stealing No. 937 on opening day.
Henderson singled in the third inning and tried to steal once, but Lance Blankenship hit a foul ball. He scored before but before match Brock's mark
the sixth. After a couple of bluffs,
Henderson took off on a 1-2 pitch to
Blankship and beat Parrish's throw.
Henderson was hit in the back by a pitch from Robinson with one out in
A near-capacity crowd gave Henderson a prolonged standing ovation. Henderson pulled up the base, and it looked like a monster he waved and blew kisses to the fans.
game. The next day, he was thrown out at second by Twines catcher Junior Ortiz, and later in that game pulled up lame running out a grounder, which put him on the disabled list.
Earlier in the season on opening day, Minnesota catcher Brian Harper threw out Henderson at third, moments after he stole second. Henderson was picked off second by pitcher Allan Anderson later in the
Henderson set the American League record for career stolen bases May 29, 1990, with his 839rd steal, breaking the record set by Ty Cobb Henderson has led the major league in stolen bases (1986-88, 1989-88, 1988-83, 1988-89), and led the American League in 10 of the last 11 seasons.
Person's 39 pace Indiana to victory
BOSTON — Chuck Person challenged an injured Larry Bird on the Boston star's own turf yesterday. And came up king . . . for at least a
The Associated Press
The victory by Indiana sent the series back to Indianapolis t1-1. Bird got out of a hospital bed to score 18 points, pass off for 10 assists and pull down six rebounds, but he obviously was hurting.
"I was the best player in the world for one day in my eyes," said Person, who made an NBA playoff record seven 3-pointers and scored 39 points. Indiana to a 130-118 victory against the Celtics at Garden Bay yesterday.
In the other afternoon game yesterday, the Chicago Bulls extended their series lead to 2-0 by overtaking the
stubborn New York Knicks 89-79
Last night, two-time defending champion Detroit evened its best-of-five series with Atlanta, beating the Hawks 101-88. Portland, leading 1-0, played Seattle at home in a later game.
Indiana's victory was only its second in the playoffs since it joined the NBA in 1976. And it was due almost entirely to Person, who was better known for his verbal jousts with opponents and his physical play.
He ended by breaking the previous playoff mark of six 3-pointers shared
After Bird had led Boston to a 51-45 lead, he scored 11 points in a 3-minute span, nine on 3-pointers as the Pacers took a 64-61 lead. He also helped the Pacers come back after Boston had retained the lead in the third quarter.
by Michael Cooper and Vernon Maxwell who did it Saturday for Saturdays.
"Chuck had a great game," said Larry Bird, who played 40 minutes despite his aching back. "Time after we started to make a run and Chuck would hit a big shot, and that really demoralized us."
The Knicks went an 11-0 run in the first half, led 44-42 at intermission and were still tied at 66-all when Craig Hodges' 3-pointer played a 13-4 turnover on top for good. They were the only points of the game for Hodges.
Michael Jordan led the way for the Bulls with 26 points and Patrick Ewing, held to six in the first game.
Chicago, which beat the Knicks 128-65 on Thursday, had a much more efficient defense.
had 24 for New York
But Ewing got 14 of his points in the first quarter on 7 for 11 shooting. After that, Bill Cartwright and he went on to center grounds held him to just 1-1 for 11.
Joe Dumars scored 28 points for Detroit in its series-evening victory against Atlanta.
The Pistons, who shot only 38.5 percent in a 103-98 loss in Game 1 on Friday night, shot 47 percent in the second game. Dennis Rodman grabbed 16 rebounds for Detroit, and set a team playoff record with six offensive rebounds in the first quarter.
Track teams split to attend Drake, Oklahoma relays
The Pistons took an 8-7 lead on a basket by Dumars at the 6:48 mark of the first quarter and led the rest of the game to 19-point margin in the fourth period.
bv Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's and women's track teams split up last weekend and competed in the Drake Relays and the Sooner Outdoor Relays.
Athletes from both teams had to qualify for the Drake meet, and those who did not went to Norman, Okla. for the competition there.
At Drake, senior all-American pole-vaulter Pat Manson placed second in the invitational pole vault, clearing his season best of 18·4½. His vault was enough to qualify for the NCAA jumps and the NCAA championship meet.
Manson was two inches short of the winning vault cleared by Baylor's Bill Payne.
On the women's side, junior Marybeth Labosky had a personal best high jump and a first place swim meet in a keel for the first time in her career.
Labosky said she was thrilled to have broken the six-foot barrier.
"I have finally put together the techniques I have been working on all season," she said. "I think I have a hold on it now."
Labesky said the meet was doubly exciting for her because of the number of fans in attendance.
"It was my first time at Drake," she said. "There were more people there than I have ever competed in front of, I didn't see an empty seat."
Breaking barriers may have been on the mind of freshman triple jumper Cassandra Bravent as well.
'I have finally put together the techniques I have been working on all season. I think I have a hold on it now.'
Marybeth Labosky Women's track team
Bryant came within one half inch of breaking the 40 foot barrier, placing second with a leap of $39.11\mathrm{lb}$ . It was Bryant's best mark.
The men's distance medley relay team and four-mile relay team performed well at Drake, also.
Senior Donnie Anderson put the Jayhawks in first place after the first leg of both races.
Senior relay runner Jason Teal was impressed with Anderson's running.
"Donnie hasn't run the lead-off this semester," he said. "He was great."
The four-mile team consisting of Teal, Anderson, freshmen Kwanza Johnson and Michael Cox finished in second behind Iowa State. Teal said that 100 meters separated first, second and third places in the race.
The distance medley relay team finished fifth.
At the Sooner meet, freshman Jayson Lavender cleared 16-6 in the pole vault and finished first.
Senior Stewart Gillin won the 5,000 meter run with a time of 15:04.6.
Senior Patty Rochford won the 1,000-meter run and Keely Harding placed first in the high jump, clearing 5-6.
Women golfers set for shot at 2nd title
Kansan sportswriter
By Lana Smith
The women's Big Eight Conference golf championship begins today in Columbia, Mo., and the Jayhawks are ready for the chance to take the title for the second year in a row.
Kansas golf coach Sarah Johnson said that although none of the Big Eight teams were ranked in one game, they scored two days of tough competition.
"Oklahoma and Oklahoma State are always strong." Johnson said. "They are always going to be there."
She said the fact that the Jayhawks won the title last year would make them more determined to do well as a team
Myers said attitudes and experience would be the key factors in doing well, and she said Kansas' schedule had prepared the players for the competition they will face today and tomorrow.
"Myers is definitely the No. 1 golfer on the team," Johnson said. "She's shooting some low number of consistent and she's fired up."
Johnson said that the Kansas team had been playing more consistently and that the players were eager for the tournament. She credited junior Laura Moore with being the team's leader.
Kansas finished seven strokes behind Iowa State in the Azalea Festival tournament two weeks ago in Hampstead, N.C.
Myers said the loss could work against the Jayhawks.
" (The Cyclones) have got it in their minds that they want to get Iowa State back on the maps, and we are going to try to do." Myrs said.
She said Kansas had to be ready to play and be ready for the competition because whover was named and the most eager would win.
"We're the defending chumps," Myers said. "I hope we win. We can win, but I don't want to say we should win. I don't want to jinx
Kansas freshman Holly Reynolds agreed that the Jayhawks had a good chance to take the title again, and she said she thought the team had the desire needed to win.
Johnson said the Kansas players seemed confident and she was optimistic about the outcome of the tournament.
She said Myers, junior Laura Martin and junior Shelly Triplett would serve as a solid base that would swing the Ja Hawks to victory.
NCAA debates moving 3-point arc nine additional inches from basket
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The NCAA men's basketball rules committee will debate during meetings that will begin today whether to move the three-point arc nine inches farther from the basket.
The NCAA and NAIA rules currently draw the three-point line at 19 feet, 9 inches. If the ruling is adopted during the three-day meeting, the line would conform with the international standard of 20-6.
The committee also will consider widening the lane from 12 feet, abolishing the rule permitting two free throws on the 10th team foil of each half and expanding the use of television replays for correctable errors
The three-point line was adopted before the 1986-87 season and NCAA statistics indicate long-range shooters are not getting better. In the first season, Division I players made 38.4 percent of their three-pointers.
son of the 12-man committee. "But I'm open-minded this year."
Two Missouri Tigers face charges of assault
"I've been for leaving it where it is, because in the past it hadn't been there long enough to fool with it," Alabama-Birmingham and chairper-
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri football players Tyan VanZant and Antonio Cooper were arrested on charges of third-degree assault Saturday morning, following a fight outside a bar.
Results of the meetings will be announced Wednesday.
The Associated Press
Columbia police said VanZant and Cooper were allegedly involved in a brawl with two men outside the Field House, a favorite student night spot.
But last season, the percentage dipped to an alltime low of 36.1 percent.
VanZant, 23, and Cooper, 22, were released from Boone County jail early Saturday after they each posted $1.00 bond.
VanZant is a former Parade Magazine national player of the year who decided to attend Missouri after a celebrated prep career at Hazelwood Central High School in Florissant, Mo. However, a history of knee injuries sidetracked his college career. The 6-foot-1, 203-pound junior has one year of eligibility left at Missouri.
Cooper, a 6-4, 215-pound sophomore linebacker, is contending for a starting job this fall.
The arrests were the second and third for the Missouri football team this year. Earlier, tight end David Frisch was arrested and charged
with burglary and stealing.
According to Columbia police, Van-Zant allegedly bumped into a unidentified man on the dance floor at the Field House. A fight broke out and Field House employees escorted VanZant, Cooper, Levoid Jackson, 20, who is a friend of the players, and two other men outside.
The arguing continued outside among Vanzant, Cooper, Jackson and the two other men. Witnesses arrived while a fight was in progress.
Officers arrested VanZant, Cooper and Jackson. All three posted bond.
Oklahoma State takes 11th Big 8 tennis title
OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma State Cowgirls won their 11th straight Big Eight tennis crown yew-
nter in the NCAA's singles titles and two doubles titles.
"I am very proud of the team."
Okahoma State coach Julius Hjekowski said he thinks they definitely deserved to win the Big Eight title."
Oklahoma State finished with 130 points, followed by Oklahoma with 103. Kansas was third with 74 points, the Lakers' Vamers Hammers' No. 1 singles title.
Nebraska was fourth with 73 points. Kansas State and Colorado tied for fifth with 60 points, Iowa scored 52 and Missouri came in last with nine.
Sports briefs
Jayhawk softball team wins twice, loses twice
In men's play, Oklahoma State snared the Big Eight title in competition that ended Friday. The Cowboys won Championship by edging Kansas 95-93.
The Jayhawks won their first game against the Cowgirls 1-0, and defeated the Cornhuskers 4-0.
nament this weekend in Lincoln, Neb.
The Kansas softball team split two-game series against Oklahoma State and Nebraska during the Big Eight Conference Round Robin tour-
Yesterday, the Jayhawks were defeated 2-0 by Oklahoma State and 1-0 by Nebraska.
Kansas freshman pitcher Stephan Williams picked up Saturday's victory against Oklahoma State, which improved her record to 15-7.
The Jayhawks' record fell to 35-12 after yesterday's losses.
Junior pitcher Shelly Sack grabbed Saturday's victory against Nebraska. Her record improved to 12-0.
Kansas' next game will be against Wichita State at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Wichita.
Argentine soccer star faces cocaine charges
Federal Prosecutor Roberto Amayo said outside the Federal
Court Building that Maradona arrested Friday with two companions, was accused of distributing drug free of charge and drug posses
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
Soccer legend Diego Maradona was charged yesterday with possession and released from jail on $2,000 bond.
Maradona was forbiddent to leave Argentina pending trial, in accordance with an order issued Saturday by the Junior Judge Amelia Berliaz de Vidal.
A trial date was not announced. Under Argentine law, criminal trials usually are held in private, with the accused and witnesses testifying before a presiding judge who determines guilt or innocence.
Hole 3 decides winner of Greensboro Open
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Mark Brooks had 10 birds and two bogies to drive to the front of the pack at the Greater Greensboro Open yesterday, but he needed a nearly routine par for before he could enjoy his work.
Brokes beat Gene Sauers on the third hole of sudden death, take the $225,000 first-place money. The two endured the tournament at 13 under 27.4. Brokes turned in an 8-over 27.4. Brooks scored the Forest Oak Country Club. The score merely earned him the chance to play more holes to settle the title.
"There weren't too many things that could have gone better," Brooks said. "You play a dream round every once in a while, but it never turns out what you want it to be. You finish fifth or third or 10th."
From staff and wire reports
14
Monday, April 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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The Saudi Student House of Lawrence, Kansas is planning to offer a FREE course in Arabic provided
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205 Help Wanted
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841-7252, N. J.
FOUND: Cat, white paws/tail. Dark gray and brown-striped white.triangle on face with brown.
Call 864-2332/864-2582 to claim aid.
Lost on campus. Silver filigree pin with turquoise center. Only real value is sentimental. $10 reward. Call 842-5373.
Aggressive GM IMP dealership is seeking a career manager to consider career in auto sales. As much as $50,000 possible for the first year, excellent compensation and appointment to 183-143-1251. Ask for Mike or Rick
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families. Personal attention PRINCETON NAY-
NIER. 301 N. HWY #46, Princeton, NJ 08540
names. Paid airfare, super salaries, excellent
names networking system. Sorry, no maury
dublin. 919-827-7200 or 919-747-7368.
NEED A JOB? Experience America, Inc. will be hiring on May 2 at the Kansas Union Centennial Room. 2 p.m. to plan to attend
Need money fast? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary 1-800-695-2789
need a break? Be a nanny! Earn good money, go o interesting places for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency. 842-4243.
Need person to show apartments, answer phones and general office work. Full time in summer with possible part time in fall. Must have car and work be studyIBLE. Call Mary M 814-600-3633
Part time secretary bookkeeper needed beginning 20 May. 3 p.m 5 days a week. Knowledge of word processing, general accounting practice and computer skills required. Job duties include skills required. $45 / hour. Send letter of interest, resume, and name and phone number 2 references by 1 May to: Edge Enterprises, P.O Box 7869, Houston, TX 77074.
Work available in K.C. area.Secretarial processing, data entry and secretarial skill needed.Must have at least six month office experience andUnloading-Want to stay physically? Flexible schedule. Apply 10am noon May 8th or 9th.Choose 4th or 5th of April.Sussex Blue and green carpets.
Stormroom store, Kansas Union Food Services. Monday-Friday, 12am-9pm. $24 an hour; part-time no fringe. Must have valid identification or stock previous inventory or stock clerk experience preferred. money handing helpful. Apply Kansas EOE personnel 130 and Level 5, Level 1.
Social Services- opening available for married couple to live in and direct treatment program for adolescents, training provided, Preference given to students with academic degree. Starting salary, $8,000 plus full benefits package 125 days off per year. Must be 18 years old. Call Canyon Caltemporary, Lodging For Children, Glacier.
Part-time jobs available in the cafeteria. Afternoon and evening times. Apply at front desk. Naismith Hall
Part-time position available for technician at Microtech. Requires some knowledge of IBM PCs. Training provided. 841-953, ask for Raymond/Dana.
Sitter needed for 2 boys ( 2 year old and 7 month
old) 2 days a week or mornings or combination.
Call Lisa at 841-6600.
SUMMER-FALL-PART-TIME JOB as an caretaker for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Mature bring, back from school on weekends, afternoons, and mornings. Available to work during KU vacations a plus good job for OT, PT, or LPN. Available to work with students or persons with interest. Relirable car and phone required. U.C. citizenship desired. Some lifting. Call 642-8618 between 11am-6pm.
Summer Jack Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Stamp For Free Details. Sullivan's, 113 E. Weymouth, Kailouin, MT 59903.
SUMMER-Tops in Pennsylvania Girls Camp needs counselors in WSI, W垦队. Arts & Creatus/Ceramics. Soccer Coach, Technical Director. Calgary Ady Alpad. 1909-4834-7625
FENNIS COUNSELOR-Boy's驻童 camp in Berkeley mountains, western Miaas, looking for family members. Must be a court couse, clay and hard surfaces. High salary, room and board from 6/8-10/8. Mail Lee Cee. College deg.
SUMMER INTERN to assist in advertising sales for K. J. Cishil Chronicle Newspaper & Magazine Call Buth Berger at (81) 745-6402-620.
Part-Time Summer Work!
THE INFO is looking for a few dedicated individuals to assist with merchant subscription management, including the transportation Canaal business attire will be required. Failure will be helpful. Fall placement available.
Local Distributor for a large Nationa Manufacturer is Now Hiring College people for summer and full time internship positions.
Interstipm
$7,500 This Summer
In Lawrence Area
6:30 p.m. Sharp
Wednesday/May 1st
- No Experience Neededary
* On the Job Training
* Major Medical
Textbook Clerks: KB Bookstores. Part time $45 per hour, position could possibly last until September 16, 2018. Must be able to work weekdays between the two locations. Must speak English, have previous sales experience, be able to stand for long periods, have excellent communication skills, employment and valid Driver License. Prefer applicant to have interest or knowledge of books. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office. Level 5
Kansas Union Centennial Room
TEMPORARY HELP WANT Job will start May 1 and last approx 2 months. Applicants should be mechanical inclined and have own office equipment in intf contact Charles Reilly at 800-835-3531
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flex hours, meals.
Call Frank, Lawrence University Club. 843-296-8967
Want a summer job where you can lose weight,
feel great and earn lots of money? Please call
Debbie (816) 444-2251
Call Frank, Lawrence Country Club, 845-266-2667
Wanted part-time Experienced Framer
References required Overland Park, KS
913-640-2680
JAYHAWK SUMMER STORAGE
225 Professional Services
School Driver education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU. students for 20 years driver license obtainable, transportation provided 841.7749
*Free Pick-up and Delivery
843-4533
- Fully Insured
* Free Boxes
Need an Attorney?
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vases, senior portraits, modeling & arts port
follows. B/AW, Color Call Tum Swells 749-1611
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 481-6028
interested in good health? Let us help you
weight/gan gain with our natural body sys
synchronized formula "Diet Disc Program" 100%
guaranteed. Call (312) 749-608.
DWI-TRAFFIC
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-01
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E. 9th Street
843-4600
235 Typing Services
$1 a page double-spaced Accurate, Fast Word
$1 processing Call Hereres at 841-0776
Fake ID'S & alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type. 842-263, days or evenings.
A • Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. ® 842 7383.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25/double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 10 am-6 pm. 841.129.
1. perform a perimeter-spaced page ruler job to biblio.
2. Label printed work paper 79-648-60
3. Word Processing: Term Paper, letters,
resumes, etc. Kit 847-452-74. 30 to 30 p.m. wk 30
days.
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 84192-5942
callers, legal, leases, notes. ect. Call us after p.m.
in the morning. Call us in the afternoon.
term papers, themes, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Taste print
rubber. Send to: R.J.'s Typing Services.
FACTOR ACCURATE, TIPING- 45 per page. Includes PU and DLEL anywhere in city limits, Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. Call Mae at: 842.3882.
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable fast service. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
termes applications, mailing lists, laser print
and spelling corrected. 210-G W 258. Sth I.
THa 4a. m-8m. F: Tha 5a. m-50. Bg 84.7244
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927*,
Mass. 841-1071.
Professional typist. Reasonable rates. Call
842-3203.
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.
10% off today!
300s
305 For Sale
84 "Jeep CJ-7" Hardtop, AC, 4-spd. Good condition.
Asking $695. Call: 805-8259.
86 Ninja under 10.000 miles. New Dunlop $2300
849-709-056, leave message
Brand new Fuji Road Bike. Excellent condition.
$425 neg. 1987 Road Bike, new frame, $125.
843-4014.
98 Yamaha jog, Yello and fast. Scott. 864-8528
99 gallon "show" aquarium with all equipment.
sed. 310 or best offer. 841.8218
For sale- Peugeot 10 speed, 3 years old. Great condition. Asking $125 obo. 965-4088. Leave message.
Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
Everything But Ice 906 Massachusetts
GIVY - SURPULS. *Sleeping bag backpacks,
teams, camouflage clothing, we wear gear,
woolen gloves, thermal underwear*
CARHARTT WORKWEAR Mon Sat-Sun
*472774. LSTAURUS Salries. St. Marys, KS*
For sale SUZUKI 450GS 1980. New front tire, exhaust, headlight. Reliable. $500. Call 841-9209.
Harleesque Honda Rebel 450 Silver Anniversary New brakes, battery Garage kept Beautiful Terry, 841-2587
Honda Elite Moped 50cc. 70 miles, almost new $600. Call before 12:00 am. 985-0977.
Kawaukee 15:20 VGMA Vista 30 MB hard drive
600 Call before 12:00 am. 865-4977
Kaypro IBM S12K VGA Monitor 20 MB hard drive
$799.00 offer 824-8031
5252 miles watered $100 offer 842-4013
King size waterhed for sale with sheets. Only $100
or best offer. Call 865-2783
MacGregor Golf Club, less than 1 yr old. SSW
MacGregor Golf Clubs, less than 1 yr old. 2 SW Best offer. 842-7011
book, table, laptop. 800 x 400 x 12-36 mm. 487-mm
bottle, no hot, rast. 100k. RAM 749-2866.
SONY XR1700 car stereo. Pall out, touch controls.
digital $25, 841-671, Mrcc. 871
8651 older 842.011
MTN Bike, 2 months old TREK 830 Call 865.3948
Leave message
NEW RALEIGH BIKE WITH SCHWINN 1500
PUMP (INCLUDES CAGE) $750 $750 $750
Neon Lights-Busch, Budlight, Busch Guitar, $100 each
749-4327
Stillwater Kicker CFT Cups sportport, 150W. Barely used, $38 new, asking $198, 843-4253, Mike.
step by step manuals that can make you up to $750 by next week. Few remain. Send $1 refundable to P.O. Box 42412 Lawrence, KS 60044
340 Auto Sales
1989 Buck Rivera Rides and drives great.
842-415 or 842-7378
1978 Datsan 200 SX Low miles, excellent mechanical condition, very good body $1200 obo 749 292
1979 Honda Accord LX 1 owner. Runs Great
for Must-For Sale $1050.00 or 84.99cc
1980 Ford Fairmont, Low mileage, no hail damage. Good condition, good stereo. $1800 obo.
749-2491
1980 Honda Prelude 80,000 mi, runs great, 5
speed 864-best offer. Days 864-930 other,
842-473.
1987 Chevrolet Spectrum, 4 dr, 5 spd, 25,000 miles
Sulberb condition. Best offer. Call 841-0822
WJ. Vetta Gold, college car, standard,
surfcoat, cheap $400, Carl Martin 81-2744
108 Solari Jady JM, 18K RL, 5 speed, ACE,
Great clean great town W, 200. Ask TAs, 749-206.
1949 Plymouth Horizon, auto, a/c, am/fm, 120-
130. Interior, $20.00 | Mobile Call
812-924-0011
89 Honda Civic DX, white, ac, am/fm cass, 24K
$600.865.3775
$30, $564, 841-569 after opn
Civage Wagon 74, 98 am, fm, good $1849, 8am
Phoenix Park 74, 98 am, fm, good $1849, 8am
Civic B1, 94K, ac, $1100 Mitsubishi Precis '89.
Loaded 1964 Toyota Celica GTs GCO Metallic
alum, light alloys, wheel accents. condition high
freeway miles $4,500 negotiable $1,832-225.
Mevy E7.2 4x4 A/C all-wheel $500
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CPC $6.00 and down Records and tapes-$2.50 and down Top dollar for collections
Wanted: top dollar for collections Wanted to buy a VW 82-85 Rabbit 2 dg, good body, bad motor Tail, Tom 749-1611
BANK
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
! BR, CA, WD hookup, quiet! For rent or buy
875-773-6932
1 bedroom available for sublease May 15-August
16 Will pay $2 May and August rent. Like new, air-
conditioning. Call 865-2782. Leave message
an apartment in beautiful old house
Avalon, MA. Walk to RU or downtown
in A.C. August 24th.
1 bedroom summer sublease w/ fall option
airless dryer and microwave. Rent negotiable.
1 bedroom apartment, available for sublease
available June 1. $350/ month plus deposit.
Water and trash paid. Quiet location on bus route.
841-5828
1 non-mosquito female for summer suburbs. Near lake Michigan. 2 mosquitoes for 2 females for summer suburbs. Great location, nice space, pool, AC, DMV room, rent here. 3 bedrooms in downtown rent forGreater. 3 bedrooms downstairs for rent. Get
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT AVAILABLE AUGUST in beautiful old house. Wood floors, claw foot tub, A/C, w of hooks, ceiling fans $90. No pets. 841-7074
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, familial status, or national origin, or an agreement limitation or discrimination'.
2. bedroom, Bradford Square Apt. for sublease.
We pay $450/mo-y you only pay $400/mo. No deposit required. Microwave, dishwasher, and clean room spaces. 842-6231
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.
2 npt avail in new building of West Hills
and 1 npt avail in new building of North
camp, ceiling fan, dishwasher, baskets, walk
in space, energy efficient gas. Great location
near campan. 100 Emery Hd. fuel .460/mo. No pet
3 Bedroom house summer sublease $175/bedroom negotiable. A/C, washer/dryer, utilities included. 841-5488
2 BR townhouse for summer sublease. 12-baths.
Room for 4 or 5 people. Bent negotiable. Available
late May until July 31. 843.7962
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option. Spacious Economical. AC, DW, on bus route. Call 749-3477
3 bedroom townehue, 2 baths, microwave,
dishwasher, fireplace, garage, low utilities,
available 81; KSD, mo. yr, lease, Pin Oak 246
Alabama, 842-9889
3 br house available Aug. 1. Full basement, central air, no pets. nita 914 E. 13th. Call 841-0855 for appt $900/month.
3 studio apt, for rent starting at $205.00 No pets
Call 749-7568
**Chamberlain Place Apartments**, 12th Ohne new construction; and 1x BR (Formerly Villa Capri) building. Both have new construction; 2B-1 bath; 3B-2 bath, all with washers dryers. Across from Mall with
4 BHP for summer sublease 2. bath W/D, DWAC microwave, water tennis courts, onboard route Sunrise Village. Call Kim. 865-0625, leave message.
- 91 Michigan 8 queks, 1 yr old; BR-3, BH-2
* Bath All with washer/dryer
* Brardwood Square Apartments, 501 Colorado, 2
* BH-1 bath and 3-BH-2 bath. Great preset
* room for small families. House every Saturday from 12s at Bradford
Square, 501 Colorado. C-1) Office hours Mon-Fri
You are concerned about the environment'
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower
House 106 Tennessee 240-671 or 814-6484
A spacious 2 bedroom, CA $335.00 on bus route sublease with option for fall! Available June 1 to July of any month. AVAILABLE. Available June and July for sublease. 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown
APARTMENTS: Kansas City, Large. Small, Wareh
to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished,
or unfurnished. Quiet, secure building, many
extras. 816-361-3928
A PERFECT sublease. June and July. Female roommates need. Close to campus/downtown AC, wash d./microphone 855 5601
Available June 1, option for fall; 4 bedroom apartment with loft in Orchard Corners. Spacious, beautifully furnished, pool, on bus route Extra furniture free. 841-1454.
and Wheel 4 br apt. For info, call 841-6953
CHEAP SUBLEASE NOW! $160 for large room in 3 bedroom dba: 842-7543
Available for summer sublease. Suriseur Village townhouse, AC, microwave, pool, tennis courts, on bus tour. Price negotiate at 653-399. Bar Hoppers! Summer sublease for a rightous
Cheap summer sublease: Furnished 1 and/or 2
bedrooms. No deposit. $120/mo plus utilities.
865-3906
Desperate for sublease - b 2 hr. 2 bath, pool, tennis-b h/wall. bukup availability. Upgrade B1. 843-8889 Desperate to sublease-Great one bedroom for June & July. Washer. Rent rental.
Available immediately, one bedroom, gas and water paid, $32 per month. Available summer tuition. Some with utilities paid. Cadding fans, mini blinds, curtains, skirting board. From campus at alpine and 1483 and 1820. HQ-764-764.
Excellent location; 1 block to campus; 2 bedroom apt in +4 beds, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA, nets, available 1床. $360 At 1341 Ohio Call 842-4242
Female waiter for summer sublease at Orchard Cinemas. Rent negotiable! Call 681-4542 Hey! KU Med students. Move in June 1 and receive $2 off the rent for two months. *Stations, 2 and 1 bedroom aps.* *Heat and water paid.* *Across the room.* Center, Hainau Tower Apt. 931-831 9631
Large 1 Bedroom Apt. Sublease May Aug Close to Campus. $250/mo. 863-3775.
International Students: Tired of getting kicked out of the dorms over the holidays? Sunflower House stay open 365 days a year and is a great place to make friends. 140 McKenna, 789-867 or 814-0484
Large Studio apartment for summer sublease
Looking for every responsible person to submit
beautifully furnished equipped apartment for
rent Summer rent Callled 865-0840
Lormar Townhouses, 3811 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
new available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 941-7800. 843-1433.
*Jackdill ht Every ap*
*Packard Kitchen DK*
*Basketball Court/Laundry*
*ID from $95*
Nice, one bdр apartment close to campus. Hardwood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-2819 or 842-9037 evenings.
Nice two bedroom home with all applicances
New carpet and paint. Blinds, guard, quiet area,
no pets, prefer long term tenants. Available immediately.
$435, 843-2088.
Non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom house immed. 832-1341.
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southbridge Plaza Apts. 1 bedroom, $25. 2 bedroom starts at $35. 16 month lease. Water and cable package. Call for more information. For fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Pinta Azalea bedroom. 325 square feet, bedroom with water and cable outlets, remodeled kitchen, new carpet. 890-160-2400. Pinta Azalea Bathroom. 890-160-2400. Pinta Azalea West Apts. $1 for bedroom; $72 for bedroom. Coffee filling, farm water, walk to Walmart. Bedrooms include
Now leasing for June and August. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kit chen appliances, including dishwasher, central air, gas, heat, carpet, draps and blinds. Low ceiling. Great room rule. REST APARTMENTS $130.00 $110.00 SPANISH BEST APARTMENTS 91-4688
One bedroom apt. in a house. Private entrance close to KU Central Air. Screened Porch. Cable Upholstery. $295.00. 749-7385.
Two-one bedroom apt. $450. One studio $240
Utilities paid. Between downtown & campus
closer to CSP-Corbin. Available June 1, no pets
41.1207
Perfect Location one bk to town, 3 bks to cam-
room 2 bedroom room in fourplex. C/A No.
Possible. Avail $1. 800 At 114 Tennessee.
Call 862-442-842.
FOR RENT: Professor's 2 BR house, $500 June
1991;Aug.1991,84;884.
Roommate needed to share three bedroom threestory townhouse for summer. Close to campus. 841-1468.
Spacies 3 bukel duplex available June 1 and August 1. New carpet, paint and blinds. All chinch appliances, central air gas, heat. Interior hookups, garage. No pests. P45-8288.
Studio, 2 bedroom apartment between town, K. U
841-6254
SUBLEASE: 1 BHR (or 1 or 2 occupancy): $55 plus
usage, pool, water room, laundry, on campus,
available mid-May through July. Call Kathy,
865-1524, leave message.
SUBLEASE, to campus. 3 bedroom, D/W/
¢C $857/mo., 1317 Kentucky, C#82-3690.
8A67770
SUBLET 2 rooms in 3 br. townhouse. Avail. carry May to July. July #483 - moils. Will negotiate. Expt. extra incentive. Please call #492-7833
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, garage. AC
2012 Heatherwood. 841-9707.
SUMMER SUBLUEASE. Beautiful 2 bedroom for rent in the heart of downtown Boca Raton, more $460. Call now 855-281-2162, leave message.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. HIRED on 3 MEDROWS. Upper floor, 2 floors of house, $200 per month plus upper 2 floors of house.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 available rooms, great place.
$160 plus $4 utilities. Call 865-4095.
MUMBER SUBLEASE: Studio apartment right across from the Glass Onion. Great balcony, Murphy bed, ceiling fan. May rent paid. Cal 865-1938. MUMBER SUBLEASE: 4-5 bedroom room, acupuncture, wood floors, close house (Alabama). Ace, uni. low fees, appropriate rent. 843-1435.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 29, 1991
15
---
meadowbrook
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Visit Meadowbrook Apts. Wide range of GREAT
Wide range of GREAT studios, 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm. apts, 2& 3 bedroom townhomes among a peaceful country
Lighted Tennis Courts
Laundry facilities in most buildings
Carports/Garages available
Water Paid Free Books
Free Basic Cable KU Bus Stops
Playgrounds Water Park
Experienced Professional Maintenance
Sorry No Pets
MON-FRI 8:5-30 SAT 8-5
424-4200 SUN 1-4
It's Time to Step Up to MEADOWBROOK
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location at a superior price. 2 bedrooms, 2 floors.Call 842-3350 (24 HOURS)
bedrooms, 2 floors. Call 841-3258 (24 HOURS)
Sublease. Three bedroom apartment close to
campus. Available May 15. We will pay May rent!
865-297
Sublease for summer apt. Not smoker. Close to campus. Call 832-2913, leave message.
Sublease 1 bedroom apt. Available May 17 at Sun dawn Apts. Price negotiable. Call 865-2995.
First Response Free Registration 661-2956
Sublease 3 months 3 BR, 2 Bath ap. Fireplace
loanals pool, no pets. Weekends and evenings
841-0448. Days 845-213, ask for Stu
Sublease 3 bdmr townhouse from mid May or
June 1 to July 29 1#1 bath, fireplace. $500/no.
utiles. On bus route 789-3402.
Summer sublease. Semi-furnished 2 be, jacuzzi
nice & clean, rest neatable. Also, female room
mate needed for next year, non-smoker. Jill.
865-0540
Summer sublease, male roommate needed. Two,
level, on bath furniture. Furnished. Near campus.
water paid. $180/mo. Call Dave 85-392. June-
July.
Summer sublease. Spacious four bedroom townhouse, pool, tennis, microwave, dishwasher Rent negotiable. 749-2493
Summer sublease 3 bdr, 2 bath. Behind Yellow-Skin on Indiana Nice. Priceバリued. $81,342. Summer sublease. Big house, close to canopy for 3 people, 10th and Ohio. Call 951-1690.
Summer sublet. June rent paid $178.75/month plus 1₄ utilities, 2 cases of beer. Call Brad at 865-903-8948
Summer sublease Barbarix *Spacecon* 3 ibdm,
new kitchen, dishwasher, new carpet,
washer/dryer look ups 842 4603
Summer sublease. Studio apartment-
Exceedingly clean, quiet, and close to campus.
Perfect for graduate students. Very cheap.
Call 749-0425/81-2686
Summer sublease Reduced rent! 2 bedroom
apartment w/ ceiling fans and AC. Excellent loca-
tion on quiet, cobblestone street. Call 749-0680
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom, 2 full baths, loft,
fully furnished Campus Place Apt. Next to Crossing.
Call 843-4601
Summer sublease with option, one room beautiful 4 BR, CA, DW, W/D. Space Roarke 749-0233.
Summer sublease 1 bedroom; Berkeley Flats.
Water/cable paid, low AC bills $275. 749.2377.
Summer sublease! One room in a 4 bedroom house. VERY close to campus, WJD, A/C clean. Hookups taken care of Rent negotiable. Jiyu. 856-6543.
Water cable pay, low AC bills 729, 749, 577
Summer saddle basket. Male roommate needs.
Close to campus. Available 15. Call Matt
865-294.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 146 Tennessee.
6th & Gateway (behind Sonic)
WALKS TO KU OR DOWNTOWN. Efficienacy. A bedroom apartment in beautiful old town Belfast, with flats, furniture, claw feet tub, a.c. w/ wall hookups, some laundry, and a kitchen. Fare at summer sales at apricot store. Fare rests at start.
Sunrise Village
Sunrise Village
Luxurious Townhomes
3-4 Bedroom
841-8400 Open house daily
VANDAHL
Two bedrooms
Fully furnished in apartment
Fully equipped kitchen
Fully furnished in living room
Private balcony or patio *Pail cable TV*
Basketball court or Pair playing table
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th CT. 841-1815
2 blocks east of lows on 23rd to Ousdahl.
2 blocks east on Iowa on 25th to UofA
3 blocks south on Guadanta to 25th St. Court
1/2 block east on 25th St. Court
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
(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
Sublease with Fall option. Large studio AC, W/D,
DW, big closet Rent $250/mn. Clark 865-4035 or
Tonya N62 2499
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Sumner and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 1 bk from KU with off-street parking, no pets. 841-500.
Sublease: 3 bedroom apartment close to campus.
Available May 15. May rent paid. Will negotiate
865-2597
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with
shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid 1.8k from KU with off street parking. No pets. B41-5000
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
SWAN
Swan Management
- Gazebo
- Graystone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
Sat. 11-3 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
WOODWAY
each apartment feature:
-Washer and dryer
-Microwave
-Gas heat, central air
-Large bedrooms
-Mini blinds
-On KU bus route
-Carports available
1-bedroom $250
2-bedroom $410
3-bedroom $600
office
611 Michigan Street
(across Horseshoe's)
Houses
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 SUN
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
--apartments
Boardwalk
Q
- Unfurnished with
Georgetown Apartments
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT /Reliable
- Water & trash paid
- Clean & well maintained
Large closets & living space
524 Frontier
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Walk to grocery
842-4444
appliances
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6 04341111
2 on-site bus stops
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
10 to 18 Months
24 hour Maintenance
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Call about our Summer Special
- No pets
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
WKNDS - BY APPT.
629 Hallway, 740, 739
Summer Sublease 2 BR Apt in Aspen West Apts.
w/option for fall CA, Water paid on Availability
June 1st #480 (mo) 848-680
Apple Lane Apartments
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $350. 2 bedroom
$900 and 1 bedroom $250 Heatherwood Valley
Apts. 843-4754.
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Pool
48
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Free cable
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month (water paid!)
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(www.room.com)
1:00 4-30 p.m. (no appt needed)
This aid for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
and unfurnished
OPEN HOUSE
Mon, Wed, Thur
Great location Near campus
MASTERCRAFT
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1•2•3•4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
OPEN DAILY
Sunrise Apts.
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
Screnery Pl
HANOVER PLACE
841-1212 • 14th & Mass.
1-5 P.M.
749-0445 • 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
- Free Cable T.V. (P.T. & Ten.)
• Luxurious Town Home
- Tennis Court, Pools
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Studios
841-5255 * 7th & Florida
6th & Gateway
- On Bus Route
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
749-2415 * 10th & Arkansa
- Luxurious Town Home *
--garage, and back yard 4 times behind Naisimh
One Two-Broomed Wanted - Summer Sublease
Close to Campus $181 plus Utilities/person
842-7217
9th & Michigan Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas Sunrise Village
& Apartment Living
TANGLEWOOD
OFFERS
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
Set Sun 14
Open House Daily
- Close to Campus
ORCHARD CORNERS
841-1287 or 841-8400
CAMPUS PLACE
KENTUCKY PLACE
Summer Sublease. Sublease 2 room, close to campus, hardwood floor, off street parking, no pet, 749-2819 or 842-9007 events.
Address: 5420 Oak Avenue, Needle Creek, CA. Required. Needle Campus. Available in Matt M. 865-2984
749-4226·15th & Kasold
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
842-4455
Better quality living
We have our own computer center, Dining anytime, and great social events.
ENARGED TO SHOW PHILOSOPHIES?
I THINK,
THEREFORE
I AMP."
-R. DISCARTE
PHILOSOPHER
R.I.P.
Convenient location
1800 Naisimith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66444
(913)8143-5559
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route Naismith spells out a wise living move.
NAISMITHHALL
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!!
"I THINK I AM
THEREFORE.
I THINK...?"
-JAKE
FOOTBALL DUCK
AND FRAT. GUY.
- Volleyball Court
Volleyball Court Basketball Court
Space for Fall!!
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
- Basketball Court
$355 - $425
1301 W.24th
奇
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
Enlarged to Show Texture
842-5111
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Water allowed*
"IN PINK,
THEREFORE
I AM"
-DIXIE
FASHION DESIGNER
"IN PINK,
THEREFORE
I AM."
-DIXIE
FASHION DESIGNER
"I DON'T THINK,
I KNOW!"
-PEACHES
AEROSPACE
ENGINEER AND
CHEEBLER
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Women students: Want to live in non-sexist environment where you can learn to repair an maintenance skills? Try Skiflower House. 1028-7957 or 816-0484. 146 Teresa 7499-0877 or 816-0484.
430 Roommate Wanted
by Brian Gunning
Female roommate need 8/1 for very nice _
dbm apt. 188/mo plus ½ until Call Christine,
841-0744
A roommate wanted for 2 Br apt. CA, furnished,
pool, laundry, 150/mo plus ½ utilities On bus
route. Call Jim. 865-3288
MAY I HAVE
ADEADLINE
EXTENSION ON
THIS QUESTION?
-ADDISON
ARCHITECT
FEMALE HOMELAND WANTED!
Serve quiet, clean, mature, upperclassman.
Share贸庭 with the RIVERMENT, rented campus beginning
and May. References required.
865-291
Female, non-smoker roommate needed for Fall
9.12 Share a truck on trailer, w/d, w/central
kit. 30% off roommate fee. 60% off $160
$160 monthly plus $4 utilities. Prefer
unsupervised annette. 864-341-3511
www.hospitaldepartment.com
Female roommate needed. Room available August 15. No rent in exchange for part time infant care. Call Pamela 832-2407.
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share spacious house. $160/month plus utilities. Alison,
865 2578
Female, roommate needed for fall; 4 bedroom duplex, cats, non-smoker, close to campus: $145 plus $t_1 utilities. Call 843-0328
Female roommate wanted-Summer sublease
Closeto campus. $181 plus 1' utilities. Call Jill,
965-0707
Looking for a mature respectful non-smoker with healthy approach to life to share my furnished two bedroom apartment. Call 841-6623.
MALE or FEMALE to share huge 2B with 9 ft ceilings and hardwood floors. $1/8 blocks from a shelf. 1 hik from CFM, Duf's & Joe's. $65 plus utilities. 865-1571
Bird Care Call Palmera. 852-2407
Female subleaser needed over the summer. Call
Lisa S. 851-4090
Male roommate need for summer sublease. Edingham Place. Make deal on rent. 794-453-441
Male roommate need. Duplex S.W. part of town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robert, 842-4252
Need a place to stay next year close to campus. Tracy at Lucas 876-304-2398. Room fireplace, housefire.
Roosemanate went urgently). 3 br townhouse. 2 bus on bath route W, D.WD, PW, FM, Summer $220 utilities included. Fall $210 plus t$_3 utilities 841-381. Call for Kill.
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. 91. Large apartment, furniture, W/D, summer storage. 841-3300
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Male graduate student or upperclass roommate
wanted. Large, beautiful house near campus.
$150 mo. + 1/7 meals. Available in June. Call
Ken, 794-2825.
Quiet, tidy roommate with sense of humor for $12
big house. $225. 841-1532. West Lawrence
Three mature male roommates need to share a large modern home on our route B/W, D/C, a large living room, kitchen, deck, etc. MUST SEE $215 plus 4 utilities. Call Basil, 843-4803.
Two female non-smakers needed to share
spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer
sublease. Call Rebecca bencocka 865-4754
- Policy
Roommate now. Very nice, very large, W/D. Pets ok.
See to believe! Only $125, 814-2746.
Summer sublease. Two roommates needed.
Large furnished apartment. 810/m² + 4 unities.
130 Kentucky. Campus. 842-229
Two roommates needed for fall. Nice house, large yard. Close to bus and campus. Call 749-1839 for details. $175.00 plus utilities.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Centered lines count as 7 words.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Vander West t1st- non-homophilic female roommate is sharing nine bed, a new bedroom house close to the library. The apartment will be airport $60.00 plus utilities. Must unlace immediately, will negotiate on the rent.
Wanted, mon-sicking female roommate for Fall
91. Call 865.0966
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
4.29
© 1961 Universal Press Syndicate
Kawan 4.29 ©1991 Universal Press Syndicate
"I'm starting to feel dependent."
16
Monday, April 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Cigler wins as outstanding academic adviser
Political science prof chosen for KU's first advising award
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Allan Gigler does not think he is doing anything special.
"I'm no super adviser," said Cigler, professor of political science. "I just doing my job."
But some think he is doing more than his share. Cigler received the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences award in academic adviser award Friday
Cigler said he was flattered to be chosen.
"It reflects that there were some students I've dealt with down the line who took the time to reflect on the contribution I made to their career here," he said. "When somebody takes the time out to recognize you, you feel pretty good."
Cigler was selected from six other nominees by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Alumni Club advisory board. Board members judged candidates on recommendations made by students. They also used a
list of criteria, which included making an effort to be available to students and giving quality time to help students make good decisions about their educations and career goals.
The award was created this semester so advisors could be recognized and rewarded.
Edwyna Gilbert, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said, "There are faculty awards, and there are teaching awards for the University, but we really didn't have any adviser awards."
Cigler said the award he received was significant because it showed his commitment.
"The importance of the award is that it symbolizes that there are some people who feel that the advising process is important," he said.
He also said that many faculty members within the college took advising as seriously as he did. The six other nonimmunes were: J. Theodore Johnson, professor of French
and Italian; Lloyd Sponholz, associate professor of history; Jack Weller, assistant professor of sociology; Charles Wyttenbach, professor of physiology and cell biology; Mohamed El Hodihr, professor of economics; and Michael Gaines, professor of systematics and ecology.
Gilbert said the board members had a difficult time deciding who the winner of the bronze Jayhawk trophy would be.
"All of these guys got wonderful recommendations from students, and they all had a reputation for being great teachers who care about student groups," she said.
But Gilbert said the comments from the student who nominated Cigler gave him the edge. She said the student mentioned that she was a transfer student coming in with bad expectations of the college advising system but was pleased when Cigler helped change her opinion.
"He has a wonderful reputation
has for his years, Gilbert said.
Shumway's is one of the best."
That is why Kellie Hogan, Wichita
tumor, nominated him.
one University is a big place, and you could really get lost here if you
'It reflects that there were some students I've dealt with down the line who took the time to reflect on the contribution I made to their career here. When somebody takes the time out to recognize you, you feel pretty good.'
- Allan Cigler professor of political science
didn't have someone to give you good advice and support," she said. "He really cares about students, and he's really willing to help."
Cigler said he was even more willing when a student came prepared and was knowledgeable about the advising process.
"For advising to work, it has to be viewed as a two-way process," he said. "Advising is best when you're solving problems and providing options. I feel very good when I feel that I made a difference in someone's life."
1982
Allan Cigler, professor of political science, is the winner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences outstanding adviser award.
Timothy Millner KANSAN
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WORD FOR WINDOWS PC$198
WORD PC$135.00 MAC$120
EXCEL PC/MAC $189.00
WORKS PC$7.95 MAC$129
QUICK PASCAL PC$44.95
QUICK BASIC PC$69.00
QUICK C PC$69.00
QUICK C A SEMBLEM PC$95
10 PAC $PC$1195
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10 PAC $PC$600 $MC$895
UNIVERSITY Purchase Order, Faculty & Student
Authorized AED Dealer
Microsoft
MICROTECH Computers 2329 IOWA, DICKINSON PLAZA 841-9513
KU Students
SPORTS
TICKETS
COMBO
are on sale now at the Ticket Office in Allen Field House Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Cost: $75.00
Cost: $75.00
- Kansas Relays - 4 Days of Events
Sports Package Includes:
• 5 Home Football Games
• 16 Home
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25th and lowa (Next to Food-4-Less)
842-7810 Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
10-6 p.m. Sun.
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For 32 years we have observed and studied different methods of merchandising We found four legitimate methods of sales and one relatively new questionable method R" stock & Grey Market goods
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PRICE OPTIONS & TERMS
FULL SERVICE ~ (SECURE WAY TO BUY)
INSURED SERVICE ~ | 5-YR TOTAL EXTENDED WARRANTY|
1. 5-year Total Full Service Warranty ~ Kief's Loaner Policy.
2. Insured ~ Nationally Collectable.
FULL SERVICE ~ (SECURITY WAY TO BUY)
1 Instant replacement of any Manufacturer's defect = 30 days = "A" stock
2 Exchange satisfaction guarantee for 30 days
3 Kiefs Warranty Service. - No charge for Freight Phone Parts Labor.ect
FACTORY SERVICE ~ {DISCOUNT WAY TO BUY}
1. Instant replacement of any Manufacturer's defect - 10 days = "A* Stock"
2. Manufacturer Warranty only - units for service must be provided by the manufacturer on these units
MAIL ORDER "A" ~ {CHEAPEST WAY TO BUY}
1. Payment in full with order - Guaranteed "A" stock
2. Expect 21 to 5 weeks delivery time or stock for any change
3. Manage payment for $18.00/box +$30.00+$18.00/box
4. Manufactures Warranty only - Units for service must be transported by customer to factory service center - No Instore service on these units
KIEP'S BUYS DIRECT AT MAXIMUM VOLUME RIBATES,
FOR PRICE LOWER THAN MAIL ORDER "A" - BELOW!
MAIL ORDER "B" ~ SECONDS/GREY~(NOT RECOMMENDED)
NOTE 'B' stock units have been refurbished / Grey goods designed for foreign markets - many parts not inter-changed.
NOTE Order details by MAIL ORDER
No specifications guarantee - No Mtg warranty on given market units
3 Payment in cash & the chg
4 Payment in cash & the chg for cancellation - 2 6 weeks delivery
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS
(913) 842-1811
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 142
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ANSAB STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
"OPENA, KS. &&&12"
TUESDAY, APRIL 30,1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
21C
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory defends his position about the death of Gregory Sevier, while Douglas County Coroner Carol Moddrell listens. Flory has been accused of being prejudiced by saying that the death of Sevier by two Lawrence police officers was justifiable.
D.A. answers accusations
Flory says inquest to proceed despite Indians' charge of bias
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
The coroner's inquest into the fatal shooting of a local American Indian by police will proceed today as scheduled, despite allegations that the district attorney had predetermined death was a justifiable homicide.
"I think certain persons have prejudiced me and my ability to carry out the proceeding," said Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, in a news conference at his office yesterday morning.
Flory called the conference in response to allegations made at a forum at Haskell Indian Junior College on Sunday night. Some at the forum said Flory already had decided that the April 24 fatal shooting of Greg Sevier, 22, by Lawrence police was a justifiable homicide.
The forum was organized by the Lawrence Indian Center to question whether the police were justified in using gunfire as the only means of disarming Sevier, who had a knife in his hand when he was killed. Family members had called police to the city, and a m to assist in dealing with Sevier, who had been distraught about personal problems, according to police.
Flory said that statements made at the forum by Lance Burr, a Lawrence attorney and representative of the Sevier family, and Don Broad, a Lawrence resident, were taken out of context and not true.
Burr said at the forum that Flory should not be allowed to conduct the inquest because healready had seen that his death was a justifiable homicide.
had said in a conversation with him and the Sevier family that the death was a justifiable homicide.
Flory said that he had never made a decision about Sevier's death and that he had stated twice in the meeting with the Sevier family and Bread that a determination had not been made.
Flory said he had told them it was likely that the jury at the coroner's inquest could conclude that the death was a justifiable homicide.
Bread said at the forum that Flory
"I think I have certain responsibilities as district attorney to carry out the inquest," he said. "The one time my ability to be fair and impartial is questioned centers on a statement I did not make."
"Why would we make something up like that?" Bread asked. "He is biased. He is slanted. He wants the truth to justify to accept his word as being true."
Bread said an outside investigative team needed to be brought in for justice to be served
Bread said that Flory was lying.
'I think I have certain responsibilities as district attorney to carry out the inquest. The one time my ability to be fair and impartial is questioned centers on a statement I did not make.'
lim-Flory
Douglas County district attorney
Guerrillas' extortion from refugees must stop, allies say
Flory said, however, that the corer's impquest was the best way to assure the public that a thorough and fair proceeding was being conducted. He said he did not think the incident involved an outside investigative team
Flory said the inquest would investigate the case thoroughly.
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Allied forces have demanded that Iraqi Kurdish guerrillas stop exorting money from Kurdish refugees and let them return home, senior U.S. officers said yesterday.
The first Kurdish family arrived yesterday in the US built camp outside Zakho, joining 576 Kurdish men already there
U. S. commanders said they
expected refugees to start arriving in large numbers this week.
Since allied forces entered northern Iran, some of the Kurdish guerilla, known as pesh merga, have blocked the refugees' return out of fear for their safety. Others have had the opportunity to charge tolls, stop vehicle movement and checkpoints, and demanding payment for passing through.
Col. Jim Jones, the highest-ranking
U. S. Marine Corps officer in northern Iraq, said U.S. patrols had been sent to some of the more notorious checkpoints off the oil军队 to stop the extortion
"It's immoral, and it's got to stop," said Jones. "They're straight-out bandits."
Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said in Washington yesterday that the U.S.-led effort to aid Kurdish refugees has turned the
corner in terms of the food situation
and the level of love of perhaps
thousands, people
Cheney applauded the U.N takeover of the camps in northern Iraq now occupied by U.N troops. "We are confident we are confident that we can with draw our forces from there, it is our urgent desire to do so," Cheney said.
In southern Iraq, meanwhile, the U.S. Army airlifted more refugees to
Saudi Arabia, in an operation that is a prelude to the U.S. troops' own departure. The airlift is expected to take about a week.
In wide-ranging interviews on the huge aid effort in the north to aid the Kurds, senior U.S. commanders said they hoped to clear the Turkish border of primitive refugee camps by June.
About 300,000 Kurds arrived at the Turkish border this month, fleeing
Saddam Hussein's postwar crackdown on their rebellion. Allied military officials are building camps for them in northern Iraq.
Military officials said some Kurdish guerrillas had been refusing to allow refugees to go to the camp at Nisir al-Nabi, where he vicioused it was safe from Iraq attack.
Bush sends aid to storm-tossed Kansas citizens
The United Nations said it was sending a convoy carrying personnel and supplies to Zakha today.
The Associated Press
Bush responded less than 24 hours after Finney requested that he declare the two counties disaster areas, so that nearly $2.6 million in aid will be available for tornado victims in the Wichita area.
TOPEKA — President Bush has ordered federal aid to help recovery efforts in Sedgwick and Butter counties after tornadoes ravaged those areas. Gov Joan Finney announced yesterday.
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbach sent condolences yesterday to President Bush for victims of tornadoes in Kansas and Oklahoma, according to the Soviet news agency, Tass.
"We were deeply aggrieved to learn about the natural disaster in your country—the tornadoes that hit Kansas and Oklahoma and caused considerable material damage and the loss of lives. Gorbach's message as saying,
"Mr. President, please accept the condolences and compassion of all Soviet people for the American people and bereaved families," it said.
Finney submitted her request Sunday in a letter through the Federal Emergency Management Agency's regional office in Kansas City, Mo.
"On behalf of the people of Kansas who have suffered such tremendous losses from the weekend storms, we thank the president for his swift action to provide additional relief." Finney said in a statement.
Nineteen people died when torna
Paris of southeast, north-central and northeast Kansas also suffered storm damage Finney already covered by federal declaration covering 10 counties.
douched down across Kansas on Friday night, and hundreds of homes were destroyed. A majority of the deceased lived in a mobile home park in Andover, a small town just east of Wichita.
Finney's request was designed to make available more than $1.9 million in federal money and more than $643,000 in state money available through an existing disaster relief fund.
Affected families could receive up to $11,000 to cover the loss of furniture, clothing and other uninsured personal property. They could also receive grants to cover six months' rent for a new home or apartment.
State officials also hope to make homeowners, businesses and renters eligible for federal Small Business Tax Credit, so they recover from uninsured losses.
Individuals and business owners who sustained losses in Butler and Sedgwick counties may call 1-800-462-9029 to inquire about available assistance. The hearing and speech team may use 1-800-462-7585 for assistance.
The numbers will be in operation from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day.
See related story
Page 16
STANLEY COVINGTON
Midair takeoff
Tony Allen, Overland Park senior, and Jason Johntz, Prairie Village junior, test a plastic-foam airplane that Allen bought from a
India Languages
toy store in Overland Park. The two were reminiscing about childhood toys yesterday by the Campanile.
Fulcher may have been overpaid at Salvation Army shelter
Former director files formal complaint with assistant dean
Kansan staff writer
FORMER
By Benjamin W. Allen
The former director of the Salvation Army homeless shelter said there were discrepancies between the number of hours worked by Darren Fulcher, incoming student-body president, and the number of hours he was paid for by the KU community-service program.
Jeeanne Blankenship, the former director, said she filed a formal complaint about the discrepancies in Kaiser, assistant dean of student life.
Blankenship did not say how many hours were in question.
Fulcher, who will become student body president tomorrow, said that questions were raised about nine hours of community work but that he thought the matter had been dealt with and a hoe committee, which included students, the Organizations and Activities Center and Student Senate members.
Fulcher said the ad hoc committee recommended that he pay the community-service program nine hours and about $39, which he could not accept.
He said the committee included Mike Schreiner, current student body president, David Hardy, assistant
director of the Organizations and Activities Center, Lisa Krisgaten, director of the KU community-service program, Carl Danon, current Senate treasurer, and Su Confort. Current Senate administrative assistant.
Schreiner said that the committee met April 4 and that it was his understanding there were 44 hours of work in question.
The KU community-service program matches volunteers with community-service organizations and helps them time they work for the organization
'From what I could tell from the committee, everything was resolved. The committee was a special effort to make sure everything was OK.'
Schreiner said that the idea for the
He said financing for the program was allocated by Senate from the Educational Opportunity Fund.
program had been around for several years but that not until the 1889-90 academic year did it become effective.
Darren Fulcher Incoming Student Senate president
Fulcher began working for the Salvation Army in early November and continued until just before spring break.
Both Eversole and Hardy said they could not comment because the situation might be a student disciplinary matter.
Blankenship said the committee also included Ann Eversole, director of the Organization and Activities Center.
"Lots of people know about this." Blankenship said. "As I became unhappy with the way it was handled, I went up the ladder."
Kaiser said he could neither confirm nor deny that a formal complaint had been filed because the national Rights and Privacy Act prohibited him from discussing student records.
"If there were a complaint filed, I couldn't discuss it." Kaiser said.
Fulcher said he was unaware of any complaint being filed against him or of any disciplinary hearings been scheduled about the matter.
"From what I could tell from the committee, everything was resolved." Pulcher said. "The committee told me to make sure everything was OK."
2
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Rain
HI:58*
LO:41*
62/46
65/56
65/43
52/35
75/54
81/53
86/74
Today's Forecast
Light rain today, with temperatures rising and thunderstorms expected by Thursday. High 58/ Low 41.
Salina
57/41
KC
Dodge City
61/38
60/43
Wichita
61/43
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
3-day Forecast
Wednesday - Partly cloudy. High 67/ Low 45.
Thursday - Cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms. High 71/ Low 49.
Friday - Cloudy with thunderstorms in the afternoon.
High 78/ Low 54.
forecast by Mike Schriever
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
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■ KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
*Managed With The Student In Mind!
KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
On campus
■ KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at the southwest lobby in the Burge Union.
- Christian Science Organization will meet at 6 p.m. Call for the location.
Gulf War veterans at 7 p.m. at the Lawrence Senior Center 745 Ver
KU Chess Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Parmar C in the Kansas Union. United Veterans Organization of United States, "We welcome Home," ceremony for Persian
- Undergraduate Philosophy Club will conduct elections for next year's president and editor of Premise at 7 p.m. at Pywetacker's, 10 E. Ninth St.
- Voice will meet at 7 p.m. at 1204 Oread Ave.
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will sponsor an eating disorder support group at 7:30 p.m. at Watkins Memorial Health Center
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For more information call the Lesbian Services of Kansas at 864-3091.
Police report
A man was taken into custody between 3 and 4 p.m. Saturday at Louise's Bar, 1009 Massachusetts St. Lawrence police reported. The man had escaped from the Topeka Correctional Facility. He was released to the Kansas Department of Corrections.
sored by the Delta Sigma Theta sorority, Lawrence police reported. Twelve people involved in the fight were treated for minor injuries at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, but no arrests were made.
A gun was fired between 11 p.m. and midnight Saturday at the National Guard Armory, 200 N. Iowa St., during a fight at a party spon-
A person took two fried chicken wings and two chicken breasts between 6 and 7 p.m. Sunday from Dillons, 1015 W. 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported. The鸡片parts were valued at $4.78
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 30, 1991
Campus/Area
3
House may cut $200 million from state programs
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - A House committee approved about $200 million in cuts to state programs last night.
The recommendations will go before the full House this morning, and unless a last-minute tax increase is passed, legislators will have little choice but to accept the cuts.
The House Appropriations Committee debated the measure for almost eight hours yesterday.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, attempted to restore about $14 million to the Board of Regents budget but was unsuccessful.
Sobach that even with the restoration, higher education financing in fiscal 1992
would have ended up lower than it was in fiscal 1991.
"We lose all that we've gained with the Margin of Excellence, as far as putting our universities on a level playing field when competing for faculty," he said. "I think we should fund these budgets at least at the base level."
But State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, said the Regents had enjoyed an increase in their budgets of 13.2 percent in the past two years.
"I think we’re in this situation because of overexpending in the last two years," he said.
Other programs face large cuts as well. If the plan passes through the Legislature, 20 full-time positions in the Department of
Revenue and eight full-time positions in the Department of Commerce would be eliminated. Employees in other state agencies would face furloughs.
In addition, two minimum-security prisons would be shut down, and a plan to close two state mental hospitals would be prepared to meet an undetermined 1983 date.
One program that survived at least some cuts was the highway fund.
Originally, the recommendation was to out $10 million from the program and finance the state highway patrol out of the highway fund that would have issued a gas tax that would have raised $21 million
But an amendment removed that financing obligation and placed the responsibility back to banks.
Legislators tried three times to reinstitute the recommendation, but they failed each time.
the tax.
State Rep. Gary Blumenthal, D-Merriam,
said the committee's defense of the $2.6-billion highway fund was ludicrous.
"I don't know how you all can defend ours what you're doing to some other programs," he said. "I just think it's outrageous. Simply outrageous."
Meanwhile, the Senate Ways and Means Committee met briefly last night to discuss both plans.
Committee chairperson State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, said he would look over the House committee's plan and decide what kind of action he would take.
He has said in the past that he would like to cut budgets across the board rather than individually.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, to continuing to push for a tax increase, however, and another tax bill was introduced in the Senate committee.
Winter said that the House committee's action would prove to legislators that there was a need for a tax increase and that the bill would be passed on the Senate floor as early as today.
Sculptor awarded grant for research
"Any vote we have on taxes is not legitimate until the opponents lay out their alternative," he said. "I think we just have to let him know how painful these cuts are going to be."
By Sarah Davis Konson staff writes
It all started with a 4-foot-tall, 300 pound purple head.
That was when Jeff Listerman, Lawrence junior, realized that the all weather sculpture he created two years ago would be more than just a work of art.
He pictured his large-scale artwork as sculpture that could be used on a playground.
"I wanted to design sculpture so kids could best interact both physically and psychologically in terms of what's best to facilitate their fantasies," said Listerman, a ceramics major.
To help him in the beginning stages of his plans, Listerman received $1,000 to help support his research project. He was one of 20 students selected to receive the undergraduate research award for Summer, 1991
J. Michael Young, director of the honors program, said Listerman's project was selected because it was interesting and different.
Listerman said he wanted to research the subject because he believed in stimulating children's imaginations.
"It struck us as a nice proposal because it was something that would pay off in the student's own work, and it will benefit other people who want to work in playground design by bringing together information that is scattered in many different sources," he said.
"I want to give them less Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and more quality stimulation like Dr. Seuss and
Maurice Sendak (who wrote "Where the Wild Things Are")," he said. "And I thought, 'Why not sculpture for children that will stimulate their imagination like the best of the children's literature?'"
Last semester, Listerman made a 2-foot model of a playground sculpture.
The figure, a grinning cyclops, was composed of triangles and rectangles, held a saxophone and wore an Egyptian headaddress. Tiny chairs for children were attached to the sides of the walls in its hollow base.
While creating the project, Listerian realized that designing playground sculpture would be more complex than simply molding clay. He applied for the research grant to build a sculpture park involved in researching his project.
His project has three steps
Although he will not create any playground sculptures this summer, Listerian plans to examine the fun materials involved in creating the sculptures.
First he will examine the legal requirements concerning playground equipment. Then he will determine physical materials that he is allowed to use to build the sculpture. After he collects that data, he will decide how he would design a large-scale sculpture.
He plans to look at code regulations, visit material outlets and talk with artists and urban planners.
"It's like a puzzle in having to make it safe and legal," he said. "You have to fit it in within the boundaries."
M. R.
Jeff Listernman, Lawrence junior, displays "Sauce Jack," one of his ceramic sculptures. Listernman's work as a sculptor inspired research undergraduate research awards.
Bond, trial date set for assault, kidnapping suspect
Bv Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Bond of $10,000 and a preliminary trial date were set yesterday at the arrangement of a Kamaso City Kan, man charged with the murder of a married sexual battery of a 21-year-old KU student.
Patrick James Harris, 20, 2922 W. 41th St.
Kansas City, Kan., was given a trial date of
June 7, 2023.
The two charges are felonies.
According to Lawrence police reports, the student was walking on Kansas Highway 10 about 12:30 a.m. Saturday near the Knights of Columbus Hall, 2206 E. 23rd St., after a party.
She was looking for a friend who also was walking along the road and with whom she had an affection. She had to come
Four men in a car pulled up alongside her, and one man grabbed her and forced her into the car, according to police reports. The car then headed east toward Kansas City.
At the Johnson County border, about 10 miles from where she was picked up, the student noticed a Johnson County police car with its emergency lights on, police said.
She hit the horn and interfered with the driver of the car enough so that he had to pull over, according to police reports. The student fled the car and ran to the police car.
Lt. John Ward of the Johnson County Sher-
iff's Office said the student told the two
women to "not go anywhere."
The officers then pulled the car over.
The officers notified Lawrence police because the crime occurred in Douglas County.
Ward said that when Lawrence police arrived, the Johnson County police turned the vehicle around.
Only Harris and a second man were taken in by Lawrence police, according to police reports. The second man was wanted by the FBI as a witness in another case.
Body-shop owners hit hard by storm of hail damage repairs
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Anyone who owns a car struck by hail during Sunday's storm may want the damage repaired quickly.
rough duck.
"I'm still making estimates for the other (storm)," said Don Crow, manager of Dale Wiley Body and Paint Center, 2840 Iowa St.
Sunday.
Because of the two hail storms in recent weeks, estimates at the shop are backed up for a week, and actual repairs are backed up to October or November. Crow said.
Tough luck
Scott Radford, owner and manager of Hadl Collision Repair, 3401 W. Sixth St., said his shop had given six or seven estimates yesterday for Sunday's storm.
He said he received about three telephone calls concerning hail damage that occurred
Although Hadi Collison is taking estimates, that shop also is backed up, he said.
The estimates have ranged from $1,500 to $3,000 for this storm, compared to $3,000 and $4,000 for previous storms.
"It's lighter than what we had a month ago," he said.
"I don't expect us to get done with the majority of the hail damage repairs until late September or early October," Radford said.
The shop has hired four extra full-time employees to help with the increased business, Radford said.
"The last storm buried us," he said.
Radford said that his shop still was trying to fit collision work into its schedule but that vehicles were backed up, waiting to be painted.
Norman Beers, owner of Wayne's Body Shop, 1214 E. 23rd St., said his estimates for the storm were backed up into June or July, while repairs are backed up until January 1992.
Just as other shop owners have, Beers has hired extra help to accommodate the workload.
The shooting death that occurred between 4:30 and 5:28 a.m. Saturday was ruled a suicide yesterday by Lawrence police and coroner Carol Moddrell.
The incident was investigated as a self-inflicted gunshot wound after police found the victim in a residence on the 400 block of Arkansas Street. Michale Kike, 38, was proclaimed dead at Lawrence Memorial Hospital later that day.
Shooting death ruled a suicide Kansan staff report
Moddellre that detectives had to combine their reports with hers to determine whether the death was accidental.
Lawrence police Lt. Mke Hall said Kite died from a single bullet wound to the chest.
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Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Questionable looks
Supreme Court's decision favors middle class; allows police to give chase for suspicion alone
If you are white, from a middle-class family and have not had many unwarranted encounters with the police, then last Wednesday's Supreme Court decision that allows police officers to chase people without reasonable suspicion may not seem like a big deal to you.
The 7-2 vote in favor of reinstating a five-year sentence on Hodari D, a California man who fleed at the sight of police and dropped crack cocaine rock during the chase, may seem justified.
However, the issue is not about his guilt, but rather the notion of chasing people just because they look suspicious.
If you come from an area where the police have a less than friendly reputation; if you, your family and your friends have been subjected to harassment, and the phrase "innocent until proven guilty" seems more theoretical than practical; or if you are Black, Hispanic or what is referred to as a minority, then the Supreme Court's decision seems to give the police carte blanche to chase you, and everyone else you know, on a whim.
Of course, it is not that every police officer is racially suspect. But in light of the Rodney King episode, it cannot be denied that relations between the police and certain ethnic groups are strained.
For the Supreme Court to bolster the power of the police so they can chase people on a hunch is a questionable decision. For every Hodari D, how many innocent people will be chased just because they seemed to be acting suspiciously? What redress will they have?
Those who argue that innocent people have no reason to run from the police should talk to those who have learned from bitter experience that it is not a good idea to hang around to find out if the officers coming toward you are from the "hit-first and ask-questions-later" school of ethics.
Clare McGinn for the editorial board
It is unfortunate that a few unfair officers have engendered so much fear and suspicion among certain communities. It is equally sad that the police find themselves on the defensive. It is understandable that they are frustrated by the vast diversity of crimes that they are trying to combat. But innocent people should have the right to move freely without the threat of being chased simply because they look suspicious.
The Supreme Court's decision will serve only to confirm the feelings of many people in this country that the law favors the white, middle class majority and that freedom is a relative concept.
NCAA regulations
Swimming coaches,athletes shouldn't complain
W whenever the NCAA passes legislation, it is almost inevitable that affected coaches and athletes will find something to complain about.
plain about.
The latest controversy, involving restrictions on required swimming practice times, is no exception.
The coaches complain of confusion about the role of the coach during the voluntary, supervised training. The NCAA defines supervision as spotting or providing safety or skill instruction. In effect, the coach, who is supervising, is also coaching.
The legislation, which will go into effect in August, limits required, supervised workouts to 20 hours a week in the 22-week college swimming season. Any workouts in excess of the 20 hours are voluntary and cannot be made mandatory.
Although the coaches may require only 20 hours of workout time a week, they can provide as many voluntary hours as they want. The NCAA allows coaches to be present at these voluntary practices,
Other Voices
Each time the NCAA enacts a new rule, the coaches spend much of their time trying to get around it. However, in this case, there is nothing to avoid. All the NCAA has done is to limit required practices for those student-athletes who need the extra time to study. After all, that is why they attend school.
and the athletes may use them if they wish. It appears to be a huge waste of time for coaches to argue for something that they already have.
NCAA coaches and athletes need to set an example by respecting the rules made by their governing body. Stanford's Janet Evans and Tennessee's Melvin Stewart dropped out of college last week rather than adhering to the new practice restrictions. If other athletes think that the available workouts in the NCAA are not adequate, maybe they should follow suit.
Juli Watkins for the editorial board
Journalists proffer different viewpoints about publishing the identities of rape victims
Certainly, when a rape victim voluntarily chooses to tell her story public and surrender her anonymity the press should use that opportunity to reveal the intimate, psychological trauma a victim suffers. But this newspaper thinks that the privacy of victims is precious and that any disclosure of their identities should be justified only in the context of an overriding public burden. If the victim's identity could be crossed simply for the benefit of competitive business considerations or to pander to the prudent curiosity of the consuming public.
From the Denver Post
- From the Arizona Republic
It is possible that the accuser would have received the same rough handling if her complaint had dealt with someone other than a Kennedy nephew — if the Palm Beach incident had involved, for example, the family of Newt Gingrich or Bob Dole. But when the police are fumbling an investigation this badly and the accusator is forced to perform high pressure spin control, it would behoove the U.S. press to behave with a good deal more judgment and restraint than some members of the media.
Committed as they are to the principle that people have the right to be informed fully on public issues, including crimes, most journalists are loath to withhold any information. But they also know that in some instances withholding certain information also can be in the public interest. The names of rape victims, in most cases, fall within that category.
The Des Moines Register, which won a Pulitzer Prize last week for its sensitive telling of a rape case by a woman who wanted her story and name known, reported what NBC and the Times had done and also named the woman. The Register offered no explanation for running her name.
Hogwash. Such self-serving statements or total lack of comment by the press does nothing but damage its credibility. How can naming the victim help the public make up its mind about the crime? Or how can we look at (at) a photograph determine guilt or innocence? Isn't that what answers are for?
Delaware County Daily Times, Primos, Pa
The woman who says she was victimized called the police, not the press. Yet she accused someone quite specific — William Kennedy Smith's name has been bandied about in the press for more than two weeks even though no charges have been filed against him — and she appears to be allowing friends to relate her version of what happened to the media. It remains our view, nonetheless, that her name should not be publicized. Rape is a highly invasive crime, and society — unfairly — persists in stigmatizing rape victims.
From the Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch
From the New York Post.
One thing must stand clear above every other element in this controversy. Every publication, every broadcaster, every individual citizen in the United States has an absolute, inalienable right to vote, regardless of national origin. For the government to try to capture or cripple that right would be to destroy the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment.
Amendment. But the right does not make publication proper or decent.
From the Daily News, New York.
The stigma on rape victims is fading, but it's still there, and the publication of these people's names — often against their wishes — would seem to us to be a cruel and not a particularly effective way of combating it. It's hard to believe that more would increase the all-too large number of rapes that go unreported to police.
If a rape victim wishes to make her story known, and her name with it, there are usually ways of doing it. Others will be allowed to keep what privacy they can
- From the Washington Post.
USA Today's policy is not to publish her name unless she consents or her name becomes so commonly known that it would make little sense not to use it. A person who brings a charge of rape has no reason to feel shame, unless he or she knows it is false. And society should never blame any victim of any crime. But a Senate committee found that too many women fear even reporting rapes to the police. While 100,000 rapes were reported last year, up 6 percent from 1989, as many as 1.9 million raps went unreported. In those circumstances, the media must not make it any more difficult for women to report rapes by dragging all those who do under a public spotlight against their will. Rape must stop being a secret shame. To bring it out of the shadows, the media must encourage rape victims to talk, not frighten them into silence.
From USA Today
- Editorials reflect the opinion of the University Daily 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 signed author.
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.
WHERE TO,
MR. SUNUNU?
TO VEGAS.
IT'S BUSINESS...
I SWEAR.
BUT FIRST WE
GOTTA SWING
BY THE BANK
ROGER.
OVER.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Wording change weak
KU has decided to change the wording in its anti-discriminatory policy from "sexual preference" to "sexual orientation." For what reason? I would like to know, from anyone in a position to know these things, what specifically makes a person biologically gay or lesbian. Not merely a biological condition that most gays and lesbians have, but something that leaves the person with homosexuality free of that harm. My suspicion is that there isn't one but that the idea that people have no control in this matter is just wishful thinking.
Consider the implications of the concept that "sexual orientation" would have on other non-traditional sexual relationships.
People who have sex with children wouldn't be prosecuted if the child consents—after all, if a person has no control in the matter, what difference do it make whether the person is 6 or 60 years old? The court will determine how much child mean just as much if knowing about other types of sexual relationships is meaningless.
Rapists would be in the same position — if the rapist is oriented toward violence and sex but can't find anyone to consent, how can we look down upon him or her because of biological argues that he or she can't control? And when someone gives you advice on lifestyle because it's so unpopular' argument, think about these other situations and consider what that argument fully implies.
And if someone asked me, "Why did you choose to be a heterosexual?" I could honestly say that when I knew more than one lifestyle, I chose to be heterosexual. Although I wouldn't place as much importance on sex in a relationship as others, I still take pride in my decision, and it offends me that others — with no substantial evidence — dismiss my decision as inevitable. (What does inevitability imply about bisexuals? Does it mean that they have the biological condition only a little bit?) And although I don't believe that being gay or lesbian is a good thing, I have a lot more respect for a person who freely chooses his or her lifestyle than someone who refused to explore the circumstances leading up to his or her feelings about something as personal as his or her sexuality, but rather hiding behind a "that's the way it" mentality and taking offense when anyone questions the way the way or she has made. I find it very weak that these people think they cannot change something this close to them. If we can't change ourselves, what is there that we can?
Dan Amego Kansas City, Kan., sophomore
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RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
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by David Rosenfield
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Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be prepared.
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 Stuffer-Flall Hall.
Sketch
I HOPE RICKEY HEADERSON
BREAKS LOU BROCK'S STOLEN
BASE RECORD TONIGHT.
I ADMIRE PEOPLE WHO
EXCEL AT WHAT THEY DO.
DON'T YOU?
I HOPE RICKEY HENDERSON BREAKS LOU BROCK'S STOLEN BASE RECORD TONIGHT.
I ADMIRE PEOPLE WHO EXCEL AT WHAT THEY DO.
DON'T YOU?
HENDERSON'S A CINCH TO MAKE IT TO THE BASEBALL HALL OF FAME.
DON'T PEOPLE LIKE THAT INSPIRE YOU TO GO OUT AND CHALLENGE YOURSELF TO FULFILL YOUR DREAMS?
NO, ACTUALLY, THEY INSPIRE ME TO GRAB A BEER, FLOP DOWN ON THE SOFA FOR THREE HOURS AND WATCH A BALL GAME ON THE TUBE.
you worry me.
NO, ACTUALLY, THEY INSPIRE ME TO GRAB A BEER, FLOP DOWN ON THE SOFA FOR THREE HOURS AND WATCH A BALL GAME ON THE TUBE.
you worry me.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 30, 1991
5
Lawrence to honor gulf war veterans
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The United Veterans Organizations of Douglas County will honor local Operation Desert Storm veterans during a ceremony tonight.
The welcome home ceremony, sponsored by Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 852, Disabled American Veterans, Chapter 22; and the American Legion, will be at 7 onight at the Senior Center. 745 Vermont St
Richard Miller, service officer for the VFW and the DAV, said that Persian Gulf War veterans from the Douglas County area would be the alls of honor at the ceremony. All veterans will be recognized, however.
"We didn't want to ignore the veterans like they were after Vietnam," he said.
He said he did not want to see anything like that happen again.
Miller said he recalled when one of his friends was spat upon after returning from the Vietnam War. He said he did not want to see
"We want to recognize all veterans," he said.
The ceremony will consist of several speakers, including a former prisoner of war and a local clergyman.
SCHOLARSHIP HALLS
WE'RE CLOSER TO YOU
THAN YOU THINK!
A moment of silence will be observed for those who lost their lives during wartime, he said. "Taps" also will be played.
Miller said he expected 25 to 50 gulf war veterans to attack the enemy.
war veterans to attend the ceremony. Miller, who was drafted during WWII, and his company held the ceremony would raise awareness about the plight of disabled veterans.
Many disabled veterans have trouble affording medical care, he said.
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
Tom Berger, assistant director of the office of affirmative action, said that all the veterans who came to the ceremonies would be recogized.
Display designer
Amanda Stullen, Topea sophomore, prepares a sign for the display booth in front of Bailey Hall. Stullen said that the display
was to promote Scholarship Hall Week and that another display would be set up in the Kansas Union.
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LEAVING LAWRENCE FOR THE SUMMER?
Don't forget to disconnect your cable service and return your converter box to Sunflower Cablevision.
Converter boxes may be returned to Sunflower Cablevision.
644 New Hampshire, Monday-Friday from 8am to 6pm.
Attention Students Living in
Convenient converter pick-up can be organized. This is a new service offered to campus multi-living units. Just plan with your neighbors, then call A-1 Cab at 842-2432 and ask for their
Fraternities and Jayhawk Towers:
package delivery service. There is no charge to you,the student, for this service. More than one converter per delivery is appreciated.
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Bring your KU I.D.
6
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Court will decide if accused abusers may query children
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday agreed to take a new look at the right of alleged child abusers in question their young accusers in court.
The court said it would hear an appeal by an Illinois man who was sentenced to 10 years in prison for sexually abusing a 4-year-old girl.
The justice said they would decide whether young children who are available to testify must take the witness stand in such cases when other witnesses have testified that the child told them they were abused.
In another matter, the court, complaining about being burdened with frivolous appeals, voted 6-3 to crack on some of the people who file them.
In an unsigned order, the court changed one of its procedural rules so it could strip some poor people of the privilege of filing appeals without having to pay a $300 filing fee and significant printing costs.
The three dissenters called the action a serious mistake that created an unfair distinction between the rich and the poor.
In the child-abuse matter, the justices last year said the constitutional right of defendants to confront their accusers was not absolute. The court allowed states to shield young witnesses from face-to-face confrontations with child-abuse defendants — permitting use of videotaped testimony, witness testimony and mony by those who interviewed the alleged abuse victims.
But the court said judges must have evidence that the child faced the risk of serious emotional trauma.
In the case of the Illinois man, the child, identified as S.G., did not testify at his trial. But five witnesses—the child's babysitter, her mother, a doctor, a nurse and doctor—said S.G. told them she was assaulted.
An Illinois appeals court ruled that S.G.'s statements to the babysitter, mother and officer were spontaneous made soon after the attack
The appeals court said the statements the child made to the doctor and nurse some time later also were admissible.
"Whether the (alleged victim) is
Tax on Indian-owned lands to be evaluated
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday agreed to decide whether states and counties may be permitted Indian-owned land on reservations.
The court, setting the stage for a ruling that could have broad significance for tribes and their members, said it would study a dispute about taxes imposed on land within a Yakima American Indian reservation in Washington state.
A ruling is expected in 1992. The Yakima Nation and Yakima County, Wash., each asked the justices to review a
ruling announced by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last June.
The appeals court partially reversed a decision by a federal judge who had killed a lawsuit by county officials seeking to impose property taxes and taxes on the sale of American Indian land.
In reviving the suit, the appeals court said property taxes — but not sales taxes — sometimes are permitted on what are known as fee lands" on American Indian land, vally owned, either by the tribe or individuals, in contrast to federally owned reservation land.
unavailable is totally irrelevant to the determination of whether an out-of-court statement of that declarant
Earthquake devastates towns in Soviet Georgia, killing 40
is admissible under an exception to the hearsay rule," the state court said.
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — A strong earthquake hit Soviet Georgia yesterday, setting off rockiesides in mountain villages at least 40 people, authorities said.
The quake also was felt in neighboring Armenia, which was devastated by a 1988 earthquake that killed more than 60,000 people or injuries were made in Armenia.
Police representative Zurab Kadzhaya in the Georgian town of Kutzai, near the epicenter, said last night that about 40 people were killed and that buildings in five mountain towns suffered widespread damage. The official Tass news agency earlier reported 30 people killed. It was not immediately known how many people were injured.
Fears prevail that the death toll will rise as rescuers search collapsed buildings in villages isolated by severed communications.
An aftershock as powerful as the initial earthquake struck the region at 9:33 p.m. (2:33 p.m. EDT), Tass said. U.S. Geological Survey representative, Timothy Park, Calif., said the aftershock registered 6.2 on the Richter Scale.
Soviet Interior Ministry troops already in the region to quell unrest were ordered to the disaster area to aid in rescue efforts.
The initial quake struck at 12:13 p.m. (5:13 a.m. ekst) in north-central Georgia among the sparsely populated villages and towns in the Caucasus Mountains. It measured 7.1 on the Richter scale, according to the Soviet Union's Central Seismic Station.
The quake's epicenter was near Dzhava, a town of 11,100 people about 60 miles northwest of the Georgian capital of Tbilisi.
In a report from Dzhava, Soviet TV showed collapsed buildings, as well as other buildings with gaping holes. Rescuers standing at a mound of rubble, with their hands and removed large stones in search of further victims.
The independent Interfax news agency said a kindergarten, a high school, a hospital and a printing house — in addition to 30 homes — were among buildings destroyed in Dzhava.
The evening televisionprogram "Vremya" showed rescuers pulling
Soviet Union Center of earthquake measuring 7.1 on Richter scale Georgia Caspian Sea Black Sea Kutaiya
Soviet Union Center of earthquake measuring 7.1 on Richter scale Georgia Caspian Sea Black Sea Kutaisi Leninakan Turkey Azerbaijan Armenia Center of 1988 earthquake Iran
Soviet Union
Map area
Europe
4/29/91 Knight-Rdder Tribune News
an injured woman from a badly damaged building in Dzhava. Another woman sat stunned outside a large house with her arm in a sling.
Veggie bill turned down in Colorado
The Associated Press
DENVER — A bill that would have mixed negatives about vegetables was vetoed by Colorado Gov Roy Romer.
The so-called "veggie bill" was intended to prevent uninformed challenges to the wholesomeness of food products. It would have allowed food producers to sue those who falsely disparage their products.
President Bush's distaste for broccoli would not have been under the measure. But the bill would have applied to the scare that resulted when sprayed on apples to make them more attractive, was said to be harmful to humans.
State Rep. Steve Acquafresca, an apple grower and sponsor of the bill, said existing label and slander laws did not address to address malicious or negligent attacks on food safety.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 30, 1991
7
Nation/World
Johannesburg, S. Africa
Mandela defense wraps up case
Winnie Mandela's defense against assault and kidnapping charges ended yesterday with her lawyers showing a videotape that depicted the assault, saying, dancing and eating in Mandela's company.
Chief defense lawyer George Bicez completed his case with the film showing the three young men attending a funeral with Mandela and taking part in the trial, where they were allegedly being held against their will.
The case against Mandela is expected to go to the judge within days after the prosecution and the defense make final statements. South Africa does not have jury trials.
Prosecutors said Mandela and two co-defendants abducted four young men from a Methodist church home in December 1988 and beat them at Mandela's home in the Black township of Soweto.
The state said the defendants thought the four were either gay or police spies.
One of the four, Stompie Sepei, was killed. Mandela's former bodyguard, Jerry Richardson, was shot in the head by a gunman.
Mandela and her co-defendants said they were not guilty.
Mandela, wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, has testified that she was trying to stop what she thought was homosexual behavior and that she was out of town when the alleged crimes took place.
Nelson Mandela, who was in prison when the alleged crimes took place, did not attend yesterday's hearing.
The videotape showed three of the young men at a funeral in January 1989, during the time they allegedly were captives of the defendants. In the video, the three were dressed in the yellow
tracksuits of the Mandela United Football Club — a now disbanded group that acted as an unofficial guard unit for Winnie Mandela and was accused of terrorizing opponents.
Washington
Outpatient centers called shoddy
Outpatient surgical centers and walk-in clinics independent of hospitals are largely unregulated, leaving an unsuspecting public at risk of shoddy care, according to congressional investigators.
A General Accounting Office study of immediate-care facilities found untrained doctors performing high-risk procedures, misleading advertising and unlicensed, uninspected facilities, investigator Frank Papineau told a House subcommittee.
Papineau said that although outpatient centers could offer cheaper care and more convenience and privacy, too often it was found that procedures performed in such clinics were conducted in spartan settings with skeleton crews that were never inspected.
"Under such conditions, they are a refuge for the unqualified, the unscrubulous and the undertrained," he testified to the House Small Business subcommittee on regulation.
Twenty years ago, few ambulatory care facilities existed. Today, there are an estimated 23,000 state-licensed ambulatory surgical, diagnostic and immediate-care facilities, according to subcommittee staff. Forty-one states have licensing programs, and their regulations vary.
Harare, Zimbabwe
Leader urges decent shelter for all
The Zimbabwe leader urged the 13th session of the U.N. Commission on Human Settlements to intensify efforts toward reaching its goal of providing decent shelter for all people by 2000.
participants that one-quarter of the world's people are homeless or living in squatter.
President Robert Mugabe opened a United Nations conference on housing yesterday by telling
Washington
He said governments, independent aid agencies and private business should work together to help the 1 billion people that the commission estimates are without homes or living in wretched dwellings.
Effort for interest rate cuts slowed
A Bush administration effort to win global interest rate cuts to help end the U.S. recession ran into more foreign opposition yesterday despite U.S. warnings about uncertainties facing the world economy.
"While each country looks to its own interest, we must work collectively to achieve our common objectives of freedom and prosperity," Brady told finance officials gathered for the spring meetings of the 155 nation International Monetary Fund and World Bank.
This year's gathering, which will end today, has been dominated by an administration plea for lower interest rates as a way to boost global demand.
President Bush took the uneasy step of inviting the top finance officials from the world's seven largest industrial countries to a White House session Sunday in which he personally appealed for lower rates.
"A recovery of world economic activity is by no means certain," Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady said, raising the specter that without more focus on growth, downturns in the United States, Britain and Canada could spread to other countries.
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8
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Mission continues despite problems
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The astronauts aboard Discovery observed eerie waves of light above the horizon in a "Star Wars" experience and found control recorders struggled to fix data recorders needed for other tests.
Six experiments were canceled as a result of the recorder trouble. The Defense Department expects to lose more data if the problem is not resolved by the end of the eight day flight.
NASA flight directors and Pentagon officials insisted the mission would not be harmed by the loss of what they termed secondary experiments. Nonetheless, there was dispairment. One space policy analyst said that the problem of trouble on the seven previous military shuttle flights, all secret
The seven astronauts tried four times Sunday night to activate the two recorders before turning their attention to instruments unaffected
by the failure Engineers on the continued to work on the problem
A fifth repair attempt was made yesterday afternoon following a break in the obstacle.
Three of five scientific instruments that constitute one of Discovery's primary payloads valued in the billions of million hampered by the recorder problem
The instrument considered most important by the military has its own recorders, which successfully coloured images on atmospheric light, or aurora.
The crew also took pictures of a rapid-fire sequence of steering jet blasts. They captured that on film and were unfaithfully unaffected by the record problem.
Officials of the Strategic Defense Initiative, better known as "Star Wars," said they needed information about naturally occurring phenomena to develop sensors that could detect enemy missiles amid such clutter.
SINCE 1983
Fans for all seasons
Carolyn Winger, Clay Center senior (far left), and Jennifer Bernaldi, Scottsdale, Ariz., junior (far right), cheer on the Kansas baseball team as Kathy Riesenberg, Carroll, Iowa, junior, and
Juhe Jacobson/KANSAN
Becky Overly, Overland Park junior, huddle against the wind. The four said that this season they had attended every home game and several away games.
Star Wars experiments
Shuttle crew will test instruments for detecting missile launches. Sensors might be used in a future space-based anti-missile system
Sensor satellite
Sensor satellite
■ Launched from shuttle
■ Telescope detects infrared light, is supercooled to improve its sensitivity
■ Positioned 1.5 to 6.5 miles from chemical release satellite
Chemical release satellite
Battery
- Launched from shuttle
- Releases gases similar to those in the exhaust of a ballistic missile launched from ground
Telescope Battery TV cameras Tape recorders
Chemical release port Chemical tank Radar reflector Solar cells
Space shuttle
Ground observers Control and data collection from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.
Other experiments: Sensor satellite will observe,
■ Gases from shuttle engine exhaust.
■ Gases ejected from canisters in the
shuttle's cargo bay.
C
Observation plane from Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M.
Jury selection begins in car-seat case
SOURCE: NASA
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Jury selection began yesterday in the trial of a man charged with vehicular homicide in his 3-year-old daughter's death because she was not in a seat restraint.
A defense lawyer said 30-year-old Ramiro de Jesus Rodriguez was singled out for prosecution to teach other parents a lesson.
It is rare for a parent to be held legally responsible for failing to restrain a child killed in an auto accident. In 1863, a Cincinnati man was acquitted of vehicular homicide in the death of his 2-year-old son in a crash five days after an Ohio law took effect requiring child restraints.
A prosecutor said Rodriguez's data was to blame for the fatal accident.
Attorneys screened more than half of 40 prospective jurors in the courtroom of Circuit Judge Sidney B.Shapiro. Allmight all said they were familiar with the case. Selection of the six-member jury was set to
Florida man faces homicide charges for neglecting to restrain his child
Rodriguez said he was still grieving for his daughter Veronica, who flew out of her mother's arms when Rodriguez made a left turn and his car collided with a van Aug. 3 as they drove to their Hiahate home from a store.
resume tomorrow and the trial was expected to last a week.
The vehicular homicide charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison, but prosecutors said they would seek probation.
Florida law requires motorists to use seat belts or a secure safety seat for children younger than six years old.
the penalty for failing to use a child-restraint seat for children 5 and under from $7 to $100 starting in August. The ban was not yet gone before the governor
Defense attorney Reemberto Díaz questioned why prosecutors were pursuing the case of Rodriguez, an immigrant from Nicaragua.
Because of the case, state legislators approved a bill that would raise
"You have a poor Hispanic immigrant who has been selected for this prosecution, and I think that's what Diaz said outside the courtroom."
Rodriguez did not receive a ticket at the time of the accident. He was arrested nearly three months later at a police station where he worked as a cook
Atlantic City dispute yields closure of services
The Associated Press
Knight-Ridder. Tribune News/BILL BAKER
'This city is not broke. This is not Philadelphia. The politicizing has got to stop.'
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Libraries closed and trash went uncollected yesterday in this casino resort as a fight between the mayor and the city council over layoffs came to a head.
Luke Witherspoon
"Oh, it's a holiday," Donna Williams said as she tugged at the locked door of the city's Free Public Library.
Told it was part of a closing ordered last week by Mayor Jim Whelan, Williams said, "I think it stinks."
Luke Witherspoon Atlantic City municipal employee
Gamblers visiting the city professed little or no knowledge of the partial shutdown of non-essential municipal services.
bus and by car and that they rarely ventured outside.
forced him to hold the line.
"I haven't noticed anything," said Joe Manney of Downsville, N.Y., as he stood in the lobby of the Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort. "We walk across the boardwalk a little, but we really don't see anything else."
Whelan ordered the shutdown Friday in a struggle with a city council angered by the layoff of 100 of the city's 1,700 employees.
Police and fire departments remained on the job, and tax, welfare and communications offices remained open. One health clinic also stayed open. In addition to library closures, there was no trash collection, municipal court or rides for senior citizens.
deserve this," said Luke Witheros-
op, a shop steward for Local 331
and a clerk in the Atlantic City health
department.
About 20 municipal employees protested peacefully in front of city hall to call for an end to the dispute.
"This city is not broke. This is not Philadelphia," he said. "The politicizing has got to stop."
can for an end to the impala
"Taxpayers of this city don't
Donald Jones of the National League of Cities in Washington said he could not recall a similar government shutdown in his 32 years in government.
"Interruptions have come sometimes as a result of labor-management disputes and strikes by employees." Jones said. "But I don't recall where a city council-mayor dispute shut down a government."
Whelan said budget pressures had
Many said that they had arrived by
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THE HOLDEN GROUP
6900 COLLEGE BOULEVARD
Suite 480
Overland Park, KS 66212
(913) 491-3729
An equal opportunity employer.
The last days of school are upon you! How about extra cash for the summer?
You can have cash for the summer while you store your stereo equip., color TV, apt. size refrig., camera, or many other valuables! Bring them in and receive a loan, then when fall semester comes, just redeem them. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY. WE ALSO BUY THESE ITEMS IF YOU DON'T PLAN TO RETURN NEXT FALL.
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718 New Hampshire 843-4344
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
749-0055
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620 W.12th (Right behind the Crossing)
620 W. 12th (Right behind the Crossing)
Taste the Rudy's difference! Our classic, spicy italian wine sauce is deliciously unique. In addition to our old-fashioned homemade crust, we are proud to serve you our new golden, honey whole wheat crust.
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One Large Pizza
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 30, 1991
9
Pittsburg professor writes a new game
The Associated Press
PITTSBURG — Nine hundred years of history melt away when students sit down at computers to play computer games. Pittsburgh State University professor.
The computer game, "Medieval Lords — Soldier Kings of Europe," was written to teach the political, tactical and financial aspects of the Age provinces, said the the game's creator, professor Martin Campion.
"I want (the students) to learn something about the conditions of the Middle Ages and some of the things that helped to determine the success and failure of states in the Middle Ages," Campion says. The game also lessons (lessons about European geography during the period 1028-1530.
At the same time, he acknowled-
s that the war is attracted to
the war games aspect of his
His first program, "Rails West," "a game about the railroad roads"
Campion says he started programming "Medieval Lords" about three years ago. He shows a printout 3 years later of the game's command commands, which is the source
program for the IBM-compatible PC version.
Up to 10 players can play the game at one time. They choose to be different characters in the game.
Players can be an adviser to a sultan, khan, emir, count, duke or king.
Europe and the Middle East are divided into 159 provinces and collections of provinces called domains.
"They all have different aims than the king does," Campion explains. Players keep track of such factors as their own loyalty to the nobles in each province.
The status of the player is measured in the gain or loss of points through the capture of territory and winning of battles.
“Declaring war doesn't cost anything, but if you're going to want to fight it, you’re going to have to raise an army, and an army costs.” “Campion says. ‘It’s very easy to go bankrupt in the course of fighting a war if you haven’t spent a whole lot of time training your soldiers up your towns, who supply money, or building up your nobles, who supply cheaper troops, or both.”
Campion is already turning his attention and his programming skills to new computer games, including one about ancient history
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Congratulations Class of 1991!
1991! KU KU KU KU KU
A house is on the top of a hill. The hill is divided into two sections by a road that goes up to the house. On the left side of the hill, there are many trees. On the right side of the hill, there are fewer trees.
KU KU
KU
ss of
Delta Gamma wishes their seniors good luck!
CONGRATULATIONS AΔΠ SENIORS!
We'll Miss You! Best Wishes—
AΔΠ's
20
Congratulations to our seniors
we're proud of you and we'll miss you!
Good luck in the future.
Love,
Sigma Kappa
QIYE
JING
CHUAN
HUA
HE
XIN
WANG
LI
SHENG
JIA
SUN
FENG
WANG
LI
SHENG
JIA
SUN
FENG
KU INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL
Serving the interests of internationals at KU Wishes to congratulate all graduating seniors. Luck To The Class of 1991!
Congratulations
Congratulations
Tri Delta
Seniors
Good Luck in the Future!
Good Luck To The Class of 1991!
PS
GRADUATE
KU PRINTING SERVICE
Want to say "THANK YOU" for your support
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PRINTING SERVICE
and business.
To the Class of '91 Join Hillel for an Open House on Commencement Day From 4-6 pm at 940 Mississippi.
KANSAS PRINTING SERVICE and
BURGE DUPLICATING CENTER
864-5098
KANSAS UNION DUPLICATING CENTER
864-4908
LEARNED DUPLICATING CENTER
864-5579
WESCOE DUPLICATING CENTER
864-3354
CONGRATULATIONS To the Class of '91
We are here to serve you through the year,offering convenient Duplicating locations on campus for students,staff and faculty.If we can be of service give us a call or drop by one of our four campus locations.
International Students Association
Announces The Election of Officers for 1991-1992
April 30, 5:30 p.m. Governor's Room, Kansas Union
Congratulations To The Graduating Class Of 1991!
for more info call us at 864-4848
Dancing
KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ KΔ
KΔ GOOD LUCK ON FINALS KΔ
KΔ & KΔ
KΔ CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL KΔ
KΔ GRADUATING SENIORS!
-KΔ!
-KΔ!
The Women of Alpha Gamma Delta
△ △ △
"You are and will always be a part of our special family."
Congratulations
1991 Alpha Gam
Graduating Seniors!
Good luck with finals to everyone!
Congratulations
and
Best Wishes
Graduates
-IFC
10
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Aeroflot begins regular Moscow-Miami flights
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Aeroflot has begun the first regularly scheduled flights between Moscow and Miami.
A Soviet jet arrived Sunday at Miami International Airport, the first time in 20 years Aeroflot had a scheduled passenger flight lard in the United States outside of Washington, D.C., or New York, the Soviet national airline said.
Under a treaty negotiated last year, Aerloft will double its weekly departures from the United States this summer to 20. Included is a new, twice-a-week flight from Miami to Moscow by way of Shannon, Ireland.
Aeroflot's new flights are part of the Soviet push to open contacts with the West and to gain much-needed currency.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 30, 1991
11
Semester's end signals stress
Good stress coping skills help keep mental, physical health
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Only four more days of class remain. The pressure is on many students to turn in projects and complete class requirements.
Final exams also loom in the future for most students. All this can add up to stress.
"A little stress is healthy, but when your coping skills break down, it can rapidly become unhealthy," said Charles Yovey, chief of staff at
Watkins Memorial Health Center. "Stress has a profound effect on your body, both physically and mentally."
Headaches, increased stomach acid, skin rashes, lower abdominal problems and heart problems such as palpitations and a faster heartbeat can result from stress. he said. Insomnia also can be a problem.
Janine Demo, coordinator for Watkins' health education department, said a student's eating habits
"They're probably eating more junk food," she said. "Some people, that is how they've always handled it."
also could suffer
Staying up all night is additional stress that some students have at this time of year. Demo said.
"The best advice is be realistic about your schedule. If you try to do everything, what you lose is your diet, your sleep and your exercise."
"All-nighters are probably the biggest taboo," she said. "You can only physically and mentally concentrate on a subject for so long. Your body is working in overdrive and that lowers your ability to ward off sickness."
tute to sleen
Yockey said that acute stress usually did not last long
Demo recommends that students use a calendar to organize time demands.
But students should not try to relieve stress by drinking alcoholic beverages, she said. Alcohol lowers the immune system more.
"Most students recognize that with the end of their last final, that will be the end of their acute stress," he said.
Tune in, massage out, bathe away stress
By Amv Francis
Kansan staff writer
Stress. It is a part of almost every person's life, but how people choose to deal with stress varies as much as the sources of the stress.
said.
One popular way to deal with stress is to rub it out. Massages have been used and enjoyed for centuries.
Bob Proctor, owner of Home Bodies Activated, 745 New Hampshire St., said a massage rehearsed musculus stiffness by bringing blood to the muscles.
"Most people find it's a time to escape and relieve themselves," he
A massage at Home Bodies Activated costs $25 an hour. A massage at Amma Health Services, 211 E. Holliday Blvd., hour and $40 for an hour, a half.
For those who do not have the budget to afford a visit to a massage therapist, there is the option of soliciting a back, or neck-ruin from a friend.
But if the hands on approach is not wanted, natural-sound tapes and subliminal message tapes are available.
Mark Rosebary, retail clerk at Kief's Discount Records and Stereo
Supply, 2429 Iowa St. said natural sounds cassette tapes, such as those featuring the sounds of the ocean, bass drum tapes tape cost between $7 and $12.
Both types of tapes are available at varying prices at record stores in Lawrence.
For those who do not just want to listen to running water but would rather experience it for themselves, there is the option of a warm bath.
Wal Mart, 2727 Iowa St., offers a small package of Acti-Bath for $2.46. Acti-Bath is a water tablet that carbonates the water, causing a tingling
Bubble bath is another option for bathtub fun.
feeling.
Students who want a more active approach to stress relief can go to Robinson Center. Swimming, racquetball, tennis and weight lifting are available. Ice skating is also available. Robinson is open for student use from 5 to 10:30 p.m.
Reading a favorite magazine or book while in the bathtub also can be relaxing. But if a student's eyes are weary of reading, background music and a wet washcloth covering the eyes may be the answer.
A man carries a large bag while stepping onto the dock.
Shell docking
Former Kansas crew coach Dave Jewett and his wife, Jennifer, lift their shell from the Kansas River. The Jewettes just moved back to Lawrence from Cincinnati. They spent yesterday afternoon on the river for exercise and enjoyment.
Texas nuclear-weapons plant unsafe, authorities say
The Associated Press
Finding may jeopardize Amarillo plant's billion-dollar plans for expansion
WASHINGTON — The General Accounting Office said yesterday that a nuclear-weapons plant in Texas had been plagued by safety problems, including exposure of workers to uranium dust.
"Workers were exposed to the black dust for years without being aware of its radioactive hazard," the report said.
Pantex, the nation's only final assembly plant for nuclear bombs and missile warheads, was described as having one of the worst occupational safety records in the Energy Department's weapons complex.
It said exposure of workers to tritium and depleted uranium raised questions about health and safety procedures.
GAO, an investigative arm of Congress, also cited deficiencies in the plant's radiation protection program.
In 1989, a radiation specialist came in contact with black dust that consisted of depleted uranium.
Authorities found that although workers had observed the black dust since 1984, nothing had been done
about it
Energy Department officials told GAO that the radiation protection staff at Pantex knew little about tritium and the hazards posed by release of the gas. Few safety measures were implemented by workers from such a release, it said.
Concern over the report's findings
A May 1989 turtlem accident could have been prevented with proper equipment and procedures. GAO reports that the vehicles have been estimated at $3 million.
was expressed by a number of law-
makers, including Rep. Mike Synar,
D-Okla, who had asked the GAO to
minimize the Pantex safety program
"The situation at Pantex indicates that the message of improved safety that DOE Secretary (James) Watkins has been trying to communicate to the nuclear-weapons complex has not spread to Panexus." Sylar said.
GAO said the Energy Department could not be sure the plant was operating safely because it had com-
plleted fewer than half of its safety analysis reports. Those reports, GAO said, should have been completed years ago.
GAO suggested that Congress might consider regulation of Paxen by the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board.
The board regulates safety programs at other plants. But Pantex has been exempted from the board's authority.
GAO said congressional staffers told it Pantex was exempted in 1988
because the operation appeared to be relatively safe at that time. And there was concern that allowing a national security risk could potentially national security risks.
Federal officials have been considering the possibility of moving operations formerly conducted at the Energy Department's Rocky Flats Facility and Pantex Rocky Falls has been shut down because of safety concerns.
A Pantex expansion could mean between $500 million and $2.2 billion worth of construction and between 1000 new jobs for the Amarillo area.
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Hours: 8 - 5:30 M - TR 8 - 5 Fri. 9 - 5 Sat. 12 - 4 Sun.
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12
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Boomer, Wyche disagree
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Boomer Esiason is at odds again with coach Sam Wyche, claiming that Wyche should focus on football instead of outside issues.
But Wyche, who is active in helping the homeless and outspoken on women in the locker room, told Esiason and other Bengals in a meeting Sunday that he's not about to back off his beliefs.
"There's no change in this coach, I can tell you that right now." Wyeche said. "If I'm a distraction every time I talk to a banquet or give out a dinner, then the player who's distracted is not professional enough to be here."
Esainson, who in the past has disagreed with his coach on offensive strategy, said Wyche should "direct football to talking football, and football only."
"I admire his work with the homeless and his wherewithal for issues like the locker room. What I was saying was that everyone has to go up at the meeting and handled it professionally in front of everyone."
Wyche has worked for three years to help raise money for homeless people. Last year, he barred USA Today sportswriter Denise Tom from the locker room, saying the players should be to stand naked in front of women.
Wyche was fined more than $27,000 by NFL commissioner Paul Hoglebaugh for violating the league's rules on free agents who don't access to accredited reporters.
Wyche still is critical of the commissioner, with whom he met last month at the NFL meetings in Hawaii.
Wyche said Tagliabue was giving mixed signals on whether there would be changes so players did not be dressed before women interviewers.
"He tells the coaches one thing, that there'll be some changes," Wyche said. "Then he turns around the next day and tells the media what they are going to do." Once asked me ask the players have to take a shower after the game."
Joe Browne, the NFL's vice president for communications, said the league would have no comment on Wyche's statement. But he added, "Sam's all wet on that shower remark."
Esiason said Wyche also distracted the team when, in 1989, he used the
public address system to chide snowball-throwing Bengals fans for behaving as if they lived in Cleveland, and by running up the score in a 61-7 victory over the Houston Oilers.
“That’s a stupid comment.” Wyche said of Eisason’s reference to the Houston game. Wyche denies that he ran up the score.
"Better in April than August. Now it's all out on the table. We know where things stand," Esiason said of the dispute.
Defensive lineman David Grant said, "(Wyche) is a human being. He's got his own personality and that's the only way you'd like him. We're not robots. Football's our livelihood, not our life.
"I see what Boomer's trying to say and I agree with him. That that's been his problem, keeping focus on the task at hand," it says. "It's good to get it out in the open."
Offensive lineman Mike Brennan said, "Sam just said it was the wrong way to start out the season, with a big distraction. I think everybody took it with a grain of salt. Sam said he was a little disappointed that we've got the monkey on our back. He thinks it's going to be all over USA Today."
Irish job tempts Tech coach but Cremins decides to stay
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Bobby Cremin took himself out of the running for Notre Dame's vacant basketball coaching job yesterday, deciding instead to remain at Georgia Tech
Although he admitted that the Irish job was tempting, Cremins said, "My feeling for my players and the Georgia Tech family and friends was too strong for me touxe any other interests right now.
Cremins took over a Georgia Tech team in 1981 that had won only one Atlantic Coast Conference game in two years. Four years later, he led the Yellow Jackets to an ACC title.
Cremins reportedly was the leading candidate for the head coaching job at Notre Dame after Digger Phelps resigned April 15.
"The next step was to go to Notre Dame for an interview," he said. "I decided not to do that. It might have been too tempting."
"I was never offered the job." Cremins said yesterday "I was
only offered to interview for it. But
when you are Irish and Catholic, it's
something that was very difficult
not to look into."
Among other reported candidates for the Notre Dame job are former Irish player and SMU coach John Shumate, Nebraska's Danny Nee and Stanford's Mike Montgomery.
Cremins said he made his decision Sunday night and called Notre Dame athletic director Dick Rosenthal.
"Dick Rosenthal handled this with class," Cremins said. "He wanted me to come up for there an hour before the place, and I was nervous about it."
If he had gone for the interview, would he have accepted the job? "We'll never know," he said.
Notre Dame sports information director John Heisler said Rosenthal would not comment on him, as he considered for the basketball job.
"There is no timetable," Heisler said. "All he's (Rosenthal) said is
tomorrow is better than the next day. We don't play a game until November or December."
Georgia Tech athletic director Homer Rice said he was elated that Cremin has chosen to stay and continue to build the program.
Cremins said, "I'm happy about my decision. The one rule I have is that when I make a decision, I don't look back, I look forward. I'm looking ahead to what's here, and it's a challenge.
"Leaving Georgia Tech and this city at this time is not the right thing for Bobby Cremins," he said in an interview before making a luncheon speech here. "It was a hard decision, and it was the first time I had thought about leaving. The challenge to keep things going in tech is still there. We weiped up a bit, but I want to bring it back."
Tech, who reached the Final Four in 1989-90, was 17-13 this season and reached the NCAA tournament before losing to Ohio State.
SIDEWALK SALE Head to the Kansas and Burge Unions to grab some Super Sidewalk Sale savings. This event comes only once a year and there's good reason for that. The savings are so incredible that you just can't afford to pass them up. KU BOOKSTORES
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 30, 1991
Sports
13
'Hawks lose final game of series to Cyclones
Kansas drops to fifth place in conference race
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In the completion of Sunday's rain-suspended baseball game, the Iowa State Cyclones slipped past Kansas 10-8 in eight innings yesterday afternoon at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
With the victory, Iowa State took three of the four games in the series and moved past the Jayhawks into place in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas fell to five place with four conference games at Missouri remaining. The Jayhawks must finish in the top eight for quality for the Big Eight tournament
"We're still not out of it," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I told the kids if we can win three, we still have a chance on the tie-breaker."
Beginning where Sunday's game was halted, Iowa State began yesterday's scheduled seven-inning game in G-1 lead in the top of the second.
After Kansas right-hander Joel Bacon retired the Cyclones in order, the Jayhawks began slicing into the Iowa State lead.
Kansas second baseman Jeff Berlinger led off with a walk and moved to third one batter later on Kansas right fielder Denard Stewart's double
Baseball
to left
Berblering scored on designated hitter John Wuycheck's ground out to second. Stewart cut the Cyclone lead in third, and David Sault sacrificed him home.
Iowa State pushed their lead to 6-3 in the top of the third, but the Jayhawks stormed back with a Jeff Niemier RBI single and a Gerry Camara two home run run to knot the score at 6 after three innings.
Although both teams threatened, there was no more scoring until the top of the seventh.
After Iowa State third baseman Rod Pottrat drew a lead-off walk, Cyclone center fieldier Eric Krogulski lined a two-run run that barely cleared the right-center field fence.
Trailing 8-6 in the bottom of the seventh. Camara answered with a two-out RBI single over second base, and Kansas center field Chris Moore.
The game was sent into extra innings when Camara scored off a Berlinger full-count single to left
by right-hander Jim Walker after hitting Iowa State shortstop John Camelin with a pitch.
In the eighth, Bacon was replaced
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Both Iowa State runners scored, giving the Cyclones a decisive 10-8 lead. Kansas was retired after four batters in the bottom of the eighth.
Mahoney, who had hit a grand slam home run off Walker earlier in the series, slammed a double to the left-center power alley.
Iowa State coach Bobby Randall said the game could have been won by either team.
"This KU club is a bunch of fighters," he said. "They're one of the best we've played this year, and we've played some good ones."
Bingham said that the decisive factor in the game and the series was the Cyclones' offensive production.
"They flat beat our brains in," he said. "I have to give Iowa State credit. We didn't play as well as can, but they had a lot to do with it."
The Jayhawks, 29-25 overall and 9-11 in the Big Eight, will face third-ranked Wichita State at 7 onight.
Gatorade
Kyphers
3
Cedar林斯
21
Mike Turner/KANSAN
**Mature Trees/KANSAN**
Kansas catcher Jire Niemeyer slides safely into second against Iowa State's Mark Elsinger. The Cyclones defeated the Jayhawks 10-8.
Kansas to take on Wichita State
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team will face Wichita State in a doubleheader at 3 p.m. in Wichita
The Jayhawks are coming off a weekend in which they split two game series with Oklahoma State and Nebraska.
Junior pitcher Shelly Sack said the weekend's games showed the Jayhawks that they needed to work on their hitting and their attitudes.
"Nobody was really fired up and ready to play." Sack said.
Softbal
She said the team would be ready for Wichita State today.
"We need these two wins," Sack said. "We're not looking past Wichita, but we’re definitely gearing up for the Big Eight on Friday."
Sack said that Kansas hit the ball well at the Big Eight Conference Round Robin on Saturday in Lincoln, Neb., but after the Jayhawks were shutout Sunday, they noticed there was room for improvement.
Sack said Kansas should have a good chance to beat Wichita State. She said the Jayhawks' pitching and defense were where they should be.
Sack said that Wichita State was a strong team and that if the Jayhawks did not play hard today they could experience an upset.
"They could come out and beat us, but if we come out and play ball, and we hit the ball, we should win," Sack said.
"It will be to our advantage to come out and hit the ball," Arterburn said. "As long as we hit the ball, we can win."
Junior shortstop Christy Arterburn said she thought Kansas would win today's games.
"It it proved what we already knew," Arterburn said.
She said she was looking at the games against Wichita State as preparatory games for the Big Eight tournament, which begins Friday.
Tennis teams look toward future success
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
However, the Jayhawks went a long way in laying the foundation for future success.
Now that the Big Eight Conference tournament is over, the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams wanted to accommodate this season.
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said the Jayhawks' third-place tournament finish was not indicative of a good season.
"We doubled our wins over last year, received votes in the national poll for the first time and moved fourth to third in the conference."
"Overall, we didn't play the way we're capable of in certain spots over the weekend," he said. "But we did some positive things this year.
The Jayhawks also saw junior
Eveline Hamers claim her third No. 1
singles crown in three years.
"Eveline made her mark over the weekend," Center said. "She will go down as the most dominating player in women's Big Eight history."
Hamers has qualified for the women's NCAA tournament May 13 in San Francisco, but she said that she would take the next season than for this postseason.
"We're only losing two girls, Stacy (Stotts) and Mindy (Pelz), plus there are three good freshmen coming in," she said. "Hopefully, we'll get better and better. That's what I want my fourth year."
Continued improvement is also what Center wants.
"We're definitely an improved team," he said. "Mentally, I think we need to learn how to compete for a championship. That's a goal for next year."
Center's disappointment in the Jayhawks' performance in the Big
Eight tournament was shared by Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman.
Three days after Kansas dropped the men's title to Oklahoma State by two points, he was feeling some ill side effects.
"I'm not doing too well," he said.
"I feel like we gave it away."
Entering the tournament in second place and three points behind the Cowboys, Kansas failed on several occasions to erase Oklahoma State's lead.
"In the seminals of singles and doubles and the finals of doubles, we had chances to win." Perelman said. "It isn't as though the door opened once. It opened five or six times and it just couldn't take advantage of it."
Despite losing the overall title, the Jayhawks did claim three conference championships.
ished first in 3. no singles, and junior Patrick Han won the 6. no singles. Haan teamed with freshman Rhan and claimed the 3. no doubles crowns.
In the wake of those victories, Perelman, like Center, found the silver lining in the Jayhawks' season.
Kansas senior Chris Walker fin-
"We've had an excellent season," Perelman said. "We've experienced things this program never has before."
Among those things are two victories over top-five ranked Tennessee and a No. 13 national ranking, the Jayhawks' highest ever.
As a team, Kansas is on the bubble for an at-large bid to the 20-team NCAA tournament.
Perealman said the No. 1 Kansas doubles team of Walker and Craig Wildey probably would qualify for NCAA postseason play, and Wildey had an outside chance to do the same
Six crew entries advance to finals
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas crew entered six boats in the Midwest Rowing Championship this weekend at Lake Wingra in Madison, Wis., and all six made it to the finals of their events.
The men's freshman notice four finished highest among the Kanas entries. They took third place.
The men's varsity eight finished sixth, and the men's varsity light eight grabbed seventh place.
All three of the women's teams finished in fifth place.
Kansas coach Rob Catloh said Kansas proved with its performance that it was in the same class as the other schools at the race.
"We row really competitively with all of those crews." Catloth said.
Catalto said he was pleased with the teams' finishes because this was the first year that all of Kansas' boats made it to finals.
More than 30 crews participated in the regatta, including Wisconsin, the men's varsity eight defending national champions.
Catloth said there were few races, if any, that Kansas raced in during the weekend that Wisconsin did not take first place. He said the Wisconsin women's varsity team had won the Midwest championship race for the past 20 years.
Catloth said the only thing holding Kansas back was inexperience. The team is young. Catloth will be members of their staff members stay on all four years.
"We just don't have the seasoning." Catloth said in regard to the women's teams.
Still, Catloth said the Kansas crew had shown all year how good it could be.
"We were in the thick of all the races." Catloth said.
Chris Davis, Kansas City. Mo.
senior, is one crew member who has been on the team since his freshman year. He said he had noticed changes in the Kansas team.
He said the size of the men's team has decreased from about 25 members to about 12. At the same time, competition has improved, he said
"We were hoping to finish closer," Davis said. "If we would have had one of our best races we could have beat Northwestern."
Wisconsin finished first in the men's varsity eight race. Purdue finished second and Northwestern finished third.
Tami Odell, Norman, Okla. sophomore, said the races against crews such as Wisconsin's were difficult.
"It's a higher level of rowing," Odell said. "We don't have the experience."
JUNE 1986
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Hands off
Chris Beal, Sedgwick sophomore, and Mandana Ershad, Pittsburg graduate student in microbiology, practice self-defense techniques during the Kempo club meeting.
Bo making progress, specialist says
The Associated Press
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — A sports medicine specialist who examined Bo Jackson for about four hours yesterday said that the two-sport star's recovery from a hip injury that he should not get rid of his crutches yet.
"We did not expect him to heal this injury during this period," said Jim Andrews, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Medicine and "orthopedic Center."
Jackson returned to Birmingham for his first in-depth examination in six weeks.
Jackson, 28. was released by the Kansas City Royals in March after the team's doctor determined that Jackson's football-related hip injury would not allow him to play baseball this year.
He signed a contract with the Chicago White Sox earlier this month.
"I passed my exam with flying colors," Jackson said at a news conference. "I'll be back on the playing field soon."
But Andrews said Jackson should continue using crutches for a safety factor as the physical-therapy program accelerated.
"Bo's hip continues to be normal." Andrew says. "Bastiany, we have a good relationship with you."
He said there was no evidence of any popping that would indicate loose bone fragments in the hip joint.
Jackson will be examined again in about four weeks.
Andrews said yesterday's exam included producing a three-dimensional image of the athlete's hip on a
computer.
"The bone appears to be undergoing a healing process," Andreas said. "This was the real positive aspect of the examination today. You can see reformation of bone injured when he was tackled."
Jackson sustained the injury, which doctors have described as a fracture-dislocation, in the Los Angeles Raiders' playoff game against the Cincinnati Bengals on Jan. 13.
The Royals waived Jackson after their team doctor, Steve Joyce, told him Jackson should not play baseball this season.
Doctors have differed on whether Jackson, the only man to win football's Trophy and baseball's PW award, will ever play sports again.
Oklahoma State gains lead in golf tournament
Sports briefs
LEAWOOD — Oklahoma State's Bob May fire a three-under-par 60 in the second round of the Big Eight Conference Men's Golf Tournament, giving the Cowboys an 18-stroke lead yesterday.
Club. His 69 came after shooting a 7 in the first 18 holes earlier yesterday.
May holds a one-shot lead over Kansas' Matt Gaget in the race for individual medalist honors. Gogel shot a 72-77-14. Oklahoma State's Craig Hainline and Oklahoma's Patrick Lee each shot a 76-74-150.
May was the only individual in the tournament to shoot under par on a cold, windy day at Hallbrook Country
Brown decides it will eliminate four sports
Oklaahoma State, the six-time defending champion, shot a 36-hole total of 59. Oklaahoma is in second place at 617, followed by Nebraska (634), Kansas (637), Iowa State (641), Oklahoma, Kansas State (658) and Colorado (660).
The 18-hole final round begins today.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Brown University announced yesterday that it
was eliminating four varsity sports in an effort to avert a projected budget deficit.
Men's water polo, men's golf,
women's gymnastics and women's
voleball will be eliminated in the
14th round about 75,000, the university said.
"All departments are being asked to cut their budgets," Executive Vice President Robert A. Reichley said. "Essentially, we are downsizing the institution in an effort to eliminate a deficit for this year and through long-range planning and relocations, bring the budget permanently in line so that deficits can be avoided in the years to come."
From staff and wire reports
14
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Classified Directory
200's
announcements
109 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
130 Education
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
---
Thanks, thanks the ballet suits you. Scott
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B. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classical to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and acadamy repair. Welcome to Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
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ACE EXAMS: Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence using hi-tech audiometry, improve speech recognition in Hymnosis and Stress Management Center
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
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A traination for everyone! July 28, Leneva, NM 9:00 am, 2:00 pm, 10:00 kb, 4:35 km. For a great case: Cyclist Fasila. Need volunteers too. Interested? Call 816-363-569.
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BATTERING can be emotional or physical WTCS Campus Support Group for battered women Monday night 7-9pm. Call 841-6807 for location and info.
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 courses, or your money refunded. America's Finest! Since 1801 COLG MUSEUM AMERICA $1500 MONTHLY. Mei Mo'680201. 1800 CK7471.
For an anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters for AI Ini 844.336. Sponsored by GLOSK
HEAMING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER! JET there anytime with AIRHITCH $ for $100 from the East Coast! $25 from the Midwest (when you buy a ticket to Times & Let’s AIRHITCH) $21 864 290 6.
K. U. Graduation Announcements still available.
Mark's Bridal. 843-7628
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Annual Hillel Awards Brunch
12:30 Hillel House
All Welcome!
Events of the Week Sunday, May 5
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 842-254 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters Counseling Center
205 Help Wanted
130 Entertainment
Tuesday, May 7 and
Thursday, May 9
Finals Food
9:00 p.m. Hillel House
140 Lost-Found
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841-2752, 8, N. 1
For rides and more info call 864.3948
Aggressive GM IMP dealership is seeking positive self-starter, female or male, for an ex-posse in a high school setting. A possible come for the first year, excellent performance, may be appointment 316-435-1155. Ask for Mike or Rick
this yours? Lost women its watch found Wed, in Robinson parkacing across from soccer fields. Call to identify, 841-9633.
200s Employment
Commencement Open House 4-6 p.m. Hillel House
LOST PARROT! If you see one please call
749-5707 or 864-3128 $40 reward
BAJA HARRY's PATTY Bar and Grill in Overland Park is looking for energetic people for all positions. Opening May 9th for lunch, Happy Hour, dinner and nightly entertainment and Invite great times, great bucks, great incentives for your business. Call BAJA Harry 931-382-6042 for appointments.
FOUND: Orange, grey, white adult cat. Friendly
at our house for 3 weeks. Call 841-9216.
CAKI Booksstore. $42 per hour, part-time,
no fringes, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday
tourism $19 pm. Could work vary days and hours
have previous, verifiable employment record as a
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long period. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Of
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Cocktail waitress needed weekends. Apply in
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Need person to show apartments, answer phone, send faxes, arrange room and possible part time in fall. Must have and be work study eligible. Call Mary Pat M4 8164003. Part time secretary/bookkeeper needed beginning April. Provide training in processing, general accounting procedures, organizational skills and effective customer relations. Prepare resume, and name and phone number of references by I May to Edge Enterprise, P.O. Box 9152, Boca Raton, FL 33428.
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Part-time jobs available in the cafeteria. After noon and evening times. Apply at front desk Nasmith Hall
Part time position available for technician at IBM Microtech. Requires some knowledge of IBM PCs. Training provided. 841-913, ask for Harvond/Dana.
Part-Time Summer Work!
Internship
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Local Distributor for a large National Manufacturer is Now Hiring College people for summer and full-time internship positions.
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Delivery driver needed Monday through Friday
for a job with Alpine Airlines. Apply in person 180th W. Mid-
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Earn up to $800/$1200/mo. part-time this summer at home. To schedule an interview, call Straight Enterprises, 842-9140.
Elementary Summer Camp staff need at Rainbow Tree Montessori School Degree in recreation, biology, phil, or ed, ele. educ. preferred. Expert work required. 12 year required. Accessible location. Lawrence on 7 acres of pastured land with horses. Intervene begin April 29 Call 843-8600
Seeking energetic, well-motivated individuals to tell telamaking positions. No experience necessary, paid training $47/hour. Advance Job Call for an appointment: 81-1200. 10:42AM.
Housekeeper for summer and next year, experience and own transportation required. 842-1343.
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NEED A JOB? Experience America, Inc. will be hiring on May 2 at the Kansas Union Centenial Room, 2 p.m. Plan to attend
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France and Marketing positions. Interviews will also be given for other positions waiting to be filled.
COLLEGE GRADUATES
Sitter needed for 2 boys | 2 year old and 7 month old) 2 days a week or mornings or combination Call Lisa at 841-660
Responsible non-smoking girl to babysit some evenings and every other Friday or Saturday night. 841-7500
Expect $2,500/MO Plus
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New divisional outlet, large customer base and our corporate expansion necessitates those openings.
Applications and personal interviews.
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews. Send Stamp For Free Details. Salliman's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kalsell, MT 59901.
SUMMER INTERN to assist in advertising sales for K.C. Jewish Chronicle Paperback & Magazine. Call Ruth Berger at (913) 648-4620
SUMMER-FALL PART TIME JOIN as personal caredian for disabled, retired KU staff member in family setting. Seeking mature, bright, handsome individuals for workdays and mornings. Availability to work during KU vacations plus. Good job for OT 37. Required: Bachelor's degree or equivalent or students or persons with like interests. Reliable phone and car required. U.C. Citizenship desired. Contact: 420-1628 between Juan Jim weekdays to apply.
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All corporate benefits available
TEMPORARY HELP WANTED. Job will start May 1 and last approx 2 months. Applicants should be mechanically inclined and have own car. Contact little contact Charlie Reilly at 911-853-3131
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Storeroom team, Kansas Union Food Service. Monday-Friday, 7am to 12pm. $4.25 an hour, part time no fringes. Must have valid ID. Req. previous inventory or stock clerk experience preferred, money handling helpful. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office, 13th and Level 5. Lunch only.
Wednesday, May 1st Kansas Union Centenial Room 6:30 p.m. sharp
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ask for Mr. Clayton
Summer semester 1-2 days/week
Fall semester Mon. thru Fri.
The University Daily Kansan has a position available for a student to proofread advertising during the summer and fall semesters. Prefer to hire someone who can do both, but will consider hiring another person. Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar and a fundamental understanding of the aesthetics of layout
864-4358
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THE INFO is looking for a few dedicated individuals to assist with merchandise subscriptions. Please include your name, phone number and transportation. Casual business attire will be required. Good oral and visual presentation skills are needed. Please contact Lawrence Business Connection, Inc. 414.224 2245. Want a summer job where you can lose weight or work with animals?
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225 Professional Services
Driver education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
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Thesis & Dissertations
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1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
235 Typing Services
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• Cover Letters
• Laser Printing
Call J.I. S. Typing Services B194-092
printers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
A + Word Processing turns your frogs into Rana pipiens. Give your words the professional appearance they deserve. @847.7283
Fern papers, theses, dissertations, laster print,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser printing,
signed and corrected. 202 G W 218 St. TH.
Mta. m 3p. m; F S 5a. m 94. m 82474
FAST, ACUATURATE TIPPING $4.10 per page. In PCU and DEL, but in any city in limits. Transcriptions and Database Projects also handled. CALL Mae at: 842.3882
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable fast service. Call after 1:00 pm, 811-6354.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more Graphic Ideas Inc. $927_{1}$
Mass. 841-1071
Professional typist Reasonable rates Call 842-3200
300s
WordPerfect word processing. InkJet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8688
Word Processing Typing Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations. Applications Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, edging composition. Have
M.S. Degree. 8416249
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1976 BMW R80 $800 841-1740
183 Honda Interceptor 750 LDK owd. cord, chassis kit
Honda Interceptor 750 LDK owd. cord, chassis kit
Honda Interceptor 600HP 800W mpg great looking like Harry. Evermance call 740 2525
Honda Hurricane 10G drive D OE HC-124
Honda Hurricane 10G drive D OE HC-124
25 inch Push racing bicycle - 12 speed. Reynolds
331 components. Ready to ride for serious rider or racer. Nc, 843-6876
Jeep CJ7 Hatchback, AC 4.5pd Good condition
Makeng 53090 Call 855-9290
86 Nijia under 10,000 miles. New Dunlop $2900
obo. 749.030. leave message
50 books, music, aquaponics and equipment
Used; $300 or best offer. 841 8218
Bookcases, desks, beds and housewares
Brand new Fuji Road Bike. Excellent condition,
$425. nag, 1962 Road bike, new frame, $125.
833-401-404
For sale - Peugeot 10-speed, 3 years old Great condition. Asking $125 obo 965-4088 Leave message
For sale SZCUK1 450K $180. New front fire.
exhaust heatlite. Reliable $300 Call 841-9209
For sale. Pool table, glass top dining table, Timbale drums. 842.9183.
GOTV SURFLRU* Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tentacles, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
combat jacket, and Speedoil Boats Also
MEN FREAR-MEAR *Sun-9.5*
147 274 28 M Mary39* Sun-14.5*
Honda Elite Moped jeep 70 miles, almost new
Call before 12:49pm 85 667 409
Kayoire 18M 512M VGA Monitor 20 MB hard drive
5.25 disk drive $1200 offer 842-4931
King size waterproof for sale with sheets. Only $100 or best offer.
Call 865-2783
MacGregor Golf Club, less than 1 yr old. 2 SW
Dart offer, #897-703.
MUN Bike. 2 months old TREK 830 Call 655-3948
Leave message
PUMP (INCLUDES GUICE) £250.892,916
Road bike, Bianchi Brava 12 speed, Krypton
road bike no rust 100, Ask Taks 749,268
NEW RALEIGH BIRCH WITH SCHWINN 1500
BRAND TRACTOR FITS 1968-1972
SONY X7180 car stereo Pull out, touch controls
digital X275 841-8671 Chris
Step by step manual that can make you up to
*bix weekend before key. Remain send *
*re refundable to P.O. Box 44212 Lawrence, KS*
*60044*
340 Auto Sales
1978 Datsun 200 XS Low miles, excellent mechanical condition, very good body (1280 obo
1979 Honda Accord LX - 1 owner Runs Great
1960 Bucki Riviera. Rides and drives great.
842-415 or 842-7378
1960 Ford Farmall. Low mileage, no hail damage. Good condition, good stereo. $1800 obo
749 2483
1962 WV Jetta, Gold, college car, standard,
speed; cheap $400; Call Martin, 841-7744
1964 Camaro ZRB, Black, AC VR, Free Package.
Good Condition, 840. Must see, 863-3834
106 Suhara Justy GL, 8K miles, 5 speed, Clean great town. Car $20.2k. Ask 749-2069. 189 Plymouth Horizon, auto/a, fm/am, 15m, like new interior. $6,200 callable. Gallon
85 Honda Civic, AT, AC, PS, PB, cass, excl.
cond. clean. 87300. 893498.
Honda Civic DX, XL, ac, ac/mf cass, 24K
8605. 865. 3775
806 353 7219
494 pax $1,100 Mitsubishi Precis '80'
806 353 7219
$494 pax $1,450 atr.60mm
Cycic Wagm. 89, 9K, am/im, good. $1849 barn
96 vols or leave message
Dive Wagon 94, 99m, am/im, good, $1849, Bam
8634 or leave message.
London 100 Troyle Colton CPTS Course Marlville
Diamond new troyca crown 11.5 x 10.25 inch *measured* ally wheels, immaculate condition High highway miles. $4,900 negotiable. 1-862-2352 MEXA D-7 X 5' ACD, S.A. suncoil, allison. $295
freetw miles, $4,500 negotiation: 7692223
Marda EX 7: 5 spd, A/C, sunroof, alloys: $2500
81-5184
Trump TR7 1975 Runs great. Nice car. $1500
849-7392
360 Miscellaneous
On TV, VCR's, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 1900 W.4th 780-1989.
731 New Hampshire
Used & Curious Goods
M
THE CHAPMAN
Cottage House
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: CD-50s and down. Records and tapes: 82-600. Top dollar for collections. Bicycle baskets, boots and jackets to buy to boy a VW R 82- Rabbit. 2 dr. good body, bad motor. Call Tom. 749-1611
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1758 Ohio-Chamberlin Court Apartments, Total 26 unit rehab start May 1st. and 2 IHR units only 2 blocks from campus. Open House Saturday 12-09 9:00 or call today. 749-1568
1. BAR and BR. All utilities paid, in older home! block from camp. Call today: 749-1566
2. BA, CW D hookup, quiet! For rent or buy $75/mo. #1804
1 bedroom bathroom for sublease May 15-August 16. Will pay $1/2 May and August rent. Like new, air conditioning. Call 865-3278. Leave message
Available in August. Walk to KU or downtown A-O off-street parking. Not pets. B25 814-1024 I bedroom summer suitelew / wi fall option B36 814-1024 microwave and microwave. Hire negotiated. 843-6360
3 bedroom summer sublease; fall option
Spacious. Economical. AC, DW, on bus route. Call
749-3477
2 and 3 bedroom. Downtown aparts for rent. Greg at
843-6855 Bam-Spm. Available May 15.
1 bedroom furnished Masterref apt for 1 or 2
people at Tangelleau. Available May 16 or later
MAY RENT PAID. 843-7299
2 bedroom, 1½ bath townhouse, available June 1.
$460, no pets. 842-329 or 841-579.
2 br apt available in new building of West Hills
ap for June 1. Great apt with microwave, dryer,
energy efficient kitchen, energy efficient gas heat
near campus. 160 Enner Hd I400 - no pets
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT AVAILABLE AUGUST in beautiful old house Wood floors, fowl food tub. A/C w/ kid beds, ceiling fans. $90. No pets. 841-1074
3 Bedroom house summer sublease
$175/bedroom negotiable A/C, washer/dryer
utilities included. 841-5488
2 bedroom. Bradford Square Apartment for sublease.
We pay $400/mo you pay only $400/mo. No deposit required. Microwave, dishwasher, and clean rooms. 842-6421
3 BR townhouse for summer suites. 1-2 baths.
Room for 4 or 5 people. Rent negotiable. Available late May until July 11. 847-7926
3 studio apt. for rent starting at $205.00 No pets Call 749-7568
3 bedroom townhouse, 2 baths, microwave,
dishwasher, fireplace, garage, low utilities,
available in: 610, km0, yr lease. Pin Oak 246
Alabama, 842 960
4 BH apt for summer sublease 2. bath W/D, DW AC, microwave pool, tennis courts, on bus ride Sunrise Village Call Kim, 865-9625, leave message
- Chamberlain Place Apartments, 21th Ohio Avenue construction 1 and 3 (Formly MI Capitol) * Memorial View Apartments, 11th & Mississippi Avenue construction 1 and 3 (Formly MI Capitol) * with washers dryers. Access from Memorial
- 341 Michigan 85th, lyle 10, bd 3-BR-1B-2R
bath All with washer/dryer
Bradda Square Apartments, 500 Colorado 2
Bradda Square Apartments, 500 Colorado 2
Call today. First Management 749-156. Open house every Saturday from 12:30 to 8:45.
Square 300, Colorado C-1: Office hours Mon-Fri
A PERFECT sublease June and July. Female roommates needed. Close to campus/downtown AC, wash/d microwave 853-3601
APARTMENTS: Kansas City, Small, Large Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished. Quire, quiet, building many, extraz. 816-913-3928
You are concerned about the environment?
Cooperative living saves the earth's resources.
Come practice what you believe in at Sunflower House, 1468 Tennessee, 749-8821 or 941-8494.
A spacious 2 bedroom, CA. $335.00 on bus route.
Available June 1; Available July 1; Available
841 798-7600; Available June 1 and July for sublease 2 bedroom
apartment, close to campus and downtown
Available for summer sublease Sunrise Village townhouse, AC, microwave, pool, tennis courts, on bus route. Price negotiable. Call 865-3599
Available June 1, option for fall; 4 bedroom apartment with loft in (orchard Corners. Spacious, beautifully furnished, pool, on bus route. Extra furniture. Free 841-345.
Bar Hoppers! Summer sublease for a righteous party palace. Less than block from Hawk, Bull, and Wheel 4. br apt. for info, call 814 6038
Cheap summer sublease: Furnished 1 and/or 2
bedrooms. No deposit. $120/mo plus utilities
865-3606
Desperate for sublease - 2 r, 2 bath, pool, tennis-ball, w/ b卫. booked. Available 5-214. Call 842-3889 Desperate to sublease-Great one bedroom for June & July. Waker, Dryer. Renewable.
Available immediately. One bedroom, gas and water paid $25 per month. Available summer rentals. Some with utilities paid. Cycling fees. Mini bins. Students from campus at 1491 and 1492 Ohio 842-7644.
Excellent Location, 1 block to campus, 2 bedroom
in 4+plex, dishwasher, WD hookup, CA,
no pets, available 1 year. $360 At 1314 Ohio.
Call 842-4242
Female wanted for summer sublease to Orchard Corners. Rent negotiable. Call Cisco. 614-1626. Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and borrow it on your 2 rent for *m* months. *Studios*, 1 and 2 befram apis. *Heat and water pares.* *Across the Room*. Center Rainbow Tower Apes. 813-981-9363
house for rent. Fall 5 bedroom. Close to campus.
downtown. Off-street parking. A/C, WD. wood
floors. Gna 654-5571. 843-3185.
Large | Bedroom Apl. Sublease May-Aug. Close to
Camous. Rent negotiable. 865-3775.
Looking for very responsible person to sublet beautifully furnished/equipped apartment for summer Rent negotiable. Call 855-0840.
beautiful furnished-equipped apartment for rent. Rent negotiable. Call 855-0640.
Lerima Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkwav
Lerimar Townhomes, 381n Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
new. Available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease then
May, July or for 12 months. 8419-7443-8433.
NAISMITH PLACE APTS
841-1615
25th St. Ct. at Ousdahl
Gourmet Kitchen/DW
Basketball Court/Laundry
9 DD from £25
Nice, one bdr apartment close to campus. Hardwood floors, off street parking. No pets. 749-2915 or 823-9771 evening.
Nice two bedroom home with all applicances.
New carpet and paint. Blinds, garage, quiet area,
no pets, prefer long term tenants. Available im-
mediately. $433, $45.2888
New leasing : 1 and 2 bedroom apts at Southbrick Plaza Apt 153. Room rented, $72.25 rooms start at $33.00 month lease. Water and table paid remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 841-160-8100
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apers. Apsent West Apsent. $60 for bedroom; $175
bedroom. Ceiling fans: water paid. Walk to camp.
Bath: 841-1160 or 843-1839.
New leasing for June and August. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with two full baths, central air, heat, carpet draps and blind. Low energy bill $100.00 SPAIN CHRIST APARTMENTS
One bedroom apt. in a house. Private entrance close to KU. Central Air. Screened Porch. Cable Utilities Paid $250.00 749-7385
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 30, 1991
15
One Two bedroom apt. $450 One studio. $240 Utilities paid. Between downtown & campus. Close to GSP-Corbin. Available June 1, no pets. 841-1207.
Perfect Location one bilk to town, 3 bikers to cam-
pany. Availability August 1, £900 to 140 Tennesseen
Parking Available Aug 1, £900
Room for rent in large house, immediately. Close to street, central Auckland. $175/mo plus 1st usg. Gina 804/571-8356. Roommate need to share three bedroom three-bedroom for summer. Close to campus. 841-1466
FOR RENT. Professor's 2 BR house, $500, June
1991-August 1992,841-8444
Spacious i3 duplex available June 1 and August 1. 8 new carpet, paint and blinds. All chen appliances, central air, gas heat, room hockey playground, garage 400, pads 443-8288.
Studio, 2 bedroom apartment between town, K.U.
841-6254
SUBLEASE: 1 BUNK (1 or 2 occupancy) $50 plus utilities, pool, room weight, laundry, on campus, available mid-May thru July Call Kathy, 865-1244, leave message.
MKUSEASE, close to campus, 3 bedroom, D.W.AC, $867.90m, Kentucky,叫Cleveland, $479.90m. Furnished 2 bedroom with free water. Laundry available. Negotiable at $60, Mark B, 841.7071
BULSEASE, lee to campus. 3 bedroom. D/W.
SUB. A67/ $mo., 1317 Kentucky, Calif. 824-3690.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. HUGE 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT. Fantastic location close to campus. Upper 2 floors of house. $50 per month call. Ba1-842-0283
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 available rooms, great place $160 plus t4 utilities. Call 965-4095.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Beautiful 2 bedroom for
2-4 people in Sundance II Furnished, private pool
more. $468. Call now 185 826. leave message
**SUMMER SUPPLY LEASEL**: Studio apartment right
side of building, on 3rd floor. Pay bed, ceil fan. May rent. Call 855-1420.
**SUMMER SUPPLYLEASE L**: 4.5 bedroom house.
Alabama - AC units, low temperatures.
(Alabama) AC units, low temperatures.
SUPERIOR SUMMER SUBLEASE
In a superior location at a superior price, 2
bedrooms, 2 floors. Call 842-3500 (24 HOURS).
Sublease for summer use. No smoking. Clea to
Sublease for summer apt. not snitter. Close to campus. Call 822 2833. message.
Sublease 1 bedroom apt. Available May 17 at Sun
Sublease i bedroom apt. Available May 17 at
Sundance Apts. Price negotiable. Call 865-2995
Sublease 3 months 2 BBL, 2 Bath apl. Fireplace overlocks pool, no pets. Weekends and evenings. 814-6948. Days 843-2311, ask for Stu.
Sublease with Fall option. Large studio. AC, W/D,
DW, big closer. Rent $250/mo. Clark 965 0735 or
Tona 942 2249.
Sublease. 3 bedroom apartment close to campus.
Available May 15. May rent paid. Will negotiate
865-2597.
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. lblk from KU with off-street parking, no pets. 841 560
Summer and Fall leasing. Furried rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 lbf from kb off of street parking. No pets. 841-5000.
Summer Sublease. 2 BR Apt in Aspen West Apts.
w/option for fall. CA, Water paid. Available on June ist. $340 pay. 842 6580
Summer sublease-Male roommate needed. Close
in course. Available May 15, Mast 865,004a
Summer Sublease: Charming 2 bedroom, close to
campus, hardwood floor, off street parking, no
keys. 749-2809 or 842-9007 (evenings).
Summer special on 3 bedroom for $350 2 bedroom
$300 and 1 bedroom $250 Heatherwood Valley
Apts. $83-4754.
Summer sublease: Semi furnished 2 br jersey,
nice & clean, rent negotiable. Also, female room-
made needed for next year, non-smoker. Jill.
865-0409
Summer subsuite, male roommate needed. Two level, own bathroom. Furnished. Near campus, water paid $180/mo. Call Dave 853-3922 June-July
Summer sublet: June rent paid $178.75/month plus 4 utilities, 2 cases of beer free. Call Brad at 865-003
Summer sublease 3 bdf, 2 bath, Belford Yellow-Sand on Indiana Nice. Price negotiable 841, 3244
Summer sublease: Big house, close to campus.
Summer subashe Bargaini Spacious 3 bdrm,
new kitchen, dishwasher, new carpet,
washer/dryer hook-ups 842 4603
Summer sublease. Studio apartment-
Exceedingly clean, quiet, and close to campus.
Perfect for graduate students. Very cheap. Call
490-0425. 914-2666
Summer sublease. Reduced rent! 2 bedroom apartment w/ ceiling fans and AC. Excellent location on quel. cobblestone street. Call 749-6808
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
Swan Management
S
- Graystone
- 1-2-3-4 bedroom apts.
Open House M/F 1-5 p.m.
Sat. 11-3 p.m
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
meadowbrook
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Visit Meadowbrook Apts Wide range of GREAT
atmosphere
Wide range of GREAT
studios, 1 & 2 3 BD dmts. 2 &
3 bed room townhomes
among a peaceful country
Lighted Tennis Courts
Two Pools
Carports/Garages available Plavgrounds
- Laundry facilities in most buildings
Water Paid
Free Basic Cable
- Experienced Professional Maintenance
Sorry. No Pet.
Summer sublease with option, one room,
beautiful 4 BR, CA, DW, W/D. Space. Roarke.
749-0233.
MON-FRI 8-5:30 SAT 8-5
842-4200 SUN 1-4
Sorry No Pets
Summer sublease! One room in a 4 bedroom
house, VERVI close to campus, WDV/A, C/clean
Hookups taken care of. Rent negotiable. JAY
865-045-3
MEADOWBROOK
Summer sublease 1 bedroom. Berkeley Flats.
Water/cable paid, low AC bills. $275. 749 2277.
Summer sublease: Large 3 bed apartment.
Two years old with wasser/dryer, dwubasher,
microwave and A/C. Rent negotiable! Call
865-1655.
Summer sublease-Quiet 1 BR furnished apt w
dishwasher, drafting table, and off street park
ing 1 block from Union $252.841.2966
Boardwalk
apartments
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
842-4444
- Clean & well maintain
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on site bus stops
- Water & trash paid
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
- appliances
- Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Now accepting reservations for summer leases!
Pool
Free cable
Water paid
APPLE
Close to KU bus route
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Summer sublease. Nice 1-bedroom apartment in quiet neighborhood near Birch Park $235 monthly. Available after May 21st. Call Chris, 941-977.
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sa*
Summer sublease. 8dib tbr townhouse at Pit Oak.
Ban route. WD bookings, microwave,
daishawer. Mnt hostel/ware. 865-8413. 8419-7227.
Mnt hostel. 2 bedroom, cheep房. Cbq
841-3244.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
Accepting reservations for summer leases!!
WALKS TO KU OR DOWNTOWN Efficiently, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments in beautiful old town Manhattan. Clay floor tile, claw feet tub, a.c. w/bookshelf, some upstairs. Rent at summer airs of sacrifice. Fees fall at start from $495.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or dhb lr 186 Tennessee
Summer sublease Male roommate needed.
Close to campus. Available May 15. Call Matt
865-294
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
**Women students:** Want to live in a non-exist environment where you can learn repair and maintenance skills? Try Skydwell Hours! Bundle 160 hours. T99-7892 or 841-9044
T99-7892 or 841-9044
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MCT / Relible
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
Double Take
--you get an education.
Fenced pool area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- No pets
630 Michigan 749 7279
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS·BY APPT.
Call about our Summer Special
Lincoln Park
MASTERCRAFT
OFFERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
HANOVER PLACE
749-0445 * 1310 Kentucky
SUNDANCE
OPEN DAILY
1 - 5 P.M.
KENTUCKY PLACE
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
841-5255 7th & Florida
841-1429 * 1145 Louisiana
749-2415 • 10th & Arkansas
ORCHARD CORNERS
749-4226 • 15th & Kasold
ORCHARD CORNERS
CAMPUS PLACE
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
- Free utilities
- It doesn't take a genius to
- Computer Center
NAISMITH HALL
see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education
Wise up and make
- "Dine Anytime"
- Fully equipped kit*
* 1 block to K. u. bus route*
* Private balconies or gate panels*
* TV setting*
* On-site management* Pm allowed
NO, IT'S OK,
GO AHEAD.
ANISSA, I REALLY WANNA TALK. ABOUT US, I MEAN, AGROES AS…WELL, I DONT KNOW…TO PORTENTOUS.
- Two bedroom from $380
the move now!
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 65044
(913) 834-8550
3 blocks south on Quadrant to 25th St. Court
1/2 block east on 25th St. Court.
DUSDAHL & 25th CT.
2 blocks east of lone on 23rd to Oudahl.
3 blocks south of lone on 29th to Oudahl.
NAISMITH PLACE
bac apartments
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas oven and hot air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom room
- 2 bedroom room $40, room
- 3 bedroom room $60
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
6:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt.
IT'S BEEN REALLY AWKNOWBLE
TALKING TO YOU LATELY, AND I'VE
GOT THE IMPRESSION YOU THINK
IM A LITTLE TOO DULL FOR YOU.
PARKS AND TRAFFIC
Sunrise Apts.
1. 2.3&4 Bedroom
- Garages (VIII.)
- Tennis Court Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- Luxurious Town Home
- & Apartment Living On Bus Route
- Close to Campus
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
Set. Sun 1:4
--lift, quietly roomify with sense of humor for 'i,
big house. $251.81-$152. West Lawrence.
Roommate now. Very nice, very large W/D Pets.
ok, am able to deliver. Oyster City, NY.
---
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Summer Leases Still
Available! Hurry in
Today to Reserve Your
Space for Fall!
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
- 3 Hot Tubs
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun,12-4 p.m.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- 3 Hot Tubs
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom, 2 full baths, loft fully furnished Campus Place Apt. Next to Crossing 843-480-363
$355 - $425
1301 W.24th
842-5111
430 Roommate Wanted
- On Bus Route
Professionally Managed
YOU JUST DON'T SEEM ALTOGETHER THAT EXCITED ANYMORE.
Z.
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
by Tom Avery
A roommate wanted for 2 Br apt. CA, furnished,
pool, laundry. 155/mo plus $1_4 utilities on bus route.
Call Jim. 863 958 5088
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED!
Most be quiet, clean, mature, upperclassman.
She furnished 2 BR apartment near campus
begins mid-May. Memories required.
865-291
Female, non-smoking roommate needs for:
91. Share 2 bt trailer, own wd,床/d; Fall
10. Share 3 bt trailer, own wd,床/d; Fall
12. Share 1$0/month plus 4 yuities. Prefer grad
or upperclassman. Annette, 841441 311).
Female, non-smoker roommate needed. Nice,
spacious. Eduda api. Beginning June or August
Call Teresa. 843-062
Female roommate needed. Room available August 15. No rest in exchange for part time in 'ant care. Call Pamela. 832 2497.
Female roommates, non-smokers, to share spacious house $160 month plus utilities. Alison, 852-257
Female, roommate needed for fall, 4 bedroom duplex, cam, non-smoker, close to campus. $145 plus 1' utilities. Call 843-0328
Female roommate wanted-Summer sublease.
Close to campus. $181 plus i4 utilities Call Jill,
865-9670
Female roommate needed by 8/1 for very nice 2
bdrm apt. 185/mo plus *ts* util. Call Christine,
841-0774
Female roommate summer sublease. Non-smoker, own bedroom, close to campus
175/month ² utilities 865-3822
Roommate roomware tilt end of July. Non-smoker. Very nice 2 bdm uprists tail. 2 blocks down from downtown. $140 mo plus ½ utilities. Call evenings. 842-8200
Female roommate needed to share 3 BR apt at Orchard Corners for 91-92. Call Michelle or Laura at 842-8954
MALE or FEMALE to share huge 2 BW with 6 off ciements and hardwood floors. 1/8 blocks from camper 1 bilk from FM, Dad's & Joe's $85 plugs utilities 865-157
Male graduate student or upperclass roommate wanted Large, beautiful home near campus $15/mo. + 1/5 utilities Available in June Call Ken. 748-3283
Quiet, non-smoking female roommate wanted starting Aug. 91. Large apartment, furniture. W/D, summer storage. 841-3300.
Male roommate need for summer sublease. Eddingham Place. Make deal on rent. Tail 749-6432. Male roommate needed. Duplex S.W. part of town. Big room. Deal on rent. Robert. 842-4252.
New place to stay next year close to campus
and want to move in or rent a garage, and back yard a blast behind Nasherm
Two One-roomers Wanted - Sumner Sublease
to Campus $811 plus Utilities/perm
842-721
Three mature male roommates need to share large modern home on bus route. W/B/D, C/A large living room, kitchen, deck, etc. MUST SEE. $215 plus 4 utilities. Call Bari, 843-2403.
Summer sublease. One female roommate needed for new 2 br. Close to campus. $175/mo. Call Jal,ynn, 841-1149
Summer Subway 3-roomes available May 1-2nd.
1. Unfurnished 4-dorm townhouse in
Nursery Village Female non-smoker $180 plus $140
refundable deposit 750-199.
- Policy
Two roommates needed for fall. Nice house, large yard. Close to bus and campus. Call 749-1809 by letters $175.00 plus utilities.
Two female non-smokers needed to share spacious three bedroom townhouse for a summer sublease. Call Rebecca, 865-0754
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted, mon-smoking (emale roommate for Fall
91. Call 865-3966
Wanted Mist-15- monhomophobic female room to share it more neat, a new bedroom close to the kitchen. Must have $2000 carport $1650 mo plus 4* utilities. Must submit immediately, will negotiate on the lease.
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Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
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| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days |
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| 16-20 | 4.05 | 6.00 | 8.50 | 13.50 |
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| 31-35 | 5.95 | 8.85 | 12.25 | 18.30 |
Classifications
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 370 want to buy
110 business personalss 205 help wanted 340 auto sales 405 for rent
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wake
130 entertainment 235 typing services
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Please print your ad one word per box:
| | | | |
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MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid ___ 119 Stauffer Flint Hall
Classification ___ Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Okay. "How do you do. My name is Tarzan, and I believe you are known as Jane."
"Allow me to introduce myself.. I am Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle... And you?"
"You must be Jane.. I am Tarzan. It's a pleasure to meet you."
There she is.
Me Tarzan! You Jane!
Damn.
16
Tuesday, April 30, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Our Gordon Thomas Guaranteed Best Value
100% Cotton Pinpoint
* 2 ply oxford
* 5 colors available
Purchase one ... $12 50 ca.
Purchase two ... $38 50 ca.
Purchase three ... $54 50 ca.
Campbells
Purchase four...$30.50 ea.
Campbell's
Men's and Women's Clothing
Men's and Women's Clothing
841 Massachusetts
Red Cross brings food and clothing The Associated Press
Tornado survivors clean up
ANDOVER — Susan Dunn poked through the heap of what was left of her tornado-ravaged mobile home and several others today in a search for personal papers and her miniature dachshund, Cedric.
"I'm finding a few things." Dunn said "The clothes I did find were in shredded pieces. My lawn mower and sweeper were crumpled. I've found a very few pictures."
She was not enthusiastic about her task, just determined.
came back out here again. But then 1
did just see what was going on, and
I didn't know where to go.
"I got real discouraged the first day," she said. "I didn't care if I
Hundreds of survivors of the twister that flattened the 40-acre Golden Spur Mobile Home Park on Friday night looked through rubble for whatever they could salvage of their possessions.
Although it stayed in Andover less than 60 seconds, the tornado killed 14 people at Golden Spur as it demolished 226 mobile homes, about 100 houses and 14 businesses. Five other people were killed in Kansas by tornadoes Friday night.
C
President Bush declared Butler and Sedgwick counties a disaster area yesterday to free federal assistance to the hard-hit area.
Sen, Bob Dole, R-Kan., toured the
rubble yesterday. His wife, Elizabeth Dole, American Red Cross president preceded him. She also stopped at a fire station and unlift and a disaster service center.
"You just try to be there as quickly as possible with the food and shelter supplies and help in every way you can to the Red Cross' approach to disasters.
Condolences came from halfway around the globe yesterday. Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev sent a message to Bush saying, "We were deeply aggrieved to learn about the natural disaster in your country the tornadoes that hit Kansas and Oklahoma."
County officials said they expected the storm debris to be cleared away by the end of the week.
O
COUPONS
Drs. Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
FREE CONTACTS*
One pair of disposable
contacts to present
lens wearer
FREE SOLUTION*
B & L Renu
GLASSES
Free U.V. &/or Sunint
coating on ole
prescription glasses
(with exam & coupon)
* WITH COUPONS
Dr. Charles Pohl
841-2866
EXPIRES 5/31/91
Dr. Kent Dobbins
843-5665
O
S
50¢ Bowling
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 50¢ game during open bowling.
Limit two coupons per person per visit.
The Kansas Union Jaybowl
Level One
864-3545
Expires 5/31/97
COMICS KR
* 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
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 offer expires 5-20-91 23rd & Louisiana
"You don't have to pay offer expires 5-20-91 23rd & Louisiana
a lot to look good!" 749-1976
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
SWIM WEAR
(with this coupon)
Exp. 5/13-91
15% OFF
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
RELAX a CISE
X ANADU DESIGN
RELAX a CISE
HAIR
ANADU DESIGN
FREE Tan, Massage,
or Body toning session
Matrix
- with any permanent, colour, hi-lite, or style
2429, I. Iowa (by Kiaje) 8142 6555
1st street graphics
842-TUES
733 Mass.
Border Bandido
EAM SPECIAL!
• Tank tops with FREE 8" numbers only $6.99
• Hanes Beefy's with FREE 8" numbers only $8.25
• Just arrived! Neon Tees (S thru XL) pink, yellow, green & orange
• Shorts with or without pockets (S thru XL) ash, white, black & gunmetal
S
Buy 1 Taco Bar At the Regular Price And receive a Free Refillable drink!
25 % OFF
all CDs, pre-recorded Cass. & LPs
Friday, May 3. 4:00pm to 5:30pm
Excludes existing sale items. Not valid with other offers.
528 W 23rd
Café and Coffee Shop
CAFE AND ESPRESSO SHOP
12th & ind. 841-2310
Above Yello Sub
75¢ Off!
Get 75¢ off any entree over $2.00.
not valid with other offers
requires $2.091
KIEF'S TAPES CDs RECORDS
AUDIO/VIDEO
24TH AND IOWA LAWRENCE KANSAS 010) 822-1541
CAFE AND ESPRESSO SHOP
12th & Ind. 841-2310
Above Yello Sub
75¢ Off!
Get 75¢ off any entree over $2.00.
not valid wither offers
expires 5/20/14
VIDEO BIZ
749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
---
SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE
Buy any Kenwood car product and get FREE installation!
Expires
5/5/91
University
udio/video
KENWOOD
2 Video Tapes and VCR One night Rental $5.99 EXP. 5/14/9
- 3 video tapes
* 2 days
Only $3.99!
$1.59 Chicken, Fish or Pork Tenderloin Sandwich
$1.59 Chicken,
Fish or Pork
Tenderloin
Sandwich
no limit
coupon required
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
expires 5/31/91
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
expires 5/31/91
Super Taco Salad and Med. Drink
$2.99
Coupon
Not valid with other offers
expires
5/07/91
BIZZA
Shoppe
6th & Kasloi
Westside Shopping Center
SUNSHINE
NEW YORK
VISA
FREE
DELIVERY!
842-0600
$1.00 VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
544 W. 23RD
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Not Good With Other Specials
Valentino's
Restaurant
expires 5-15-91
ROUNDTABLE
Hamburger, Sausage, Canadian Bacon
Pepperoni, Green Pepper, Mushroom,
Black Olive, Onion, with Extra Cheese
MEATY ONE
CANADIAN BACON
SAUSAGE, PEPPERONI
HAMBURGER
Large • $9.95 + tax
2 for $15.95 + tax
Medium • $7.95 + tax
2 for $13.95 + tax
Valentinos
Restaurante
expires 5-15-91
$3.00 OFF
jiffy lube
14 POINT SERVICE
INCLUDING OIL AND FILTER CHANGE
LUBRICATION OF CHASSEIS, SAFETY CHECKS
AND THE FINISHING TOUCHES
Offer expires 5-21-91
914 W. 23rd #0557
BIGZZA Shoppe
Pizza Shoppe
6th & Kasioq
Westnage Shopping Center
SHOPPING CENTER
MALL SHOPPING CENTER
VIA 54
FREE
DELIVERY!
842-0600
LASAGNA or MANICOTTI or 1 POUND SPAGHETTI with Garlic toast & 32 oz. COKE for only $4.95 PLUS TAX
THE HANGAR No. 4 CLUB
PIZZA!
ANY 9" PIZZA &
A MUG OF BEER
$2.75
2309 Iowa Street
Expires $/31/91
DAYS INN
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 5/15/91
HAMBURGERS
Quickies
FRIES & DRINKS
SM
PIZZA Shoppe
DAYS INN
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kascoo
Westnagle Shopping Center
MASTERCITY
WESTNAGLE
175-9
FREE
DELIVERY!
842-0600
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
ONE HOUR UDK
MOTO PHOTO
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 5/3/91
ONE HOUR UDK
MOTO PHOTO
30% OFF FILM
DEVELOPING
BURGER SPECIAL Tuesday 5pm-Close 1/2 price single hamburgers
BURGER SPECIAL
Tuesday 5pm-Close
1/2 price single hamburgers
3201 W.6th St.
749-2466
no place hope like
SONIC
1015 E.23rd
842-7000
3201 W.6th St.
749-2466 no place holds like SONIC 1015 E.23rd
842-7000.
BUM STEER BBQ $1.00 OFF
Any BBQ Sandwich Basket
Expires 05/15/91