THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.86
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
MONDAY.FEBRUARY3.1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Deportation of Haitians begins
The Associated Press
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — The U.S. Coast Guard shipped home 250 Haitian refugees yesterday, and military officials said the 10,000 expatriates remaining in a makeshift tent city would be deported as soon as possible.
"At this point, there really is no choice in the matter for the Haitians," Cmdr. Randy Beardsworth said as the crew climbed aboard the cutter Bear.
It was the second group of Haitians sent home since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled late Friday that the Bush administration could resume the forced deportation. The first shipload of about 150 refugees was expected to arrive last night in Port-au-Prince.
More than 14,000 Haitians fled the impoverished Caribbean nation after a Sept. 30 military coup ous'd Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti's first freely-elected president. The Coast Guard intercepted the refugees, many of whom usedICKety boats to flee their homeland.
About 1,450 refugees are still packed aboard four Coast Guard ships await-
Yesterday, dozens of Haitians crowded along the rail of the cutter Mohawk to watch as their countrymen docked alongside, for the trip home.
in space at the camp set up at the U.S. Navy base here. Some have been waiting for five days, sleeping on the deck under a huge net tarpaulin.
The Haitians were denied political asylum because the United States says they are fleeing poverty, not political repression as asylum cases could be handled. Court set aside a federal judge's order that had blocked their return.
They stared in silence as the others climbed the gangplank with their meager belongings bundled in cloth carryalls and clear plastic bags.
The State Department said that about 5,500 refugees found ineligible for asylum would be sent home first, and the rest will be素材s for the others remain to be decided.
Marine Corps Brig. Gen. George Walls, who has been in charge of the refugee camps since it began in Nov. 1982, said that the reaction to the repatriation order has been subdued.
"At some point in time there may be a situation where we've got people who aren't going to want to cooperate and go, and we're prepared to deal with it," he said, declining to elaborate.
Walls said that the news of the Supreme Court decision had been broadcast in the camp and that many of those in the first two groups had volunteered to be among the first sent home.
Silotesse Jean-Jacques, 34, a political activist and Aristide supporter who had been at the camp since Nov. 23, said that he decided to return to Haiti to take care of his wife and even children.
"They don't know if I am alive and I don't know if they are alive," he said. "If I have to die, I'll die with my family."
Walls said Haitians remaining at the tent city will be sent home as quickly as possible, but that it might take until summer to complete the task.
The determining factors are how fast the Haitian government can take them in and how many cutters we have available," he said.
The Red Cross will handle the influx
Life went on as usual for the thousands of refugees remaining in the mile-long tent city set up along an airstrip. Women drew water from spigots and washed clothes in white buckets issued by the Navy.
of refugees into the Haitian capital. Beardsworth, commander of the Bear, said that the 185-mile trip would be stretched out over two days to avoid overtaxing the facilities in Port-au-Prince.
As dozens of journalists and television crews interviewed the 250 refugees being processed for the trip home, about 100 other Haitians crowded up against a fence separating them from the reporters.
They clapped, sang and shouted pro-Aristide slogans as they vented their anger over the Supreme Court decision.
Yvette Augustine, 28, said that she left Haiti because government officials were shooting civilians and burning down houses but that she volunteered to be among the first deported because there was nothing for her at the camp.
Hispanola
Haiti Dominican Republic
Port Au Santo Domingo
Prince
Caribbean Sea
Map area
0 100 Miles
Pacific Ocean
Knight-Ridder Tribune New
Walls said that there were 10,921 Haitians, including those deported yesterday, at the camp. Of that number, 2,000 have been granted political asylum and are awaiting word from the Immigration and Naturalization Service about when they can enter the United States.
So far, 1,400 refugees have reached the United States to pursue asylum claims; 955 have returned to Haiti and 350 went to a third country.
1987年
Peggy Woods/KANSAN
Hostess Qienwen Licoaxes Flower Jiang, 4, into singing the chorus of a song performed at the Chinese New Year's celebration. The fest'vities, marking the beginning of the year of the monkey, took place last night at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building.
Students from China celebrate New Year's
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
The year of the monkey begins tomorrow in China, and the year of the sheep ends.
Xin Nain Hao, or Happy New Year!
Yesterday, members of the Chinese community in Lawrence welcomed the traditional Chinese New Year at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. The Chinese Student and Scholar Friendship Association provided food and entertainment for the party. The association also elected new leaders.
The traditional story of the 12 animals that mark a cycle of 12 years varies, but the animals symbolize what is expected of the year to come.
Jun Bao, former president of the association, said people could expect the year of the monkey to be active. Because the monkey also is clever or smart, they can expect good things to happen in their lives, he said.
But people born in the year of the monkey must be careful, because the year could be unlucky for them, Bao said.
Feb. 4 marks the actual beginning of the new year.
Ming Maxwell, Shanghai, China graduate student, said the new year meant out with the old and in with the new.
"It's called the Spring Festival." she said. "It's the beginning of the lunar calendar that is set by the agricultural season.
graduate student, said the celebration wasearly because the fourth fell on a weekday.
Jiang Zheng, Hangzhou, China.
"In China, it is the most important holiday, similar to your Christmas. It is a three-day holiday where family members get together to visit relatives and friends."
She said the party was important to many in the Chinese community because they could not be with their families and did not want to spend the holiday alone. Different new year's customs exist in different regions, but food and fireworks are tradition everywhere, Maxwell said.
John and Jan Schick, KU alumni from Lawrence, said they came to the party to see friends. The two had spent three years attending school in China through a KU program.
"Starting at 12 o'clock, firecrackers and fireworks go off for a solid hour," Jan Schick said. "It's really neat."
Sobriety checkpoints to continue in Lawrence
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
Lawrence police say they plan to continue sobriety checkpoints despite a Johnson County judge's ruling last week that stated they were illegal.
Attorney General Bob Stephan said Friday that he had not read the ruling by Johnson County District Judge Franklin Davis, but that he would advise police in the state to continue the checkpoints until an appeals court ruled on the issue.
The checkpoints will continue until the attorney general or a district attorney recommends suspending them, police said.
A state law requires that officers have reasonable suspicion that someone committed a crime before they can stop them.
Davis said in the ruling that checkpoints violated that law.
Checkpoints will continue to be illegal in Johnson County until the Kansas Legislature passes a law authorizing them, he said.
The ruling came after a motorist appealed suspension of his license. Police stopped him at a checkpoint last April in Leawood and he refused to take a breadalater test. Police use the breathalyzer to determine a driver's blood-alcohol content.
The checkpoint program in Kansas began after a 1990 U.S. Supreme Court decision that ruled a checkpoint law in Michigan constitutional.
Lawrence attorney Don Strole said that according to the state constitution, police could continue checkpoints in Douglas County and that no judicial opinion in the county prohibited them.
*The police do lots of things that don't have to be authorization,*
*or just compliance.*
Carolyn Johnson, instructor in political science, said that according to federal law, police could search the interior of a car anywhere the driver could reach, but that they must have probable cause to search the trunk.
However, she said she did not know about Kansas' law concerning automobile searches.
Sobriety checkpoints, called "driver's license checklists" by Lawrence police, stop cars at specific areas in the city and check for drivers without their licenses, drunken drivers and defective equipment.
Lawrence police issue news releases that list locations of checklanes for specific time periods.
However, the release does not give exact dates of checklanes. Some locations may never be checklanese sites and others may be the site of repeated checklanes, said Sgt. Mark Warren, Lawrence police.
Blizzards in Turkey hamper search for avalanche survivors
Official says at least 134 have died since Saturday's snowslides
The Associated Press
ANKARA, Turkey — Blizzards and snow-blocked roads hampered searches yesterday for scores of people feared buried under snowslides in the rugged southeast Kurdish region.
Gov. Necati Cetinkaya, the state-appointed chief administrator for the region, said at least 134 people had died, many of them soldiers.
"At 7 a.m. everyone was shoveling snow from the roof of their houses. Suddenly, there was a loud boom like an artillery gun going off, and we saw a whole mountain moving upon us," said Ali Ergebn of Gormec, a village 190 miles east of Diyarabakir and in Sinnak province bordering Iraq.
Rescuers, airlifted by U.S. military helicopters, were digging through the snow.
Villagers carried victims in makeshift stretchers and shoveled snow and rubble to reach possible survivors.
He had to be rescued from snow up to his neck, he told the Anatolia news agency.
Thousands of villages were cut off in eastern and southeastern Turkey. In many places, the snow was piled up to 10 feet high.
A private Turkish TV station had said officials estimated the number of dead at 322.
Freezing weather meant it was unlikely that many of those trapped in the avalanches could survive much longer. Snow was as high as five feet in some places, said meteorologists who predicted more snow for today.
Still, there were miraculous rescues reported. Anatolia said that a soldier and four civilians were pulled out alive in Gormec yesterday after 30 hours under the snow.
Power line pylons weighted down with snow toppled down, plunging much of the area into darkness, television reported.
Worst hit by Saturday's avalanches was Gormec. Cetinkaay — without giving a comprehensive breakdown for the 134 dead — said many soldiers in a military outpost and villagers had died in Gormec.
Tunekpinier in Sirt province, Anatolia said. Another snowslide killed two soldiers returning from sentry duty in Uluder, while civilisans perished in Altkemer, Dolusalkim, Yamacil, Gectitl and Ortaklar villages, television said.
U. S. military helicopters based in Diyarbakir and at Incirik Air Base in southern Turkey ferried supplies and personnel to the disaster area and flew injured to hospitals.
Another avalanche killed soldiers in
The helicopters, along with 48 warplanes, are part of an allied air fleet which remained after helping hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Kurds who fled to Turkey. The Kurds left Iraq after failing in their uprising last year against Saddam Hussein and then were repatriated.
Kurdis revolted in March in the aftermath of Iraq's defeat by a U.S.-led coalition in the 6-week-old gulf war, which began Jan. 17, 1991.
During their flight, thousands of Kurds died of cold, disease and hunger. Hundreds of thousands remain homeless. Many are living in tents in the mountains, their children often barefoot and subsisting on tomatoes and bread. Unemployment is rife, and food is scarce.
Black History Month events (through Feb. 12)
Opening ceremonies:
"African Roots Explore New Worlds: Pre-Columbus to the Space Age" speech, 7:30 p.m., tomorrow, Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Lectures and discussions:
■ "Black Women: Reflecting on Self Image," 7 p.m., Feb. 6,
Pine Room, Kansas Union
■ "Our Roots: Too Legit To Quit," 7:30 p.m., Feb. 11,
Downs Auditorium, Dyche Hall
■ "Black Male and Female Relationships," 7 p.m., Feb. 12,
Javakhwk Room, Kansas Union
Movies and entertainment:
"My Children! My African!"
tonight at 8, 100 Smith Hall
"Straight Out of Brooklyn",
Feb. 7 at 5.p.m., Feb. 7 at 9:30,
Hashinger Hall. $2.50.
"Roots", Feb. 7-8, 6 p.m.
Feb. 27, 5 p.m. Feb. 8 at the
Kansas Union. Free.
KU Jazz I and Jazz Singers,
7:30 p.m., Feb. 10,
Crafton-Freeman Theater
Ethnic Recruitment and Retention Conference, 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m., Feb. 6, Kansas Union
Conferences and other activities:
Black History Month examines past, future
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
KU events for Black History Month include pursuit of academic, intellectual and historical issues, not just celebration, said Norma Norman, organizer of the events.
Norman, associate director of minority affairs, said that the month's goal was to show that African-Americans were a vital part of U.S. history.
"We have to focus on the historical significance of African-Americans," she said. "The month's events are not just songs and dances. They have to with scholarly awareness and debating issues."
The national theme for this year's Black History Month is "African Roots Explore New Worlds: Pre-Columbus to the Space Age."
Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African and African-American studies, said Black History Month was based on an intellectual premise.
Black History Month
Norman said the University of Kansas' activities would follow the theme by highlighting both the historians and the Americans and their impact on the future.
"We certainly need to know about
these, and we have to build
the past for the future."
"Most of us forget the intellectual foundation of the month," he said. "It's not a celebration for the sake of celebrating."
DR. MICHAEL A. KENNEDY
Gordon said that he hoped the month affected people's attitudes. He said he thought the main impact was of an academic nature.
"One of those impacts is the creation of Black studies programs," he said.
Gordon said that Black History Month was not concerned with the problems of African-Americans, but rather with the problems of white-dominated U.S. history.
"White history has to include other peoples," he said.
Bill Tuttle, professor of history, said a Harvard University history professor began what he called "The 1860s." It eventually expanded to Black History Month.
"You can't get away from the historical aspect of the month," he said. "Even though it has expanded, the focus is still history."
2
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 3, 1992
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairway Fint-Hall Law, Kanon, K60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Average temperatures in January seventh warmest ever in Lawrence
Forecaster says El Niño current makes February weather difficult to predict
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
A Pacific Ocean current caused a warmer January in Lawrence.
Andy Kula, a forecaster with the KU Weather Service, said the mild weather last month was caused by the El Niño current in the Pacific. El Niño is a large current of warm water that can change weather patterns in North and South America.
In Lawrence, that means a weakened jet stream from the west. The weakened jet stream causes fewer waves in the water and allows warmer air to settle in the area.
Despite the warmer temperatures,
no record hights were recorded during
The average temperature was 37.5 degrees, the seventh highest average ever recorded for the month, Kula said.
KU Weather Service records for January showed that four of the seven warmest months in Lawrence's history have occurred since 1986. The warmest January was in 1933, when the average was 41.6 degrees. The coldest average was 14.4 degrees in 1940.
"We have come within two or three degrees of a record the last couple of days."
The average high for January 1992 was 44.8 degrees, about eight degrees higher than normal.
"We have come within two or three degrees of a record the last couple of days," said Mark Mitchell, a forecaster with the KU Weather Service.
January heat waves
The warm weather meant that snow did not play a role in January.
Last month was the seventh-warmest January on record. A comparison of average temperatures:
Kula said the precipitation level was almost normal — 1 inch, a tenth above the usual figure — but all of it was rain. "The big goal was no snow," he said.
degrees Fahrenheit
41.6
40.1
40
39.4
39.2
39.0
37.5
'33 '90 '86 '33 '39 '89 '92
Warmest Januaries
Colde-
Januaries
(in degrees Fahrenheit)
1940 14.4
1979 16.5
1977 16.9
1930 17
1912 17.4
1918 17.9
"The big deal was no snow," he said.
Source: KU Weather Service
Lawrence averages 4.9 inches of snow for January.
Jeff Meesey, Daily Kansam
This week's forecast could cause people to forget the mid month. Kula said there was a chance of rain today and it will create conditions for the remainder of the week.
Robert Wavrin, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topeka, said he predicted normal temperatures for February. Averages are highs in the low-to-mid 40s,lows in the low 20s and 1 inch of precipitation.
But Kula said El Niño's pattern
indicating February weather
Phil the groundhog predicts more winter, but competitors differ on their forecasts
"it's hard to say," he said. "The pat- tern tries to keep things the same."
The Associated Press
PUNXSUAWNEY, Pa. — More winter. That was the not-so-spontaneous forecast attributed to Phil, the groundhog awakened yesterday to further a 105-year tradition in homespun American meteorology.
A shivering crowd of about 3,000, including comic actor Bill Murray, who was doing research for an upcoming part, cheered as the sleepy rodent was held aloft to peer through blinding camera flashes for its shadow.
Prognosticating groundhogs-comelately in Wisconsin, Georgia and West Virginia also got into the act, with differing outcomes.
Superstition imported from Europe says when a groundhog sees its shadow on Feb. 2, expect six more weeks of winter. No shadow means spring in two weeks.
Since Punxsutawney inaugurated this forecasting method in 1897, a
groundhog has predicted an early thaw 10 times, the last in 1990
"He's right about 90 percent of the time," said Jimmy Means, president of the Puxunxuawong Groundhog Club's Inner Circle. "It's just instinct."
Well, almost. The result is actually decided in advance by the Inner Circle's 14 members, who don tuxedos and top hats for the event.
The annual ritual began at 7:20 a.m., when Means rapped three times on Phil's hutch and handler Bud Dunkle gently pulled the rodent into the 15-degree weather.
Phil was passed to Means for a pretend conversation in "groundhogese" before a proclamation was read declaring a long winter. With that, the crowd's cheers turned to boos.
Murray was there as part of plans to star in a film titled, "Grounding Day." He will play a newspaper reporter cov-
The spectators began gathering around 5:30 a.m., two hours before sunup. Some stayed warm with coffee and doughnuts and blankets, others with pretzels and beer.
Glenn Warners, 34, drove all the way from Grand Rapids, Mich., to seeit.
"Some locals told us not to expect too much, but it's great," he said.
too much, but it's great," he said. Chad Neidigh, 19, and Shannon Barlow, 18, crossed the state from Lock Haven University to this town 62 miles northeast of Pittsburgh on the advice of Barlow's mother.
In Sun Prairie, Wis., where it was 42 degrees outside, Jimmy the Groundhog saw a shadow in a local custom that includes a Groundhog Day breakfast and a Groundhog Ball.
"She told us that Groundhog Day should be a family day," Barlow said. "She has a warped sense of humor."
Gen. Beauregard Lee, a groundhog in Lilburn, Ga., waddled on a 28-degree morning, reportedly saw no shadow and presaged an early spring.
"Dogwoods and daffodils to rise again — that is the official, lowdown word, y'all, from the Yellow River Game Ranch," said Ruth Letosky, a representative for the 11-year-old event there.
In West Virginia, Concord Charlie, a 15-year-old groundhog at Concord College in Athens, saw a shadow, college President Jerry Beasley said. But French Creek Freddie in Upshur County, W.Va., only peeked at the snow-covered ground before vanishing again into its hole, game farm warden Bill VanScoy said.
"I guess groundhogs are smarter than humans, because he knows when to stay in when it's cold," VanScoy said.
ON THE RECORD
Stereo equipment, valued at $1,145, was taken between Dec. 24 and Jan. 13 from a room at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave., Lawrence police reported.
An identified person took 10 cartons of cigarettes, valued at $154.70, at 7:56 p.m. Thursday from Dillons, 1015 W. 23rd St. When an assistant manager tried to record the person's license plate number, the person attempted to run over the assistant manager. Officers stopped the person at 8:07 p.m. and found that the license plates had been stolen from a Topeka resident, Lawrence police reported.
ON CAMPUS
The Homeless Awareness: Week Committee is sponsoring a candlelight vigil at 7:30 tonight in front of Wescoe Hall.
■ The University Placement Center is sponsoring a workshops and internships fair. The "Beginning the Job Search" workshop will be at 3:30 p.m. today at 110 Burge Union. "Preparing for the Interview" will be at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at 110 Burge Union. "Successful Interviewing" will be at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at 110 Burge Union. The Summer Employment Fair will be from 10a. m. to 2p. m. Wednesday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. "Resumes and Letters" will be at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at 110 Burge Union.
The English Alternative Theatre
is celebrating Black History Month with a staged reading of Athol Fugard's *My Children! My Africa!* at 8 tonight at 100 Smith Hall. Admission is free.
The KU coalition of the Lawrence Alliance will meet at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow at 64 Twente Hall.
The Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
The office of study abroad will sponsor an informational session about studying in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the French Department Library. An informational session about studying in Spanish-speaking countries is at 4 p.m. Wednesday at 4039 Wescue Hall.
ENVIRONS will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union.
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
The Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services of Karas will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Maisy Hills Room in the Burge Union.
GLSOK will meet at 7:30 p.m. The Turbine in the Daisy Hill Room in the Tower
- Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. Friday at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
INTERNSHIP/SUMMER EMPLOYMENT FAIR
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University Daily Kansan/Monday, February 3.1992 /
3
New domestic violence law sets stricter arrest policies
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
In the early television comedy, "The Honeymonerons," Ralph Kramden threatened his wife, Alice, that one would get a punch "right in the kisser."
Today, Ralph's threats could put him behind bars.
A state law that went into effect Jan. 1 mandates strict domestic violence policies. The KU and Lawrence police force a crackdown in accordance with the state law.
The law states that an officer called to handle a domestic violence complaint "shall make an arrest when they have probable cause to believe that a crime is being committed or has been committed."
Both Lawrence and KU policies also state that the crime of domestic violence includes threats of violence and physical harm, as well as physical and/or sexual abuse.
Lt. Mark Brothers, Lawrence police representative, said there were problems with the new domestic violence policy.
Every incident generates a full offense report, which has led to large amounts of paperwork, Brothers said.
Also, the law has taken away discretion the police had in deciding whether an arrest needed to be made in a domestic violence situation, he said.
"It has changed from the officer 'can' make an arrest to the officer 'shall' make an arrest," Brothers said. "Going from three to five letters makes a world of difference."
"It has changed from the officer 'can' make an arrest to the officer 'shall'
Lt. Mark Brothers Lawrencepolice
make an arrest."
Extenuating circumstances in the past that could have let officers avoid making arrests, such as considerations for an arrest's effect on children, money problems or the emotional state of people involved in the dispute, cannot be considered now, he said.
"If well-trained officers do not have a reasonable level of discretion, it really takes away much of the positive strength of having that well-trained staff," Brothers said.
Putting the aggressor in jail is not always a solution to the domestic problem. he said.
"The arrest can have a positive effect. It provides a cooling down time instead of leaving the woman alone," Robinson said.
Jean Rosenthal, a lecturer at the Applied English Center, worked with State Sen. Wint Winter Jr. on revising a draft of the bill before it became law. She said she thought Lawrence police were uncooperative when dealing with the domestic violence law and the public.
Rosenthal said she thought the Lawrence officers were not trained correctly to deal with factors involved in domestic violence.
"They need to train them not just in this law, but in the psychological things that are going on, like why battered women act the way they act," she said.
The quality of training Lawrence police receive in this matter is important to students because the police's actions, actions of the police, who live off campus, Rosenthal said.
Connie Burk, Lawrence graduate student and member of Students Against Violence Against Womyn, said Lawrence police might not comply with the intent of the law.
"They need yearly training and training for the recruits, and they need to have the attitude that this is something they need to see work," she said.
Burk said she thought KU police had a positive attitude about the policy and her willingness to work with them.
Burdel Welsh, KU police representative, said the KU police's policy followed the guidelines required by the law.
KU police also provide people involved in domestic violence cases with information about where they can receive help.
Watkins' survey highlights student satisfaction, concerns
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
The most recent patient satisfaction survey at Watkins Memorial Health Center indicated that KU students were overwhelmingly pleased with the services at Watkins.
However, the numbers don't tell the whole story. Positive comments outnumbered the negative comments, and many staff members were praised for their performance. But many students expressed frustration with doctors seemed rushed and that waiting time for walk-ins seemed long.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, who oversaw the survey, said the staff tried to be efficient and meet student needs.
Pharmacy employees distributed the survey during finals last semester. Surveys were given to 150 patients, and 95 were returned.
The pharmacy was the last stop of a Watkins visit for most respondents. Some of the staff, at least the pharmacist, were very surprised that a survey was being conducted.
Ninety-eight percent of the respondents said the waiting time for appointments or walk-ins was short or OK.
Ninety-nine percent of the respondents said their conditions and treatment were satisfactory.
All respondents said their overall opinion of the visit was OK or great.
The survey asked patients to individually rate the departments at Watkins, such as the pharmacy and gynecology clinic. The ratings for all
Watkins Memorial Health Center conducted a survey December 9-20 with 95 respondents. The results:
Watkins survey results
Waiting time for walk-in or appointment
short 33% O.K. 65% long 2%
Were your condition(s) and treatment(s) adequately explained to you?
great 69% O.K. 30% poor 1%
Rank of each section visited by surveyees. (1 is
7.95 general medical clinic 7.36 laboratory 7.30 pharmacy
7.78 urgent care 7.91 medical records 8.58 gynecology
9.00 INH/TB clinic 9.29 wart clinic 8.13 physical
8.25 immunization/allergy 7.83 nutrition clinic 7.67 medicine
Overall opinion of the visit great 77% O.K. 23%
Source: Watkins Student Health Center survey
departments ranged from 7.3 to 9.3 on a 10-point scale.
Most of the written comments complimented the friendly, helpful nature of the staff, particularly the physicians.
Many respondents said that they many clear explanations and considerate advice.
Some comments said that the examinations did not seem thorough and the
Although 98 percent of the respondents approved of the waiting time for walk-ins or appointments on the rating scale, the most frequent complaints on the survey were about the need at the pharmacy and for walk-ins.
Several students said that they did not feel they received complete, individualized care during their visits.
doctors seemed rushed.
Yockey said waiting times could be reduced significantly if more students made appointments. One-third of the patients at Watkins make appointments. The goal is to increase that number to at least half of the patients, he said.
The maximum waiting time for a
during finals was 48 minutes.
Yorkie
He said there must be a compromise between spending 30 minutes with every patient and keeping the waiting time reasonable. Appointments for the general medicine clinic are scheduled 15 minutes apart.
"The amount of time that a doctor spends with a patient is not directly related to the quality of their care," Yockey said.
Pow-wow at Haskell celebrates return of students
WESTERN COMMUNITY SCHOOL OF TRADITIONAL ARTS
A member of the Eagle Talon Society takes part in the traditional dance.
Kristen Petty/KANSAN
Tribal dancers from across Kansas bring traditional event to junior college
The Head Singers pound out the beat to the "Round Dance" at Haskell Indian Junior College.
By Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
Mark Brown and his 6-year-old daughter, Becky, approach the center of the packed room. Boom, boom, boom; the drums beat slow, then fast, then slower, then faster.
Yellow and black feathers frame their 'faces', and beads from their headaddress hang below each eye. They look dark and forth but barely lift their feet.
Brown shakes a feather in time with the music. The drums keep beating, and voices echo native songs.
Kristen Petty/KANSAN
For a moment, the audience seems to forget that they are not part of a traditional pow-wow on tribal grounds. They seem to forget that this dance is in a school gymnasium.
About 100 dancers participated in the Welcome Back Pow-Wow Saturday night at Haskell Indian Junior College in the Tony Coffin Sports Complex. Festivities included intertribal and social dancing as well as gourd dances and a dinner.
"It was a spiritual event," said Manny King, master of ceremonies for the pow-wow. "We wanted to bring in elders to give the school a spiritual blessing."
King said that the pow-wow was a welcome-back celebration for the students, faculty and staff but that it was most important for the students.
"The pow-wow gives students some cultural activity," he said. "It's important to maintain our culture and our spirituality, and we want the students involved with that."
King said the pow-wow was the first of the year. Another has been scheduled for the first week in May for commencement.
Bob Martin, president of Haskell, said that the pow-wow also was related to the activities for the celebration of the 500th anniversary of Columbus' discovery of America.
"We want to open up all these activities to the community," he said. "We hope we can get them involved with our culture."
The gourd dance was performed by the Intertribal Warrior Society of Wichita and the Eagle Talon Brotherhood of Kansas City, Mo.
King said that the gourd dance originated in Oklahoma and usually was performed by societies or gourd-dance clans. He said that the dance honored war veterans.
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OPINION
LIFEIN HELL
1992
BY MATI
GROENING
DE OMA MAI
BINKS'S GUIDE TO LOVE
WHERE ARE YOU SOUNDING TIPS FOR PEOPLE YOU HAVE HAPPY
CHAPTER III:
THE DART GAME OF LOVE
OR "PIN THE TAIL ON YOUR INSERT DONKEY"
LOVE SECRET #1: LISTEN CAREFULLY, INTIMATE PILLOW TALK A SURTLE UNDERCURRENT OF VERIFIED HOSTEL!
DO YOU LOVE ME, BLAIND NOSE?
BE LOOKING I DO MY JIGGY BOWL OF FLABBBRUM!
THIS LITTLE DART GAME IS DESIGNED TO SHOW WHERE WE MAY SYMBIRICLY CAN NOT LOVE CAN BE FOR PEOPLE WITH SOOO ANIMAL AND HAIR FUN!
MISRABABY
BORED
JIGGY BOWL
YOUR INNER DONKEY
I AM BORED.
I CAN BE BORED.
I CAN BE BORED.
I CAN BE BORED.
HOW TO PLAY
PIN GAME TO WAIT FOR ME TO TURN TO THE RIGHT.
NOTE YOUR OWN LAUGH ON THE OUTER WALL.
LAUGH ON THE OUTER WALL.
LAUGH ON THE OUTER WALL.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
YOU CAN BE BORED.
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Today's students, campus life influence tomorrow's history
We all have certain images of African-American history.
Most of us have been deprived of the chance to learn about Black America and what we do know has been offered through a very limited perspective. Specific pictures have constituted the basis for learning to learn about African Americans.
The picture of Martin Luther King Jr. standing in Washington D.C., orating to a magnificent wave of people.
Rosa Parks, searching for a seat on a crowded bus and meeting hostile onlookers.
Tiffany Harness Editor
YOU WERE THE BEST.
Malcolm X, fist clenched above his head, spectacles reflecting a distant light.
Each picture tells the story of those who sacrificed their time and lives in
We store their pictures in our minds.
We recognize their names, King,
Parks, Malcolm X, W.E.B. Du Bois,
Booker Washington, Sojourner Truth.
And we have attached to these names
and pictures some sort of confused
notion of what it was and is like to be
Black in America.
exchange for a closer chance at fairness, for the scent of justice and for a gimpse at equality.
But it is not only through great stories and near-mythical figures that African-American history is shaped. The history of Black people also is the story of ordinary people and everyday experiences.
Behind each of the god-like figures we learned about stood countless oth-
And still, behind those stood an even greater number of faceleves, but not silent, members of the African-American community.
Even here, at the University of Kansas, we daily are influencing his
tory because what we live will become part of history. The interactions among students, faculty and community will become part of Black history.
This month is Black History Month. For a fraction of a year, we are given the opportunity to focus on the intellect and achievements of Black people.
By participating in events scheduled for this month, students can begin to understand the Black experience.
The University Daily Kansan will attempt to capture African-American history as it is being shaped on campus. In what may be considered a nontraditional mode of viewing Black History Month, we will look at how the lives we lead are affecting history, what we are changing and what we are leaving behind. We will learn within our microcosm on the Hill as well as within Lawrence.
The Kansan will preserve a piece of the story.
- Tiffany Harness is a Hutchinson senior majoring in journalism and African-American studies.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
February cherishes diversity
Black History Month is not just for African-American students; it is for everyone to enjoy
This year, February is a special month not because it is a leap year but because
the University of Kansas is celebrating Black History Month. This may mean different things to different people. But everyone should see it as a wonderful opportunity because it is a chance for people to learn more about one another.
It is a celebration of diversity. It is a way to show that differences should not just be tolerated but cherished. If everyone were alike, the world would be dull and monotonous. The more difference there is in the world, the greater the chance for change and innovation.
But Black History Month is also a time to show that everyone has common bonds, that all people hurt when ridiculed and that all people need acceptance. It shows that all colors are only skin-deep and that it is more important what is inside a person.
This is not a month where one group of people is trying to raise itself above everyone else. It is not about separatism or alienation. It is not a celebration exclusively for the African-American community. It is away for the African-American community to share with everyone its history and achievements.
In order to understand one another, people need to learn more about one another. This month offers that opportunity. Black History Month should not be viewed as the answer to all racial problems, but it can be a valuable first step in understanding for some people. I hope one day people will not have to be reminded that we all have value and every group and community has contributed to where we are now. Every day should be an appreciation of diversity. But until that occurs, Black History Month and other events like it should continue.
Everyone can experience and enjoy this month. There are events planned throughout the month, such as lectures, movies and an art exhibit. There is no reason why everyone should not attend at least one of the events.
Amy Francis for the editorial board
Nintendo group offers option to keep the team in Seattle; those opposing the deal are off-base
There are few ancient Mariners in Seattle, a city whose baseball team has forsaken under a course of madness
1 tle, a city whose baseball team has forever sailed under a curse of mediocrity. In their 15 year of existence, the Mariners often have been little more than a glorified farm team.
But now Minoru Arakawa, president of Nintendo of America, and a group of local investors have offered to purchase the team. Seattle residents see a way to keep the team in town and remove its financial albatross. Unfortunately, baseball commissioner Fay Vincent and major league owners, including M's owner Jeff Smuylan, oppose the deal.
Smuylan has a $125 million offer from a Tampa syndicate that wants to move the team to Florida. Under his current lease with King County, Smuylan could not charge more than $100 million if he sold the team to a local investor. To deter local investors, Smuylan has been telling everyone who would listen what a lousy baseball town Seattle is.
But despite the considerable handicap of playing on the abomination of artificial turf known as the Kingdome, the Mariners managed to attract more than 2 million fans last year. That's more than the Atlanta Braves drew. And the Braves play outdoors on the
real stuff and won a pennant last year. You also have to admire the ingenuity of a town where a bar pegs its drink prices to the perennially weak batting average of the M's beltin' backstop. Dave Valle.
Arakawa and the local investors have offered $125 million and have pledged to put $25 million directly into the team. That worries the owners of other teams, who fear the $25 million would give the M's an unfair advantage. Smuylan and the owners have found a champion in Vincent, who said, "Baseball...has developed a strong policy against approving investors from outside the U.S. and Canada." And Vincent points out that baseball has had a policy requiring local control of the team since 1985.
However, these arguments are far off the mark as the M's pitching has often been.
At least four other cities — Houston, Baltimore, San Diego and New York — have teams with absentee landlords. And none of Mariner's owners have ever had permanent residence in Seattle. Arakawa, who was born in Japan, has lived in Seattle since 1977, the same year the Mariners docked.
Since Jackie Robinson broke into the major leagues, baseball players have come from a number of ethnic backgrounds and countries. There is noreason why ownership can't be equally diverse. Let Arakawa keep the Mariners in port.
Mark Coatney for the editorial board
Warren commission files won't reveal anything
Although the movie "JFK" has been in theaters only a short time, the list of unanswered questions the film poses is a long one.
Was there more than one assassin? If so, were they? Was the shooting a government conspiracy? And why were there so many famous Hollywood actors involved? John Candy, Joe Pesci, Kevin Bacon, Tommy Lee Jones, Ed Asner – the list seems endless.
Of course, I am kidding about that last one. However, with Oliver Stone's blend of realities, myths, flashbacks, flash-forwards and realities, it's difficult to decipher what the facts really are.
But Stone offers a simple solution. Free the files.
I hate to rain on Stones's parade, but freeing the files will probably reveal the same thing
Rich Bennett Staff columnist
Geraldo Rivera uncovered in Al Capone's vault—nothing.
Does he believe that there are some dusty files tucked away in a little room somewhere in Washington and that in those files is a piece of paper that reads:
What does Stone expect?
OK, I admit, I'm a bit curious about what exactly is in the unrevealed files, just as I'm curious about why the taste of Frosted Flakes makes Tony say, 'They're ggrrrl!' But neither piece of information will do me much.
The U.S. government did it."
When the files finally are liberated, finding all the juicy stuff should not be difficult. In fact, all the incriminating information will be conveniently highlighted — in black.
"From: The Warren Commission RE: The JFK assassination
I assume this because of my experiences with the government. Under the Freedom of Information Act, any U.S. citizen can request his or her personal FBI file, so a couple of years ago, a friend and I sent away for ours. I expected my file to include every major crime I had ever committed, dating back to the time I was
caught stealing a magnet off my teacher's desk in kindergarten. But the FBI has nothing on
My friend, however, had a one-page document on file about the time he was arrested in an abortion demonstration. Nearly 25 percent of the file sent to him by the FBI was blacked
If the FBI blackens the file of a 19-year-old kid who was part of an abortion demonstration, I think it is safe to say that the chances are exactly 100 percent that any top secret information about the assassination of the president of the United States is unreadable as well.
And if the documents have somehow remained unmolested, they certainly won't contain any earth-shattering information. The files, when revealed, will probably say something like this;
"On Nov. 22, 1963, our 35th president, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, was shot and killed. There were precisely three bullets fired, give or take a few, into Dealey Plaza from the book depository or the grass knoll by Lee Harvey Oswald who may or may not have been acting independently."
The reality of the situation is that no matter how many files are opened or how much evidence is reconsidered, it's too late to resolve exactly what happened on that November day
I would like to know, however, why Tony the Tiger tirs so excited over a breakfast cereal.
■ Rich Bennett is an Overland Park senior majoring in journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochele Olsen
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Myers
Graphics Aimee Brainard/J Jeff Meesey
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr...Bilton Leo塘恩
Regional sales mgr...Rickian Lamburger
National sales mgr...Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr...Ame Johnson
Production mgrs...Kim Wallace
Marketing director...Kim Leecker
Marketing director...Kim Cluxton
Creative director...Leah Chen
Classified mgr...Kip Chin
Business Staff
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 can send their letters by e-mail.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Sausfer Flint Hall.
Stick
I'VE GOT FIFTEEN HOURS,
TWO PART-TIME JOBS,
I'm IN THREE CLUBS,
AND I'm DATING AROUND...
I'VE GOT FIFTEEN HOURS,
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AND I'M DATING AROUND...
WHAT CAN I DO
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BEING TOO
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TAKE UP A
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WHAT CAN I DO TO KEEP FROM BEING TOO STRESSED OUT?
by David Rosenfield
TAKE UP A
HOBBY?
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 3, 1992
5
A
Philip Meiring / KANSAN
Up in the air
Brian Moore, Overland Park freshman, left; Eric Fellows, Boulder, Colo., sophomore, center; and Kevin Stephens, Shawnee freshman, practice a juggling maneuver called a three-man feed. The three students were practicing Saturday for a performance at the Second Annual Coffeehouse Fundraiser for Soviet Jewry, sponsored by KU Hillel. The fundraiser was held at 8 last night at the Rum Tree Club in the Holiday Inn Holidome. 200 McDonald Drive.
Controversy, debate to mark Legislature's fourth week
Abortion
m
ear
m
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee will conduct hearings at 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday to discuss a proposal to legalize abortion in Kansas.
Proponents of legalized abortions will address the committee Wednesday.
The House bill, sponsored by State Rep. Kathleen Sebelius, D-Topea, would guarantee a woman the right to an abortion if the fetus could not survive outside the womb.
The bill also would create stiff penalties for anti-abortion protesters who block access to clinics.
Anti-abortion activists consider the bill an attempt to legalize abortion if the Supreme Court overturns Roe vs. Wade.
If Roe vs. Wade were overturned and no action were taken on abortion by the Legislature, existing Kansas law would require three doctors to agree that a woman's life was in danger before an abortion could be performed.
Qualified admissions
The Senate Education Committee will conduct hearings at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday to discuss a bill that would enact qualified admissions standards at Board of Regents universities.
Proponents of qualified admissions are scheduled to address the committee Wednesday. Opponents will speak Thursday.
Chancellor Gene Budig is scheduled to address the committee as a SIA speaker.
Proponents say low retention rates and the high cost of educating unprepared students make qualified admissions necessary. Opponents say students in rural and low-income school districts would be disadvantaged because they have less access to college-preparatory curricula.
In a telephone poll Wednesday, committee members said they supported qualified admissions 5-3, with 3 members undecided.
The Legislature has considered enacting admissions standards since 1984.
School finance
The House Educa-
The House Education Committee will conduct hearings at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday to discuss Gov. Joan Finney's school finance proposal.
repealed sales-tax exemptions and reductions in the required balance.
The plan would levy a 45-mill statewide property tax for education. Property taxes would be lowered in 253 of 304 state school districts.
taxes
deficit
lottery
$$$$
The governor's plan would create a $217 million shortfall. She proposes to make up the shortfall with revenues from video-lottery machines,
A court order requires the Legislature to equalize the quality of education throughout the state. The governor should also would make education more equal.
However, the governor's plan has been criticized strongly by Johnson County legislators, who say schools should be locally financed and administered.
---
Presidential primary
The Senate was scheduled to vote on the issue Thursday but delayed action because opponents of the priors were moving through the Senate too quickly.
tomorrow or Wednesday
State Sen. Lana Oleen, R-Manhattan, sponsored a bill to repeal the primary earlier in the session. The bill was in the Senate Elections committee.
The Legislature approved the revival of the presidential primary in its 1991 session but did not allocate the funds for the primary. Kansas' only presidential primary was in 1980.
Gov. Joan Finney's budget proposal would $1.5 million for the April Treasury
If the Legislature vote not to appropriate the money, counties would have to finance the vote.
County officials throughout the state say they do not budget the funds for a primary.
Compiled by: Jeff Meesev
County official to leave position
McKenzie to direct League of Kansas Municipalities
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
Although Douglas County Administrator Chris McKenzie is leaving the courthouse to work in Topeka, he says his ties to Lawrence will continue.
Reported by: Greg Farmer and Gayle Osterberg
"I thought this offer would provide unique and positive opportunities for working with local governments," he said. "I'll still be working on the same issues that I've been working on in Douglas County. The only difference is that I'll be working on a statewide level."
McKenzie announced Friday that he would resign to become executive director of the League of Kansas Municipalities.
If the county commission accepts
his resignation, McKenzie has day in
the sun on her resignation.
McKenzie said that he announced his resignation because of an offer from the league, a statewide association of city governments.
He earns $72,500 a year as county administrator and will earn $76,500 in his new position. he said.
McKenzie said that he and his family planned to stay in Lawrence.
"We like it here in Lawrence," he said. "It's a good place to live."
His wife, Sandra, is a KU professor of law administration. Their children, Katie and Andy, attend Lawrence schools.
MKenzie was an attorney for the league for six years before he began a law firm.
The League of Kansas Municipalities was started in 1910 by KU faculty members, and its first headquarters were on the Lawrence campus, he said.
McKenzie became the full-time Douglas County administrator in 1986, and was the only person to hold that position. His responsibilities included overseeing the financial and legal responsibilities of the county departments and consulting the Douglas County Commission on all county matters
County Commissioner Mike Amyx said McKenzie's resignation would be a big loss for the county.
"He's such a wealth of information," Amyxsaid. "His oral and written communications were always dependable, and he would never pull any surprises. I'm sure the league is looking for those qualities."
Amyx said that the county commissioners would discuss replacing McKenzie atattoday'smeeting.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 3, 1992
Crown Cinema
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A People Person
Wichita journalist's book depicts 15 years of studying Kansas people
By Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
Larry Hatteberg went to great lengths to study Kansans in everyday life.
That meant setting aside a personal fear of snakes so he could observe Dr. Henry Fitch, a former University of Kansas ecology professor.
Hatteberg, a Wichita journalist who chose to profile Fitch, autographed copies of his book, "Larry Hatteberg's KANSAS PEOPLE," Saturday at the Hatch Bookstore. 2018 West 32rd St.
Fitch is known to many as the "snake man of Lawrence" for his expertise of the reptiles.
To tell Fitch's story, Hattieberg strapped a wireless microphone onto his own lapel, followed Fitch into a field with snakes, and let the "snake man" handle the dirty work.
Fitch was one of 85 people featured in Hattieborg's book, which is subtitled "A Collection of Colorful Personalities from the Sunflower State."
Although the book was released last year, observing Kansans was nothing new to Hattemberg.
Along with the profiles, the book contains photographs taken by Newton photographer Vada Snider.
For 15 years his television news feature, "Hattieberg's People," on Wichita's KAKE-TV, has profiled people throughout the state of Kansas. He said the book was a collection of his favorite subjects from the television feature. However, unlike television, the book allows readers to become more familiar with the subjects.
"In television, you have one chance to get the viewer," he said. "But with this particular book, you can go back and re-read anything you did not understand."
Hatteberg said the profiles were colorful because he had let the subjects tell their own stories.
"The greatest thing I write is silence," he said. "I let people like Mr. Fitch do the speaking."
Hatteberg's book includes profiles of people ranging in age from 13 to 97 years, from small towns like Neola, to bigger cities like Lopea and Wichita. He said the book taught him a lot about the people of Kansas.
"I learned that the people are our state's most powerful resource," he said. "We should be promoting them more and forget about the 'Wizard of Oz' and the tornadoes. It is the people that make the rest of us want to stay here."
However, Hattieberg said he never expected the profiles to be so popular.
Fitch, who was also at the book signing, has been interviewed by several reporters during the years. But Hattieberg took a different approach, Fitch said.
The first profile that he televised was about a paralyzed rodeo rider from eastern Kansas who maintained a positive outlook on life. The station got a lot of calls from viewers saying they liked the feature and as a result it continued for 15 years, he said.
"I think he was more interested in understanding just what was going on," Fitch said. "Some of the other reporters have taken a very superficial look at it."
The book's first printing of 8,000 copies sold up in December. One dollar from the sale of each book is being donated to Big Brothers and Sisters organizations throughout the state. In the book's foreword, Hatteberg says he wants the profits to benefit a people-oriented community organization.
In the future, the book will be used as a reference about life in Kansas in the 1990s. Hatteberg said.
STINFEN
"We are not just doing daily news stories," he said. "We are also doing history."
Henry Fitch, professor emeritus of systematics and ecology, signs a picture of himself and one of his snakes. Fitch was one of 85 people profiled in a book about Kansas people written by Larry Hatteberg.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 3, 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFSE belgrade, Yugoslavia
U. N. peacekeepers may visit Croatia
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Serbian leaders yesterday offered assurances that U.N. peacekeepers can be deployed in Croatia, but a defiant rebel chief did not sign the pact and apparently remains opposed to international intervention.
The Belgrade-based news agency Tanijug reported the accord was reached after 40 hours of debates between ethnic Serbian leaders from Croatia and senior Serbian officials. A declaration said the Yugoslav presidency guarantees the unhindered arrival and activity of U.N. peacekeepers.
But Milan Babic, leader of the Serbian enclave of Krajina in western Croatia, did not attend the final talks. Mile Paspalj, who heads the Krajina parliament, signed on behalf of the region, home to most of Croatia's 600,000 ethnic Serbs.
Algiers, Algeria
Algerian government forces changes
Hundreds of college students demonstrated peacefully against Algeria's military rulers yesterday as the country's new president promised the eventual return of democracy.
Mohamed Boudiaf, the aging heroof Algeria's war of independence who nominally heads the ruling High State Committee, made the pledge during an interview to be broadcast tonight, the official news agency APS reported.
In excerpts made available by APS, Boudiaf said the democratic process would be restored at some point. But he offered no timetable and said nothing about rescheduled parliamentary elections that were canceled last month to block an expected victory by the fundamentalist Islamic Salvation Front.
The agency said earlier Boudiaf would appear on television last night. There was no explanation for the change.
Algeria's new rulers have cracked down hard on the Islamic Salvation Front, arresting its leaders and hundreds of its supporters, and using force to rid the nation's 10,000 mosques of fundamentalist influence.
The abortive voting was the first attempt at free elections after 30 years of rule as a Marxist state under the monopoly of the National Liberation Front, which led the fight for independence from France.
Army leaders forced President Chadii Bendjedid to resign Jan. 11, after he indicated he was willing to share power with the fundamentalists. Critics contend the fundamentalists were abusing the fledgling democracy in an effort to install their own brand of one-party rule and create an Islamic state.
Chittagong, Bangladesh
Insurgency bomb explodes, kills 14
A powerful bomb exploded Sunday in a motorboat in an insurgency-torn area of Bangladesh, killing 14 of the 30 passengers, army officials said.
passage. Buddhist insurgents apparently planted the bomb, which also injured 12 people, said an army official in this southeastern city.
It was the worst terrorist action this year by the insurgents, who are fighting for autonomy in the resource-rich hill tracts region, the official said.
The explosion occurred near the village of Mahila as the boat was traveling on Kaptai lake, 35 miles northeast of Chittagong.
The 17-year-old guerrilla war in the hills bordering India and Burma has claimed more than 4,000 lives and sent thousands of local tribepeople fleeing to India.
From The Associated Press
Yeltsin completes first world tour
Yeltsin told reporters on the airport tarmac that the trip was strenuous but had achieved results, particularly in cementing the new friendly relations between the United States and Russia.
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin returned home yesterday, declaring his four-day overseas trip a success and promising an increase in foreign food shipments to Russia.
The Associated Press
"The main thing is that we have reached mutual understanding. Practically not a single question discussed caused contradictions," he said. "From now on we are not potential enemies, but allies, and we shall continue to develop our future relations on this ground."
Yeltsin's trip, his first major world diplomatforay, was heavily and generally favorably covered by Russian media. It is likely to boost his credibility at home, although perhaps not his popularity because he has come under increasing criticism for ordering painful economic reforms. His trip abroad adds a dimension to his image,
Yeltsin began his trip Thursday, stopping in London for talks with Britain's Prime Minister John Major, then continued on to New York for an extraordinary United Nations Security Council session attended by other world leaders. He later spent time at Camp David, Md., with President Bush, and in Ottawa with Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.
at Bush's retreat at Camp David, the two presidents signed a declaration outlining a new relationship. Both declared their countries allies after decades of U.S.-Soviet rivalry.
that of international statesman.
During Yelstin's five-hour visit to the Canadian capital, officials signed an agreement for Canada to sell 25 million tons of grain to Russia over five years.
Yeltsin called the talks in Canada very interesting and concrete economically.
He also noted Canada's active role in supporting reforms in Russia.
"This trip definitely won the official support of the leaders for our reforms," he said, adding that the West would be sending increased food aid.
Yeltsin also stressed the importance of his meetings in New York with Japanese and Chinese leaders and expressed Russia's willingness to restore friendly relations with China.
Russian television showed Yeltsin's return and reported approvingly on the role of him as a maина, who made her first film with him.
The report showed her on the overseas trip and noted that she had dressed simply, rather than showing off in furs. Raisa Gorbachev was sometimes criticized at home for her expensive taste in clothing and her high profile, which is unusual for wives of Soviet leaders.
The TV announcer noted that in contrast to her predecessor, Raisa Gorbachev, Naina Yeltsin prefers to stay out of the limelight and concentrate on housework. The evening news showed her buying bread.
Thousands of protestors clash with police violence in former Soviet republic of Georgia
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — About 5,000 people clashed with police yesterday in Tbilisi, the capital of the former Soviet republic of Georgia, while rallying in support of ousted President Zviatgadsakhurdia. One person was reported dead.
In neighboring Armenia, meanwhile, the defense minister vowed to turn the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh into an "impregnable fortress" to prevent its takeover by Azerbaijan, news agencies reported yesterday.
Azerbaijan, Mozambique,
In Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan, Azerbaijani troops continued their assault on Armenian villages yesterday, burning one to the ground and torching nearly two dozen homes in another, according to the Armenian news agency.
There were conflicting reports on how the shooting began in Georgia, where several previous pro-Gamsakhurdia rallies held in defiance of the ruling Military Council have al
ended in violence.
entered in violence.
More than 100 people have died in a month of fighting in Georgia between Gamsakhurdia supporters and opponents, who accuse him of becoming a dictator. Gamsakhurdia fled Tbilisi on Jan. 6 and has been in seclusion in western Georgia.
The Interfax news agency said police and national guard units fired shots into the air to disperse the demonstrators. The Tass news agency, which now calls itself the Information Telegraph Agency of Russia-Tass, reported that pistol shots were fired from the crowd of Gamsakhurdia supporters.
In the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Azerbaijani news agency Turan accused former Soviet military forces of airlifting Armenian forces and weapons by helicopter. Soviet military officials have denied accusations of helping either
Moscow radio said dozens of people died in pitched battles
Fridav and Saturdav in Nagorno-Karabakh.
"In the past few days, the sides have made wide use of planes, artillery and rocket launchers," the radio said.
Armenian Defense Minister Vargen Sarkisyan told Armenian television, "Our ultimate goal is to turn Karabakh into an impregnable fortress."
More than 30 Armenian and Azerbaijani fighters died in pitched battles Saturday, the Itar-Tass news agency reported.
The Russian television news program Vesti said that during January, more than 60 Armenians had been killed and more than 90 people wounded. Many victims were old people and children, killed in their houses by rocket fire, the television report said.
Pay-off scandal plagues Japanese politics
The fighting marked a new phase in the nearly 4-year-old battle for Nagorno-Karabash, a mountainous region. Hundreds of people have died in the former Soviet Union's bloodiest ethnic conflict.
Charges that the secretary-general took bribes could hurt Liberal Democratic Party's election hopes
The Associated Press
TOKYO — In a serious blow to Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa, a former close political ally was charged Saturday with accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes.
prosecutors charged Fumio Abe, a former Cabinet minister and former secretary-general of Miyazawa's party faction, with receiving $640,000 in bribes between August 1989 and January 1990 from Kyowa Co., a steel frame maker that now is bankrupt.
During this election year, Miyazawa and his long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party have been plagued with allegations that politicians received millions of dollars from companies.
Japanese politicians rely heavily on corporate larges to advance their careers because the favors they must give to political supporters inside and outside the party can add up to millions of dollars a year.
In a separate allegation embroiling Miyazawa's government, a former top aide to Posts and Telecommunications
Minister Hideo Watanabe claims his ex-boss accepted a total of $840,000 from parents wanting to get their children into good universities.
Hideyuiki Nagasawa wrote in the *Shukan Bunshun* weekly magazine that Watanabe took from $240 to $160,000 in exchange for using his influence to bump students higher on waiting lists after they passed exams.
Watanabe has denied the allegations, and no formal charges have been made. Local media reported the story last week.
In addition to Abe, prosecutors said Saturday they had charged Goro Moriguchi, the 48-year-old former vice president of Kovya, with having bribed Abe.
The $640,00 allegedly paid to Abe is part of more than $4 million that Kyowa reportedly gave Abe between August 1989 and January 1990 while he was in charge of development projects on the northern island of Hokkaido.
Prosecutors charged him with providing information about future projects in exchange for the alleged bribes.
Miyazawa has not been linked personally to the allegations, but the scandal has been a major blow to his administration.
Kyowa, but said he did not provide any favors in return. If he is convicted, he will face a maximum of seven years in prison.
Abe, 69, has acknowledged that he received money from
In New York, where he was visiting for a United Nations summit, he expressed regret and said he would work harder for political reform
"I apologize deeply to the public that such a thing happened," Miyazawa said.
After Abe's arrest last month, Miyazawa began urging his party to adopt new restrictions on political donations. In addition to anti-bribery laws, there now are reporting requirements as well as limits on corporate donations.
Abe has not resigned from Parliament and only recently left the governing party despite pressure from other Liberal Democrats who were afraid the scandal would hurt the party in upper-house parliamentary elections scheduled later this year.
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Talk show host Raphael's daughter dies suddenly
The Associated Press
ERWINNA, Pa.—The 33-year-old daughter of talk show host Saly Jessy Raphael was found dead in her mother's bed-and-breakfast inn early yesterday. A coroner cited natural causes.
The family tragedy came just three weeks after Raphael accepted son Joseph's offer to be his brother.
She was last seen alive late Saturday and was found dead about four hours later, said the coroner, Thomas Rosko.
A friend found Raphael's daughter, Allison Vladimir, dead in her bed at the Isaac Stover House, a mansion by the Delaware River, Bucks County District Attorney Alan Rubenstein said.
sentative for her show.
he said. No signs of foul play or suicide were found, and the autopsy showed no apparent heart damage, indicating a heart attack was improbable.
An initial autopsy was inconclusive.
Vladimir, of White Plains, N.Y., was one of two daughters of Raphael and her former husband, advertising executive Andrew Vladimir, Raphael, host of the "Sally Jessy Raphael" show, is married to Karl Soderlund, a former television producer.
"I would say it is likely to be due to natural causes," Rosko said, adting that more tests were being done.
On Jan 11, the youngest of her eight children, 19-year-old Jason Soderlund, was critically injured in a car crash about 60 miles north of New York. Soderlund regained consciousness after six days and is recovering from leg, rib and facial injuries, Schneider said.
Raphael, a native of Easton, spent many summers with her grandparents in Kintnersville, Bucks County. She bought the inn in 1986.
Raphael's story of coping with her adopted son's injuries is featured as the cover story of the Feb. 3 issue of People magazine. The magazine reported that Vladimir, a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, was unemployed because of back problems.
An employee at Isaac Stover House near Erwinna, 40 miles north of Philadelphia, said no one was available for comment.
Raphael was unavailable for comment, and a statement will be issued today, said Cindy Schneider, a repre-
Twain, Kennedy listed among celebrities' literature favorites
The Associated Press
GARDINER, Martin — Mark Twain is a hit with actors Martin Landau and Ted Danson. Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney likes a book on President Kennedy and Isaac Asimov picked "Pickwick Papers."
They were among scores of notables asked by the librarian in the small town of Gardner in southern Maine to help him find a wife. He has compiled a very year since 1888.
Pat Boone chose the Bible and Yoko
Oni favored Naomi Wolf's "Beauty Myth," which says a male-generated myth about feminine beauty keeps women from reaching their full potential.
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sion, wrote to Gardiner librarian Glena Nowell after seeing a past list.
He said his favorite books cover California and Texas history — “Two Years Before the Mast” by Richard Hana and “Napa” by James Conaway.
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9
Six 'Hawks win at track invitational
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
Kristi Kloster had never won the mile run before. She had never run it.
Kloster said her workouts made it possible to make the switch.
Kloster, running in the first mile race of her career, including high school, won the mile run at the Jayhawk Invitational Saturday. Normally a short-distance runner, Kloster said the Jayhawk coaching staff told her she was going to run the mile on Saturday.
"I liked it," said the freshman from Lenexa. "My workouts have had a good balance of endurance training and speed training."
Both the Kansas men's and women's track teams competed at the invitational, which featured more than 1,000 athletes from 40 schools. The meet was held at Anchust Sports Pavilion and was not scored.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said athletes prepared differently for non-scored meets. He said most invitations were not scored.
"In a scored meet, kids are called upon to do sometimes two or three events. Scoring points is very important," Schwartz said. "Invitations are more of a performance meet."
Besides Kloster, Kris Nelson won the 600-yard run in Inmate, 26.92 seconds, Marybeth Labosky won the high jump with a leap of 5-7/3-4 and Cassandra Bryant won the long jump with a jump of 18-9/1/4.
Despite the non-scoring format, six Jayhawks finished first in their respective events.
For the men, Harun Hazim won the long jump with a jump of 25-01/4 and Jon Handy won the mile in 4:13.90.
Schwartz said Kloster had been running longer distances to accommodate an ankle injury she had suffered from a fall during season and to show her versatility.
we were concerned about the strength of the ankle in the turns of the spurs". Schwartz said. "She's a very good athlete with a wide range of abilities. She's capable of doing more than a couple events."
Kansas snaps Sooner's spell
PATTERSON 31 KANAS 23 KANSAS 00
Marnee Dietrich/KANSAN
Kansas guard Rex Walters shoots for two as freshman center Greg Ostertag fights off the Oklahoma defense.
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
For the No. 5 Kansas Jayhawks,
Saturday's game against No. 18
Oklahoma was definitely a case of
bending without breaking.
The Hawks, who leaped from startto finish, withstood a second-half rally by the Sooners and a raucous Oklahoma crowd in claiming a 96-95 road triumph, their third Big Eight Conference road victory in as many tries this season. It was Kansas coach Roy Williams' first victory in Norman and the Jayhawks' first at the Lloyd Noble Center since the 1985-86 season.
"We stayed with our game plan," said senior forward Alonzo Jamison, who scored a season-high 23 points for the Jayhawks, 16,1-4 on the Big Eight. "We kept our compose, Ever since the Missouri game, we've kept our compose everywhere we've went."
That composure was tested throughout the latter stages of the second half.
The Jayhawks, on the strength of inside scoring by Jamison, sophomore forward Richard Scott and freshman center Ben Davis, led 43-47 at halftime. After Oklahoma scored the first four points of the game, the Hawks took a 22-7 streak and took a 66-48 lead with 14-46 left in the game.
Four minutes and 17 seconds later, however, that lead had dwindled to two, 68-66. The Oklahoma crowd was rowdy, and the Jayhawks were reeling.
Kansas point guard Adonis Jordan said the Sooners forced the Jayhawks out of rhythm.
"We were out of sync," he said,
"but after a couple of possessions
we began to play with poise again.
I knew they would make a run at us,
but that is where you have to play
with noise."
Williams said that at a media time-out during the 18-2 OKlahoma burst, he challenged his players to use the Oklahoma crowd as a reminder to concentrate and to play with poise.
"I told them that every time they heard the crowd roar, that should make them more determined to do the things that we ask them to do," Williams said.
Kansas settled down after the time-out. Guard Rex Walters hit a turnaround reverse lay-up that gave Kansas a 70-66 lead. The 'Hawks defense then held the Sooners' without a field goal for 5 1/2 minutes.
Nevertheless, Oklahoma hung close. Ten free throws by the Sooners during the stretch kept the 'Hawks lead at three, 81-78, after Oklahoma center Bryan Sallier, who scored a game-high 29 points, hit a lau-up at the 4:59 mark.
After a lay-up by Walters, a three-pointer by Oklahoma guard Angelo Hamilton cut the Kansas lead to 83-81, but Jamison answered with a four-foot jumper on which he was fouled and hit the free throw, giving Kansas an 86-81 lead with 3:56 left.
Oklahoma guard Brent Price cut the lead to 86-83 with a lay-up at the 2:49 mark. On the ensuing possession, Kansas ran down the shot clock before guard Steve Woodbury found Walters open for a three-pointer that pushed Kansas' lead back to six, 89-83, with 2:13 left.
Jamison put the game out of reach with three free throws in the last 21 seconds that put Kansas' lead at 96-92. Only a 49.7 percent shooter from the line last season, Jamison is hitting 76.7 of his foul shots this season and went 9-of-12 from the free throw line Saturday.
"My confidence has been better this season," Jamison said. "Nobody's been talking to me about it like they did all last season."
In addition to Jamison's solid outing, Walters, who led the Jayhawks with 24 points, once again provided a spark with two three-pointers and 17 points in the second half.
The loss dropped Oklahoma to 14-4 and 2-3 in the Big Eight. The Jayhawks continue their conference schedule at 8:38 tonight against Kansas State at Allen Field House.
Aycock boosts game leads team to victory
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas Coach Marian Washington challenged freshman Angela Avcock to shoot the ball more.
"I've been talking to Angie the last few weeks because she's been playing like a freshman," Washington said.
Aycock responded with 22 points as she led the No. 20 Jajawhaws past Kansas State, B-52, yesterday in Manhattan. Aycock hit on 11-of-18 from the field and nabbed four steals.
Washington has compared Aycock, a 6-foot-2 forward from Dallas to Lynette Woodard. Woodard was selected by the American at KU from 1977 to 1981.
Although Aycock admits she is flattered by the comparison, she said she tried not to worry about being compared to Woodard, Kansas' all-time leading scorer with 3.649 career points.
"I just try to play the best I can play," Aycock said. "I play to have fun and be myself, and I try not to worry about Lynette Woodard or any other famous role models."
Senior Kay Kay Hart was second behind Aycock in scoring with 14 points on six-of- nine shooting including two three-pointers. Senior Danielle Shareef and freshman Alana Slatter added 12 points each.
Aycock was one of four Jayhawks in double figures yesterday.
Kansas shot 51.5 percent from the field while holding K-State to 34.7 percent. The Jayhawks also outbounded the Wildcats, 44,28, including 21 offensive boards.
Aycock said Kansas did not have to rely as heavily on its nation-leading defense against K-State.
"We've been letting our defense win the games for us lately," she said. "Our offense has been really off lately. It came alive today."
Kansas' defense caused 20 K-State turnovers and held senior guard Mary Jo Miller to 11 points. Miller averages 15.1 points a game and needed only 14 points against Kansas to reach 1,000 points in her career. Miller was the only K-State player to score in double figures.
Kansas improved to 16-3 and 5-1 in Big Eight Conference play. Nebraska lost to Oklahoma State 69-57 Saturday, leaving Kansas in sole possession of first place in the conference. K.State dropped to 5-14 and 2-4 in the conference.
Washington said that despite hot shooting by the Jayhawks, defense was still a key to the game.
"We still relied a lot on our defense to get the ball back and contain K-State," she said. "Defense has been our mainstay all season, and it was certainly no different today."
K-State hopes to revive sullen season
By Lyle Niedens Kansan sportswriter
Things may be starting to look up a bit for the Kansas State Wildcats.
"Before it's over with, they are going to beat some people," Williams said. "I think they're going to win several con-
In a season in which the Wildcats have suffered two 41-point road losses
oneotherroad at Lamar University and the other at home against Okla haha their westside mayor K State heads into tonight's game against 0 N Kansas after back-to-back victories against Missouri-Kansas City on Wednesday and Colorado on Saturday.
Kansas Coach Roy Williams said he thought better days lay ahead for the Wildcats.
Rone and Nickerson have failed to live up to expectations, though. Nickerson is shooting just 41 percent from the field, and Rone is shooting 38 percent. However, the two combined for 29 points in K-State's 62-56 victory against the Buffaloes Saturday.
Nevertheless, a road victory against their intrateat rival would be a big boost for K State, 11-6 and 1-3 in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas State lost four starters from a year ago, but Coach Dana Altman brought in a heralded junior college transfer class that included 6-foot-3 guard Gaylon Nickerson from Butter County Community College and 6-6 forward Trasel Rone from Allen County Community College, who both were sought by several major colleges.
Kansas Basketball Game 18
"It could make their season if they beat us," Kansas guard Steve Woodberry said.
(5) KANSAS JAYHAWKS
Coach: Roy Williams Record: 16-1, (4-0)
VS.
KANSAS STATE
WILDCATS
Coach: Dana Altman
Record: 11-6, (1-3)
Game time: 8:38 tonight at Allen Field House
Probable Starters
| Player/Position | Ht. | PPG | RPG | Player/Position | Ht. | PPG | RPG |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 24-F Alonzo Jamison | 6-6 | 10.9 | 4.7 | 24-F Askia Jones | 6-5 | 15.6 | 4.0 |
| 24-F Richard Scott | 6-7 | 10.9 | 4.0 | 52-F Aaron Collier | 6-6 | 6.2 | 5.2 |
| 51-C Eric Pauley | 6-10 | 8.0 | 2.9 | 22-C Wylie Howard | 6-8 | 10.8 | 6.9 |
| 23-G Rex Walters | 6-4 | 16.2 | 3.1 | 23-G Gaylen Nickerson | 6-3 | 11.0 | 3.8 |
| 30-G Adonis Jordan | 5-11 | 13.8 | 3.5 | 5-G Marcus Ziegler | 5-11 | 4.9 | 1.3 |
Game notes: ■ Kansas leads the all-time series 135-86, including a 64-33 series advantage in Lawrence.
■ K-State last beat Kansas in the first round of the 1989 Big Eight Tournament, 73-65. ■ Walters has made at least one three-pointer in 16 consecutive games. ■ Jordan has 16 rebounds in his last three games.
■ Tomorrow's game will be televised on ESPN, Channel 18 in Lawrence, and it will be broadcast on KLZR 105.9 and JHKK 90.7.
Source Kansas Sports Network
terence games."
Williams added that K-State's athleticism could cause problems for opposing teams.
"They are much more athletic than they were last year," Williams said. "They can run eight kids out there who are very athletic and who can run the
Jeff Meesey, Daily Kansan
court and can make things difficult for other teams."
The Wildcats have relied mostly on 6-5 sophomore Ashia Jones, who returned to the team this season after sitting out last season with a broken ankle. Already this season, Jones has turned in a 35-point game against
Wyoming and a 28-point performance against Temple.
The Jayhawks will continue to rely on strong guard play. Adonis Jordan, Rex Walters and Steve Woodberry combined for 41 points in Saturday's victory against Oklahoma.
Kansan sportswriter
Bv Lyle Niedens
The Kansas women's tennis team will be looking for its second victory against a ranked regional opponent when the Jayhawks play host to No. 17 Brigham Young at 1:30 afterparton at Alvamar Racquet Club.
Women's tennis to play No.17 BYU
Kansas coach Michael Center said the Jayhawks, coming off a season-opening 7-2 regional victory against No. 23 Utah on Jan. 24, would have to play on the same level they did against the Utes in order to beat the Couzars.
"We're going to have to play one of our better matches of the season to win, that's for sure," Center said. "It's
a big match for us. If we want to prove ourselves as the best team in the region, we have to beat Brigham Young."
Although Center said he may make some minor adjustments, he said the Kansas lineup would be similar to the one the Jayhawks used in the victory against Utah and in a 6-3 triumph against Northwestern on Jan. 26.
At singles, senior Eveline Hamers, junior Renee Raychaudhui, sophomores Abby Woods and Casey Cooley and freshmen Rebecca Jensen and Nora Koves will take the court for Kansas. Jensen is ranked No. 21 in the nation and Hamers is ranked No. 32.
The Jayhawks' doubles lineup will likely consist of Hamers Jensen at No.1, Raychaudhuri and sophomore Buffy McLain at No.2 and Cooley-Koves at No.3. Hamers and Jensen are ranked No.7 in the nation.
Brigham Young does not have a player ranked in the Top 50 in singles and does not have a ranked doubles team, but Center said it was a testimony to the Cougars' balance.
"We're probably stronger at the top," he said, "but I think they are a very deep team. There is not a lot of difference between their six players. I am really impressed with their depth."
Tennis team wins match
The Kansas men's tennis team split
pair of matches during the weekend
at the Mamaroneck County Collegiate
Tennis Center.
SPORTS BRIEFS
No.16 Tennessee gained a bit of revenge against the Jayhawks. Kansas won both meetings against Tennessee last season, but the Volunteers prevailed 6-3 over Kansas on Saturday night. Tennessee won four of six singles matches and two of three doubles matches.
Rhain Buth, at No. 4 singles, and Manny Ortiz, at No. 6 singles, gained two singles victories. Carlos Fleming and Paul Garvin won Kansas' doubles match at No. 2 doubles.
Rowling teams double up
On Friday night, the Jayhawks won two of three doubles matches in a 5-4 victory against Alabama. Kansas' No. 1 doubles team of Butch and Patrick Han won the deciding match for the Jayhawks, defeating the Crimson Tide's Andes Lingren and Sten van Beurden 7-6 (7-1), 5-7, 6-3. Rafael Rangel and Ortiz won at No. 2 doubles for the Jayhawks, and Han, Buth and Ortiz won at No. 3, No. 4 and No. 5 singles for Kansas.
The Kansas men's and women's bowling teams participated in two competitions during the weekend. On Saturday, the teams bowled at Central
---
Missouri State in Warrensburg, Mo. and on Sunday, the teams competed at the Jaybowl in the Kansas Union.
The men went 7-5 while the women went 3-9. The men were led by Stephan Cox, who had a 200 average during the weekend. Joe Donnii averaged 195 and Morris Ross averaged 193.
Lisa Vialythang led the women with a 155 average over the weekend. Cindy Ries averaged 147 and Heather Anderson averaged 141.
The teams, which play in a six-tie league with a round-robin format, will conclude their conference schedule in three weeks against Nebraska-Omaha and Nebraska-Lincoln on successive days.
10
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 3. 1992
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SPORTS
Walters leaps into team's leading role
The Associated Press
In Latin, Rex means sking. And that's exactly what Kansas guard Rex Walters has become : king of Jayhawk basketball.
Kansas fans have enthusiastically taken the 6-foot-4 junior transfer from Northwestern under their wings. And it's no wonder. Walters is the team's top score, averaging 16.2 points a game. He has scored in double figures every game this season, averaging 58.2 percent (88/151) from field goal range and 48 percent (39/82) from behind the three-point line.
In Saturday's game against Oklahoma, Walters impressed the fans in Norman, scoring 24 points, including three of five three-pointers with his usual nothing-but-net jumper.
No plays, however, summon a louder crowd reaction than Walters' dunks. With a vertical jump of 341/2 inches, it's Walters' leaping ability that is fast becoming his trademark.
"I think people see me and think of
According to Peter Brancazio, author of "Sports Science" and professor of physics at Brooklyn College in New York, the average playground basketball player has a vertical leap in the 18-24 inch range. A vertical leap in the range of 24-36 inches is considered unusual and a jump over 36 inches is execlentual.
me as the guy who can jump," Walters said. "I think they also recognize my shooting though."
Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls, considered one of the NBA's premiere dunkers, has a vertical leap in the 36-40 inch range. Jordan is known for executing seemingly gravity-defying freestyle dunks, the type that Walters said is not in his game-day repertoire.
"I leave that kind of stuff for Midnight Madness and things like that," he said. "I might do a double-pump or something, but nothing too creative."
Just what is it about the dunk that turns a crowd from lax to loud?
Brancazio suggests that it may be
the fact that dunking is beyond the capabilities of most people. Or it may simply be witnessing physical strength as opposed to the usual soft touch of a basketball shot.
"The slam dunk is probably the biggest thing in basketball when you talk about what excites the fans," Walters said. "They love to see a guy fly through the air and hang on the rim a little bit. It's also a little bit of an intimidation factor for the other team."
Walters admitted that it was his junior year at Independence High School in San Jose, Calif., before he could dunk and that his vertical leap is something he worked hard on during the off-season.
"We don't really have time to work on it during the season," he said. "And as the season progresses my legs seem to become weaker and weaker because I'm not working on just jumping.
"But I still have enough to get up there," he added, smiling.
"The slam dunk is probably the biggest thing in basketball when you talk about what excites the
fans. "9"
Rex Walters
Kansas junior guard
Keeping in mind the crowd reaction to a Walters dunk, has coach Roy Williams given him the green light?
"He says dunking is fast as long as you make it," Walters said. "If you miss it, there's a very good possibility that you'll be taken out of the game."
Kansas swimmers, divers defeat Salukis
By Jerry Schmidt Kansas sportswriter
In their last dual meet of the season, the Kansas swimming and diving teams defeated Southern Illinois Saturday in Carbondale, Ill.
The No.25 men beat No.23 Southern Illinois 135.5-103.5, and the No.18 women defeated the Salukis 140-94. Both the men and women won eight of 13 events.
the women, freshman Amy Graham won both of her diving events and qualified for the zone meet in the three-competition with a score of 447.90.
Davidson, who qualified for the NCAA diving meet last year as a freshman, said this was one of his strongest performances.
Sophomore diver Tim Davidson qualified with a score of 534.52 in the three-meter diving competition. For
Two Kansas divers qualified for the NCAA Zone Diving meet during the competition.
A diver first must qualify for the NCAA diving competition in the NCAA diving team.
"This was one of the better meets overall in my career," David said.
Scott Tornsend wom the 50 freestyle in a time of 21.06 and the 100 freestyle in 46.88. The men finished the season with a 9-3 record.
The Kansas women were led by three freshmen. In addition to Graham, Heather Switzer won the 500 freestyle in 4:58.33, while teammate and fellow freshman Frankie Hanson took second in 4:58.40. Switzer took second in the 200 freestyle in 1:52.60 and Hanson won the 1,000 freestyle in 10:08.41.
Hanson said that her time in the 500 freestyle was her best all season and that her 1,000 freestyle time was second-best.
Coach Gary Kempf said that the overall performance of both teams was good and that the team was gelling just in time for the Big Eight Conference Championships.
"We had good performances on the men's and women's side," Kempf said. "Our focus, intensity and ability come together at the right time."
The championships will be Feb. 13 in Lincoln, Neb., and Kempf said the Nebraska men and women could pose a stiff test for the 'Hawks.'
Davidson said an early season loss to the Cornhuskers proved Nebraska would be tough.
"We're going to be in control of our own destiny," Davidson said. "We lost a dual to Nebraska earlier in the season and they should be the team to beat."
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Feb 24-30 enrolment I borrowed your pen. Upon returning it, you ran to get your dean's stamp while I was reading a book. Then henotched the opportunity and I would like another chance. Please reply here.
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Book signing. Carmie May Fowler, author of *Growing Up*. 1:30 a.m., m. p. tuesday. 2:45 a.m., f. tuesday. 4:15 a.m.
Louisiana County Rape Victims Support Service offers confidential, on-going support groups for victims/survivors of rape/sexual assault. Call Headquarters Counseling Center 841-2345.
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12
University Daily Kansan / Monday. February 3. 1992
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Female condom one step closer to availability in United States
ROCKVILLE, Md. — Marketing of female condoms should be allowed in the United States if the maker provides further information supporting its claims of effectiveness, a federal advisory panel said Friday.
The Associated Press
The panel's recommendation to the Food and Drug Administration is not binding, but the agency usually follows its own rules. Friday's vote was unanimous.
The FDA staff and the 14 experts on the panel indicated they were troubled by some aspects of the company's application. Specifically, they said the company's data did not support claims that the condom prevents the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and did not provide enough statistical basis for calculating effectiveness in preventing pregnancy.
But the company said afterward that studies required by the panel should be finished by summer and that if nothing goes wrong, the condoms could appear on store shelves by fall or the end of the year. They would be available without prescriptions.
"We don't see this as a big delay," said Mary Ann Leeper, who heads the product's development for its U.S. manufacturer, Wisconsin Pharmacal Co.
Earlier, during a daylong hearing,
women's advocates pleaded for government approval of the female version of the condom, saying it would give women control they need to protect against pregnancy and disease.
The condoms, which would sell for $2.25 each, already have been approved for use in Switzerland and France and England later this year.
"It's been known that contrapetties that are under the use of women are more effective because they are used," said Mary Guinan, a physician from the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
Guinan said the device would for the first time give women the power to protect themselves against sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS.
"The women who are most at risk do not have the power to protect themselves," she said. "They do not have the power to negotiate condom use by men."
"I think about what this represents to me," she told the panel.
Concha Orozco, who spoke for a Hispanic health organization agreed.
Although the panel's job was to decide whether to recommend the device as safe and effective, others were considering other possible problem: its acceptance.
Orozo told the panel that the questions people wanted answered were:
Female condom
U.S. Food and Drug
U. S. Food and Drug Administration approval is pending for a female condom. The vaginal pouch is designed to guard against sexually transmitted diseases and to prevent conception.
Selected facts
Tubular organ.
Dimensions
Researchers conducting clinical studies have found that:
The chance of women being exposed to semen is 3% , compared to 11.6% with male condoms.
- Tear rates were less than 1%, compared to 1-14% in studies of male condoms.
6 1/2 inches long
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2-inch diameter
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"How is it going to enhance my pleasure? How is it not going to enhance my pleasure?"
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The device is intended for one-time use, but Soupourner said even that need be met.
SOURCE: Chicago Tribune, Wisconsin Pharmacal Co.
"Are we talking about one night of
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
sex or one ejaculation?" she said
The female condom is an adaptation of the one for men. It is a seven-inch tube with flexible rings at both ends. The inner ring fits behind the woman's pubic bone, and the outer ring remains outside her body.
Testicular cancer diagnoses rise at KU
By Katherine Manweiler Kansan staff writer
Testicular cancer is common and curable, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Testicular cancer, Yockey said, has been the most common type of cancer diagnosed at Watkins in the past five years. Three cases have been diagnosed at Watkins in the past 18 months.
*Very few things that are that serious are that curable. "he said.*
Testicular cancer is always treatable, and the cure rates exceed 90 per cent.
Nationally, testicular cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer in
men 20 to 40 years old. Lymphoma, cancer of the lymph system, is the most common.
*No one causes nor can anyone prevent tunicular cancer," he said.
Yockey said monthly self-examinations until age 60 were crucial for the detection of cancer.
According to a survey last semester of KU freshmen, the top health risk for freshman men was that 83 percent were monthly testicular self-examinations.
"A tumor in the testicle feels like a
Yockey said most cases of testicular cancer were diagnosed after the cancer had spread to other parts of the body.
raisin or a piece of gravel half-imbedded in the testicle, he said. "Testicles should be smooth. If someone feels a bump, they need immediate examination.
One KU student diagnosed with testicular cancer went to Watkins for a cough, and a chest X-ray revealed that cancer had spread to his lungs, Yockey said. The student underwent surgery and chemotherapy and became free of cancer.
Blood tests can detect the spread of the cancer, he said.
A representative for the American
Cancer Society in D aver said the first step in treatment of all types of testicular cancer was the surgical removal of the affected testicle and all adjoining tubes.
But Yockey said the four types of testicular cancer required different treatments. Treatment possibilities include radiation, chemotherapy and surgery.
Based on cell types, testicular cancers vary in growth rate, responses to treatment and patterns of metastasis, and cells spread to other parts of the body.
The fastest-growing form of testicular cancer, embryonal cell carcinoma, can double in size every 21 days, Yockey said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.87
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY FEBRUARY 4,1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Studentlobbyingforrapebill
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
Jean Winter is trying to make her ownrules.
The Emporia senior has spent the past two months researching Kansas statutes and writing legislation she hopes will help Kansas rape victims.
Winter has written a proposal that would allow the sexual history of a person accused of rape to be introduced in a rape trial.
In order for Winter's proposal to be introduced, she needs a legislative sponsor. Last week, she spent an afternoon with several legislators, hoping her proposal will be added in a package of four bills dealing with sex crimes.
Three bills currently are being considered by Senate committees, and Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, is expected to introduce the fourth next week, said Robin Lehman, a legislative assistant to the senator.
Sen. Winter was out of town tveste day and could not be reached for con
ment.
Jean Winter spoken to Sen. Winter last week and said she hoped her proposal would be part of that bill, which would extend the statute of limitations for reporting sexual abuse against a child.
Rape is a very personal issue for Jean Winter, who said she was raped by an acquaintance when she was 15. She decided not to press charges because she did not want to go through a trial, she said.
"It just seems like it's the victim who is dragged through the mud," Winter said.
She said it was several years later before she learned that the man who had raped her also had raped other women.
Winter said she had a lingering guilt about not pressuring charges.
"I felt like I could have prevented him from doing the same thing to someone else," she said.
But as Winter was watching parts of Kennedy Kennedy rape trial in Detroit.
"I was more repelled by the whole thing, but I tried to keep current on what was going on," she said. "Granted, the witness had some credibility problems. But when they had three other credible witnesses who came forward and said he did the same thing, I was appalled."
Smith, who was accused of raping a woman in Palm Beach, Fla., was found
not guilty. The testimony of the women who claimed to also have been raped by Smith was not allowed.
Winter said she wanted to prevent a similar situation from happening in Kansas.
"I decided to make an independent effort to make a change," she said. "HIs just one person's effort to change a law that seems somewhat unfair."
With the help of friends and staff at the KU law school library, Winter looked up statutes relevant to her cause.
She said she found that Kansas law forbids a victim's past sexual history to
PRESIDENT
Winter, who hopes to attend law school after graduating, wrote her proposal and set an afternoon walking statehouse hallways, explaining her idea to interested legislators. She said she did not tell them about her own experience but planned to do so if it would help the proposal.
be admissible in a rape trial but that there was no mention of the defendant.
"It was amazingly simple," she said. "I think many people have a perceived sense of powerlessness when it comes to government. But if you just open your mouth, they do listen."
Homeless Awareness Week starts
About 50 people hold candles in front of Wescoe Hall to symbolize their awareness of homeless people.
Marmee Dietrich / KANSAN
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
A speaker at a candlelight vigil last night in front of Wessoe Hall challenged society to give hope, not handouts, to the homeless.
"Homelessness is not normal," said Mary Meyers, director of for a homeless shelter for men in Kansas City, Kan. "It is the failure of society. Charity is not acceptable. For 10 years, we've been putting on Band-Aids without looking at the source of the infection."
Meyers and State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, spoke to about 50 people at the vigil, which kicked off Homeless Awareness Week at the University of Kansas.
Meyers told those gathered to ask hard questions about why there were homeless people and why there were not enough jobs or affordable housing across the country.
*Lasting change comes from the empowerment of the people saving this is crazy.* "she said.
"It is the duty of the government to become involved because historically the solution to most acute social problems are solved with political solutions," she said.
Charlton said the government needed to get involved and understand the possible solutions. A shelter is not a home, and an income tax cut does nothing for those who have no income, she said.
Charlton said the political system was finally catching up to the rest of society in terms of recognizing and acknowledging the problem of homelessness, even if the system was not doing every thing it could to solve it.
After the speakers finished, students lighted candles that represented knowledge.
Homeless Awareness Week is sponsored by the St. Lawrence
Catholic Center, EcumenicalChristian Ministries, KU Students Against Hunger, Habitat for Humanity and theLawrence/Douglas County Coalition for theHomeless
Russ Testa, Topeka senior and assistant outreach minister for the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, said students were a good target for the awareness week
"Students have a lot of energy and the ability to get involved now and hopefully stay involved for the rest of their lives," he said.
Events will be going on all week to
help bring about awareness of homelessness. Testa said.
A panel discussion titled "Homelessness: In Our Own Backyard" will be at 7:30 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
A luncheon talk by Capt.
George Windham of the Salvation
Army about the homeless in
Lawrence will be at noon Wednesday
at the Ecumenical Christian
Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A family prayer of help for the homeless will be at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A speech by Janice Grady, a field organizer for the National Coalition for the Homeless, titled "Homeless in America: A Personal Perspective" will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
Videotapes will be shown prior to a discussion with Janice Grady about what individuals can do about the homeless problem at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the library at the St.
Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
Habitat for Humanity will work on its projects Saturday. Sign-up sheets and more information for volunteers will be available in front of Wescoe Hall and the Kansas Union.
A soup kitchen supper will be at 5:15 p.m. Saturday at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Mary Meyers and men from her shelter in Kansas City, Kan., will speak after the supper.
Ozone hole above U.S. is expected, NASAsavs
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The highest levels of ozone-destroying chemicals ever measured have been found in the skies above the Northern Hemisphere, making it likely an ozone hole will develop this winter over parts of the United States, Canada and Europe, NASA scientists said yesterday.
"Everybody should be alarmed about this," said Michael Kurylo, manager of the upper atmosphere research program at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. "We're seeing conditions primed for ozone destruction. It's in a far worse way than we thought."
Kurlyo said aircraft and satellite instruments had measured levels of chlorine monoxide, a man-made chemi-lution, and carbon dioxide, the highest levels ever recorded.
The levels are high enough, he said, to destroy ozone at the rate of 1 percent to 2 percent a day for brief, late-winter periods. In ideal weather, the northern ozone layer may be depleted by 30 percent to 40 percent, he said.
Kurley so said that the areas of depleted ozone found by NASA satellites extended as far south as New England and France during parts of January.
"We're not concerned with just remote areas now," he said. "What we're dreading with extends overpopulations in the Northern Hemisphere."
Ozone in the upper atmosphere shields the Earth from the destructive effects of ultraviolet radiation. Excess exposure to UV rays is known to cause skin cancer and cataracts. The natural radiation also can damage plants and ocean plankton.
Atmospheric molecules of chlorine monoxide and bromine monoxide react with sunlight to cause a thinning of the ozone layer. By measuring the levels of these chemicals, scientists can predict the level of ozone destruction.
African studies gains popularity
By Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
When Deo Tajua first started teaching modern African history three years ago, about 30 students were enrolled in the class.
A jubilea to turn away 61 students. His class is one of the 24 undergraduate classes offered by the department of African and African-American studies. In the past few years, interest in African and African-American studies has increased—among both Black and white students.
This semester, 101 students tried to enroll.
But while trying to accommodate students, the department is facing a widespread problem at the University — a tight budget.
GTA Deo Taiuba teaches a filled modern African history class.
SAMUEL BACON
Tajuba had to turn away 31 students.
Arthur Drayton, head of the department of African and African-American studies, said the department needed more counselors to meet increased student interest.
"We are a growing department," he said. "There is no question about that. From that point of view, we can use more instructors."
Drayton said the department suffered from a shortage of supplies and
ALEXANDER KUBRICK
limited classroom space. He said that with Hoch Auditorium out of use, it was difficult to find lecture halls for all the courses. As a result, many students 'are turned away from school.'
Black History Month
"I if I had made, I would be getting films made in Africa," Tajuba said. "I would also divide the class into two sections so we could hold discussions. But because of lack of funding, we cannot do that."
enrolling in the classes, Dylan said.
Tajuba agreed that the department lacked the money to keep up with the growing student interest.
Many students are interested in the courses because they fulfil a non-Western qualification.
However, Tajuba said he had noticed a growing interest among students to
enrolling in the classes, Drayton said.
"Africa is the second largest continent in the world," he said.
Tajuba said that although many Black students took the courses to learn about their heritage, African history should be important to all students.
"Thirteen percent of Kansas wheat is consumed in Africa," Tauba said. "Therefore, Kansans should want to know what Africa is all about."
Gretchen Muir, Lawrence senior,
said the course helped to dispel many of
the myths and stereotypes associated
with Africa.
"Americans have no knowledge of anything outside their country," she said. "In this world, you need to be aware of other cultures. You just can not be isolated."
Sewit Negash, Shawnee junior, said
U. S. students should be introduced to African history at a younger age.
"This is the first opportunity they get to learn about Africa, since it is not taught in the high schools," Negash said.
Drayton said interest in African and African-American classes was not limited to Black students.
"If it has any academic validity, it has to be a program for everybody," he said. "It would be wrong for the University to exclude African history whether it had black students or not."
Venezuelan rebels try to oust president
The Associated Press
CARACAS, Venezuela — Rebel soldiers tried to oust the troubled, elected government of President Carlos Andres Perez early today, cutting off roads to the capital and trying to seize the country's second-largest city.
Heavy machine-gun fire and mortar fire was heard around the Perez's residence and the Presidential Palace when the attempt began shortly after midnight. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Perez appeared on national television shortly after the shooting began and said loyal troops had defeated a coup attempt by forces led by a paratrooper regiment.
An Associated Press reporter heard heavy gunfire, lasting about 1 1/2 hours, around the presidential residence in the western La Carli neighborhood. Then shooting was sporadic.
But rebel troops cut off the two main roads into Caracas, and troops of undetermined allegiances took over the international airport.
Three hours after the attempt began, sporadic shooting was heard in the capital, and the presidential residence and government palace appeared to be held by loyalist troops.
But the attempt clearly had not been quelled and Perez? whereabouts were not known. There was no word from whoever was leading the rebels.
In Maracajo, the country's second-largest city and oil capital, rebels surrounded the gubernatorial palace, where officers located 350 miles west of Caracas.
The past few days had been characterized by indirect warnings from the military that Venezuela was facing threats from inside and abroad.
Venezuela has had a democratically elected government since 1958, the longest of any South American country. But the nation of 19.3 million, one of Latin America's richest, recently has been wracked by a wave of protests.
Perez appeared on the commercial TV network, Venevision, three times early today. He said units from the "Jose Leonardo Callejas" paratrooper regiment were leading the revolt. The regiment is based in Maracay, about 70 miles west of Caracas, site of one of the country's most important army and air bases.
Coup troops appeared to be wearing armbands with the colors of the Venezuelan flag.
Two large television stations in Caracas were surrounded by soldiers of unknown loyalty and both were transmitting regular programming.
2
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas. 119 Stairfer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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The University of Kansas ANIME will meet at 6 p.m. at 315 Art and Design building.
The University Placement Center is sponsoring "Preparing for the Interview" at 3:30 p.m. today at 110 Burge Union.
14th & OHIO
UNDER THE UNION
The headline "Third-class mail replaces classroom" on page 3 of the January 28 Kansan was incorrect. Correspondence courses at the University of Kansas are handled through first-class mail. The same story incorrectly stated that Sandra Hick was coordinator of continuing education. She is manager of student services. Also, all classwork for the course is sent to student services, not the office of continuing education, and the corrected classwork is mailed to the students, not picked up.
CORRECTION
ON CAMPUS
Police to continue sobriety checkpoints
The KU Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society will meet at 7 p.m. at 200 Malott Hall.
The KU coalition of the Lawrence Alliance will meet at 8:30 a.m. today at 64 Twente Hall.
Lawrence police will sporadically set up sobriety checkpoints at the following locations until March 1: south of the Kansas River bridge; the 700 block of New Hampshire Street; the 1200 block of Massachusetts Street; the 3200 block of W. Sixth Street; the 500 and 600 blocks of W. Ninth Street; the 2100 block of Kasold Drive; the 800 and 2200 blocks of Iowa Street.
Chess Club will meet at 7 p. m. at Alcove I in the Kansas Union.
842-3232
Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 p.m. at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
The Homeless Awareness Week Committee is sponsoring a discussion panel, "Homeless: In Our Own Backyard," at 7:30 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas Support Group will meet at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters at 841-2345, KU Info at 864-3506 or the GLOSK office at 864-3931 for the meeting location.
Men's Lacrosse Club will conduct a conditioning practice at 8:30 p.m. at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Weather
Tomorrow
Salina 45/24
In Lawrence:
Kansas forecast
K.C.
44/24
Clearing and cooler with a high of 48 degrees. Winds N-NE 10 to 20 mph. Tonight, mostly clear skies with a low of 26 degrees, winds N 5 to 10 mph.
Today
Thursday
Dodge City 48/24
Partly cloudy. High 46, low 24
Wichita 50/25
KU Weather Service forecast: 864-3300
Partly cloudy. High 48, low 20
Partiy cloudy. High 51, low 25
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Eligibility: Women and minority men with interests in the biomedical sciences.
Amount of award: $2,000.
Application deadline: March 16, 1992
Application forms are available from Sylvia Suarez, Administrative Assistant, Howard Hughes Program, 6007 Haworth Hall (864-3933)
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of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
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CAMPUS / AREA
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
3
Lawmakers discuss state commitment to education
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
More professors may leave the University of Kansas and other Board of Regents universities if state support for increased funding will increase, local legislators said last month.
But one lawmaker said Kansas' support for Regents universities was strong.
Michael Gaines, KU professor of biology, and Donald Robertson, KU professor of microbiology, announced last week that they were leaving the University.
The professors, who each taught at KU for 22 years, said part of their reasons for leaving was a lack of state support for higher education.
A subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee is scheduled to begin hearings today on the Regents budget. The KU budget will be considered separately by the subcommittee later this month.
When Gaines announced his plans to leave KU to lead the biology department at the University of Miami in Florida, he said that he 'money the anti-higher education governor'
PETER HALLMAN
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said Finney was doing what she could for higher education. He said the state's lack of resources was a problem that had been compounding since former Gov. Mike Hayden's administration.
During Hayden's term, $100 million was taken out of the state's general fund to pay for highway improvements and to return excess tax dollars to taxpayers.
Betty Jo Charlton
"At least part of that money should have gone to higher education," Solbach said. "State government, including the legislators and the governors, need to realize that higher education is an
PETER JACKSON
investment that will pay dividends in later years."
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawe, in the Kansas lawmakers were supported of her.
"All states in the nation are facing this same budget crunch that we are facing," Bogina said. "Those professors have their own reasons for leaving, but I don't think their anger should be directed at state government. We are doing all we can under right budget constraints."
"This kind of thing is what the Margin of Excellence was all about," Charlton said. "We were doing better at keeping faculty members when the Margin was financed. But when we didn't provide the funds for the Margin's last year, we were inviting faculty to go elsewhere."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-D Lawrence, said the resignations were legitimate to the legislature would have to pay for not financing third year of the Margin of Excellence.
The Margin was the Regents three-year plan to bring the total financing of its seven institutions to 95 percent and faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers. The Legislature financed the first two years of the plan, but the funds for the third year were not appropriated last session.
Philp Meiring/KANSAN
My Children! My Africa!
Ramona Curtis, Lawrence resident, and Peter Ukpokodu, assistant professor of theatre and African-American Studies, perform a staged reading of "My Children My Africal" In the play, the lives of isabel Dyson, a South African schoolgirl, and Mr. M., a teacher, are brought together in an Eastern Cape Karoo town. The play was presented last night in Smith Hall by the English Alternative Theatre.
Turner expected to testify this week
Jury selection ends for Morris' murder trial
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
James "Skip" Turner, former director of the Office of Affirmative Action at the University of Kansas, will be called to the stand this week as a witness for the prosecution in the murder trial of Kenneth L. Morris.
Prosecutors and defense attorneys chose a 12-person jury yesterday in the trial of Morris, a transient charged with the Aug. 8 murder of Danny Davis, of Lawrence. Eighty-six prospective jurors were asked if they knew, through social or business relationships, anyone from a
list of about 18 witnesses, including Turner.
In October, Turner was included in the prosecution's original list of about 160 witnesses.
Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells asked prospective jurors if they would be unfair or partial in the trial because of any biases toward anyone on the witness list.
One prospective juror, who identified herself as an employee of the University of Kansas, was excused by the district court judge because she said she could not listen to Turner's testimony impassantly.
hearing that Turner sold drugs to him on the night Davis was bludgeoned with a golf club.
Turner has said that he was with Davis on the night of the murder but that he did not sell Davis any drugs. Turner has not been charged in connection with any of the allegations.
Morris testified in a preliminary
Pat Laws, Douglas County district court clerk, said the number of jurors called by a judge depended on the type of trial. Because of the pretrial media coverage of the trial, more jurors were called for potential duty than in most trials, she said.
Turner resigned from office Dec. 17 after he used the words "fat Indian chick" and "faggot" in an interview Oct. 23.
Wanda Kring, deputy secretary of the district court, said there were no guidelines for the number of men, women or minorities in the jury.
Of 86 potential jurors, 36 were chosen by random drawing. The number of jurors then was narrowed to 12 by the prosecuting and defense attorneys, who each asked the jurors peremptory challenges or questions.
The questions are supposed to determined if prospective jurors would be unfair or impartial in making a decision about testimonies.
Minority numbers rise at Med Center
More minorities in med school
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Increased minority admissions at the University of Kansas Medical School has placed the school one step closer to fulfilling a commitment to minority education, said Shadrach Smith, associate dean for minority affairs at the medical school.
The University of Kansas Medical Center has increased its minority recruitment significantly this year. Here's how the recruitment stacks up.
Nineteen percent, or 47, of the students who were accepted into the school were minorities. Last year, 8 percent of accepted students were minorities.
This year, the admissions criteria included non-cognitive factors, such as leadership skills and motivation, along with grade point averages and MCAT scores.
Smith said the biggest difference in this year's admissions process was the decision to interview more minority students. Almost 10 percent of this year's applicants were minorities, and nearly one-fifth of the applicants who made it to the interview stage were minorities.
Smith said only five of the minorities accepted to the KU Medical School this year were from Kansas, which reflected the relatively low minority population of the state. Kansas has an 8.9 percent minority population, according to 1990 U.S. Census figures.
| | African-American | American Indian | Mexican-American | Puerto Rican | Other Hispanics |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1992 | 14 | 9 | 18 | 3 | 3 |
| 1991 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 9 |
"We interviewed all of the minorities on the same day," he said. "It showed that we have a strong commitment to minority education."
Fewer than 90 African-American physicians have graduated from the KU Medical School in the past 50 years, he said.
Although the number of minority medical students is increasing, the number of minority faculty members at the medical school remains low, he said.
One Mexican American and five African Americans are faculty members at the medical school. No American Indians are on the faculty, Smith said.
One of Smith's future goals is to develop solid peer and faculty support systems for minority students so minorities will not feel isolated, he said.
Lovie Bey, a second-year medical student, said that when she first came to the medical school, she fell isolated as she was a member of a minority group.
"There are not that man of us, he
said that has been kind of hard," she said.
Bey said it was important to include non-cognitive factors in the admissions criteria for medical school.
"There is more involved in life than grade point averages and MCAT scores," Bey said. "When you deal with patients, you have to have more than grades."
Back-door access hinders disabled
Architecture students try to find better way
By Svala Jonsdottir Kansan staff writer
When Jayne Loulos had a class in one of Wescoe Hall's auditoriums, she had to knock on a locked door in the back of the building and hope that someone would let her in.
To get to the front of the room in her wheelchair, Loulos had to enter on the ramps for the disabled in the back of the building because there were steps inside the auditorium. The back doors to the auditorium were locked all semester, even though this was the only way for Loulos to get to her desk, she said.
This is just one of the many challenges that disabled students at the University have to face every day to get to class.
"The disabled have been forced to enter buildings by side and back doors," said Tony Chapman, instructor in architecture. "That is what we need for our students. They have the right to enter a building on the same level as everybody else."
Chapman's students in Architectural Design II completed a project yesterday titled "Entering a Building." They
studied 21 campus buildings and suggested solutions to make each building more accessible to disabled students.
"What we have been trying to do is recreate main entrances, so everybody comes in on the same level." Chapman said. "People with disabilities should not have to feel they are considered second-rate."
Some of the solutions the students came up with were to add ramps to the front of buildings, relocate bathrooms, create new pathways on campus and add elevators to buildings to make all floors accessible.
"Disabled students going to the Art and Design building have to go from Jayhawk Boulevard to Marvin Hall, go around the building, take the elevator from the lower level and go across the walkway between the two buildings," he said. "Again, it is the back-door approach."
Other campus buildings also are difficult to enter, although they are supposed to be accessible, Chapman said. Strong and Fraser halls have back and side entries for the disabled, and in both cases, students suggested putting ramps by the main entrance of each building.
The problem with having ramps on the side or back of a building is that disabled students take longer to get to class when they have to go around the building, said Loulos, Kansas City, Mo. senior.
"You're just always late," she said,
yay (the University) are not success-
ful.
Wescoe, Blake, Strong, Learned and Malot halls were among those Loulos mentioned as difficult to enter.
The ramps are steep and the doors heavy, and wheelchair users often have to go around the building to enter, Loulos said.
Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said there was no plan to add ramps to the front entrances of campus buildings.
"In 1973, we established a plan of action to make buildings more accessible for the disabled." Wiechert said. "It dealt with parking space, routes to buildings, accessible entrances, vertical accessibility, restrooms and safety of programs. We were almost all the goals outlined in the plan."
Wiechert said wheelchair ramps often were put by a side or back door because such placement was easier and more inexpensive than modifying the main entrance.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4. 1992
OPINION
MATHELY Chicago Tribune
RALLY?! HELL NO, PAL.
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TODAY
Bush's union prattle simply political noise
Sounding somewhat like a representative for Quaker Oats, President George Herbert Walker Bush said last year's Persian Gulf War "was the right thing to do."
Bush challenged Congress to accept his package of proposals by March 20 or else "the battle is joined." George, George, George: We are not at war anymore. It is over. No more Desert Storm, no more stirring speeches and no more — thank God — "briefings" from Gen. Norman Schwartzkopf. All that is behind us now.
You can't make war on a recession. Saying, "OK, all you weak-knee consumers, get out there and spend!" doesn't accomplish anything. And neither will Bush's plan, at least as far as key issues such as education and public investment are concerned.
The package Bush proposed is mostly a grab bag of short-term solutions which, according to many economists, may improve the economy temporarily but will not pull the United States out of the recession. So what was Tuesday night's speech about? Good question.
Despite Bush's statements that this was not a politically motivated speech, no one watching could have not come to the conclusion that Bush
Kevin Bartels staff columnist
has become seriously worried about his re-election chances.
Millions of hapless television viewers were subjected to an almost endless barrage of lame swill about the death of "imperial communism" whatever that means — and how the American taxpayer deserves a "hunk of the glory" for supporting U.S. militarism, amid other statements that the recession "will not stand."
Never mind that if you don't fork over your "hunk" to Uncle Sam, you will be carted off to jail and have all your possessions sold. Just ask Willie Nelson.
When will it end? The U.S. political process is coming to resemble a football game more and more. Our elected representatives behaved like a pack of fans at a pep rally, applauding wildly, giving one standing ovation after another and just hotting like animals.
and all for no good reason.
Will Bush were-elected? That seems to have been the question behind the State of the Re-earnment, er, Union address. There was much gibberish uttered during that speech, including the ridiculous assertion that America and George Bush "won" the Cold War.
Nowhere, though, was any real assurance that things can or will change. In a day and age when a Japanese executive can label American workers "lazy and illiterate" and get away with it, and when Americans everywhere are watching their standard of living steadily decline, the president can offer nothing more than feel-good rhetoric and warmed-over economic proposals.
Perhaps Bush made use of the washroom after his speech to purge whatever feelings of guilt he might have had after such a dim-witted oration. Perhaps not. We all can, though, congratulate ourselves for having licked those dirty commies. Let's celebrate by electing ourselves a new president.
- Kevin Bartels is a Louisville, Ky.,graduate student majoring in English.
THE UNIVERSITYDAILY KANSAN
Low pay frustrates teachers
The state must finance competitive salaries, otherwise talented professors will leave
Frustration. That is why two professors announced last week they would no longer teach at the University of Kansas.
Michael Gaines, professor of biology, and Donald Robertson, professor of microbiology, have enjoyed teaching at KU for 22 years. Both men wanted to continue to teach at KU. But when they received lucrative offers from other universities, they decided it was time to leave.
Who can blame them? Until the state of Kansas makes a strong commitment to higher education by providing adequate financing, more departures are likely.
"I'm not excited about going to Miami. It's just something that I have to do," Gaines said.
The fact that other universities are able to pay professors more than KU does is nothing new. That was the main reason behind the Margin of Excellence, the Board of Regents plan to increase KU faculty salaries to 95 percent of its peer schools.
But only two years of the program were financed by the governor and the Legislature. The third year was canceled when the state faced a budget crunch. And as the recession gets worse, the chances for improvements in higher education in Kansas
arenot good.
Last month, Gov. Finney revealed her 1993 budget, which provides only a 2.5-percent merit increase for faculty and staff. That is half of what KU requested, and the third straight year that KU has received less than a 3-percent increase.
How can the state of Kansas expect to keep talented faculty when other colleges and universities are willing to provide better salaries? A more troubling question is how will Kansas universities will replace faculty members who go elsewhere?
The departure of Gaines and Robertson should alarm students at KU. For a long time, the University has fought the battle against under-financing and done surprisingly well. But both professors warned in their statements that they knew of other faculty members who were thinking of leaving.
The time has come for Gov. Finney and the Legislature to realize that education is too important to under-finance. By cutting money for higher education, the state is mortgaging its future.
Higher education has been a valuable resource for the state of Kansas for a long time. Gov. Finney should now provide the leadership to ensure that it is adequately financed.
It is in this way only that professors like Gaines and Robertson can kept at KU.
Phones are sound investment
Chris Mossier for the edithiaboard
Chris Mossier for the edithiaboard
Emergency phones increase safety for students and faculty in buildings across campus
Human life is the most priceless thing in the world. The University of Kansas should be applauded for spending money to further protect the lives of students and faculty. The installation of new emergency phones is a bright idea. Although there currently are blue phones on campus, the newly installed bright yellow phones are inside buildings and contain a single button which directly rings the police dispatcher.
Besides eliminating the hand-held receiver, the new emergency phones contain a device which prevents the caller and the dis
patcher from being disconnected for three minutes. The caller cannot merely hang up as he or she could on a blue phone. When the caller activates the button, the telephone speakers shriek loudly. This device may discourage pranksters and scare off an attacker. After three minutes, the telephone will reset itself if it is not in use. The telephones are also handicapped-accessible with operating instructions in Braille.
Students can find the new emergency phones in the Kansas Union as well as Wescoe, Fraser, Strong, Learned, Haworth and Malott halls. These locations are beneficial to students studying late who might need emergency access to a telephone.
Tiffany Lasha Hurt for the editorial board
--the morning, after the cleaning crew has done its work and before the daily onslaught of Capitol visitors begins. ...
- The Parkersburg (W.Va.) News on congressional spending:
Although most members of the House headed for their home districts over the holidays, House Speaker Tom Foley ordered marble floors installed in the elevators. Not just any old marble, either. This stuff cost $250 per square foot. Total bill: $26.00.
National perspectives
Like the Bourbons of pre-revolutionary France, congressional leaders are fond of constructing ostentatious quarters for themselves at taxpayers expense. Their latest display of gluttonous behavior can be found in elevators serving the House of Representatives side of the Capitol.
Apparently mere carpeted floors were not good enough for Prince, er, Speaker Foley. The new marble surely looks grand when it's clean, a condition in which it can be found in the wee hours of
Foley used a slush fund available to him through the Architect of the Capitol, which allocated only $20,000 for the project. Maybe Foley will just write a check for the other $6,000.
Ah, but it looks so grand at 3 a.m. And besides, Prince Foley likes it. So taxpayers are stuck with the tab. Term limits, anyone?
Daily Press, Newport News, Va., on Head Start:
This is the kind of thing President Bush should have been doing more of over the past four years: visiting Head Start centers. The president dropped in on one in Maryland ... to announce a proposed increase in funding for the program that prepares poor children for school and for life.
Head Start is recognized as one of the great successes coming out of Lyndon Johnson's war on poverty. It provides young children with instruction to prepare them for school, but also offers good meals, medical care and other services that are hallmarks of healthy, middle-class families. It is the focus on all of a
The problem has been that not all of the children eligible for Head Start have been able to participate in it. There hasn't been enough money.
child's needs that accounts for Head Start's record of achievement.
Bush's proposal to increase spending by $500 million is welcome, but he will have competition from some Democrats who want to double that.
People know it works, so let's give it a chance to work.
Government can't force parents to love their children. But, for the children's
- Greensboro (N.C.) News & Record on child care:
- People who produce children have a responsibility to take care of them. ... The reality is that this most basic of responsibilities is one that many parents haven't learned. It's estimated that some 2.8 million American parents — mostly fathers
- either don't provide any support for their children or else don't pay as much as they should.
sake, it should force negligent parents to provide for them. That's the virtue of a bill introduced by U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill. It would hold runaway parents' feet to the fire, making it a federal crime to flee a state to avoid paying court-ordered child support...
Not only would it make federal law enforcement officials more involved in tracking these scofflaws. But its stiff sentences for playing state-to-state hop-scatch would offer a deterrent. Hyde's bill provides for substantial fines and prison sentences ...
It's a shame that the shotgun approach to support is what works. But parents should be held accountable for their children's well-being.
The Atlanta Journalon joblessness:
Once again, jobless Americans are running out of money. They need another 13-week extension of jobless benefits. They should get it and quickly.
Last year the president held up jobless benefits for four months, claiming to see
This go-around there will be no opposition from President Bush. Everyone agrees we are in a recession; everyone agrees we are in an election year. While all agree, however, to extend benefits, there is no agreement over how to pay for it.
House Democrats showed the wrong way in legislation they introduced the other day: They would borrow $4.5 billion to grant another 13 weeks of jobless benefits.
He finally acquiesced, but had benefits been granted expeditiously, the economy may have been more buoyant. By keeping families afloat, jobless benefits keep the economy affloat, too.
The president was wrong to hold up benefits last year. He was right, however, to insist that the money to pay for benefits be found without additional borrowing. He should insist again on no new borrowing.
Extend jobless benefits. But cut spending or close tax loopholes to pay for it.
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
the light at the end of a recessionary tunnel.
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
Editors
News ... Mike Andrews
Editorial ... Beth Randall
Planning ... Laure Gold
Campus ... Eric Gorske/Rochelle Olson
Portraits ... Eric Nelson
Photo ... Jule Jacobson
Features ... Debbie Myers
Graphics ... Jeff Meesey/Aimee Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr Bill Leibenkoen
Regional sales mgr Richelle bahrberger
National sales mgr Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr Anne Johnson
Production mgrs Kim Wallace
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Classified mgr Kip Chin
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
By Tom Michaud
Letters should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pho-
**Kansas** reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Safer-Fint Hall.
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1
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
5
U.S. returns Haitians
Activists, officials fear repatriates may face death
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The United States began its repatriation program for thousands of Haitian refugees yesterday, turning over 381 people to Haitian authorities with $15 in their pockets and an uncertain future.
U. N. officials and human-rights advocates warned that many of the 12,000 boat people in U.S. custody face death or intimidation at the hands of
Haitian security forces if they return to their towns and villages.
Officials at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where nearly all the Haitians are being held, said those who returned on two Coast Guard cutters yesterday did so voluntarily, but others did not want to go back.
Dozens in the first group said they had risked their lives fleeing in rickety boats to get away from Haiti's poverty and not political persecution.
The United States has denied asylum to most intercepted Haitians, saying they were not political refugees as U.S. law requires. The Supreme Court opened the way Friday for their repatriation by overturning a federal judge's order that had blocked their
The repatriation caused an outcry among some politicians and advocates of the immigrants who think that these people would be exposed to political reprisal on their return.
return for months.
"Had we been any other country—white or Spanish —we would have had a chance," Florence Comeau of the Haitian Affairs Committee in New York said yesterday. "The Cubans can come in any time. The Cubans are people, the Haitians are people, but one is light-skinned, and the other is not."
In Washington, White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the repatriation was being monitored by U.S. Embassy officers as well as representatives of the Organization of American States and the Red Cross.
Argentina to free Nazi files
The Associated Press
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina After decades of secrecy, the Argentine government displayed yesterday some of its files on Nazis who fled to this South American country after World War II, and said all such files would be made public soon.
"This is a debt Argentina is paying to humanity," President Carlos Menem said at a news conference attended by Cabinet ministers, foreign ambassadors, Nazi hunters and reporters from around the world.
Experts said the documents may
shed light on some of history's dark corners, particularly on how former top Nazis vanished from Europe as the Third Reich collapsed and showed up months and years later in the South American nation.
The files are locked away by the Federal Police, Immigration Department and other agencies. Menem's decree removed the documents from protection by an official secrets act and ordered them collected by the National Archives.
The files are to be turned over within 30 days, and will be opened for public inspection as soon as they have been
put on microfilm.
Adolf Eichmann, the architect of Hitler's attempted extermination of Europe's Jews, found refuge in Argentina. So did Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death" at the Auschwitz concentration camp. There have been rumors of sightings of Martin Bormann, Hitler's top deputy who many experts think died in Berlin in 1945.
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Aides said Menem was moved to act by requests from the World Jewish Congress and unfavorable publicity in newspapers for not doing having acted earlier.
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6
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
Lowden to help lobby in Legislature
By Jay Williams Kansan staff writer
Alan Lowden, student body president, does not like to lobby.
"That was one of the reasons I did not run for the job," he said.
Circumstances placed Lowden in the position in which some lobbying in the Kansas Legislature is necessary.
Lowden became president Dec. 4, when the Judicial Board recommended to uphold Student Senate's vote to expel Darren Fulcher as president.
Lowdensaidhislateststartplacedhimata disadvantage.
"We have a monumental task the next few months," he said.
Topeka this semester as past presidents.
Lowden said he would not be as active in
"Things around here are delegated pretty well," he said. "There are only so many things one person can do."
10
Joe Cinalli, campus director for Associated Students of Kansas, said most of the work in Toperka fell on him and assistant campus director John Schwartz.
"John and I will spend the time in Topeka," he said. "We have got to take the ball and run with it. I'm sure Alan will be there when he can."
Lowden said his largest disadvantage was not knowing the members of the Legislature.
Mike Schreiner, former student body president, said Lowden lost nine months during which he could have met the key people in the Legislature.
"After I took office in April, I spent the summer working on state issues with the Student Advisory Council and the Board of Regents," Schreiner said.
The preparation helped him know which legislators to target and which lobbying methods would be successful, Schreiner said.
"Any chance to have lunch with a legislator, I took advantage," he said. "I would walk around the building and grab an ear."
Lowden said the events involving Sanne a last semester caused the University of Kansas to be poorly represented at the state level. He said that for the University to catch up, he would
need to get to know legislators and the Board of Regents and articulate student concerns.
Lowden said those concerns included the issues that always concerned KU students.
"The issues are not complex things," Lowen said. "They do not change much year to year."
Schreiner said that although Lowden lacked time, he still could be effective in Topeka.
Schreiner recommended that Lowden get familiar with the issues, especially Gov. Joan Finney's proposed budget.
"He should sit down over a weekend and study it well," he said. "He's going to have to work from that."
Schreiner said Lowden's No.1 task as president was to inform the students about the issues and to organize them to voice their opinion.
"He has to campaign to get the students pumped up," Schreiner said. "It's not going to happen out of nowhere."
Schreiner said that when Lowden went to the Legislature, his first task would be to meet with the members representing Lawrence. After that, Lowden should contact other key members, such as the Speaker of the House, President of the Senate and committee heads, Schreiner said.
"Even if there is no chance to talk with them, he should at least write a letter," he said.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said Lowden's presence in the building would be a big boost.
"The best thing is to have a building full of students," he said. "But having the president is helpful."
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7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFS Ankara, Turkey
Another snowslide killed four people yesterday as soldiers and civilians searched for those missing in weekend avalanches that claimed at least 131 lives, the Anatolia news agency said.
Snowslide takes four more lives
Yesterday's avalanche destroyed three houses and injured two people in the village of Seslie, the agency said, quoting Gov. Aydin Arslan of Sirnak province. Seslie is four miles from Gorme, the village closest hit by Saturday's slides in southeastern Turkey.
Government representative Akin Gonen said at least 131 people were killed in the weekend series of avalanches, which struck villages, military outposts and travelers in four provinces bordering Iraq and Iran.
However, a Turkish television station said officials estimated 322 people were killed. There was no confirmation of the report.
The snowslides were blamed on a harsh winter with abnormally high snowfall — up to 10 feet in some places.
Washington
Gadhafi seeks peace with U.S.
Libvan leader Moammar Gadhafi said he was hopeful of reaching a compromise that would avert threatened U.N. sanctions on his nation in connection with the bombing of a Pan American commercial jet.
In an interview published in yesterday's editions of The Washington Post, Gadhafi said he thought his country had been made a scapegoat for the terrorist attack, which killed 270 people over Lockerbie, Scotland.
But he also praised the Bush administration and urged the United States to reopen its embassy in Tripoli.
Gadhiafi said his government had sent messages requesting a dialogue with the United States through Belgium's ambassador in Tripoli.
A U.S. grand jury has indicted two Libyans in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 and the United States is seeking their extradition — with backing from the United Nations.
Washington
Crash report studies propellers
The commuter plane that crashed in coastal Georgia last year, killing former Sen. John Tower and 22 others, had excessively worn propeller parts, federal investigators said in a preliminary report released yesterday.
The National Transportation Safety Board report, which did not assign a cause for the crash, ruled out engine malfunction but focused on extreme wear in the proofer control units.
"Examination of the engines did not disclose any evidence of pre-impact malfunction or failure," the report says.
The NTSB's final report on the crash is several months from completion, said Brent Bahier.
Tests showed severe wear in the propeller control units could have inhibited the pilot from changing the propeller blade angle, the report said.
Among those who died in the crash were Tower, his 35-year-old daughter. Marian, and a friend of his, lost their lives.
Tower was nominated by President Bush in 1989 to be defense secretary, but the Senate rejected the nomination.
From The Associated Press
Noriega aided U.S., says defense lawyer
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Manuel Noriega was the United States' closest ally in Latin American drug wars and served its political ends in Central America and the Grenada invasion, his attorneys said Monday as they enclosed his defense.
"At the end of this case you may wonder why General Noriega was ever indicted," attorney Jon May told jurors.
The prosecution's case in Noriega's 10-count drug and racketeering trial ended in December, but the defense was delayed seven weeks after U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler underwent heart surgery.
In a brief opening statement, May argued that Noriega could hardly have sold his nation to Colombia's Medellin caroline-car
tel while at the same time identifying its couriers to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, raiding laboratories and seizing cocaine-refining chemicals.
The ousted Panamanian leader even broke his own nation's banking secrecy laws to help the United States in drug cash investigations, one of which led to the arrest of the Medellin cartel's top money launderer, he said.
"The level and quality of the cooperation given by General Noriega to the United States was unprecedented among the leaders of Central and South America," said May. "General Noriega was our ally in the war against drugs."
The defense also called its first witnesses Monday, two former DEA officials.
The defense took direct aim at two key prosecution issues—an
alleged $5-million bribe the cartel offered Norigeia to protect its cocaine chemicals and a July 1984 meeting with Cuba's Fidel Castro. Prosecutors said the Castro meeting was to smooth out a dispute with the cartel after Norigeia raided a Panamanian drug lab.
May said the defense would show the bribe attempt was reported to the DEA when it was discovered.
And the Castro meeting was not about drugs but Central American guerrilla warfare — and the CIA discussed the meeting with Noriage before and after it occurred, May said.
If convicted on all 10 counts, Noriega could be sentenced to 140 years in prison. Hes has been jailed since he surrendered to U.S. forces following the December 1989 invasion of Panama.
Japan's rebukes continue
The Associated Press
TOKYO — In Japan's latest rebuke of its economic rival, Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa said yesterday that U.S. workers were losing the drive "to live by the sweat of their brow," and a former Cabinet minister said Americans worked only three good days a week.
The Foreign Ministry later issued a statement saying Miyazawa "had no intention whatsoever of criticizing American workers," but the remarks prompted a visceral reaction from White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater.
Fitzwater, making an analogy to a coach using opponents' criticisms before a game to spur his team to play harder, said: "These kinds of comments are probably helpful in the sense of stirring the rages in all of us" who want to compete and show the best work force.
House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., called Miyazawa's remarks an "ignorant expression of Japanese racism."
"Americans work hard every day, and our productivity is higher than Japan's," said Gephardt, chief sponsor of a bill that would curtail Japanese auto imports unless Tokyo reduces its U.S. trade surplus.
Two weeks ago, lower House Speaker Yoshiio Sakurauchi fueled a U.S. backlash and a "Buy American" campaign when he said Americans were lazy and 30 percent of them could not read.
Japanese stress out
The Associated Press
TOKYO — A majority of adults surveyed in Japan complain of fatigue and emotional distress. The minister's office said yesterday
Asked whether they usually feel fatigue, 11 percent of the respondents in a government survey said they felt very tired, and 53 percent said they felt somewhat tired.
At the same time, 53 percent said they felt stress, 37 percent said they did not feel much stress, and 10 percent said they did not feel stress at all, the survey said.
istry said. That is the equivalent of 51 40-hour weeks a year.
The average Japanese employee worked 2,044 hours, including 185 hours of overtime, in fiscal year 1990, which ended March 31, 1991, the Labor Min-
According to government statistics, Americans worked 1,948 hours in 1990. That is fewer than 49 40-hour weeks the Japanese work.
Under U.S. trade pressure, Japan has launched a campaign to reduce annual working hours to 1,800 by the end of fiscal 1992, or March 31, 1993.
The government statistics showed Germans worked 1,642 hours—or 4140-hour weeks.
The survey, released Sunday, randomly questioned 3,000 people over 20 years old. 0-13 and was intended to investigate health conditions in Japan. The study did not specifically link the problems to working conditions.
The fact that remarks such as yesterday's continue, despite the wrath they've provoked in America, reflects a belief among Japanese politicians that the United States is a deteriorating superpower.
American workers are too preoccupied on Fridays with the coming weekend and "cannot throw themselves wholly into their work Mondays as they played too hard Saturdays and Sundays," conservative lawmaker Kabun Mutoldo Parliament during a discussion of the auto industry.
"I think Americans should learn, how to work properly from Monday to Friday," added Muto, who served as minister of international trade and industry under Miyazawa's predecessor, Toshiki Kaifu.
The comments arose when Mutoasked Miyazawa how thefaltering U.S. economy could recover.
The prime minister said that in the United States, "producing things and creating value has 'loosened' too much in the past 10 years or so."
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
Kickapoo gambling hits roadblock
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Kickapoo Indians' plan for casino gambling in Kansas stalled yesterday when the Interior Department withheld its approval until a dispute is resolved between Gov. Joan Finney and the Legislature.
Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan told Finney that the department could not approve a compact signed by her with the Kickapos which would allow the tribe to operate a casino on their reservation near Hiawatha.
Steven Goldstein, a representative for Lujan, said the department concluded that under Kansas law the compact needed more than the governor's approval.
In delivering that message to Finney, Lujan cited a ruling by Kansas Attorney General Bob Stephant that the compact required approval of the Legislature as well as the governor.
made by the tribal council on what actions to take next.
"The matter now is in the hands of the Kickapoo Nation to determine whether they want to send the compact to the Kansas Legislature or whether they want to go to federal court to resolve this matter," Finney said after the meeting.
Lance Burr, a Lawrence lawyer who serves as attorney general for the Kickapoos, said no decision had been
"We're prepared and willing to do anything necessary to get the job done. This is just a continuing battle," he said.
Among the various options:
The Kickapoo could ask the federal courts to approve their casino proposal, arguing they have followed the proper procedure in seeking approval of the compact. Goldstein said such a lawsuit probably could not be filed until Feb. 24, which is the end of a 180-day period allowed for gambling compact negotiations with a state.
The governor, attorney general or
Legislature could ask the state courts for a ruling on the question of who represents the state of Kansas in approving the gambling contract.
Under a 1988 law, the Indian Gaming Act, tribes can establish Las Vegas-style casinos with games such as blackjack and roulette if they enter into a compact with a state that allows some form of gambling.
At issue in the Kansas case is whether Finney alone represents the state in signing the compact. Goldstein said the department and its chief attorney based the agency's position on Stephan's ruling that the Legislature must be part of the approval process.
Duke will seek delegates at Kansas GOP primary
The Associated Press
TOPEKA—David Duke, a former Louisiana state lawmaker and one-time Ku Klux Klan leader, filed yesterday to seek delegates from Kansas in his campaign for the Republican nomination for president.
The GOP candidate has been denounced by other Republicans because of his background.
Duke mailed a check to the Kansas secretary of state's office to cover the filing fee and to place his name on the April 7 presidential preference pri-
marvballot.
Duke, who unsuccessfully ran for governor of Louisiana last year, announced that he was seeking the GOP nomination for president on Dec. 4.
"It has been widely reported that I have greater name recognition than any announced Democratic presidential candidate," Duke said in a letter to the secretary of state's office.
Sofar, Sen. Bob Kerley, D-Nebraska, is the only major candidate to file for the Kansas primary. A total of 14 people have filed to be on the ballot.
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S628
SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
9
Kansas pounds Wildcats 80-58
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
If the Kansas Jayhawks were looking ahead to Saturday's game with Big Eight Conference co-leader No. 2, Oklahoma State, they did not let it bother them in last night's 80-58 victory against rival Kansas State.
Williams did not have to. The Jaya hawks, who moved up to the No. 3 ranking in the Associated Press Top 25 yea- dure, made sure of that early on.
"When we lost to Louisville, one of the questions I was asked was 'Do you think your team was looking ahead to Missouri,'" Kansas coach Roy Williams said after the game. "I told the players I sure didn't want to listen to that question tonight."
After Kansas State scored the first four points of the game, Kansas scored 14 straight points, holding the Wildcats scoreleast for just under 5 minutes and giving the Javhawksa 14-4 lead.
The Jayhawks increased their lead to 13, 30-17, with 8 minutes left in the half, and behind the scoring of senior forward Alonzo Jamison and junior guard Rex Walters, Kansas kept its lead with the score 41-30 at halftime.
Walters opened the second half with a three-pointer from the top of the key, and Kansas State did not get closer than 11 the rest of the ball game.
All was not smooth for the Jayhawks, however. Kansas led 74-49 with 7:27 left in the game but did not score again until the 2:23 mark. Kansas also had trouble from three-point range, hitting just 6-0 of 21 attempts.
"We took bad shots tonight," Williams said. "The last 12 minutes, I wasn't pleased with anyone's shot selection. For about a 10-minute stretch, I didn't think we played like we usually play on the offensive end."
Kansas State, however, could not capitalize during the Kansas scoreless stretch. The Wildcats scored only two field goals in the last 727
The game was indicative of the problems K-State, 17- and 1-4 in the conference, nashad all season. The Wildcats, shooting 44 percent for the season, hit just 36 percent last night.
K-State Coach Dana Altman said the no-shooting doomed the Wildcats.
"If you're going to stay with a team like Kansas," Altman said, "you've got to hit open shots."
The Jayhawks, 17-1 and 5-0, were led by center Eric Paulie, who scored a career-high 17 points. Jamison finished off the Hawks with nine rebounds.
Kansas almost played without point guard Adonis Jordan. The 5-foot-11 junior, who played 30 minutes and dished out six assists, had an upset stomach before the game, and Williams said he did not decide until just before game time to allow Jordan to play.
Kansas 80
Player FG FT R A F T 2 P 16
Jamison 7/9 1/5 2 F 1 16
Scott 7/9 0/1 9 1 12
Eckert 8/14 1/1 1 1 12
Walters 5/13 0/1 1 1 17
Jordan 3/8 0/0 4 6 1 7
Woodberry 3/5 1/4 3 6 1 10
Davis 1/5 0/0 2 3 1 10
Davis 0/2 0/2 2 3 1 10
Ostergt 0/2 1/2 1 0 1 1
Nash 1/1 1/2 5 1 1 1
Johann 1/1 0/2 0 0 0 1
Luntini 1/1 0/2 0 0 0 1
Percentages: FG 52.4% (13/63), FT 18% (86/21). Bacterial count: 87,500 (Blood shots): 6 (Oosserg, Wallers) Streak: 6 (Scott, Woodberry, Wallers) Technicals:
Kansas State 58
Jones 5/13 4/5 1 1 1 15
Collier 1/1 0 0 0 0 1
Howard 2/7 0 9 1 2 1
Zeigler 1/2 1/2 2 7 1 4
Nickerson 6/14 2/2 6 2 1 4
Retkeer 1/2 2/2 6 2 1 4
Rice 1/6 0 4 2 1 2
Jackson 4/10 2/4 6 0 2 10
Cunningham 0/10 0/4 0 0 0 2
Henson 1/4 0/0 1 1 2 3
Strickland 0/1 0/0 0 0 2 0
Percentages: FG 36 % (22/61) FT 75%
(13.6-point) Three-hole players: 214 (Jones,
Hennessy) Blocked shots: (Howard 2, Rome)
(Sam) Defending pitches: Retinger,
Jackson) Techniques: none
30
KIRA
2
STA
DerekNolen:KANSAN
Surrounded by Kansas State players, Kansas' Steve Woodberry is fouled under the net.
Pauley recovers confidence
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
He may have discovered it last night.
Confidence is something Kansas junior Eric Pauley has had trouble finding much of lately.
The 6-foot-10 center scored a career-high 17 points and grabbed five rebounds in Kansas' 80-58 victory against Kansas State. Pauley's previous high was 16 points against Southern Mississippi in the BMA Classic, and he matched that performance against Colorado.
Before the Big Eight season, Pauley was mired in an five-game slump that started with a one-point performance against Temple in the second round of the BMA on Dec. 28 and finally ended with a 15-point game at Missouri on Jan 13.
Pauley said improving his game was a matter of gaining confidence in himself.
"My shots weren't going and I wasn't contributing." Pauley said. "Tonight, I was able to stand in and contribute, but it was a team effort."
Kansas Coach Roy Williams said he had not seen any big changes in Paulie's play. Williams said the bottom line was confidence.
"He's basically taking the same shots he took earlier," Williams said.
"He's probably got more confidence. I think that is the whole thing."
Pauley said a key to his performance was the play of the Kansas guards. He said that when the guards were hitting from the outside, it gave the inside players more room to work.
"When they're hitting threes, it really opens it up for us," he said.
Women's tennis team topples No.17 BYU
Rex Walters led the outside attack last night for the 'Hawks, hitting three three-point shots and scoring 13 points.
By Lyle Niedens Kansan sportswriter
One week after beating No. 23 Uchah,
Kansas edged No. 17 Brigham Young
5-4 yesterday in a dual match at Alva-
nora High School, where they
improved the Jawhacks record to 3-0.
The Kansas women's tennis team played another regional match against the ranked opponent yesterday. And the Jayhawks got another
Kansas coach Michael Center said she was impressed with the team's play.
Hamers-Jensen, ranked No. 7 in the country, breezed through the match, winning 6-4, 6-0 and earning the Jay-bawks the victory.
The series was tied 4-4 going into the final match of the day between Kansas' No.1 doubles team of senior Eveline Hamers and freshman Rebecca Jensen and BYU's Evica Koljanin and Susana Labrador.
"It's a big win for us," he said. "It puts us in control of our own destiny and gives us a chance to get out of our region and into the NCAA tournament."
Earlier in the day, Hamers, at No. 1 singles, defeated the Cougars' Jennifer Holmes 7-6, 6-2. Hamers said she had trouble getting started in the match.
"I was a little bit nervous," she said.
In the second set, I got into it more and
felt like I had to win.
The Jayhawks also got victories from the No.2 and No.3 singles spots.
"It's a big win for us. It puts us in control of our own destiny..."
Michael Center Women's tennis coach
At No 2 singles, Jensen defeated Sarah Mugnawi 6-0, 6-1, and at No 3 singles, freshman Nora Koves beat Koljainn 6-2, 6-4.
Kansas' other victory in the match came at No. 3 doubles. The Jayhawks' team of Koves and sophomore Casey Cooley won the match against Holmes and Anissa Robinson 6-3, 6-1.
The victory came one season after the Cougars pounded Kansas 9-0 at BYU. Center, who had been concerned with BYU's depth, said beating teams such as the Cougars would help Kansas gain respect.
The Jayhawks will not play as a team again until Feb. 15 at home against Iowa, but Hamers and Jensen will leave tomorrow for Minnesota, where they will compete in singles at the Rolex National Indoors. Hamers and Jensen are also the first doubles team alternate in the match.
"I think we showed we can play with
an Ivbhay. No. 1 through 0," he said.
Jayhawks fly despite injuries
By Cody Holt
Kansansportswriter
One of the women's basketball team members suggested a new team slogan that Coach Marian Washington is excited about.
"Three of our wings have been clipped, but we're still flying," Washington repeated her player's sentiment. "If they can all retain that attitude we're going to continue to be a very competitive ball club."
The three wings the player was referring to are Lisa Tate, Marthea McCloud and Tanya Bonham, three of whom is most likely theist for the season because of injuries.
Tate's replacement, McCloud, a 5-
10 junior forward, was averaging 7.3
Tate, a 6-foot-3 junior center,
missed the first eight weeks of the
season with a stress fracture in her
left leg that occurred sometime in
pre-season practice. She made
steady progress and returned to the
time for the Florida International
Tournament, Jan. 2-4 in Miami. Fla.
"Weth quickness, power and size on the inside; Lisa was our size." Washington said of Tate, Kansas' tallest player.
Tate averaged 10.4 points and 7.4 rebounds in five games and was named to the Florida Invitational All-Tournament Team. Despite her successes, Tate reaggravated her injury and is not expected to play again until next season.
points and 5.3 rebounds when she went down with 1.1 remaining in a Jan. 25 match-up at Nebraska. She was carried from the floor on a stretcher with torn medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligaments in her left knee. McCloud is not expected back for the remainder of this season or the first half of next season.
Bonham, a 5-8 senior forward, ended her career unexpectedly after practice Jan. 21. Bonham had returned to the floor to shoot around when she tore the anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee.
Despite a stockpile of Jayhawk injuries, Kansas is currently leading the Big Eight Conference, 16-3 and 5-1 in conference games. The Jayhawks are 4-0 since the loss of Bonham, including three straight conference road victories. Washington credits an entire team effort for Kansas' continued success.
One of the reasons for Kansas' continued success is the corps of talented young players filling in for the injured veterans. Freshmen Angela Aycock and Alana Slatter have taken up much of the slack scoring. Aycock scored 22 points and Slatter added 12 points off the bench in Kansas' 82-52 victory against Kansas State on Sunday in Manhattan.
"Anytime you have a loss, people find a way to come together and support each other," she said. "We have pulled together very well, and these girls need to be complimented on that."
20
STATE
Paul Kotz/Special to the K^NSAN
Kansas' Alana Slatter, center, has logged more playing time since the 'Hawks lost three starters to injuries.
Javhawks rise in AP poll
Kansas basketball rallied this week as the men's team moved up to third place and the women's team jumped to 17th place.
Men Last week Women Last week
1. Duke 1 1. Maryland 1
2. Oklahoma St. 3 2. Virginia 2
3. Kansas 5 3. Stanford 4
4. UCLA 7 4. Tennessee 3
5. Arkansas 2 5. Iowa 5
6. Indiana 4 6. Stephen F. Austin 6
7. Arizona 9 7. Mississippi 7
8. Ohio St. 10 8. George Washington 9
9. North Carolina 11 9. Miami 12
10. Connecticut 10 10. Purdue 10
11. Michigan St. 6 11. Penn St. 8
12. Missouri 8 12. W Kentucky 14
13. Syracuse 12 13. Vanderbilt 11
14. Tulane 16 14. Houston 16
15. Michigan 15 15. Hawaii 17
16. Southern Cal 25 16. SW Missouri St. 17
17. UNLV 21 17. Kansas 20
18. Alabama 22 18. Clemson 15
19. Kentucky 14 19. Washington 13
20. N.C. Charlotte 17 20. Texas Tech 19
21. Oklahoma 18 21. North Carolina 23
22. LSU — 22. Alabama 24
23. Florida St. 23 23. West Virginia 25
24. Georgia Tech 20 24. California 21
24. Texas-Ello Paso 19 25. Long Beach St. —
Jamison earnshonor
Alonzo Jamison was named player of the week in the Big Eight Conference on Monday after he led No. 3 Kansas to two victories, including one against No. 21 Oklahoma on Saturday in Norman, Okla.
Jamison scored 23 points against the Sooners and tied his career high in assists with eight. He had six rebounds and 10 blocks, Norman for the first time in six years.
Jamison had 12 points as Kansas beat Marquette on Tuesday in Milwaukee. He made 12 of 15 field goal attempts and 13 of 13 free throw attempts for the week.
Kansas iunior varsity wins
SPORTS BRIEFS
The Kansas junior varsity basketball team improved its record to 12-1 last night by defeating Moberly Community College 76-70 at Allen Field House.
"We played a high-profile team, and even though we didn't play well, it was nice to get the win," Coach Mark Tur-
geon said.
Blake Wiechbrot led the Jayhawks with 23 points and seven rebounds. Brent Johnson added seven rebounds, and Donnie Braun had four assists.
Tyson trial continues
Kansas will face Hesston College at 7:30 tonight at Allen Field House.
Prosecutors building a rape case against former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson have reconstructed in damning detail the chain of events from his night out with a teenage beauty queen to her emergency room examination afterward
The former heavyweight champion's rape trial entered its second week yesterday, and his lawyer implied Tyson may testify when the defense puts on its case. Prosecutor Jeffrey Modiest said the state's last witness would take the stand by today. Tyson, 25, could receive up to 63 years in prison if convicted.
In six hours of testimony last week,
Volunteers sought
Interested persons should contact Harry Lehwald, Relays manager, at 864-5634, or stop by the track office for an application form today. The track office is at t143 Allen Field House.
The Kansas track office is seeking volunteers to work at the Kansas Relays, which will be held April 15-18 at Memorial Stadium.
On Saturday, Dr. Thomas Richardson, who examined the woman the day after the alleged rape, testified that the woman had two small vaginal abrasions consistent with forced intercourse. The emergency room doctor said he had seen such injuries as a result of consensual sex only twice.
an 18-year-old college student and Miss Black America contestant said Tyson pinned her on a bed July 19, stripped her, raped her and laughed while she cried in pain and begged him to stop.
Funeral services set
Funeral services were scheduled for today for a Purdue football player killed in a fight outside a bar.
Jason Crawford, 21, of Valparaiso,
Ind., died from a brain hemorrhage
early Saturday about an hour after the
fight.
Police said Crawford and Richard E. Kinzer, 38, may have been fighting over ownership of a leather jacket. No weapons were used in the fight, investigators said.
Kinzer was freed on bond after a preliminary charge of involuntary manslaughter was filed.
Crawford, a 1988 graduate of Andrean High School in Merrillville, Ind., was a senior at Purdue and a walk-on deep snapper on the football team.
From The Associated Press
10
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4. 1992
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$15 dollars for first donation !
Godfather's Pizza™
BIG VALUE MENU
2 LARGE
$9.99
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2 LARGE
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711 W. 23rd • 843-6282
$5.99
for one
or $15.99 each
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2 Toppings of your choice
TRIPLE MEAT FEAST
Sausage • Pepperoni
and Boon
Godfather's
Pizza
Void only at
711 W. 20th
EXPIRES
3/16/92
2 FOR $5
FOR YOUR
Pizza
LUNCH
BUFFET
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Pizza • Breadsticks
Pasta • Dessert
Godfather's
Pizza
Void only at
711 W. 20th
EXPIRES
3/16/92
$9.99
for two
Pizzas
BIG VALUE PIZZAS
2 LARGE
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SUPER PEPPERONI
Loaded with Pepperoni
Onion • Green Pepper
Godfather's
Pizza
Void only at
711 W. 20th
EXPIRES
3/16/92
FOR VALUE ADD 5 PER BUFFER, you
would save $11.99 each
Original Code: Lenticular Security
LUNCH
DUFFET
LARGE BIG VALUE PIZZA
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TWO TOPPER
Cheese plus
2 Topping of your choice
TRIPLE MEAT FEAST
Sauage + Pepperoni and Bacon
Godfather's
Pizza
Vale any or
11:11 am 2nd ed
EXPIRES
3/15/92
LUNCH
BUFFET
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Pizza + Breadsticks
Pasta + Dessert
Godfather's
Pizza
Vale any or
11:11 am 2nd ed
EXPIRES
3/15/92
2 LARGE
CHOOSE FROM
SUPER PEPPERONI
Loaded with Pepperoni
or CLASSIC
Sauage + Pepperoni
Orion + Green Pepper
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11:11 am 2nd ed
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3/15/92
FOR SLIDAGE ADD 1 PIZZA BUFFET
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Loaded with Pepperoni
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Orion + Green Pepper
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Godfather's Pizza
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NO LONGER
FOR SALE AND ALL ADD 1 BUYER
VARIABLE PRICE
Godfather's Pizza
www.godfatherspizza.com
11:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
MAYBE
1 LUNDA
-KU Student
YES...
"The First provided faster service than any other financial aid people."
Available Toppings: Pepperoni, Beet, Sauage, Bacon, Ham, Black Olive, Onion, Green Pepper, Mushroom, Tomato.
Ask Carol Wirthman and her Staff to explain the many options available to students today.
First National has earned a reputation for fast, friendly service on PLUS, SLS and Stafford Loans.
M
10
Call (913) 865-0278
First National A MidAmerican Bank
Ninth & Massachusetts
Motor Bank, Ninth & Tennessee
South Bank, 1807 West 23rd
Northwest Bank, 3500 North 67th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044-0428
Member FDIC
Equal Opportunity Lender
Lender ID #804609
Regent may be dismissed from college presidency
The board of trustees of the college last week directed its attorney, Judd Dent, to prepare a statement that would notify McDowell of heriring. The statement also would explain the reasons for her dismissal.
Board of Regents member Jo Ann McDowell may lose her position as president of Independence Community College.
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
If approved by the board tomorow,
the statement will be given to McDowell at a special board meeting at 10a.m.
tomorrow. Dent said.
The college is being investigated by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, but James Malson, KBI director, said the KBI would not release any information until the investigation was complete.
College officials and McDowell said
that as far as they knew, the board's statement was not related to the KBI investigation. They would not comment about why the board was considering firing the president.
Trustee members declined to comment about their request for an intent to fire McDowell.
Mark Boyle, director of public relations at Independence Community College, said, "At this point, the board has not announced reasons why they have begun proceedings for resignation."
McDowell said yesterday that she was very upset and that the board had not given her any reasons as to why it would ask for her termination.
edge, the KBI investigation was a routine investigation of the college concerning a complaint filed with the state's sattorney general. She would not specify further about the complaint.
"I haven't done anything wrong," she said. "This is the most difficult time in my career. I'm personally very sure of it, my personal integrity is under attack."
McDowell said that to her knowl-
She said that she thought the current situation would not affect her position on the state Board of Regents, which oversees the state's six public universities. She was appointed as a Regent in January 1991 by Gov. Joan Finney.
Martha Walker, Finney's press secretary, said Finney was not available for comment and did not want to speculate about how the situation at Independence would affect McDowell's status as a Regent.
"The governor is hoping to meet with her and discuss the details of the situation," she said.
County to decide on jazz festival
By Andy Taylor
Kansas staff writer
Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director, could not be reached for comment.
Kansan staff writer
Douglas County commissioners will decide at their meeting tomorrow whether to issue a temporary business permit to a Lawrence bar owner who wants to organize a jazz festival.
Reed Brinton, co-owner of Benchwarmer's Sports Bar and Grill, 1601 W. 29rd St., said the bar wanted to sponsor the Free State Music Fest on May 9 in a field one mile east of Eudora.
Mark Buhler, head of the commission, said the commissioners expressed concern about safety at the concert and the consumption of 3.2 beer, which would be sold at the event.
"There's going to be a lot of traffic," Buhler said after he saw the concert site yesterday. "And anytime you serve alcohol, there's always the possibility of something bad happening."
In August, the commission rejected a temporary business permit for "Sandblast '91," an alter native rock music concert that was to be held on property between Lawrence and Eudora.
Also at its meeting yesterday, the commission accepted the resignation of Douglas County administrator Chris McKenzie. The commission it will start advertising immediately for a replacement.
Brinton would not comment yesterday about the issue.
The commissioners cited concerns for safety, possible damage to homeowners' property and possible underage drinking as reasons for rejecting the permit.
"We hope to have a replacement by June 1," Buhler said.
"We hope to have a replacement by June 1," Buhler said. McKenzie resigned last week to become executive director of the League of Kansas Municipalities. His last day on the job will be March 4.
Jayhawk Bookstore
"at the city of Naamish Hill"
JBS Briti-Bus·843-3826
The commissioners also met for one hour in executive session with Bob Fairchild, county counsel, to discuss a $2.5 million lawsuit filed by 21 county employees who claim the county owes them for past wages.
Holiday Apartments
230 Mount Hope Court
Directly East of Lawrence Holidome (behind Coastal Mart)
FREE RENT
Fairchild could not be reached for comment yesterday
during February, 1992
2 bdr. apts. starting at $385.
• Coming this spring: 3 & 4 bdr. apts.
Convenient to:
- Daycare Center
- Food Mart
- Liquor Store
- On Bus Route
- Laundromat (coming soon!)
- West Turnpike
- Energy efficient design
For information or tour call 843-0011
KU KSU U
ESU WSU
SPRING BREAK '92
MARCH 6 - 14
Great Condes!
Don't Miss Out!
Come On
KU!
PANAMA CITY BEACH, FLORIDA
SPRING BREAK '92
MARCH 6-14
Great Concerts!
Don't Miss Out!
Come On
KU!
Stay in the best condo on the Beach!
$280.00 Take the Bus or $178.00 Drive yourself
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Sign up Deadline: February 14, 1992
For More Information:
Information Meeting: February 5, 1992 at
8:00 pm, Kansas Room, Kansas Union.
Or step by step with the SIA Office, four floor Kansas Union,
at 607-730-5632. Pay with your Master or Visit!
$280.00 Take the Bus or
Sign in Deadline, February 14, 1992
1
100's
Classified Directory
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Announcements
105 Personal
106 Family
Personal
130 Entertainment
130 Entertainment
130 Entertainment
105 Personal
100s Announcements
CINDY: Hope you love your surprise. Have a
great birthday! I Love You! Jason
X
To the young lady who was check on relieve for
her urine analysis, please contact your physi-
cal unit analyzed.
110 Bus. Personal
How Was What's after thighmaster, Buns of Steel? If
Is it hairy? Is it oily?
TIM: You are my Dylan. Had Geg 100 last fall with you. You know I can all. Toys too with you.
NO GIMMICKS
electrician tutor to help foreign students with composition or conservation *Call Alan 844-7433*
300's
ENVELOPE STUFFING — $600 • $800 every week
Free DENAILS. SSA IN
NO GIMMICKS -
EXTRA INCOME NOW!
Brooks International, Inc.
D. Row 680605 + Orlando FL 328
120 Announcements
Feel confused, anxious, blue? Counseling can help make sense of your world. Student rates.
Douglas County Hape Victim Support Service
Douglas County Hape Victim Support Service
survivors/of rape/sexual assault. Call Head
Survivors/of rape/sexual assault. Call Head
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program.
Help for students of any language. Wednesday,
February 5, 3: 30-5 p.m, Daisy Hill Room, Burge
Union.
*ROCKCHALKREVUE*
Tickets are available now! For more information call 865-3238.
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is who - call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support group. Tuesdays to 6 o'clock call headquarters or KU.
WANTED: St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen. Contact 749-6531 For More Information
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns call 841-2346. Headquarters
ZETA PHI BETA SORORITY INC. introduces its Essay Scholarship Contest for the best 500 word essay on "Black Youth in Contemporary America." Students will be asked to submit their Etta Candy at 831-1424. Along with their "Man of the Year" Content Date February 25, 2012 *9:00 AM* online; info now! | Contact Krista Morgan 864-8159
A
Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union
cerns call 814-234-7248. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly, understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (calls to the counseling office) for 814-234-7248 or KU into 864-300- Sponsored by GLOSK
Translate
FREE!
Foreign Language Workshop for students of any language
400's
Wednesday, February 5, 3.10-5.30 p.m.
Deezy Hill Room Burge Union
presented by the Student Assistance Center and International Student Services
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
Wednesday. Feb. 5
Soviet Jewry Meeting 7:45 pm, Hillel House
Tuesday, Feb. 4
Thursday, Feb. 6
Community Service Meeting 7:00 pm, Hillel House
Hillel
Events of the Week
Friday, Feb. 7
Open Forum Meeting 8:15 pm, Kansas Union
Shabbat Dinner 6:00 pm, Hillel House (RSVP by Thurs. Feb. 6)
Saturday, Feb. 8
Crown Center
Fire and Ice Program (Havdalah and Ice Skating) 5:30 pm, Hillel House and
Sunday, Feb. 9 &
Sunday, Feb. 9 & Monday Feb.10
Monday Feb.10
UJA Phone-a-thon
information call 864-3948
StiHot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
$
I'VE GOT TO
CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT
TO BE STOCKIN'
LAWRENCE.
DAYTONA BEACH from $104
DAYTONA BEACH $18
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $128
STEAMBOAT from 122
BANANA CITY BEACH $190
PANAMA CITY BEACH 122
FORT LAUDERDALE $136
ATWITH
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND /
PORT ARANSAS $128
apres
DON'T WAIT 'TIL IT'S TOO LATE
11th Annual Celebration!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
11
EXCEL
Academic Excellence Workshop for students who want to Study Smarter. No Harder
FREE!
Thursday, February 6, 7-8 p.m.
4025 Wescoe
offered by the Student Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
You can EXCEL Academically. Learn strategies for studying smarter, not harder. Learn to maximize study time on reading assignments February 6, 7 & 8 p.m., 402 Wesley FREE!
Don't miss Nova Mobi Mob featuring Grant Hart 'tour'
Du Da Sunday Feb. 16. Bottleneck 18 & over
SPRINGBREAK VACATIONS! Enjoy a warmairy excursion in Vacuum ($990 for Ferry) or Funday ($1,290 for Ferry).
& VINX TICKETS ON SALE TUESDAY FEBUARY 4 AT MIDNIGHT BENCHWARMERS
140 Lost-Found
Found: set of keys in front of the Children's Learning Center in Dale on Friday afternoon. 865-0118
WATCH found. In Burge Union parking lot before Xmas. Call to call. 864-3847
Apply now! Part time & flexible hours. Sub & Staff
161W 23rd
205 Help Wanted
Housekeeper needed. very flexible hours with great pay! Phone and car must call 749-5814
BabySitter Neced! car and phone a requirement
BabySitter Neced! car and phone a requirement
Call 349-800-2440 Req for Experience
349-800-2440 Req for Experience
housekeeper needed very flexible hours with great pay' phone and car must a camera 749-5814 CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys, golf summer camps. Teach swimming, tennis, diving, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, dramas. Or riding. Also kitchen office, maintenance $190 or more camp, crafts (736) Maplin 736, Mil. 41000 746-4444 204-444
We arecontinuing toexpand our Lawrence community-based program. Community Loving Opportunities, Inc. seeks to hire quality-minded,professional staff and volunteers to vocational and daily living skills or our men and women with developmental disabilities. We need people interested in PT day shifts, specifically working on a bedside, evening, PT night and PT weekend teaching counselors and substitute teaching counselors for all shifts are also needed. A 4yr degree is required and a Master's degree is preferred. Homemaker skills need for night TC's Great benefits, competitive salary and family-style atmosphere. Send resume to CLO, 2135 W. Harrison Blvd., New York, NY 10016.
The Youth Program of the Lawrence Track Club is recruiting for the pard position of Track & Field Coach. This position involves working with boys & girls to develop teamwork, qualify applicants would possess experience coaching youth and knowledge of all facets of Track & Field. Send resume to 7/31/92. Send letter of interest and resume to Steven Lee. 2005 Kingston Drive Lawrente 7/6/92 Application deadline February 7. 1992
Counselors/support staff children's camps/northeast top salary, bd/j/miami; travel allowance for summer trips to local high schools; archery, basketball, baseball, bicycling, dance, drama, drivers, dancers, fencing, boxing, football, golf, gymnastics, hockey, kitchen supervisor/workers, lacrosse, maintenance, nature nurses, photography, piano, rock climbing, scuba, secretary, soccer teams, track, waferkins, weights, Droopy for an interview on Wednesday at the University of Kansas Regional Hall in Kansas Union
Daycare Assistant/Driver Christian Daycare
Daycare Assistant/Driver Tuesdays 7:30 - 8:45 m - 8:50 w 11:90 a - 12:00
m 12:00 - 12:15 w 11:90 a - 12:15
Do youlike working with children? Stepping Stones is hiring toddler room aides to work 8-14 MWF. Submit positions also available. Apply at 1100 Wakuraus
Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or related science; laboratory experience; 2-weeks' work for 3-hour blocks of time during regular 8-askway labor. Mon.-Fri: Submit application with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to the University of Alabama Street. An equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H/V
Native Chinese speaking man or woman to care for his nine year six岁 old American boy. Purpose: teach children the importance of ability to set limits and ace the Nintendo. He is an intelligent, kindy kid who will need car $20. Can you help him?
Need job? We are looking for distributors. Excel-
load Send LS $40 E-mail GlaxoSmithKline Distributor.
Send LS $40 E-mail GlaxoSmithKline Distributor.
Need extra money for Spring Break? Looking for a job? Interest in community service positions from the University of Pennsylvania or St. John's 8/hr, no experience necessary! Pick up applications in the Student Senate Office (Fourth hour of Student Union) or call 843-710 for more information.
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN. 4/Rm. prices. Daya149, $149.
Panama City $139, Kitch. Wrftr & Trans Available
CALL CMat! 800-423-3264
vow taking applications for part time help. Apply n.
person. Vista Restaurant 127 West 6th.
STUDENT WORK Christmas bills to pay? *Saving for Spring break* PT positions available now! Can lead to PT workwork. $10.00 starting. Call 842-6499 Now!
Stop Shop is looking for honest and reliable Convenience store clerks. Great part time job for college students. Must be able to work weekends and holidays in person at Lawrence 3 Shop at 10:30 n. 3rd.
Student needed to care for our four year old daughter, M-F 6 AM onm and to take her to preschool.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June three August) at Camp Lincoln Campus Lake Hunt in Minnesota with leadership, teamwork and staff men and women, expand horizons, rewarding work with children, develop leadership skills. 30 hours of training required. Employers are available at the Placement Office, Burge Union. Sign up, an advance, for a personal interview. Call (212) 458-8790.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS: National Parks,
Firecresc, Forest Fire. Over 9,000 Openings!
Stamp for Free Details. Sullican's, 113 East
Waypoint, Kalispell. MT 59901
WANTED Student daycare providers for 3-month old infant Must have own transportation and speak English. For more information, call 842-5598 after 5 o'clock. p.m.
Wanted, mother's helper. Must be female, have own car, have driving license. Mon-7 Fri-Sat, 7 & 8 p.m. or Wednesdays, & Fridays: Approximately 10wk/brw until Spring break, 20 & 30 wk/brw, after Spring break.
Tennis juniors-children cAMP-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. F1. April 18m-1pm in Regional局 and Orcad Rooms in the Kansu Region.
Waterfront Jobs-WSJ Summer Children's Camps Northeast-Men and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team waterskiers and other water sports. Beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. Fry 19 from 11am in the office. Call (855) 232-7400.
Week long, part-time positions for Assistant Instructors in Summer Workshops for Young People's Museum of Natural History. June 1-July 5. $550 per person. 913-642-8020 or public Education, 913-642-8020. (913) 844-7944. Dyehme Hall, 913-642-8020.
225 Professional Services
COVOTE BIKE SHOP
9th & Connecticut - 832-2484
Check Our Prices
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
16 East 13th
842-1133
FAVOR FACTORY The Ultimate Service. Let us work for you. We specialize in video and library services. Call 800-763-9154.
HOUSE CLEANING, conscientious person, high-quality work, references. Perry 597-3812
- B+ more info/infocall 249-840
Makes the most of your P.C. Have him come to
Custody 82-3244
B+ more info/infocall 249-840
Model Photography. Model Portrait. Wedding &
student photos ID photos. student press calls
(414) 849-2680. (414) 849-2685.
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
823 Missouri 843-4023
PRIVATE OFFICE
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
*PROFESSIONAL RESUME* Consultations ormatting, typesetting, and more: graphic ideas, Inc. 021/2 Mass. 841-1071
DUI/TRAFFIC
Tired of taking帐息 at buyback time? Get $15 more per textbook and save when buying it now! *http://www.motivemore.com/textbooks*
Want to learn guitar singing blues, goodtime rock, insightful theory and folk. Call Bena at benca@ipl.edu
FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
16 East 13th 749.0087
Word Processing Service: Term papers, thesis,
reports, etc. Fast, accurate service. @2.90 price.
double spaced call. page #84-3834 Computer Processing Services, Lawrence, KS
things, etc. 843-4754 after 3:09 kdays anytime wenda.
Anything typesetured up? Reasonable word
processing. Call 843-4638 leave message if no
answer.
Jew Lendy, a recent UK English grad, polish and
learn Hebrew for all your word processing and
English text editing.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-290, days or evening.
235 Typing Services
PINK A LA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for success! Now! Call
From Quality Typing to Mailing List Entry Maintenance; Production, and Personalized PC Training! For Experience and Reliability call Louise at 843-4022 with your ideas.
Word processing, applications, term papers,
distortations, resume, Editing, composition, rush
production.
305 For Sale
2. 10" Subs, Super Pro, 200 watts max, w/ chokens and boxed x 1 $ x 2.084472-6731
386 xx16 computer 2BM ram, 42MF HD, I.2.4 104
videos, FLG monitor, modem, software, $1050
TREK Pro Series路车, Shimano 105 components,
$325 865-9390
IBM Compatible F. C. 460 K Ram ZD Color Mobilizer Printer Mouse and Modem. Wizard drive: Sturdy keyboard.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade items, baby products, boys, Penthous, vintage clothing, books, carnival glaze, MaxiFair Parrish, art deco, advertising materials, school supplies, Doulton, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale cardboard bags, stuff you will blow away! QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Friday. Call 811-254-7090 or visit www.quantrill'sflea.com Visa and Mastercard welcome.
BARGAIN! Two brass table lamps with pleated handles $55 /EA. or 400 lkeen high violet HVC-130/280/390/450/570.
"91 mountain bike series " 20 " Paramount, owned
& maintained by Shop Mechanic $850.842-9617
State of Kansas Trade-in. Excellent condition.
Market value: $19,000. Ships to:
sorters $19.00 and up based on Gail Syllabus
CHANGING MAJOR. HP-285 Calculator with both manuals $100, obo, 864-1040
Image Writer II with cable, cover-and stand 79-
0255 6p m-10.m
Giant Sedona ATCH 24 inch frame, 18 speeds, two sets of tires, $2084-8500
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.95
841-7949 841-8903
Mountain Bike, Bridgestone MB-2, Race ready,
nuke-proc fiber bib/haup $50, $350 842-4879
Mountain Bike, Bianco, Sweet Ride, Must See,
last weeked $250, nag Calls Zach 864-5733
goland D-30 professional synthesizer/keyboard with 64 voice and 234K memory cards. 99%
CSD CPY 370 CD Play $130.00 and 10-band EQ
$100.00 T-479-0231
Olympus M-PC Camera fully automatic or manual plus 35-120 zoom lens, 2x converter lens, multidicated镜头, Tamrac bag. $300 KU medical student in NC1:384-6456
Yo Shi Bumm!" red NORICIA R Boots with pump air system $1.72 Used $900-860 10-40-30
340 AutoSales
Used Ski Boots $18. Raichle & Nordica Sizes
10x41 $50 each, ob Call Jennifer 843-9233
1988 Chevrolet Cavalier 2 DRS spd, excellent condition
2900 Callen CD40 B32-9908
1909 Chevrolet S10 pickup V4 longhead s5d. excellent condition, below loan value, $200 offer, 84-2712
***
1909 Chevrolet S10 pickup V4 longhead s5d. excellent condition, below loan value, $200 offer, 84-2712
CLASSIC 1966 Chevy Iconvertable convertible $120 or best offer. Call Bruce Replay. 3:30 p.m. 842-9744
85 Jetta 4-DR, A/C. Cruise, AM/FM Cas.
61.000 mmj. Gmanpool, 4.275, 814-6898.
360 Miscellaneous
FEDERAL STATES MEMORIAL
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Good
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
370 Want to Buy
KU kasketball tickets wanted! Call 829-9430 Leave a message!
Wanted 2-3 non-student BBall tickets, Colorado
Feb. 15, CXB486, Kansas 804, nufd. 849, 848, 754
Buy • Sell • Trade
Feb. 15 Call Erick aka 8643-3498 842-72-
Wanted: Two non-student basketball tickets for Iowa State and Colorado games (February 12 and 15)
Call Jeff 749-6066
400s Real Estate
A
405 For Rent
FOR REST 2nd/28a Zhao Cou, W.D) hookup, carpenter,
for a golf course of KR. Retail/rtl/
3/12/964/2, $600
Available Now. Private - iBDR Apt. Close to campus, $22/mo. No Pebits Nb 196-90-1653
Available now! Hague, unique, sunny IHGB Great
no hoo! no mo. neel. need Nels. day 46-636 nights
811 - 6409
811 - 6409
Furnished room for responsible female Near K U.
841-6254
2 bedroom 2 baths for sublease. $425/mo. Colony
1 bedroom, call 641-8603 or 645-4133
FEB RENT FREE!: non-smoking female needed to share toilet. $617/MW, 1.0W/DM
**ABOUT US**
Furnished rooms on Tenn and Kentucky Share utilities. Close campus and downtown. $150.00 per room.
合
Large 1 bdmr + studio Avail. now at 1339 Ohio $230
+ $825 and 749,756
New 2 bedroom apt. for sublease, $490.00 monthly.
Available immediately Call 843-756-1400
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 in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
NOW LEASING FOR FALL Studios. 1, 2, 3 bedrooms in all new locations and close to campus. Now between 9-4 for information and to reserve a room. First Management Inc. 749-1566, 841-8468
SHORTTIMESLEASENOAVAILABLEonboard
2.br.apt. and aerial to townhouse
TRAILBARGE
One bedroom for habitat at Hanooyen Place. Finished room, water pad. Walk to campus and downtown.
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688
Sublease now available at Campus Place, Great location. Call 865-870 for more info
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
815-1234.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
EDDINGHAM PLACE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
841-5444
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
--in most buildings
TOWER OF THE SUN
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3&4
Bedroom TownHomes
- Garages; $2^{1/2}$ Baths
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool and
Tennis Courts
--in most buildings
841-8400
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
- On Bus Route
Ask About Reduced Security Deposit!
Models Open Daily
Mon.-Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4p, Sun. 12-4p.
$355 - $425
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive, You're About to Get an Education.
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat anytime you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
meadowbrook OPEN HOUSE
Showing studio and 1&2 Bdrm. Apts. Now Available
Sat. Feb. 8th 11-2
Sun. Feb 9th 1-3
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence,KS 66044
(913)843-8559
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
Lighted Tennis Courts
Laundry Facilities in most buildings
Askabout our "Upperclass man Special" or our $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next
LIGHTED TERNS COT 2 Swimming Pools
On KU Bus Route
Call now to reserve your room.
Naismith Hall
Close to Campus (Sorry No Pets)
Meadowbrook
842-4200 15th & Crestline
Mon - Fri 8-5:30 Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1 - 4
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths close to furnished furnishings [764] 797-839
430 Roommate Wanted
Roommate needed ASAP. 3.bedroom apt. $290/mo
828-1461
Roommate wanted to share nice, 2 bedroom apt.
仅 Only hifi from campus $120.00 per month + 12ft²
per apartment. Call us at (800) 356-7242.
Roommate needed. 2-bedroom Duplex. $150.00
1/utilities. Close to campus. 842-1126
Roommate needed. Large 2 bed room at Park 25
Square Drive. Room carpet available.
EI-943-844 or 843-269
**BOOKING ONLY AT**
**THE MIDDLE SCHOOL**
Roommate wanted! Non-smoker for 3 bedroom furnished duplex with 2 full bath, WD, DW, microwave, and garage. Rent negotiable Call 841-1698. Leave message
1 non-smoking roommate needed for 3bedroom fur-
nished duplex on bus ride with a full bath, WD, DW,
microwave & garage. Large bedroom $155 plus 1/3 u/
Please call 749-2181 after 6.
Cool 9th Roommate needed Large House E. of Mass $180/mo & MUF. W/ importance not 748
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEBED
WASHER/DRYER/GARAGE/OFF BUS
NURSED COURTS/STREETS
NURSED MOVIEINIMMEDIATE/LYRIST
NEGOTIABLE CALL 861-7271-82
Female femalemate needed ASAP to support 3 bedroom apt, $186.00, 13 facilities, furnished to close
Female roommate needed! Non-smoker. Till the end of May. Rent $189.50 plus 1/2 utilities on bus route. If interested, please call 865-0538, leave message.
Female to share 3 bedroom, new apartment, near campus. Call 842-2757.
- Policy
All MyPhone
Reliable Trustee to share LGRG 2BHR
1600/170/LTCL, call us
One female student for a furnished 5 Dkrm. Room
at parking 170/mth + 1/7 utilizes. Another 86/mth +
1/7 utilizes. Antwerp & Brugge.
M/F Non-smoker, respon $200, utils pd. accept phone, 842-2248 leave message
Furnished master bedroom available immediately in new 3-bedroom townhouse on bus line $240/mth plus 1/3 utilities. Fireplace, patio, and tennis. Call John Peirce 191-493-3491.
FURNISHED APARTMENT Female roommate
Room #24 + 17/12th On bus route. Call 865-0194-
3285 for enquiries.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Male, non-smoking roommate needed immediately for 4 bedroom room. Dishwasher, washer/dryer, microwave, and more $215/00 (until utilities and cable are called. Call 841-649-868)
Need roommate for 3 bedroom furnished apartment on road. $200 + 1 / 8 rooms B4-625
Roommate needed, non-smoker, 4 bedroom
duplex, cats on bus route $143 + $141 durians
$84.
Roommate要求: female non-smok for &4 bdrm
2 blacklocks for Union. Veg reductible. 1
blacklocks for Union. Veg reductible.
loommate Wanted 3 BR Town home, smoker pre-
1/Utilities + 1/rent, npc 865-9962
Roommate needed, 6 bedroom house, male or female washer, dryer, dishwasher, all the amenities. No locks needed.
toomatch Matching. We do the work. We check references, match preferences. Low rates. Guarantee. For info, write DoubleCheck/1020 WWW.KS6523.RC KS 66523 or call DREA at 402 348 0249 oday'
Roommate wanted. non-smoking male to share 3-bdm apt. Close to campus, for Spring semester. Pay 1/3 of utilities and rent. Call Bruce or Scott for more info. 841-6542
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Word set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 7 words
"toomate wanted to furnish shared 4 dbr. apt. at KU AASP $100; Cathy A-148-7099
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Blank lines count as 7 words.
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University Daily Kansan
11 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence,KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Before
After And then suddenly I saw this bright light at the end of a tunnel!
12
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 4, 1992
1972
♀
1992
20th Anniversary Commemoration
On February 4,1972,the East Asian Studies building,1332 Louisiana,was peacefully occupied by some 30 women known as the February Sisters, demanding changes in campus policies concerning women. Inextricable change followed on campus and the women's movement was effectively born in Lawrence. We come together tonight to commemorate their vigil.
Featuring an Open Discussion and Dr. Sheila Ruth Professor of Philosophy SIU-Edwardsville Editor: Issues in Feminism Will Speak on a Feminist Future
February 4 at 7:30 pm ECM Building 1204 Oread
Bail set for Toledo police officer
Man is accused of killing student
The Associated Press
Jeffrey Hodge, 22, was charged with aggravated murder in the slaying of nursing student Melissa Anne Herstrum, 19. The victim's body was found Jan. 27 on the university's Scott Park campus. She had been shot 14 times.
TOLEDO, Ohio — Bail was set at $1 million yesterday for a University of Toledo police officer accused of killing a student, and the school's head of security said the man may have set fires that damaged several campus buildings.
Hodge did not enter a plea during his appearance yesterday in Municipal Court. Judge Denise Dartt set a preliminary hearing for Feb. 11.
Curt Posner said he would present the case to a grand jury this week. He said he would seek the death penalty.
Assistant Lucas County Prosecutor
No motive was determined in the slaving.
Police Chief Marti Felker and Capt. Tom Gulch said Hodge was one of the search team officers who found the student's body.
Police said wrist marks indicating the victim may have been handcuffed led them to consider whether a law enforcement officer was involved.
Hodge, arrested Saturday, was being held on the medical floor of the Lucas County jail. His lawyer, Alan Konop, said police were watching to prevent him from possibly harming himself.
"He's never been arrested," Konop said. "He's never been in custody. So obviously these are very difficult times for him."
Authorities also were investigating nine fires that caused thousands of dollars in damage in three university buildings on Labor Day weekend, Aug. 31 to Sept. 1.
Frank Pizzulo, school public safety director, said that the fires were set by someone who had keys to the buildings and officials were trying to determine whether Hodge worked that weekend.
Posner, the prosecutor, said that he was unsure whether Hodge and Herstrum were acquainted. He said Hodge had responded to a car accident on campus several hours before the disappearance of Herstrum, who had stopped at the accident scene to offer help.
"We have no indication of whether or not they made contact or whether or not they even saw each other," Posner said. "But we do know circumstantly that they both were there at that particular time."
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It can't do laundry or find you a date, but it can help you find more time for both.
The new Apple* Macintosh* Classic* II computer makes it easier for you to juggle classes, activities, projects, and term papers—and still find time for what makes college life real life.
It's a complete and affordable Macintosh Classic system that's ready to help you get your work finished fast. It's a snap to set up and use. It has a powerful 68030 microprocessor, which means you can run even the most sophisticated applications with ease And its internal Apple SuperDrive" disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks-allowing you to exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer.
Catalog of Compensation in 1959 (date)
And indeed there will be time to wonder
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and "Do I dare?"
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Macintosh Classic II
In addition to its built-in capabilities, the Macintosh Classic II can be equipped with up to 10 megabytes of RAM, so you'll be able to run several applications at once and work with large amounts of data.
To put more time on your side, consider putting a Macintosh Classic II on your desk. See us for a demonstration today,and while you're in,be sure to ask us for details about the Apple Computer Loan. It'll be time well spent.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.88
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Senate snubs primary
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The on-again, off-again Kansas presidential preference primary is off again in the Senate.
The Senate voted 25-12 yesterday to cancel the April 7 primary.
The House of Representatives and Gov. Joan Finney now will decide the primary's fate. Both must approve the Senate's action for the primary to be canceled.
Lawmakers voted last year to hold a presidential preference primary in Kansas, but no money was appropriated to pay election costs.
Finney allocated $1.5 million to pay for the primary in her proposed fiscal year 1993 budget.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee recommended that the appropriation be approved by the Senate, but State Sen. Lana Oleen, R-Manhattan, proposed yesterday's amendment to deny the appropriation and cancel the primary.
"Kansas voters would not help decide directly who the presidential candidates would be," she said. "They would only be voting for delegates to represent them at the political parties' national conventions.
CAMPAIGN
'92
"The current caucus system provides Kansans with the same opportunity at their county level. The $1.5 million is simply money that could be spent better some where else."
She said the primary would be
Oleen had sponsored a bill earlier this session to cancel the primary, but the bill was killed in the Senate Elections Committee.
"The presidential primary proposal is late, flawed, unnecessary and virtually inconsequential," she said. "We have a responsibility to spend state money on things that matter to Kansans. This is not one of those things."
It is unclear whether the House or the governor will approve Oleen's proposal.
The House never acted last session on a bill passed by the Senate that would have canceled the primary.
Martha Walker, Finney's press secretary, said the governor supported the primary but had not said what the opposition was proposing.
State Sen. Alicia Salisbury, R-Topeka, said the Senate's vote would send a strong message to the House.
"I don't believe people put a higher priority on a presidential primary than they put on other concerns," she said. "We are facing a tight budget year, and the primary is a waste of precious dollars."
But State Sen. William Brady, D-Parsons, said Kansans had expected a primary since the Legislature passed his bill.
"We may not have a legal obligation, but we do
were promised obligation to give Kansans what they
were promised."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said she did not know how the House would vote on the issue.
"I supported the primary and voted for the primary (last session), but when you think about what other things the money could be used for, it makes you pause," she said.
Charlton said the $1.5 million could be used to finance more pressing concerns, such as the first-year financing of Hoch Auditorium.
■ Kansan staff writer Gayle Osterberg contributed information to this story.
Although the State Senate voted 25-12 to cancel the primary, the final decision rests in the hands of the House of Representatives and Gov. Joan Finney.
Kansas primary in question
GOAT
John Barnes Caney, Kan.
Jeffrey Marsh Fairfield, Iowa
1992 presidential primary candidates
Louis McAlpine Jennings, Okla.
Bob Kerrey
Omaha, Neb.
MARINA DE ALQUILER
Stephen Koczak Washington, D.C.
Pat Paulsen Los Angeles, Calif.
Philip Skow Carbondale, Kan.
George Zimmerman Dallas, Texas
David Naster Overland Park, Kan
Jack Beemont Kansas City, Kan.
David Duke
Metairie, La.
Thomas Fabish
Harbor City, Calif.
Tennis Rogers
Sierra Madre, Calif.
Jack Fellure Hurricane, WVa.
Almee Brainard. Daily Kansan
COLLEGE OF STUDIO ARTS
Derek Nolen/KANSAN
Idolgossip
Before the airing of the John Boss talk show on KUJH, David Castellani, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, Melissa Florek, Evanston, III, senior, Jennifer Hayward, Barrington, III, senior, and Lyla Solomon, Peoria, III, senior, talk with actor Willie Aames. Aames was in Lawrence yesterday to a guest on the show. Aames played characters on the television programs "Eight Is Enough" and "Charles in Charge."
Computer, communications jobs most abundant at center's fair
Despite the recession, two fields look bright for graduating seniors
By Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
Terry Glenm, director of the placement center, said graduating seniors in those two fields accepted the most jobs through the center last year.
Of the students attending the University placement center's job fair today, those studying computer science or communications studies may have the best chance at walking away with a job.
Of the 455 students who registered through the placement center last year, 86 reported that they had accepted jobs, Glenn said. Twenty-one of the students were computer science majors and nine were communications studies majors.
Those two fields are relative bright spots in a year that jobs are scarce and the economy is hurting. The placement center hopes the Internship and Summer Employment Fair, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Ballroom, will be helpful.
Dave Severance, production manager at Sunflower Cablevision, will represent the company.
Nobleza Asunción-Lande, undergraduate coordinator for the communications studies department, said more businesses were looking for articulate students.
Severance said he would be looking for communications studies students for summer and fall internships. He said he wanted to hire four to six students interested in television production.
"Every job requires communications skills," she said. "Therefore, a communications major is a generalist. That person is able to fit into any organization."
It is possible that a permanent job might be offered to one of the interns, he.
Judy Holloway, administrative assistant for the computer sciences department, said the economy would not affect the demand for computer science majors.
Asuncion-Lande said job opportunities for communication studies majors ranged from disc jockeys to government press secretaries.
"We are in the information age." Asun-
cion-Lande said. "We are getting into the
heart of communication development."
She said the demand for communication studies majors would increase in the future.
Although communications studies and computer sciences majors placed severa-
James Orr, acting head of the biology department, said placement was lower in the sciences because most students go on to medical school or graduate school after graduation.
majors were not as successful.
"I am not saying biology is a poor choice to major in," he said. "But most of our students do not look for jobs right after graduation."
Few students majoring in sciences such as biology and chemistry accepted jobs through the center.
Although the number of students placed through the center might seem low, Glenn said it was misleading. Only 138 of the 455 students registered through the center responded to the center's survey, saying they had received job offers. Therefore, the results were not fully representative of jobs accepted by students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"These numbers are based on a few responses," Glenn said. "They do not, in any way, reflect what is happening across the board."
He said the numbers also excluded students who received jobs without assistance from the center.
But the figures also may have been the result of a troubled economy. Genn said.
"We have noticed fewer employers coming to campus to interview students."
Long days with Haitian refugees test professor
ByErik Bauer
By Erik Bauer Kansas staff writer
At a crowded airstrip in Cuba, Bryant Freeman watched as people's lives were decided in a matter of minutes.
The KU professor of African studies and French, who is fluent in Haitian Creole and French, spent winter break helping U.S. Coast Guard and Immigration officials communicate with Haitian refugees seeking temporary asylum in the United States.
He said he also briefed immigration officials on the
A. E. SMITH
backgrounds, marriage patterns and political situations of the refugees.
THOUSANDS of the refugees were interviewed by U.S. officials at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba.
Freeman, who worked seven days a week, 14 hours a day, said the situation at the base was emotionally trying. The interviews, which were supposed to take 20 minutes, determined the
sent back to Haiti, they faced possible imprisonment or execution...
Seventy two percent of the refugees he helped interview had to return to Haiti, he said. About 5 percent chose to return because they became impatient with the interviewers.
"Those of us who work there feel it's wrong to return people to Haiti," said Freeman, who may return to the base at some point. "It was the most intense experience I ever had in my life."
A military coup Sept. 30 that ousted Haiti's first freely elected leader, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, left the island in a state of terror.
the military took control of the entire nation, prompting thousands of Haitians to flee the island on makeshift boats. The refugees who arrived in Cuba were rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard.
Freeman said the Justice Department contacted him for the job in Guantanamo Bay because it had heard of the University's Haitian studies program.
Freeman said many refugees had had to be shipped back to Haiti because they sought economic instead of political asylum. To receive asylum, refugees had to prove that they would be in personal danger if they
Bush lightens U.S. sanctions
The Associated Press
At the same time, the administration moved to block the U.S. assets of Haitians who are providing financial backing to Haiti's coup leaders.
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration announced yesterday an easing of the U.S. embargo against Haiti to help out an estimated 40,000 workers in the assembly sector, almost all of whom have lost their jobs as a result of the sanctions.
State Department representative Margaret Tutwiler said the partial lifting of the embargo could benefit an estimated 240,000 or more Haitians because each of the assembly workers had an average of six to seven dependents.
returned to Haiti.
Many of the refugees, who sought to escape violence, left the country in poorly equipped boats, he said.
"We cannot take in the poor of the world." he said.
Freeman said that a typical story involved a father who would come home to find his family murdered by the military.
"Some of the boats, which weren't more than 100 feet long, had 25% people on them." Freeman said.
Many times, the refugees who survived had spent anywhere from 18 hours to five days on the boats. Usually, they had not eaten due to seasickness.
Only one in two refugees who traveled in such conditions survived, he said.
The lucky ones were rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard, which controls the waters around the island, he said. The Coast Guard then brought the refugees to Guantanamo Bay for interviewing. However, refugees may end up waiting for months before being interviewed.
Freeman said that when refugees first arrived after the military took over, the influx of refugees was so great that the interviews lasted only three minutes a person.
Some were vomiting, some were sick, and their whole lives were determined in three minutes," he said.
Congress votes to extend jobless benefits
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Congress gave bipartisan approval today to its first anti-recession measure this year, an extension of unemployment benefits that President Bush has promised to sign into law.
By a 404.8 margin, the House adopted a $2.7 billion measure that will give another 13 weeks of coverage to people who have used up their jobsbills benefits. The Senate later voted its approval, 94-2.
The new coverage, proposed initially by Democrats but quickly endorsed by Republicans after slight changes were made, will be on top of the 13-week and 20-week extension that became law last fall.
Without the new legislation, 600,000 jobless citizens would use up their benefits later this month. Democrats estimate. In all, 1.2 million U.S. citizens already are receiving extended unemployment coverage, the Labor Department says.
Last year, Bush killed two Democratic efforts to provide extra coverage for people whose 26 weeks of standard benefits were exhausted. But after his approval in public opinion polls dropped, Bush swing in line with the Democrats.
This year, he quickly said he would back a new extension. With the economy still in recession and unemployment high — including in New Hampshire, where he faces his first presidential primary in two weeks - opposition would be politically damaging.
"The president hurt himself badly with his objec tions last year," Rep. Thomas Downey, D-N.Y., a sponsor of the legislation both years, said Monday.
The legislation would be paid for largely by a $2.2 billion surplus the White House said it had discovered. The remaining $500 million would come from forcing large corporations to make larger advance payments of some of their taxes.
Democrats initially proposed financing the measure by having Bush declare a budget emergency, which would allow the government to borrow the money.
The administration objected. The two sides worked out the financing compromise after Democrats decided they had scored their political points last year and had no need to force another confrontation.
The new bill will bring to 26 or 33 the number of weeks of extra coverage people could get, depending on the rate of unemployment in the state where they work.
It also will extend the existing extra benefits program until July 4, instead of expiring June 13 as now scheduled.
2
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5. 1992
642 Mass.
HALL 749-
1912
NAKED LUNCH (R)7:15, 9:45
SLACKER (R)7:00, 9:30
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Love & the Beast(B) Rev 500/715
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Hook(PG) Rev 515/800
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The University Dialy Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
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RUDY'S PIZZERIA 74
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SUMMER RESEARCH AWARDS FOR
MINORITY MEN AND WOMEN IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Monetary awards to undergraduate Juniors for participation in research programs with Biology faculty at The University of Kansas.
Eligibility: Women and minority men with interests in the biomedical sciences.
Amount of award: $2,000. Application deadline: March 16, 1992
Application forms are available from Sylvia Suarez, Administrative Assistant, Howard Hughes Program, 6007 Haworth Hall (864-3933)
--the Power Plant, 901 Mississippi St. One person was treated for a chipped tooth, Lawrence police reported.
Classic tradition on the go.
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A wak started a fire yesterday in the kitchen of the Peking Restaurant, 2210 Iowa St., causing about $2,000 worth of damage. Firefighters were called, but the fire was extinguished before they arrived, Lawrence Fire Department reported.
ON THE RECORD
Apple Macintosh computer equipment, valued at $1,500, was taken between 7 p.m. Sunday and 6:45 a.m. Monday from Centennial Elementary School, 2145 Louisiana St., Lawrence police reported.
Two Lawrence residents were battered by two unidentified people at 1:55 a.m. Monday in the parking lot of
The Archaeology Club will meet at 10:30 a.m. today at the Seminar Room in Spooner Hall.
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information table at 9:30 a.m. today on the fourth floor in Wesco Hall.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum talk, "Let Them Eat Cake," at noon today at 1204 Oread Ave.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information session about studying abroad in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today at the French Department Library. An information session about studying in Spanish-speaking countries will be at 4 p.m. today at 4039 Wescoe Hall.
The Undergraduate Anthropology Club will meet at 3:30 p.m. today at 633 Fraser Hall.
The Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring an information meeting about studying abroad in Japan at 4 p.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall.
The Atmospheric Science Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 6072 Maliet Hall.
The KU Flying Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
The Juggling Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in the lower lobby in Lewis Hall.
The University Scholarship Halls for Ethnic Reality will meet at 7 tonight at Sellards Scholarship Hall.
The KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. Richard Levy, professor of law, will speak about Roe v. Wade and the Supreme Court.
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The same story incorrectly stated that Sandra Hick was coordinator of
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at the top of Nahill Hall
JBS Britt-Bus-843.3826
The headline "Third-class mail replaces classroom" on Page 3 of the Jan. 28 Kansan was incorrect. Correspondence courses at the University of Kansas are handled through first-class mail.
continuing education. She is manager of student services.
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, February 5,1992
3
Attaining cultural insight is goal, visiting prof says
Black History Month
PETER SCHULZ
Peegy Woods/KANSAN
ByKatherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Myron Brimm, East St. Louis, Ill., freshman, and Marqueal Jordan, Kansas City, Kan., junior, play jazz piece for the audience attending the opening ceremony for Black History Month in the Big Eight Room.
JAZZ
People should use Black History Month as an opportunity to expand their knowledge of other cultures, a KU professor told about 30 people last night at the Kansas Union.
"We should not be content with what we know," said Kwabena Nketia, KU's Langston Hughes visiting this semester. "Black History Month is telling us to share our experiences and knowledge. We seek to explore, rather than to enact, the history we already know.
"We should explore the different worlds of Black experience and not confine ourselves to just one world."
Nketia's speech was part of an opening ceremony for the month sponsored by the office of minority affairs and the University of Kansas Black history coordinating committee. Sounds from a jazz due played by African-American students welcomed the audience to the ceremony.
Nketia told the audience that Blackhistory was utilitarian.
"It is something that we may use to affirm our identity, give us hope for the future or spur us to action," he said. "Culture is not just something handed down. It is continually constructed and reconstructed."
Nketia said it was important to look at the historical foundations of African language and institutions so the dimensions of African-American history could be expanded into national and international contexts.
Arthur Drayton, head of the African and African-American studies department, said Black History Month served to remind African-Americans of their richness and significance of their origins, renew the exploration of origins and confirm for the American conscience that the history of Africa must be the concern of all Americans.
Norma Norman, associate director of minority affairs, said people needed to explore other cultures.
"We need to look at different worlds to see how all of us interrelate, no matter what color we are," she said.
Program focuses on homeless problems
Kansan staff writer
By Andy Taylor
Keeper staff writer
Bob Simons is frustrated with the homeless situation in Lawrence.
Simons has spent 17 years advocating adequate housing for mentally-handicapped and homeless individuals as the director of Project Acceptance, a local mental health organization.
His opinion was heard last night by a six-member panel and 30 other audience members in a program titled "Homelessness: In Our Own Backyard." The program, which was at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union, was a part of Homeless Awareness Week.
"When I hear on the news that $500 million was bet on the Super Bowl, I know that we have the resources," Simons said. "I can't believe that we can spend $196,000 for a tennis court renovation at Lawrence High School, but we couldn't even get $100,000 to keep the Salvation Army Safe House open a year ago for our homeless. I think we're afraid to admit to our selfish ways."
Members of the panels said lawmakers on all levels needed to at least recognize the problems of the homeless.
"When we look at the legacy of the Reagan era, the budget cuts had a devastating effect on the homeless."
Paul Johnson executive director of Public Assistance Coalition
Forrest Swall, associate professor of social welfare and a panel member, said President Bush's recent State of the Union address was indicative of the federal government's lack of concern toward the homeless.
Paul Johnson, executive director of the Public
"There was not one word about the poor or people who are homeless," he said. "It showed the lack of political will."
Assistance Coalition of Kansas, said the Reagan era proved disastrous for the homeless.
"When we look at the legacy of the Reagan era, the budget cuts had a devastating effect on the homeless," he said.
While many people look to the federal government for answers, State Rep. Sandy Draper, R-Lawrence, said the problems should be solved on a local level. But she also said the Legislature had not yet shown an interest in dealing with the homeless this session.
"There hasn't been a lot of dialogue concerning the homeless," she said. "Our biggest issues are on school reform and property tax relief. Until we get those problems solved, homeless issues will have to wait."
Jeanie Chavez, an attorney specializing in human rights, said the average rent for Lawrence residences was higher than the state average.
"It costs an average of $525 per month while the average cost in Kansas is $375," she said. "This means a person has to make $7.50 an hour just to meet the housing costs."
She also said cost-of-living expenses had increased dramatically while the minimum wage had remained steady during the past 12 years.
Officials: Current tensions between Japan, U.S. won't hurt in long term
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
They resemble two angry stepisers pulling each other's hair.
Japanese and U.S. officials in the past month have volleyed insults across the Pacific about trade policies and work ethics.
But local officials and KU faculty members said they thought the resentment would have little effect on future Japanese-American relations — including Lawrence's cultural exchange program with sister city Hiratsuka, Janan.
Maggie Childs, associate professor of East Asian languages and culture, said that the images of U.S. protests against Japanese products that appear on the evening news, as well as media reports of politicians criticizing the other side's products, were not symbolic of individual interests.
"These kinds of things get picked up on TV, and people think they are seen on every street corner," she said. "This is a society where we get a mistaken perception and turn it into a wide-scale phenomenon."
Childs she thought that arguments about trade policies had nothing to do with either the Japanese or the American people.
"I think it is meaningless to individuals." she said.
Philip Schrodt, professor of political science, said leadership in both countries was weak and caused politicians to point fingers at each other.
"What people need to realize is the Japanese government under Prime Minister Kichi Miyazawa is struggling on rocky ground," he said. "And with Bush's popularity falling in America, these guys are using each other as scapegoats. It's a slimy game."
going on."
Schrodt said that each country needed to see that its economy was intimately linked with that of the other country.
"A at fundamental level, people need to realize that Japan has contributed greatly to our high-tech and computer industries and that the U.S. has given the Japanese new retail concepts," he said.
Charles Deceue, executive director of KU's Higuchi Biosciences Center, said he had not noticed much resentment from either U.S. or Japanese businesspeople when he made business contacts for the center, which specializes in biomedical drug research.
"In terms of resentment, I see very little," he said. "And whether or not there will be any lingering effects, I don't think so. It's all election year rhetoric."
The publicity surrounding Japan-U.S. relations should strengthen Lawrence's sister city program with Hiratsuka, said Gary Toebben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
"The sister city program does not depend on headlines in a newspaper," he said. "In fact, from the Japanese perspective, intensifies our desire to attract intensives."
Lawrence Mayor Bob Walters, who traveled to Japan in November, said the idea of conducting relations did not center on trade and commerce.
"The sister city program is not 100 percent economic development," he said. "We try to foster development and cultural aspects of each other's cities. I haven't seen any changes in attitudes from the Lawrence citizens."
University panel to study sexual harassment policy
Kansan staff writer
By Jenny Martin
Kansas staff writer
A newly formed committee will begin its review today of the Universitv's sexual harassment policy.
"For a number of years, we have had a sexual harassment policy," said Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor. "But given growing concerns both nationally and locally, we thought we would examine the policy again and strengthen areas of it."
The 10-member committee was formed in November to look at the current sexual harassment policy, which was drawn up in 1982, and to recommend possible changes.
It also will look at provisions of the Faculty Code of Conduct, which do not specifically address sexual harassment.
The committee, which will meet weekly, will present a final report of recommendations by the end of the semester.
After recommendations are reviewed by student and faculty governance and the administration, action will be taken to make the changes as soon as possible, Shankel said.
Sandra Wick, assistant director of the college honors program and chairperson of the committee, said there were many different procedures at the University concerning misconduct, but not specifically sexual harassment.
Sexual harassment policies are outlined in the Office of Affirmative Action handbook, but are not included in the Faculty Code of Conduct or Student Code of Conduct, Wick said.
"The Faculty Code of Conduct was probably written before the term sexual harassment was used," she said. "There is no direct reference to sexual harassment in the code, but there could be implied ones."
The committee, which is comprised of faculty, staff, students and administrators, will decide how University policies can be updated and how they can be altered to work together.
"We have lots of procedures, but some bridges need to be built between the codes to make them internally consistent." Wick said. "It's going to be a complicated issue because there is not always a clear understanding of how policies overlap."
Wick said she would like the committee to look at larger issues, such as a clear definition of sexual harassment within the University.
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radiation symbol
4
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
OPINION
CALL FOR BACK-UP.
IT'S WORSE THAN
WE THOUGHT.
COAST
GUARD
HAITI
Finding reason for life eases prospect of death
I was home in South Dakota for the holidays. My parents were reminiscing about old friends, and I realized I had forgotten a lot of the people I used to know. One of these people was a girl named Joanie. Her name struck a chord, but I could not put a face or anything to her. As the days went by, remembrances of Joanie drifted back to me. But they were strange things. I remember she died. She was about 11 years old. She had diabetes, but it wasn't discovered in time. I didn't know what diabetes was; I thought it was a form of diarrhea (probably the prefix connection), and I recall thinking it was a pretty awful way to die.
My brother used to call diarrhea, "Diane Korea." This used to just slay my parents, and he never was sure why they found this condition so funny. "Diane Korea" took on a new form to me when we moved into our "blue house," where I spent most of my childhood.
Two doors down was a little girl named Diane, who had sort of Asian features, so I thought of her as "Diane Korea" for a long time. Diana was
Mary Ann
Kate
Kelley
staff
columnist
killed in a car accident a year after she graduated from high school. It's always been curious to me how diarrea could have so unwittingly been related to two deaths.
As I was wondering why my thoughts had turned so morbid, another childhood death leapt from some drawer in my mind. The boy, Brady, who lived across the street from us, was one of those weird children your parents tell you to stay away from. My brother found him interesting because he was always making inventions. He built a tree house in the field behind his house.
One day he climbed up there, poured gasoline all over himself and the tree house, and then lit a match. I think he
intended to die then but didn't count on it being so painful; he screamed. Another neighbor, a police officer, heard the screams, ran out and rescued Brady from the fire. The officer was a hero in town for a long time, but I wondered if he sometimes thought he'd done the wrong thing. The boy went through several skin-graft operations and was always in pain. About two years later, he went into an old abandoned farm house and hung himself from a rafter. This time he made sure there would be no one around to hear any screams.
Why at Christmas time was my mind so full of something as awful as the death of children? guess when we start looking back at the soft lights of our past, they are always accompanied by shadows and dark corners. Sometimes we need to look into these dark places and understand how they touched our lives. Deaths are a little easier to accept if we can see some reason for life in the first place.
Kate Kelley is a Fort Leavenworth junior majoring in English.
THE UNIVERSITYDAILY KANSAN
Students should hail mail-in
New fee-payment program should benefit KU students, but does not lift responsibilities
For those of you who enjoy the social aspects of standing in long lines, shuffling from one building to the next and standing in more lines, just for the pleasure of paying your last dimes for your education, the news of the new fee payment mail-in program may not be as welcome as it is to the rest of us.
Beginning with Fall 1992, students who enroll in the spring will be able to mail in their fee payments by the first week of August. This is good news to the multitudes of students who have summer jobs and could use the extra week to earn money to pay for those fees.
For the University, the benefits include having three weeks to adjust class-size needs. Those who enroll in the spring and
change plans in the summer can be dropped from the rosters before classes begin. This could be a blessing for those of us who often must wait two weeks to find out if we can add a needed class.
With this new privilege will come a responsibility for the student. Payments must be received by the University by the first week of August. Missing the deadline will mean being dropped from the enrollment process. "The check's in the mail" excuse will not hold up when so many payments are due at the same time. It will be imperative to get those checks mailed as soon as possible. With the reputation of the U.S. Postal Service, it may not hurt to insure and register these remittances as well.
The mail-in system has been in use at many other universities and has been very successful. It is up to this University's students to ensure that it works well here, too.
Attorney general should quit
Kate Kelley for the editorial board
Bob Stephan's legal problems have stripped him of the ability to perform his job efficiently
On Jan. 29, Kansas Attorney General Bob Stephan was indicted by a federal grand jury on two counts of perjury and one count of conspiracy to commit perjury. This marks the latest in a series of courtroom appearances by Stephan not related to his position as Kansas' highest legal officer, including a case of sexual harassment. This, though, should be the last chapter. Bob Stephan should resign.
Stephan, like everybody else, is innocent until proven guilty. But his legal problems have become such a distraction that he can no longer execute his office according to the oath he took. Stephan is entrusted by the people of Kansas to apply the law to every individual. Defending yourself and representing the state are two full-time jobs. He cannot do both.
More than that of any other public officer,
the attorney general's honesty and integrity should be beyond reproach. Stephan's outside legal problems will only distract him from his real job of prosecuting criminals. How can someone attempt to apply laws that he himself is accused of breaking?
The best imaginable option would be for Stephan to suspend himself during the time that it takes to resolve his legal problems. However, Kansas law doesn't provide for that possibility.
Gov. Finney has questioned Stephan's ability to perform his duties, and talk has spread in the Legislature about impeaching him. Anything like that would create a partisan battleground in the Legislature.
Before that occurs, Stephan should examine his ability to continue. The state and its people shouldn't be subjected to anything but the best in legal advice and counsel. I hope Stephan will decide that the best interests of the state of Kansas would be served by his resignation.
Stephen Martino for the editorial board
U.S. should alter stance
Lettersto the editor
With the exception of a few occasions on which he seemed deliberately deceptive or mean-spirited, George Bush has always struck me as a principled individual who honestly believes that America, by virtue of its democratic society and its position of power, is the greatest nation on earth and should exert influence accordingly; and that Americans are great people whom he respects and cares for.
My generation was born in the aftermath of Vietnam and Watergate, and for most of us the country is a different place.
He is also misguided and short-sighted. He has always been a man of affluence and rarely strayed outside the sphere of that affluence. His formative years fell in a period of time in which America attained and held the position of undisputed leader of the "Free World" on several fronts. Then he watched, presumably with pride, as the country struggled to escape its racist and sexist heritage. His picture of America is shaped accordingly, showing an economic giant making the world safe for democracy, a country in which each generation has more of its citizens fulfill the national dream.
Our formative years, still in progress, include fallout from Ronald Reagan's "Think less — you'll feel better" policies, whose products range from a debt burden that defies comprehension, whining car manufacturers and an increasingly carcinogenic environment. We have never known legal discrimination, but we see or experience the discrimination that remains rooted in economics, education, and attitudes, and we are not satisfied.
The Cold War, which many in America claim to have won, was as much a matter of mutually-assured destruction as a nuclear exchange would have been. By involving the Third World, we and the Soviets successfully converted much of the potential, economic or otherwise, of nearly every country in the world into some kind of death, leaving those countries who excluded themselves or were excluded from our game in the uncomfortable position of its only winners.
We and the former Soviet republics face similar problems now; they differ only in magnitude and distribution. Just as they overcome theirs, so can we overcome ours. But the crucial first step must be awareness of the problems. Let us not restrict or destroy those agencies that protect us, however imperfectly, from
negligence, discrimination or fraud,
merely on the assumption that defective
limbs must be amputated. Let us not
exempt the wealthy from paying for these
services on the assumption that their
investments are all that matter. Let us
not cut ourselves off from an increasingly
interdependent world on the assumption
that fair trade should require no effort.
And let us not lay stiffer penalties on criminals merely on the assumption that everyone has an alternative.
The central problem is this: Our guiding principle, our reason for being a world power has always been negative. We were anti-communist, just as they were anti-capitalist. That principle is gone. We now have the opportunity to reassess our global role, to change our status from power to partner, and reorient our goals from something negative to something positive. In the end, we must address this particular problem or, falling ever further out of alignment with reality, we too will collapse, last victim of the Cold War. But perhaps, if we are wise, that will be the first problem we recognize.
Saul Epstein
Prairie Village junior
Count administrators
Your editorial of Jan. 23 was right on target. We should be pleased that our graduate teaching assistants might receive a full fee waiver, and your warning is most appropriate.
According to an article printed in the Kansas on Dec. 4, 1991, KU experienced a 41-percent increase in the number of GTAs between 1985 and 1990. It is also important to note that during this period there was a 5-percent decline in full-time faculty and a 28-percent increase in administrators.
Your warning that the "University should guard against a policy of replacing full-time faculty with GTAs" should be extended to replacing faculty members with administrators.
Lawrence Sherr
Cancellors Club Teaching Professor
Cardinal has changed
Ina Jan.29letter criticizing a sports column by David Mitchell, journalism student Brandon Hull writes that Mitchel'
"loses...credibility by mismanaging a college football team. Stanford University's mascot is, and always has been, the Cardinal. Not Cardinals, but Cardinal. As in 'the Stanford Cardinal.'"
It's true that Stanford began its history as the Cardinal, a name spawned by sportswriters referring to the color of the football team's jerseys. But according to Steve Raczynski, Stanford's sports information director, the name evolved into the Cardinals, and during the 1930s the students adopted the nickname "Stanford Indians."
In the 1970s, sensitivity to concerns by Native Americans led the university to rename itself the Cardinals. Then, in 1981, prompted by a desire to return to its roots as well as giving a nod of recognition to the university's president, who was an alumnus of the Harvard Crimson, Stanford reverted to the Cardinal. Thus, it has come full circle.
As a great editing professor at this University once said, Mr. Hull, "If your mother saves she loves you, check it out."
In other words, know your facts
KANSANSTAFF
Ben Jones Lawrence resident, 1985 KU graduate
TIFFANYHARNESS
Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
Editors
News...Mike Andrews
Editorial...Beth Randolph
Planning...Lara Gold
Campus...Eric Gorski/Rochester Oleon
Photo...Eric Lehman
Photo...Julie Jacobson
Features...Debbie Weyers
Graphics...Jeff Messery/Aime Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ..Bienniewieden
Regional sales mgr ..Rich hamburger
National sales mgr ..Stott Hauna
Co-op sales mgr ..Ameh Jones
Production mgrs ..Kim Wallace
Marketingdirector ..Kim Claxion
Creative director ..Leanne Doolan
Classified mgr ..Kip Chin
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kanana reserves the right to edit or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanana newroom, 111 Sauffer-Fint Hall.
Stick
WHAT'S YOUR DEFINITION OF GREAT ART?
WHAT'S YOUR DEFINITION OF GREAT ART?
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IT SHOULD BE SIMPLE,
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MANY GENERATIONS.
by David Rosenfield
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
5
February Sisters challenge KU women
Alison
February Sisters member Christine Smith answers questions about her role in the takeover of the East Asian studies building 20 years ago.
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Twenty years ago, a group called the February Sisters occupied a campus building as a statement for women's concerns.
Last night, three former members of the organization challenged women at KU to continue fighting for demands they made in 1972.
"If you want to make a difference, you have to start telling other women what you want to do," said Christine Smith, one of the members, who worked at Watson Library when she participated in the protest. "All groups have to get together and tell each other what they think and work from there."
Smith, who spoke to about 50 people last night at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., said the February Sisters worked for two years before they occupied the East Asian studies building, then at 1332 Louisiana St., and gave a list of demands to the University.
"We worked our butts off," she said. "Weformed committees. We had meetings. Women got together and talked about their concerns. We were all trying to get these demands. It didn't happen overnight."
About 20 women and five children occupied the building and demanded a women's studies department, an affirmative action program, free day care and a women's health clinic.
Mary Coral, who participated in the occupation, said that although some needs were met 20 years
"Women still do not have adequate day care or health care," said Coral, who was then a wife of a faculty member.
ago, some needs still had not been met.
Sheila Ritha, a professor of philosophy at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville and author of the textbook, "Issues in Feminism," also suggested ways that young women could continue feminist activity.
"Identify the need of young women today and figure out how to fulfill it," she said. "We must look at what the February Sisters did and get a clue of what to do now."
In Fall 1989, a group of women calling themselves the February Daughters, in honor of the February Sisters, formed on campus.
Sharon Danoff-Burg, one of the original February Daughters, said the women formed for certain protests and marches but were no longer an active group.
Now a member of Students Against Violence Against Womyn, Danoff-Burgsaid most of the daughters graduated or moved out of Lawrence, and those left were involved with other organizations.
Connie Burk, also a former February Daughter, said that women's groups presently were focused on other issues but that she thought energy would be redirected toward the sisters' demands.
"There's a long way to go to meet the demands," she said.
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Classes Now Forming! MCAT GMAT GRE LSAT
| CLASS | START DATE | EXAM DATE |
| MCAT | February 11 | September 19,1992 |
| GMAT | February 10 February 11 | March 21,1992 |
| GRE | February 5 February 13 | April 11,1992 |
| LSAT | February 11 February 12 | June 15,1992 |
THE RONKIN EDUCATIONAL GROUP
Call Now To Register
843-0800
708 W. 9th St. Suite 6
HOMELESS
AWARENESS
WEEK
(FEBRUARY 3-9)
HOMELESS IN AMERICA;
[a Personal Perspective]
JANICE GRADY
FIELD ORGANIZER FOR THE NATIONAL COALITION
FOR THE HOMELESS FROM WASHINGTON, DC
Once a Homeless woman herself, Janice advocates the need to address the issue of Homelessness in the U.S. She specially stresses the need for affordable housing and other basic needs for the homeless and low-income populations at risk.
1:30 PM
KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS
HOMELESS
AWARENESS
WEEK
[FEBRUARY 3-9]
HOMELESS IN AMERICA;
{a Personal Perspective}
JANICE GRADY
FIELD ORGANIZER FOR THE NATIONAL COALITION
FOR THE HOMELESS FROM WASHINGTON, DC
Sponsored by Saint Lawrence Catholic Center, ECM, AU Students Against Hunger Habitat for Humanity, The Lawrence/Douglas County Coalition for the Homeless
Yello Sub
1814 W. 23rd
12th and Indiana
36 Hot Submarines
Call 841-3268 or 841 2782
Yello Sub
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coupon expires2/19/92
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Saffees
SEMI- ANNUAL WINTER CLEARANCE
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Downtown Lawrence • 922 Mass. • 843-6375
Open late Thursday & Sundays
Special Purchase of Computer Books
SALE!
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While Supplies Last Burge Union Store Only
Burge Union Level 2
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
6
University Daliv Kansan / Wednesdav. February 5, 1992
Fun!
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Baths/tays
Benefits
Toggles
Toys/Pillows
Alternative entertainment
for the KU student
Lower Level
Riverfront Plaza
841-3322
Dear Kristen:
Nassau four days behind us. Semester at Sea is the best! Still can't believe this incredible ship is my campus for 100 days.
I miss you. Signed up for Global Ecology, Intro to International Trade, World Music and Comparative International Studies. Just read "The Art of Crossing Cultures". That book sold 400 copies at the bookstore yesterday—most of them on my work-study shift I'm sure. Venezuela here we come!!!
Magnificent sunsets from deck.
P. S. Promise me you'll call Semester at Sea at 800-854-0195 today and get an application for Fall '92.
Love, Brian
WE'RE PROUD
To bring the tradition of brewing back to Lawrence. Come try the freshest beer in town along with great fresh-cooked meals, all at a price that can't be beat.
Sit outside in our beer garden or sit inside and see our custom made brewing facilities. Daytime visitors can often see brewing in progress.
So come visit THE FREE STATE BREWING CO.
For lunch, dinner. or a few fresh beers. Look for lunch, dinner. and dessert specials daily!
636 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, KS 843-4555
Open Mon-Sat 11-midnight
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First National has earned a reputation for fast, friendly service on PLUS, SLS and Stafford Loans.
Ask Carol Wirthman and her Staff to explain the many options available to students today.
Call (913) 865-0278
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THIS WEEK
PRESENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
864-SHOW
7:00 Tuesday, Feb 4
7:00 Wednesday, Feb 5
1:00 Saturday, Feb 8
MYSTERY
TRAIN A FILM BY JIM JARMUSA
7:00 Thursday, Feb 6
4:00 Saturday, Feb 8
plus
Friday, Feb 7, at 7:30 & 10:00
at Hashinger Hall
Straight out of Brooklyn
co-sponsored
with
BLACK TODAY
New York Times
films are screened in Woodruff Auditorium
Tickets are $2.50 at the Sun Box Office
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUAV
KU graduate Connie May Fowler wanted her master's thesis to be accepted by the department of English, and it was.
Her thesis also became the first novel Fowler had published.
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
KU thesis launches novelist's career
"Sugar Cage" explores the resilience of the human spirit and the search for spiritual meaning in the modern world. Fowler said.
She signed copies of the novel, which was released Jan. 9, yesterday afternoon at the Mt. Oread Bookstore in the Kansas Union.
Fowler said she finished the novel in May 1990, the same semester she completed work on a master's degree with an emphasis in creative writing.
Fowler said that Carolyn Doty, assistant professor of English, suggested she turn the thesis into a novel.
The novel began as several short stories with many characters, she said.
Doty said the richness of the character that Fowler greatest that Fowler connect the stories.
"She has a good ear for the way people speak," Doty said.
She said the book received wonderful reviews.
"The writing is absolutely beautiful! She said."
Fowler said she had written poetry for literary magazines and freelance articles for magazines before coming to KU. She is now a full-time novelist.
Doty contacted an agent who accepted the novel. The agent took the
rower said that after connecting the stories, she still did not think about publishing the work.
"I really just wanted to get a draft done before I graduated," Fowler said.
Fowler said that she had sold the paperback publishing rights to "Sugar Cage" and that Columbia Pictures purchased the movie rights.
Fowler said she was lucky that her first novel was published.
"I didn't think I had the talent," she said.
Her book-signing tour will continue in the Kansas City area, Florida and Europe. The novel has been sold in seven European countries.
"I am not a struggling writer, just a nervous one," she said.
Before coming to KU to earn a master's degree, Fowler graduated from the University of Tampa. She now lives in St. Augustine, Fla.
The tour temporarily will prevent Fowler from working on her second novel, she said.
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NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5. 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFSE
Belfast, Ireland
Constable suspected in killings
Three people were shot to death yesterday in the offices of the legal wing of the IRA, and police said a suspended constable later found dead was the prime suspect.
It was the most deaths in one incident in Belfast since Jan. 13, 1990, when soldiers killed three men who were mistaken for terrorists as they attempted to hold a betting shop.
Authorities said the officer's body was found in Ballinderry, a town west of Belfast, after he phoned a police station to report he had shot four people and called a second time to say where he was.
Press Association, Britain's national news agency, said the officer worked for the anti-terrorist mobile support unit of the Royal Ulster Constabulary. He was not identified.
Paris
French Parliament faces crisis
French President Francois Mitterrand called yesterday for an extraordinary session of Parliament, saying he was willing to risk a no-confidence vote that could bring down his Socialist government.
Mitterrand has been criticized for allowing Palestinian guerrilla leader George Habash to enter France for emergency care January 29, then allowing him to return home.
Four top aides lost their jobs over the scandal, the worst to hit the government since the Greenpeace vessel Rainbow Warrior was bombed in a New Zealand harbor by French agents in 1985.
Passage of a no-confidence vote would require the defection of some Socialists, something that has never occurred.
Soldiers rebel in Venezuela
From The Associated Press
The Associated Press
CARACAS, Venezuela — Rebel soldiers tried to overthrow the troubled, elected government of President Carlos Andres Perez early yesterday, cutting off roads to the capital and trying to seize the country's second-largest city.
Heavy machine-gun fire and mortar fire was heard around the Perez's residence and the Presidential Palace when the attempt began shortly after midnight but there were no immediate reports of casualties.
Soldiers were shooting at passing vehicles and pedestrians.
Perez appeared on national television shortly after the shooting began and said loyal troops had defeated a coup attempt by forces led by a paratrooper regiment.
But the attempt clearly had not been quelled and Perez' whereabouts were not known. There was no word from whoever was leading the rebels.
Three hours after the attempt began, sporadic shooting was heard in the capita, and the presidential residence and government palace appeared to be controlled by loyalist troops.
But rebel troops cut off the two main roads into Caracas and troops of undetermined loyalty took over the international airport.
An Associated Press reporter heard heavy gunfire around the presidential residence, in the western La Carota neighborhood, for about 1/2 hours. Then shooting became sporadic.
In Maracaibo, the country's second-largest city and oil capital, rebels surrounded the gubernatorial palace, said reporters in the city.
Rebels surround gubernatorial palace Caribbean Sea
gubernatorial palace Sea
Rebels attack presidential palace
Maracaibo
Maracay
Caracas
Colombia
Venezuela
Map area
South America
Brazil
200
N
Kingfisher Ridley National
The past few days have been characterized by indirect warnings from the military that Venezuela was facing threats from inside and abroad.
Report calls for chemical reform
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The discovery of alarming levels of ozone-destroying chemicals over Canada, the United States and Europe, is prompt calls for a stepped-up effort to eliminate industrial chemicals thought to cause the problem.
and satellite studies showed that chlorine monoxide, a chemical that destroys the ozone layer, reached record levels over parts of the Northern Hemisphere in January.
In some measurements, the chemical was found to be as high as 1.5 parts per billion.
research program at NASA. "We're seeing conditions primed for ozone destruction. It's in a far worse way than we thought."
The levels are high enough, he said, to destroy ozone at the rate of 1 percent to 2 percent a day for brief, late-winter periods. With conducive weather conditions, the northern ozone layer could be depleted by 30 percent to 40 percent, he said.
A National Aeronautics and Space Administration report released Monday said aircraft
"Everybody should be alarmed about this," said Michael Kurylo, manager of the upper atmosphere
FEBRUARY SPECIAL!
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Call for Special Charter Rates Mon-Thurs 843-3826
JBS Briti-Bus
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at the top of Nazism Hall
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913 841 - LIVE
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
WEDNESDAY 5
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Macintosh PowerBook
They're small enough to fit in a book bag. Powerful enough for your toughest class assignments. And they're affordable, too.
The new Apple* Macintosh* PowerBook* computers give you the freedom to work anywhere you want, any time you want.
They run virtually all Macintosh software. And can run for up to three hours on a single battery charge.
Flowers
It's the next thing.
COMMON GROUND Cry Out
With built-in AppleTalk* Remote Access software and a modem, you can use a PowerBook to retrieve files from your project partner's Macintosh without leaving the library. Or log on to the library computer without leaving your room.
They can be expanded to up to 8MB of memory and come standard with plenty of hard disk storage.
There are three models from which to choose the PowerBook 100 is the lightest, most affordable PowerBook, the PowerBook 140 offers higher
allowing you to exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer. Add SoftPC and you can run MS-DOS programs, too.
FRIDAY 7
NIC
COSMOS
The Kents
SATURDAY 8
Sometimes to do your best work all you need is a change of scenery.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
The Apple SuperDrive* disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks—
CARIBE
MONDAY 10
OPEN
MIC
Free Online Library and The Digital Universe
A Guide to Accessing the Web for Librarians
The Internet is a vast resource for information. It provides access to a wide variety of information, including books, articles, videos, and more. However, it can be challenging to find the specific content you are looking for. That's why we offer this free online library.
To access the internet, you need a computer with an internet connection. You can use a router or a wireless adapter to connect to the internet. Once connected, open your browser and enter the URL of the website you want to visit.
The internet is divided into several categories, such as public libraries, academic institutions, and government agencies. Each category has its own set of websites that offer a wide range of resources.
For example, if you want to access information about the history of computers, you can visit the website of the National Center for Computational Science (NCS). This site offers a comprehensive collection of research papers, technical reports, and other scientific publications on computers.
Alternatively, you can search for information in a local library's database. Many libraries have a section dedicated to computer science. You can also use the Google Search engine to find websites related to computer science.
Remember to stay updated with the latest news and information about computers and technology. The internet is constantly evolving, so it's essential to stay up-to-date with new developments in this field.
864-5697
Burge Union • Level 2
KUBookstore
performance and a built-in Apple SuperDrive disk drive and the PowerBook 170 is the highest performance PowerBook. All three offer bright, adjustable backlit screens and the simplicity of Apple's latest system software innovation—System 7. And their ergonomic, all-in-one design makes them comfortable to use—no matter where you do your best work.
See the PowerBook computers at our place today, and while you're in, be sure to ask us for details about the Apple Computer Loan.
Macintosh. The power to be your best at KU.
There's no telling where a PowerBook could take you.
苹果
What type of hat would you like to wear?
Feature 0
Feature & Spectrum Films
Fine Arts
Forums
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S
Live Music
Snapback
Recreation & Travel
Special Events
Become an SUA COORDINATOR!
Pick up your application in the SUA office - Kansas Union, Level 4.
Applications due by 5:00 pm, Friday, February 7.
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
8
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
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Lawrence begins work on public bus plan
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Rotunda-Strong Hall
Wednesday, February 12, 1992
2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Lawrence residents could have access to a public bus system in the near future.
Acitizens 'grouphas been calling for public transportation for a year and a half, and the city is now in the first stage of developing a plan.
By Svala Jonsdottir
The committee includes representatives from neighborhood groups, senior citizens, low-income families
Kansan staff writer
"What we are doing is trying to get the city to provide public transportation for the whole community," said Barbara Bishop, chairperson of the Citizens Public Transportation Blueprint Committee.
and organizations for the disabled
"We felt it was an important issue the city was not addressing," Bishop said. "The public transportation available now does not meet the needs of the community."
The Douglas County Community Transportation Coordination Council proposed a fixed-route bus service for the city last spring.
KU on Wheels does not operate during semester breaks and primarily serves the people on campus. Van services for the disabled and senior citizens are available only during business hours and must be requested in advance. Taxis are expensive and take a long time to arrive, Bishop said.
"What we want is an affordable and
The city will select a consultant to study the need for public transportation in Lawrence, she said.
accessible transportation system that serves the community all year," she said.
Bishop said residents would be able to provide information to the consultant and would have access to the study.
Diane Mullens, city planner, said an independent consultant had to perform a feasibility study before the city could receive federal funds.
The city plans to interview four consultant companies this week, she said.
"The consultant is being hired to analyze all the different approaches to
public transportation, and will present the results to the city commission, which ultimately makes a decision what will be done," she said.
MaryEllen Henderson, coordinator of KU on Wheels, said the public transportation system would have to be separate from the University bus system.
"The Student Senate has found that it is best for the KU bus system to be student-run," she said. "That way we make the route decisions and do not have to deal with any bureaucratic red tapes."
KU on Wheels is not used by many people outside the University community because every route goes to or from the campus, Henderson said.
RENEGADE DRIVER
KANGAS
DRIVER LICENSE
NAME: LILY DAVIS
DATE OF BIRTH: 12/16/1970
AGE: 40
FATHER NAME: RICHARD J. KANGAS
MOM_NAME: JUDI M. KANGAS
BORN IN: COLORADO
CITY: KANSAS
STATE: KANSAS
ZIP: 63035
REGISTRATION NUMBER: 841-1200-1200
SPECIALTY: DRIVING
LOCATION: KANSAS, COLORADO
DO NOT REPRODUCE
GRANTED BY: THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Feb. 5 The Crossing
9:00
"The Most Happenin' Band in Lawrence"
Attention!! May '92 Graduates
Order your graduation announcements on the following dates:
February 17th, 18th and 19th
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Orders must be prepaid
Visa, Mastercard, Discover &
American Express Accepted
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions
KS Union
864-4640
Burge Uni-
864
KU HOUSESTONES
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KU
BOOKSTORES
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Original Topping: Pepperoni Reed Sauce: Sausage Ham Black Olive Dining: Green Pepper Mustard Tomato
LUNCH
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PARKA CITY BEACH, FLORIDA
Call 843-3131
Stay in the best condos on the Beach!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SJK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY
KANSAS UNION
PARLORS A & B
LSAT
GMAT
GRE
LSAT GMAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW
ENVIRONS
Information Meeting: February 5, 1922 at 8:00 pm, Kansas Room, Kansas Union. Os step by the SUA Office, fourth floor Kansas Union, 8:30 - 4:30 m Monday through Thursday 8:30 - 4:30 m Friday through Saturday
KU KSU U
ESU WSU
SPRING BREAK '92
MARCH 6 - 14
Great Condes.
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KU!
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BECAUSE IT'S YOUR WORLD,TOO.
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LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044
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every Friday & Saturday Trixie & the Tornados
KU★KSU★WS
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SPRING BREAK '92
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PANAMA CITY BEACH FLORIDA
Thursday, Feb. 6
only
Ladies Night Male Dancers 8:00 - 10:00
Cover charge
(Guys admitted at 10)
$3^{00}
Available for Private Parties)
at843-2000
Call our Entertainment Hotline at 843.2000
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is currently seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study
Men With Allergies Receive up to $700
be 18 - 50 years of age.
To qualify you must:
be able to sleep over in our
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be able to attend 5 short visits
be allergic to dust, mold, cats,
Call IMTCI today to find out if you can qualify to participate in this study,
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Call IMTCI today to find out if you can
1-599-2044
clinic on 2 occasions, and
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TUTORING WORKSHOP
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1992
PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION
9:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M.
(Can bring a sack lunch)
There will be a sign-up table on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union on February 5, 6, or 7
or Call Matt Todd at 842-0706
arge Selection $ \cdot $ Competitive prices
sponsored by Students Tutoring for Literacy
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hat? Is the best way to tell that someone special just how special they are this Valentine's Day??...
with a Valentine personal in the University Daily Kansan!
How? Come by the Kansan business office to place your ad before 5 p.m.- Monday February 10.
A
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The University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
9
Bush keeps lead in N.H. polls
The Associated Press
MANCHESTER, N.H. — Two weeks before the New Hampshire primary, polls show President Bush maintaining at least a 2-1 lead over challenger Patrick Buchanan in the state, while the Democrats are in a tight, volatile race.
A Boston Herald-WCVB-TV poll of 404 likely Republican voters in the state showed Bush ahead 59 percent to 28 percent. The University of New Hampshire Survey Center conducted a poll for WMUR-TV in which Bush led 60 percent to 23 percent among 499 likely GOP voters.
Up to 35 percent were undecided or not firmly committed in the WMUR poll, said Kelly Myers, the center's associate director. The size of that number, coupled with widespread dissatisfaction about the economy, leaves an opening for Buchanan to pick up more support, Myers said.
The polls had margins of sampling error of plus or minus 5 percentage points for the Herald poll and 4 points for WMUR's.
A weekend poll of 401 probable Democratic primary voters taken in New Hampshire by the bipartisan Sawyer Miller Group of Washington, D.C. showed Clinton at 27 percent and
former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas at 24 percent, followed by Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerney at 17 percent, Iowa Sen. Tom Harink at 10 percent and former California Gov. Jerry Brown at 8 percent.
The pollsters said that the race was volatile because only 20 percent said they definitely would vote for the candidate they preferred.
When voters were given the option of writing in New York Gov. Mario Cuomo's name, the split was Tsongas 20 percent, Cuomo 19 percent and Clinton 19 percent, a statistical three-way tie.
Bloodstains scrutinized in Morris trial
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
A former forensic serologist from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation testified yesterday that blood found on a golf club and a pair of jeans was consistent with the blood type and enzymes of a Lawrence man who was murdered last August.
The items are evidence in the trial of Kenneth Morris, who is charged with the Aug. 8 murder of Danny Davis.
Rita Dole, a forensic serologist who examined evidence from blood and body fluids for the KBI, said she tested the blood on the golf club that allegedly was used to bludgeon Davis.
Dole said she also tested a pair of
jeans this month worn by Kenneth Morris during his arrest. The jeans had six bloodstains on them, five of which were consistent with the blood type and enzymes present in Davis' blood, she said.
The sixth bloodstain was too small to produce results, she said.
However, the defense argued that Davis' blood type, Type A, was common in white people in the United States, and that the blood on the jeans may have come from Morris if he was injured during his arrest.
During cross-examination, Dole said heat, humidity and time could cause the dried blood's genetic markers to deteriorate. The markers indicate who may have contributed a
bloodstain.
Helen Turner, a latent print investigator for the KBI, said she examined fingerprints found on items taken from the scene of Davis' murder.
Turner said she found 29 usable prints on crime-scene items. Usable prints are hand or fingerprints that are not smudged and have characteristic, individual ridge patterns.
Turner identified seven of the prints as belonging to Davis and said she identified no prints from Morris.
Doctors involved in the investigation are expected to testify today.
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Snow causes extra stress at Olympiad
ALBERTVILLE, France — The first major snowfall since a December blizzard hit the Olympic region yesterday, dumping up to a foot of snow and raising fears of an Alpine gridlock four days before the start of the Olympic Games.
The Associated Press
Scores of French soldiers, Olympic officials, ski students and local workers were pressed into service against the snow at venues throughout the Savoy region, where the XVI Winter Olympics will begin Saturday.
Snow was expected to continue through tomorrow, with up to 20 inches falling in some areas before tapering off. O₃ ganizers fear the snow could cause a traffic nightmare on the winding two-lane mountain roads 'that connect the various sites, but reports indicated that the roads were still passable.
The snow prevented French Prime Minister Edwin Cresson from address-
Albertville, France
12
February 8-23
WINTER
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officials warned that could change as the snow fell unabated.
"At the moment, we have no real problems, but 50 centimeters (20 inches) of snow in 48 hours is quite a lot," said press officer Elbert Tarrago. "If it continues like this, we could face some problems."
More than a foot of snow fell by yesterday afternoon at Les Saisies, where the cross-country skiing competition will start Sunday. About 180 people,
"Schedule a downhill, and I snores," said former U.S. ski team member Doug Lewis, who is in Val D'isère to help film this year's skiing events. "That's the way it works."
The snow was so heavy in Vald 'Iseer that it totally obscured the top third of the new downhill course, "La Face de Bellevarde."
including 90 soldiers, were busy packing the new snow with heavy machinery.
"As long as they keep on top of it, there'll be no problem." Lewis said.
A mixture of local ski school employees, soldiers and Olympic officials were clearing snow from the course as it fell.
Training runs for the luge were held up by the snow at La Plagne, where they were expecting more than a foot of snow.
"We'll have bad weather at least until Thursday," said the site's weather officer, Denis Capdegelle.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
11
Tennis stars go to Minneapolis
adidas
Hamers, Jensen to play singles in tournament
Rebecca Jensen ranked No. 21 in the nation practices at Alvamar Golf and Country Club,4120 Clinton Parkway
Kansan sportswriter
By Lyle Niedens Kansan sportswriter
Kansas women's tennis players Eveline Hamers and Rebecca Jensen, who led the Jayhawks to a dual match victory against Brigham Young on Monday, are scheduled to leave today for the Rolex National Indoor tournament in Minneapolis.
Hamers and Jensen play No.1 and No.2 singles for the Jayhawks, respectively, and team together at No.1 doubles. They will each compete in singles matches in the tournament, which features the top singles players and doubles teams from around the country. The tournament will begin tomorrow and run through Sunday.
"I think both can have an impact in the draw," Center said. "It's a very elite field."
Both Hamers and Jensen will be guaranteed at least two matches in the tournament. Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said he expected both players to do well in the tournament.
Hamers, a senior and three-time All-America selection, received an automatic bid to the tournament on the basis of her No.4 national ranking last fall.
However, after posting a 10-4 record in individual competition in the fall, Hamers' ranking fell to 32 in the nation. She said that playing well in Minneapolis would prove that her ranking was misleading.
Center said that Hamers, who was runner-up in the consolation round of last year's Rolex tournament, definitely belonged in the tournament.
"It's a good tournament," she said. "It will help me see how ready I am for the NCAAs. It will be fun."
"She can play with anybody in the country," he said. "She can beat anyone on any given day."
Whereas Hamers is a veteran of the tournament, playing in the Rolex will
be a first for freshman Jensen, who is ranked No.21 in the country.
"I am very excited to go," said Jensen, who qualified for the tournament by winning the Rolex Qualifier in the fall.
Jensen's play has been improving all season. Center said.
Although they are ranked No. 7 in the nation as a doubles team, Hamers and Jensen are not scheduled to compete in the doubles portion of the tournament. The pair did not qualify as a team because of a loss in Fall 1991 to Utah's No. 1 doubles team, a regional opponent that Hamers-Jensen defeated in the season-opener Jan. 24.
"The key for Rebecca is that she has been playing with more and more confidence all the time," he said.
However, Hamers and Jensen are
the first alternate in doubles, and Center said there was a good chance that the Hamers-Jensen pairing would compete in doubles before the weekend was over.
Still, Hamers said the prospect of not playing doubles left her frustrated.
"You can think you regou-
bles team," she said, "but you can't
really say it until you prove it."
Football team expects signings today
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
After months of hitting the recruiting trails, the Kansas football program will wait in anticipation today as high school seniors from California to Florida are expected to sign national letters of intent to play with the Jayhawks
Under NCAA regulations, it is the first day college football teams can officially extend scholarship offers.
One of the latest players to make a verbal commitment is Scott Whittaker, a 6-foot-7, 315 pound offensive lineman from Etiwanda High School in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.
"He's really very agile and athletic." Eitwanda coach Larry Tisdale
said. "He was used as a pulling tackle and would lead our sweeps. He was able to do that because he is very mobile."
He said Whittacker picked Kansas instead of San Diego State, UNLV, Fresno State and Oklahoma. Tisdale said Whittaker had been Oklahoma's top pick in California.
Whittacker was not an all-league pick, but was a Top 50 prospect in California, Tisdale said. Though other players from Etiwanda may have earned more honors, Whittacker's size made him a popular draw to major colleges.
"He wasn't even our best player, but potentially he could be a great player," Tisdale said.
Whittacker's talents extend past the
trenches of the interior line. Tisdale said Whittacker also punted and played tight end on a few occasions.
Another player expected to sign with the Jayhawks today is Jim Moore of Garden City High School in Garden City. Moore is a 6-3, 225 pound tight end.
Moore picked Kansas instead of Wisconsin and Southern California.
Garden City coach Dave Meadows said Moore was an excellent athlete with speed. He said Moore runs the 40-yard dash in 4.7 seconds.
Meadows said a factor in Moore selecting Kansas was its medical program. He said Moore wanted to be a doctor.
"Everything about KU just fits
right " Meadows said.
According to the Tampa Tribune, Andre Carter, a 5-11, 155 pound receiver from Chamberlain High School in Tampa, Fla., Charles Davis, a 6-10, 185 pound quarterback and defensive back from Vocational High School also in Tampa, and Mark Sanders a 6-20, 220 pound running back from Pinellas Park High School in St. Petersburg, Fla., are expected to sign with Kansas.
Accordingi d to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Dorian Brew, a 5-11, 180 pound defensive back from Florrissant, Mo., will also sign with Kansas.
The Kansas coaching staff is prohibited by the NCAA to comment on recruits until they have officially signed with the school.
Jayhawks' defense expects challenge
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team's nation-leading defense will face what could be its toughest challenge of the season tonight as Oklahoma brings its high-scoring offense to Allen Field House for the teams' 7:30 matchup.
Kansas, 16-3 and 5-1 in the Big Eight Conference, allows its opponents an average of 53.2 points a game while averaging 71.5 points a game, the third best offense in the conference. Oklahoma's offense, averaging 86.4 points a game, leads the conference.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the loss of players this year to injuries could hurt the Jayhaws against a team like Oklahoma.
"The challenge we have is our lack of depth." Washington said. "As much as we'd like to pressure them with our man to man defense, we may have to go to a zone if we get into any foul trouble."
Oklahoma, 12-6 and 3-3 in conference play, is led by senior guard Carin Sithes who averages 15.5 points a game. Sithes was the conference's fourth leading scorer one year ago, averaging 18.5 points a game. She took 476 shots last year, more than any other player in the conference.
Washington said Stites' ability to shoot the ball was definitely a concern for Kansas' defense.
"She's the kind of player that has an incredible eye," Washington said. "She can shoot the ball as well as anybody in the conference."
The Jayhawks have beaten the Sooners in the teams' last four meetings and nine of the last 10 dating back to Feb. 1, 1986. Kansas has not lost to Oklahoma at the field house since a 78-77 loss Feb. 24, 1985.
The Jayhawks recently captured sole possession of first place in the conference on the strength of a 3-0 road swing during which they defeated Nebraska and Oklahoma State, both of which held a share of first place before Kansas defeated them.
Aycock earns honor Kansan staff report
Kansas freshman guard/forward Angela Yacock earned Big Eight Conference Player-of the Week honors after scoring 34 points and grabbing 13 rebounds in a pair of road victories for the No. 17 Jayhawks last week.
In the Jayhawks' 82-52 victory against intrastriit rival Kansas State on Sunday, the 6-foot-2 native of Dallas, Texas, connected on 11-of-18 field goal attempts as she led all scorers with a career-high 22 points. She also collected five rebounds, handed out two assists, added four steals and committed just one turnover.
In 34minutes of playing time, Aycock did not commute a foul in holding senior guard Mary Jo Miller, K-State's leading scorer, to just 11 points, which was 11 short of what Miller had been averaging in league action.
Aycock made 6-of-13 shots from the field en route to 12 points as Kansas defeated defending league champion Oklahoma State, 64-60, on the Cowgirls' floor home last Wednesday. Aycock pulled down a team-high eight rebounds, while adding two assists and two steals.
Kansas is ranked No. 17 this week in The Associated Press Top 25. The Jayhawks were also ranked No. 17 during the week of Dec. 30, 1991, after starting the season 8-0.
Washington said that it was nice to be in the polls but that the team could not afford to stop and enjoy the recognition.
"I's great to be in, but I'm trying to keep the (Jayhawks) focused on what we're trying to do," she said. "We're just trying to focus on playing basketball and winning a few more games."
Women's basketball probable starters
Game time: 7:30 tonight in Allen Field House.
The game will be broadcast on KJKH 9.0 FM
Basketball
Kansas 13-2 (6-3, 1) Position Year Height PPG RPG
32 Danielle Shareef F Sr. 5-10 8.0 5.4
10 Jo Do Witherspoon G Jr. 5-7 2.7 1.3
13 Kay Kay Hart G Sr. 5-7 9.7 3.7
23 Terrilyn Johnson F Fr. 5-11 7.2 9.3
30 Anuela Avcock F Fr. 6-2 10.4 4.4
Oklahoma 12-6 (3-5)
22 Angie Alexander G Sr. 5-8 10.2 3.9
23 Carin Stites G Sr. 5-8 15.5 2.3
24 Kelli Epps F Sr. 5-11 9.1 4.4
44 Angi Guffy F Fr. 6-2 14.4 6.0
45 Mandy Wade F Fr. 6-3 9.9 7.2
arce: Kansas Sports Network
Almee Brainard, Daily Kansan
Lowe is a Junior National qualifier in five or six different events and hopes to make the 1992 Olympic Trials held in Indianapolis.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Kansas swimming head coach Gary Kempf announced yesterday the signing of Ryan Lowe to national letter of intent to swim at the University of Kansas. Lowe, from Greshan, Ore., competes in the butterfly and the distance freestyle.
Swimmers signs letter
"He is one of the top men that we wanted," Kempf said. "I feel he is a cornerstone to which we can continue to build a strong foundation."
JV beats Hesson 73-52
The junior varsity's next game is at home tomorrow against Benedictine College. Tip-off is set for 7:30 p.m.
The Kansas Junior Varsity improved their record to 13-1 last night with a victory against Hesson Junior College, 73-52.
The Jayhawks led the entire game and streaked out to a 40-27 halftime lead.
Others, including the university president Jon Wefald, are urging patience. They note K-State coaches historically get off to slow start. Altman was left with virtually no players when Lon Kruger abandoned the program for Florida.
Sophomore forward Blake Wiechbrodt led Kansas in scoring with 25 points while junior center Donnie Braun pulled down12rebounds.
K-State embarrassments endanger Altman's job
Some are saying let Altman be the first and not only because of consistent losses on the court. Attendance is down dramatically at a place that once enjoyed routine sellouts, a place already burdened with the Big Eight Conference's heaviest athletic debt and needing every dollar it can generate.
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Kansas State never has fired a basketball coach, and Dana Altman, taking heat in just his second year, does not want to be a pioneer.
Not only are the Wildcats (11-7, 1-4) losing, they're being embarrassed. No. 21 Oklahoma came in last month and became the first team in K-State's history to score 100 points at Manhattan. There was also a 41-point loss at Lamar and a wretched 38-point televised drubbing at Oklahoma State, in which the Wildcats managed just 11 points the entire first half.
All this is coming off K-State's first lastplace finish. Last year, Altman's first after serving as a valued assistant and No. 1 recruiter on Kruger's staff, the Wildcats finished at the bottom of the Big Eight for the first time since the conference was formed in 1958-59. Before then, K-State had won or tied for the Big Eight crown 20 times but never occupied last place.
This year the team is in danger of a dismal repeat. A victory against Colorado at home Saturday got the Wildcats their first conference triumph and kept the Buffs winless. But that 65-6 victory was tempered by a half-empty Bramlage Coliseum and the fact the Wildcats shot less than 40 percent and committed 21 turnovers.
Altman, 33, gave an honest answer when asked how many Big Eight victories such a performance could expect to bring.
"I would say it would be hard to win very many at all," he said.
Monday night's 22-point loss at No. 3 ranked Kansas more than gave the Jayhawks a 50-game lead in their 85-year series with the Wildcats.
It's enough to make a K-Stater's blood boil. It also enough to keep K-
Statersaway.
Ahearn Fieldhouse almost always was filled to its 11,220-capacity during its heyday in the '60s and '70s when a K-State ticket was just about the toughest ticket in the Big Eight.
But already wice this season, fewer than 6,000 fans have shown up at Bramlage, which opened amid great expectations in 1989. Bramlage seats 13,500, and attendance this year is averaging about 7,800.
But Wefald is not giving up hope.
"I don't care if you're in politics or communications or coaching, I believe you've got to give people a chance, and Dana is in only his second year," Wefald said. "I think most K-Staters are willing to give people a chance to show what they can do. That's an attitude I share."
Future Kansas alumni, please don't act your age at games
In a few short months, University of Kansas seniors will join the ranks of a group of people we Kansas students have ridiculed and openly shunned for years. No, I do not mean the unemployed, I'm speaking of the Kansas alumni.
There are just five home basketball games remaining for graduating seniors to enjoy as students. I advise them to take a good look around as they stand in the midst of Allen Field House's student section. Take note of what it is like to be a real fan. Try to remember how a real fan acts. For in time, you will become one of THEM.
Unfortunately, it seems many of our esteemed alumni ticket-holders are too busy hanging out at the country club to get the full Jayhawk basketball experience.
PETER ROSENBERG
David Mitchell Staff columnist
The list of nonsensical actions the alumni make, or fail to make, during home games is too long to attack in great detail. But for the benefit of the graduating seniors, I have devised these simple guidelines for them to use upon their return as alumni next season.
**Arrive early.** As an alumnus, or alumna, you will no longer have to camp out for good seats, but by show-
up ing right before tip-off, alumni often miss out on women's and junior varsity basketball games. It is probable that many of the alums had never heard of Lane Czaplinski before this season.
**Stay late.** Just once I'd like to see the old folks watch an entire game. However, if the "Hawks have any kind of a lead, the alumni begin filing out with about 5 minutes left to play. This is an insult to players like Czapiakls who see limited action. All the Jayhawks deserve our support, not just the starters.
Don't be afraid to act silly. Most alumni do not participate in even the most honored field house traditions. Of course, I don't expect them to throw a senior citizen into the air during the 'Hey!' cheer, but they could at least
hold up newspapers during the opening introductions. With more crowd participation, the alumni could help make the field house an even more intimidating venue for visiting teams.
I've also noticed that the alumni have not seen fit to do to the new "O" cheer. This season, students have taken liking to freshmancenter Greg Ostertag. Every time the big mandoes something well the students make an "O" by circling their arms above their heads and then chanting, "O." The alumni seem to think this is silly. Do it anyway.
During Coach Roy Williams' first
Know when to stand. Students stand whenever the game clock is running. This allows for the stumping of feet and shows the team our level of interest and dedication. Alumni stand during halftime, which I suppose
■ Never give up. This is the mark of a true Kansas basketball fan. During the Jayhawks' loss to Louisville, alumni poured out of the field house like rats from a sinking ship. Most of the students stuck it out. And as is tradition, the 'Hawks received a standing ovation from the students as they left the court, despite the final score.
shows their fascination with the Crimson Girls.
It takes the most phenomenal of plays, perhaps an alley-op so slam dunk, to get the alumni off their butts. This is unfair to the vertically-challenged players like Adonis Jordan who seldom, if ever, dunk. Every exceptional play is worth a response, not just slams. This is not the NBA.
season at Kansas, the Jayhawks lost a tough overtime game to Oklahoma at home. After that game, the team received a standing ovation as it left the court. Williams remarked later that this kind of dedication meant a lot to the team. It is the kind the team deserves.
I don't mean to imply that earning a degree from Kansas is not a great achievement, because indeed it is. Being a Kansas graduate has its advantages, and having a degree from the University might open some doors out in the real world.
But while it might be advantageous to be a Kansas graduate, you don't always have to act like one.
**David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.**
12
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
Prosecution rests case in Tyson rape trial
Juror moved to tears during testimony by accuser's mother The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Prosecutors rested their case yesterday against Mike Tyson after his accuser's mother tearfully described how her happy daughter became a frightened child in the weeks after the alleged rape.
"She sees his face, and she's scared. She's reliving this nightmare over and over," the mother said, her voice cracking and tears flowing.
The mother's testimony, which
moved at least one juror to cry, capped a morning of legal setbacks for the defense. Judge Patricia Gifford refused to allow the jury to hear three surprise defense witnesses and permitted the prosecution to play parts of a tape of Tyson's accuser talking to a 911 operator.
Prosecutors completed their case against the former boxing champion after calling 20 witnesses.
Tyson, 25, is accused of raping the 18-year-old Miss Black America contest after inviting her to his hotel room July 19 during the pageant. The former heavyweight champion said the woman consented to sex. He could get up to 63 years in prison if convicted.
"I came out of the bathroom and this person was in his underwear and he just basically kind of did what he wanted to do and kept saying, 'Don't fight me. Don't fight me.' And I was saying, 'No! No! Get off of me, get off of me please,' the woman said.
The court released a partial transcript of the woman's 911 call to report the alleged rape.
The woman testified last week that she met Tyson at a pageant rehearsal. She said she accompanied him to his hotel suite because she thought they were going to pick up someone.
The woman said they had no physical contact in the car after Tyson gave her a brief kiss when she climbed in.
But defense attorney F. Lane Heard said three witnesses who came forward and claimed that the pair were all over one another when the limo pulled up to Tyson's hotel.
"I wonder what rock these people had been hiding under," special prosecutor Greg Garrison said.
The judge said she thought the witnesses were substantially prejudicial to the state's case and reprimanded defense attorneys for waiting so long to alert prosecutors to the existence of the witnesses.
The defense says the accuser filed charges in revenge for being treated as a one-night stand and hopes to collect a civil lawsuit judgment.
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2411 Cedarwood Ave.
Spring Break'92 South Padre Island $149 per week*
You and 5 amigos can share a week in a 2 bedroom condo on S. Padre for just $149.00 per person.
This offer is limited and only available if you mention seeing this ad.
Call today 800926-6926
AUTOSOUND
LAMBORGHINI
Island Reservation Service
P.O. Box 3469
South Padre Island, Texas 78597
*Rate is per person based on 6 people sharing a 2 bedroom condo the week of MAR 7 MAR 14. Tax and fundable damage deposit extra.
ENGINEERING AWARDS
EACH YEAR 2000+ AUDIO ENGINEERS SELECT
THE MOST SIGNIFICANT
AUTOSOUND PRODUCTS OF THE YEARI
WINNERS ARE CHOSEN ON THE BASIS OF THE THESE CRITERION
1. DESIGN & ENGINEERING EXCELLENCE.
2. SONIC INTEGRITY & SOUND FIDELITY.
3. RELIABILITY RECORD OF THE UNIT.
4. MANUFACTURER'S ABILITY TO SERVICE.
5. MARKET PRICE & VALUE COMPETITIVE.
1. DESIGN & ENGINEERING EXCELLENCE.
CASSETTE/RECEIVERS OF 1992
AWARD WINNING MODELS BY PRICE CLASS
TOP 5 BRANDS
1. ALPINE
2. DENON
3. NAKAMICHI
4. YAMAHA
5. PANASONIC
AWARD WINNING MODELS BY PRICE CLASS
ALPINE - (7400) $200.
DENON - (DCR-5170) 250.
DENON - (DCR-5390) 350.
NAKAMICHI - (RD-360) 450.
ALPINE - (7618) 550.
NAKAMICHI - (TUNER/DECK) 650.
5. PANASONIC
Total Brands Considered: 17 - Total Models Considered: 44
POWER AMPLIFIERS 0F 1992
CD PLAYERS & CHANGERS OF 1992
AWARD WINNING MODELS BY PRICE CLASS
ALPINE - (3522) $150.
DENON - (DCA-400) 200.
ADS - (PS-5) 250.
DENON - (DCA-500) 300.
ALPINE - (3555) 500.
ALPINE - (3544) 700.
1. NAKAMICHI
2. ALPINE
3. A.D.S.
4. DENON
5. ROCKFORD
TOP5 BRANDS
AWARD WINNING MODELS BY PRICE CLASS
Total Brands Considered: 19 - Total Models Considered: 49
Total Brands Considered: 13 - Total Models Considered: 34
TOP 5 BRANDS
1. ALPINE
2. DENON
3. SONY
4. NAKAMICHI
5. PIONEER
SPEAKERS & SPK SYSTEMS 1992
AWARD WINNING MODELS BY PRICE CLASS
SONY - (CDX- 5040) $425.
ALPINE - (5952V)-CD-CHANGER 500.
DENON - (DCC-1570)- CHANGER 600.
DENON - (DCC-8770) 700.
NAKAMICHI - (CD TUNER-1) 800.
ALPINE - (7909) 900.
AWARD WINNING MODELS BY PRICE CLASS
BOSTON ACOUSTICS - (703) $ 50.
ALPINE - (6297) 100.
BOSTON ACOUSTICS - (767) 150.
IMPACT - (M-110) 250.
BOSTON ACOUSTICS - (PRO 5.2) 400.
ADS - (32015) 500.
TOP 5 BRANLE
1. BOSTON A.
2. A.D.S.
3. IMPACT
4. ALPINE
5. INFINITY
Total Brands Considered: 41 - Total Models Considered: 96
$ 595 • Ask
About Lower
Price Options
SOUNDS GREAT CAR STEREO
TOP 5 BRANDS
1992 Award Winner's
SALE!
////ALPINE 7618 REMOVABLE FM/AM CASSETTE PLAYER
JOB NO. 13020769
DATE OF COMPLETION: 04/05/2021
REMARKS: THIS IS A PROJECT ONLY FOR THE PERSON TO HANDLE IT.
This is the one. The state-of-the-art in FM/MM cassette decks. Alpine's elite 7618 is designed to excite even the purest audiophile. The 7618 has in GR H-type mechanism and ultra-
$ 189. Ask
About Lower
Price Options
BOSTON ACOUSTICS 767 TWO-WAY C
61/2-inch wooster; 3/4-inch In-line tweeter
Car Audio and Electronics says, "The character of the sound remained the
bound remained the same at all volume levels clear, detailed, spacious and tonally correct... Boston 767's are
BOSTON ACOUSTICS 767 TWO-WAY COAXIAL SYSTEM
A DEFINATE BEST BUY" CAR AUDIO
DENON DCC-8770 AM/FM RECEIVER AND
Fader Control - Preamp Outputs (2-Pairs)
Slide-Out DIN-D EChassis to prevent theft
Retracting Bass & Treble Controls
High-Performance AI D/A Converter
646 Ask
Below Lower
Price Options
100%
CD PLAYER
24-Station Preset Memory
18W + 18W W-B Pow Amp
CD PLAYER
////ALPINE 5952V SHUTTLE - WOW!!
$ 475 . Ask
About Lower
Price Options
$648. Ask
JBL KENWOOD
Digital technology found in far more expensive
in far more expensive changers: 18-bit Dual
8X oversampling
Improved DR Changer Mechanism
Hybrid I-DACs
8X oversampling
KIEF'S
*AUDIO/VIDEO, CAR AUDIO, CDs & TAPES*
2429 A. IOWA STREET • P.O. BOX 2 • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO: 913.824.1811 • CAR STEREO: 842.1438 • CDs & TAPES: 842.1544
HOURS: MON/THUR-10: to 8;PM FRI/SAT-10: to 6PM
As The Weather Gets Cold
100
Suntint Auto Tinting Cen Reduce Interior
Crack and Sun Sedge with Insultrion Film
Inclusion is by international definition with firm and install installation reduces heat up to 80% and 90% reduction of heat reuses heat up to 80% and 90% reduction of heat reuses heat up to 80% and 90% reduction of heat reuses heat up to 80% and 90% reduction of heat reuses heat up to 80% and 90% reduction of heat reuses heat up to 80% and 90% reduction of heat reuses heat up to 80%
Auto Detailed
Genuine Installation
• FREE ESTIMATES
TINT
2201 C West 25th St
841 - 4779
WINTER SPECIALS:
$50 for 3 window trucks
$100 for 2 door cars
Paradise
Cafe & Bakery
Treat Yourself
Breakfast•Lunch•Dinner
Paradise Cafe & Bakery
728 Massachusetts • 842-5199
Classified Directory
100's
200's
Employ...
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional
Services
235 Typing Services
Announcements
110 Bustle sessions
110 Bustle sessions
120 Announcements
120 Announcements
130 Entertainments
---
100s Announcements
105 Personal
We, twe at the Powerpant. I'm the *Bai Box* Blue with the "House of Silence." *Bai Box*
Hey Sam, What's after thighmaster, Buns of Steel? It's only a 1-mile 8-away!
NO GIMMICKS
110 Bus. Personal
English tutor to help foreign students with composition or conservation Call Alan Ail84-4733
NO GIMMICKS
EXTRA INCOME NOW!
ENVELOPE STUFFING — $600 · $800 every week
MATERIALS
Brooks International, Inc.
P.O. Box 630605 *Orlando*, FL 32868
300's
Merchandise
Wanted: Female Running partner for 2-3 mornings.
Sexually Preferably near 29th Street. Call Kevin
AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
Call Today!
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
---
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
120 Announcements
Translate
FREE!
Foreign Language Workshop
for students of any language
Wednesday, February 5, 3:00-5:30 p.m.
Daisy Hills Burrow Room 8e1
presented by the Student Assistance Center and International Student Services
Feared confused, anxious, blue? Counseling can help make sense of your world. Student rates.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program.
Help for students of any language. Wednesday,
February 3, 3: 50-3: 50 p.m., Daisy Hill Room, Burge
Union.
Douglas County Rape Victims Support Services offer confidential, on-going support groups for victims/survivors of rape/sexual assault. Call Headquarters Counseling Center BM-2345.
Thursday, Feb. 6
Wednesday, Feb. 5
Hillel
Events of the Week
Soviet Jewry Meeting 7:45 pm, Hillel House
Thursday, Feb. 8
Open Forum Meeting
8:15 pm, Kansas Union
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Friday, Feb. 7
Shabbat Dinner 6:00 pm, Hillel House (RSVP by Thurs. Feb. 6)
Saturday, Feb. 8
UJA Phone-a-thon
Fire and Ice Program (Havdalah and Ice Skating) 5:30 pm, Hillel House and
For rides and more information call 864-3948
Sunday, Feb. 9 & Monday Feb.10
图
400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
INTERESTED INSERVICE!
100.00 /usr/ READ BOOKS and TV Scripts. Fill out
simple "like"不用 form "like". FUN. relax-
ing, vacation. vacations. Guaranteed payee
free. FREE! Recordings 881-379-4292©k15EK
k15EK
cup this MANAGER'S ad SPECIAL
ALPHAPHIOMEGA
for more info call 816-373-8667 Ask for Patrick or Judy
National Service Fraternity wants to reactivate at KUI
LUNCH
BUFFET
11:30 - 1:30 Mon.-Fri.
12:00 - 2:00 Sa
$2.99
with coupon
Add .70€ for salad
Limit 4 specials/coupo
THE BEST ANY WAY YOU SUE IT
Explanation Date: 02/10/2023
MAZZIOS PIZZA
Expiration Date 2-19-92.
2630 Iowa • 843-1474
welcome
We're always open
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by headquarers.
We're here because we care
841.2345
1419 Mass.
We're always
EZATA PHI BITA SORORITY INC. introduces its EZATY Scholarship Competition for the best 500 word essay on "Black Youth in Contemporary America" at Kaiser Pride. From 12:45 p.m., Erica Cattay at 832-1424. Along with their "Man of the Year" "onestate Test" February 29, 1928 "Canon" "inform now!" info now! "Contact Krista Morgan 864-8159
FREE!
Academic Excellence Workshop for students who want to Study Smarter, Not Harder
EXCEL
Thursday, February 6, 7-8 p.m.
4025 Wescoe
offered by the Student Assistance Center
are anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-243. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Fee Counseling. A friendly, understated counselor who is committed to being returned by counselor. Headshots 8/24 or 10/31. Call 516-786-3994.
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
WANTED: St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen. Contact 740-6351 For More Information.
You're not alone! Gay, Leshain, Bisexual support group *Tuesdays* 8:00 call, headphones or K U
STIHOT! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
G G
I'VE GOT TO CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT TO BE SICK IN LAWRENCE!
DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDALE $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND / $108
MUSTANG ISLAND /
PORT ARANSAS
$128
DON'T WAIT 'TIL IT'S TOO LATE
11th Annual
Celebration!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
13
SUFFERINGFROMABORTION?
SUFFERING FROM ABORTION?
Hearts Restored
Box 94
Grinnell, Ks 67738
Confidential Response will follow.
You can EXCEL Academically. Learn strategies for studying smarter, not harder. Learn to maximize study time spent on reading assignments. February 6, 7 p.m. 402 Wesley FREE!
130 Entertainment
SPRING BREAK VACATIONS! Enjoys warmed
exciting break activities! Call Barry M. 60-2711
Call Mary H. 60-2711
140 Lost-Found
Don't miss Nova Moe featuring Grant Hart from Duke University Dus. 16. Bellettone & 18. over
Found: set of keys in front of the Children's Learning Center in Dole on Friday afternoon, 865-0118.
WATCH found. In Burge Unparking parking lot before Xmas. Call to callme. 864-3847
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Apply now! Part-time & flexible hours. Sub & Stuff
161W 23rd.
BabySitter Needed, car and phone a requirement
Preferably a male. For an old age boy Call 7498
Housekeeper needed; very flexible hours with great pay! Phone and car must a1. 749-3814-812
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan girls/boyscamp summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, baseball, softball, golf, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1,000 per hour. Mail to: The Craig Leer Group, 175 Maple Ridge, IL 60684-784-2444
We are continuing to expand our Lawrence community-based program. Community Living Opportunities Inc. seeks to hire quality professionals, knowledgeable and dedicated daily living skills or our men and women with developmental disabilities. We need people interested in PT day shifts, specific training, and teaching of PT evening, PT night and PT weekend teach counselors and substitute teach counselors for all settings. We also provide a related provider to B.S. and, exp. with MR/DD help. Homemaker skills needed for right TCs' Great benefits; competitive salary and family benefits. Located in Delaware, Lawrence, KS65404, EOE
The Youth Program of the Lawrence Track Club is recruiting for the pad position of Track & Field coach. Students will need to give 9th grade 9-18 who are AU and TAC qualifiers. Qualified applicants would possess experience coaching youth and knowledge of all facets of Track Coach. Send resume to 7/31/92. Send letter of interest and resume to Steven Lee. 2005 Kingston Drive, Lawrence Ksam 66495. Application deadline February 7
Daycare Assistant/Driver Christian Daycare needs a reliable assistant, should be available TuesThurs 7:30 a.m - 8:30 a.m M F 11 a.m a. 12:00 p.m payees $49 hair 842-2086
Counselors/ support staff children in camp/north-tal super salary, bmh/laundry, travel allowance Must have skill in one of the following activities: drama, dance, drivers, drums, fencing field hockey, football, golf guitar, gymnastics, hockey, kitchen supervisor/workers, lacrosse, maintenance, nature, nurses, photography, rock music, secretary, soccer tennis, track, waterkis, weights. Drops for an interview on Wednesday or Friday, secretary, soccer tennis, track, waterkis, weights. Drop
Doylon like working with children? Step stoning Stones is hiring toddler room aides to work 8:41 MWF. Substitute positions also available. Apply at 1100 Rockway
FAST
FUNDRAISING
PROGRAM
Fraternities, sororites, student clubs. Earn up to $1000 in one week. Plus receive a $1000 bonus your own.
And a FREE WATCH for calling) 800-932
0528 Ext. 65
LABORATORY ASSISTANTS
Full time babyssister for one year old in our home
Phone evenings 842-4577
Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or related science; laboratory experience is required. Weeks leave for 3-4 hour blocks of time during regular 8-workday. Mon - Fri. Submit application with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to the University of Alabama's Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F / H/V
native Chinese speaking or woman to care for lixely six year old american boy. Purpose teach the basics of learning and ability to set limits and ace the Nintendo. He is a fun, intelligent, wit kid. You will need car. He is a good buddy.
Needa job! Weare looking for distributors. Excellent pay! No experience required! Start now! Send Long S.A A.S Env. Galaxae Distributors suit-a'1231 Hillwood RD Forkered River, NJ08721
Need extra money for Spring Break? Looking for a job? Interest in community service? Apply now on the Kansas Center for Community Services at Kansas Center for Gucreach $/hour, no experience necessary! Pick up applications in the Student Senate Office Fourth Floor (500 W. 12th St., Suite A) at kcucreach.com. Applications due 3 p.m. Friday, February 19.
Now taking applications for part time help. Apply in person. Vista Restaurant 127th West eighth floor.
Part time now Full time in summer, answering phones, showing apartments, and general office duties. Please refer to the calendar after 9 M F. Possibility for 10-20 hrs a week until you have car 841-5379, kirk walk through mid August. Must have car 841-5379.
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN, 4/Rm. prices Dayla $149,
Panama City $139, Kirch. Writtr & Trans Available.
CallCIMiat@ucla.edu 423-5364
STUDENT WORK Christmas bills to pay? *Saving for Spring break* PT positions available now! 'Can lead to PT summer work' $10.00 starting. Call 842-6499 Now!
Stop 5 Shop is looking for honest and reliable Convenience store clerks. Great part time job for college students. Must be able to work weekends and holidays. Apply in person at Lawrence Stop 2 Shop
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June three August) at
Camp Lincoln Lake. Camp Lake hires in Minnesota
staff and staff members, expands horizons, rewarding
work with children, develops leadership skills, 30
proficiency in English, equips students with
are available at the Placement Office, Burge-
Union. Sign up at the Placement Office for inter-
nal interaction. February 10th
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS! National Parks,
Firewood, Fire Cells. Over 9,000 Openings!
Stamp for Free Details. Sulivan's, 113 East
Wowing, Kailapai. MT 59901
Waterfront Job: WS1 SWI Children's Camp- Nursi-Northeast Men and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiers, camp counselors, and teachers in a beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview. Register at Registral & Groad Rounds in the Kansas Union.
Instructor, part-time positions for Assistants
in Museum Instruction and Young People's
Inquiry (MUS) in Natural History. Jan-
31 845-856/week, Contact Ruth Gennrich, Director of Public Education, 802-745-9134, Hall 9134 (944) 214-6320.
"SUMMERJOBS"
45 positions at the Rock Springs
Junction City, KS. Recruitment positions food
leaders, receptionists, roomkeepers,
roomboard, and a cash salary. Representative for a K U.
summer job day Feb. 5, or call 912-8721 for an
inquiry.
Tutors needed immediately to assist student athletes in accounting, business adm, computer science, and geography. Please contact Heather at 844-7946
WANTED! Student daycare providers for 3-month old infant. Must have transportation and speak English. For more information, call 842-5559 after 5:00 p.m.
Wanted, mother's helper. Must be female, have own car, be available on 7-monday or Thursday & Thursday.
Wednesday, & Friday. Approximately lwrs/hw until spring break. Weeks wk./hw. after spring break.
Tennis jumper-summer is a camps-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. Pick them up from the regionalist and Orcad Rooms in the Kansas Union.
225 Professional Services
COYOTE BIKE SHOP
9th & Connecticut - 832-2484
Check Our Prices
Driver Education offered mid Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FAVOR FACTORY THE Ultimate in service. Let us work for you. We specialize on video and library training.
HOUSECLEANING, conciseness person, high
reliability quality, references. Perry 591-5912
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
& civil matters
DONALD G. STROLF
to East 13th 842-1133
KU student would detail your car professionally for $60! For more information call 749-7087
your home office. Studentrates 842-2344
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Weeding &
portraits, Instant ID photos, student prices call
Bordei MM1991
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 481-6878
RICK FRYDMAN
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
823 Missouri 843-4023
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES - Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas. Inc.
9217 J. Mass. 841-107
Tired of taking an at-bay business time? Get $15 more per textbook and save when buying the book.
Want to learn guitar, stringing blue, goodtime rock, insightful folk and theory too. Call BenBata at 718-260-1511.
DUI/TRAFFIC
Criminal Defence* •Fake ID*
* FREE Initial Consultation*
Elizabeth Leach
16 East 13th 749-0087
Word Processing Service Term paper thesis
Word Processing Service Word Paper thesis
double spaced paper 84-983 84-984 Computer Pro-
gramming
235 Typing Services
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type 843-2063, day or evenings.
1+ Typing UPW. Letters, term papers, resumes,
etc. 842-4754. afterwards 30:30 am/weeks anytime
Anything typed overnight. Quick, reasonable word
processing. Call 843-6438 leave message if no
From Quality Tying to Mailing List Entry Maintenance; Production; and Personalized PC Training. For Experience and Reliability call Louse at 843-4022 with your ideas.
Let Wendy, a recent UK English grad, polish and type your papers or resume. Call Full Circle Services at 841-749 for all your word processing and English tutoring needs.
PINK A LA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Sched-
on a appointment for success! Now! 'Call
NOW APPOINTMENT'
Laser Type Word processing, typing, editting,
resume and employment services 843-7903
Word processing, applications, term paper, dis-
tribution, responses, Editing, composition,
recommendations.
**computer**: 16 computer 2$mR奔. 2$MHD HD. 2$MHD MDP. **travel**: TREES Pro series road bike. Shimano 105 (computer) TRIES Pro series road bike. Shimano 105 (computer)
10' $^{7}$ Super, Suc Pro, 200 watts max, w/chokes,
and boxed x 1 2" $^{8}$ 10842-6723 $^{9}$ 10842-6723
305 For Sale
\$ST Premium 286, RMB AM. 80237 Math Copro-
partment 2, 4 MBH AM. EGARD Carta, Toll Free
Support 1-800-955-8923
300s
Merchandise
BARGAIN! Two brass table lamps with pleated glass cover and clear plastic cover, type cast mahallens $50, 749, 859 any time.
Car stereo 1 Diennase deck 2 Rockford Fone Gate Punch 15 amp. Boston Accoustic #8, 98 call.
Living room 1 Diennase deck 3
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and
sorters. $499.00 up on usage. Call Sylvia
+1-800-625-0292
92 Cannondale racing bike Never ridden, Brand new $500+0/offer 82-401
19' mountain bike series "50" Paramount, owned
maintained by Shop Mechanic $650, 842-6671
Giantada Sigma AT24. 12 inch frame, 18 speeds, 6
sets of tires. $209.82 - 6800
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture frames, large artworks, mugs, matte quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbags, Penthouses, vintage clothing, books, carnival glaze. Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising materials, children's books, Douton, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale supplies, stuff you will love to stuff it will flow you away! QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET. 811 New Hampshire. Open every Friday at 9am. Call 1-800-426-8581 for info 826-8581 Visa and Mastercard welcome.
I8 Compatible P. C. 160 K Ram 2 DColor Monitor
Printer Mouse and Modem. No hard drive. Video
studio. Hardware $360, 460, 481/717.
Image Writer II with cable, cover and band-
949.25 ppm. i.m.
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.99
Call 814-7504 - 841-893
Roland D-30 professional synthesizer/keyboard
99% 891 843 901 and 25K memory cards 99%
891 843 901
CSD CPY 370 CD Player $130.00 and 10-band EQ
$100.00. Tel 749-0231.
Olympus PM-OC Camera fully automatic or manual plus 35-1200 lens, 2x converter lens, multi-directional Tamrac bag. $300 KU medical student in KC1-3844 flash.
Mountain Bike, Bridgestone Mt2, Kace Phady
nuke-proof carbon fiber hub, $550, jmj 462-8497
Mountain Bike, Bianco, Sweet Ride. Must See.
last week for $259, call Maeja 847-5737
Sharp laptop computer 64Kk20 31/2'F D. Excellent condition 842-4021
Ticket to New York, round trip, cheap. Bake 3/9.
Tickle only, stop by as Souterflight. Bldg A 7.
Ski Boots For Sale. Rachel & Nordica. Sizes
10 & 11 .obc. bell. Obq Call 843-9233.
Yo Shi Bums!! Red NORDICA Boots With
pair air泵, system 8/1/2 Use $OPO 806-10
$
340 AutoSales
1980 BMW 320 Sport Version 88K runof, speed 5,
AC. 2C BWM 0B04-8420 leave message
1979 Buck Regal Limited 7,100k actual mileage
4 E-Engine, runs very good. $1300, 865-4539
1988 IBM Cavalier C2 DIRS 5spd, excellent condition
R2900LK David R2900-0988
1900 Chevy S10 pickup V4 longbed 5p. excellent condition, below loan value, $250/unit, 841-271-2166
5 Jetta 4D+R/A, C/Cruise, 5 spd, AM/FM Cas,
mi. garaged; MG43. 725. 91-6866.
condition, below loan value $200; offer, 84/12-21.
Jetta 4.2A, C-A cruise, 5.4M, BF/12-21.
370 Want to Buy
Choose from thousands already £2. FREE 24-hour
Recordings Details 801.379.4592 Copyright
87 MERCEDES...$100
26 MARUANG...$50
bests offer Call Bruce after: 30 p.m. 842-9749
Vokwagen Bagus For Sale, fair condition, $0cash
Delivery is free.
CLASSIC 916 Chevroel Impala convertible $3100 or
best offer C叫 Bruce筐? 30 p.m. 842-4974
WANTED: oneonem student B-Ball ticket Feb. 15th, Shauna 843-4678 leave message
KU basketball tickets wanted! Call 829-9430. Leave a message.
Wanted 2-3 non-student BBall tickets, Colorado
Feb. 15, CAJ day84 day349, night82-349
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
2 bedroom 8aps for sublease. $425/mo. Colony Woods Apts. call 841-6603 or 865-4133
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, 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.
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 Bedroom
furnished units. All furnished. Pully equipped kitchen. Laundry facilities. Pool. On-site management. Heat, AC; water and trashpand Cheap bills? 1741 W. 19th Call: Christina
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Available Now. Private - IBD Apt. Close to cam-
pans. $225/no. Nowe Petski 966-1963
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
FEB RENT FREE! Clean, non-smoking female needles(fishshoot) $61/m, 1/unit, W/L
NICE!!!
Available now! Huge, unique lump of 1BIR Great
$200/mo, no pet. Nails: New 841-686 three
weeks old.
9th & Avalon 842-3040
*Luxurious 2,3&4 Bedroom TownHomes
*Garages; $ 1/2 $ Baths
*Microwave Ovens
*Some with Fireplaces
*On KU Bus Route
*Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
YORK DISTRICT PARK
FORENT 2nd/2ha Chao DW, W/DHookup, carpent,
1st/1ha Baotong DW, W/DHookup, carpent,
1/172, $4600 Leave. Leave 881-9719
1/172, $4600 Leave. Leave 881-9719
Furnished rooms on Tenn. and Kentucky. Share
rooms in downtown and downtowns. $155 mo.
7月44日 · 749页
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
Furnished room for responsible female. K near U.
841-8254
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Large, bd+ bromo + studio Avail. now at 1339 Ohio $230 +
$252 + utilities. 749-7568
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price"
Hilliview Apts $15免签 signin bonuses 1 & 2床 room
on-site. On-site rooms 845-534 or 769-505
on-site. On-site rooms 845-534 or 769-505
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
1-9 am Sat.
841-8400
Affordable Price!!
841-5444
No Appt. Necessary
Louisiana Place Apts. New leasing nice 28R Apt
Laurie Campus Beautiful view of the city call Doraly
Borde 8223
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
SHORTTERMLEASENS NO AVAILABLEonstu-
dio, 2br apt, and low-density townhouse.
Now leasing for June & August. Nine 2 bedroom apartments for sale in the Old Town area on bus route, Excel. Excellent maintenance and management. Quality at the best price in town. B4-668. Spanish Cresant Apartments
One bedroom for sublease at Haveron Place. Furnished.水费 paid. Walk to campus and downtown.
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688
meadowbrook OPEN HOUSE
Sat. Feb. 8th 11-2
Sun. Feb. 9th 1-3
Showing studio and 1&2
Bdrm. Apts.
Now Available;
Studio and 2&3 Bdrm. Apts.
We offer What you're looking for:
Lighted Tennis Courts
2 Swimming Pools
Laundry Facilities
in most buildings
On KU Bus Route
Close to Campus (Sorry No Pets)
Mon - Fri 8-5:30 Sat. 8-
Sun. 1 - 4
Meadowbrook
842-4200 15th & Crestline
STOP PAYING RENT! Move into a great 2BR combo just West of KENT. Combine with wi-fi internet, Wi-Fi and smart home excellent time to buy. For more info on this or on Eddy & Kaperman 841-2727 Calgary at Eddy & Kaperman 841-2727
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call 843-1232
Sublease Studio Appartment available for summer rental $266 + 8 utilities per month. Call 823-0307.
Sublet: 8 brpt amt. W/D, FREE storage, pets ok. $400 plus mo:贷额 81-244 2.04 p.m.
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive You're About to Get an Education.
Summer subsuite, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths.
close to campus, furnished. Call: 749-8367
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat anytime you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
---
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- 3 Hot Tubs
$355 - $425
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence,KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Ask about our "Upperclassman Special" or your $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
Ask About Reduced Security Deposit!
Models Open Daily
Mon.-Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4p.m. Sun 12-4p.m.
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Call now to reserve your room.
Naismith Hall
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
430 Roommate Wanted
Cool 3rd Roommate needed Large house E. of M.
1800/mm² and U/LP / M/po not important 789/mm²
1 non-smoking room mate required for 2bedroom furnished *1* on bus ride with a full bath, WD, DW, microwave & garage. Large bedroom $15 plus 1/3 use. Please call 749-2181 after 6.
Female housemate wanted. House bordering campus.
Non-smoker and no pets. 749-264
Female roommate needed! Non-smoker. Till the end of May. Rent $19.50 plus 1/2 utilities on bus route. If interested please call 855-0538, leave message.
Female to share 3 bedroom, new apartment, near campus. Call 848-2757.
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female roommate wanted for 2 bedroom. Have own room and walk in closet. $240 + 1/2 util. On bus route. Call 865-0194 Available now!
Furnished master bedroom som available immediately in new 3-bedroom townhouse on bus line. $249/mth plus 1/utilities. Fireplace, patio, and tennis Call John Pierce I 913-491-3491.
Male, non-smoking roommate needed immediately for 4 bedroom house. Dishwasher, washer/dryer, microwave, and more! $215.00 /月 utilities and calls included. Call Ian-841-4698
Need roommate for 3 bedroom furnished apartment on bus route. $290 + 1/1 utilities 841-8125.
Nice room in a house near campus available Feb. 15. $170 utilities paid, 749-7285.
One female student for a furnished 5 Bdm. Town located on bus route. W/D, pool, parking $170/mb. + 1/5 utilities. Anytime 842-7678
Dollars Payable to: 3BP BDM
Roommate Matching. We do the work. We check references, match preferences. Lowsrates. Guarantee. For info, write DoubleCheck/1020 W. RSC 6522 or RS6522 at Dike at 5428 0349 (oday)
Reliable Trouble maker to make LRG 2BR
1600/mi 1.7U, CallM 842:5446
Roommate needed, 6 bedroom house, male or
female. Room size: 50'x32'. $190/month + 1/of utilities. 843-300-667
Roommate Wanted 3 BR Town home, smoker pre-
fered 1/utilities + 8/rent, 865-5962
Roommate needed ASAP. 3 bedroom apt. $200/mo.
832-1461
Roommate wanted: non-smoking male to share 3-bdm apt. Close to campus, for spring semester. Pay $1/3 of utilities and rent. Call Bruce or Scott for more info. 841-6542
Roommate wanted, female non-smoker *4+bdrm*
anyblocks from Union. Refundable 841-623-4928
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate needed - Large 2 bedroom at Park 250 per month, water pad, carport available, carpet available.
Roommate wanted to chair furnished 4-dhr. at ap. KU AASP $1090/mc. Cathy *449-7099*
Roommate needed 2-bedroom-Duplex. $150.00
1/unitities. Close campus. 842-1126.
worms set in *bold FACE* and *bold WORSE*
worms set in *all CAPS* & *BOLD FACE* count as 5 words
Blank lines count as 7 words.
**Policy**
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
we wanted non-smoker for 3 bedrooms
microwave, and garage. Relevant to sale.
wanted
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Centered lines count as 7 words
Roommates needed. 3bedroom duplex behind Hullmert Plaza. 200 utilities and Cabd. 842-6150
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19Staffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence,KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
WOLF BLANKER AND CARTOON ART
"Hey . . . this could be the chief "
14
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 5, 1992
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So, you've heard a lot about AIDS lately?
More than enough. And my wife has too. So don't bother her.
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She wouldn't be the only one. Everybody does.
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Paid for by: Call for Peer Student Senate Education AIDS Task Force 864-3710
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WAGON WHEEL CAFE
Uphold A KU Tradition-- Visit the Wagon Wheel Cafe
WAGON W
Uphold A KU Tra
Visit the Wagon W
Lunch at the Wheel?
But of course.
$2
$2 ^ { \mathrm{DAILY LUNCH}} $2 SPECIALS
Monday- Hamburger and Fries
Tuesday- 3 Tacos
Wednesday- Taco Russian
Salad
Thursday- Grilled Cheese and
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Friday- Cheeseburger and
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DINNER SPECIALS
Wednesday through Saturday 5:00-8:00-Cheeseburger and Fries Sunday-2 for1 Cheeseburger and Fries
Campus cafeterias try to recycle
By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
Obstacles prevent completion of effort
Recycling at KU cafeterias ranges from aluminum can collection to a dishroom employee who picks up newspapers from dining room tables.
But while recycling at the cafeterias has increased recently, food service officials say they have several obstacles to overcome before they can recycle cafeteria waste more completely.
"We're becoming more aware of (recycling)," said Jay Glatz, manager of food services at the Kansas and Burge unions. "I think we've got to take a look at it and make changes that are necessary."
Glatz said the union cafeterias began recycling aluminum cans a year ago. Food services is looking into the possibility of recycling glass and packaging, Glatz said.
Last year, the union cafeterias considered purchasing a polystyrene foam crushing machine. Glatz said. But the idea was discarded because the company that was going to supply
the machine could not guarantee a long-term commitment to the program and the environmental ombudsman's office could not determine if the machine was environmentally safe.
If the program had been started and then discontinued, it would have hurt the momentum of recycling and environmental awareness on campus, said Sue Ask, assistant environmental ombudsman.
Glatz said the union cafeterias had had success with a project called the "mug club." Sofar, the cafeterias have sold 11,000 refillable mugs through the project. he said.
Because customers use the cups for refills quite frequently, they have reduced paper waste by 20 percent, he said.
Union food services does not have an official newspaper collection program, but a dishroom employee daily collects papers left lying on cafeteria tables, Glatz said.
At Wescoe TerraceCafeteria, which is operated by KU Conversions, workers this semester started to recycle glass and paper in addition to aluminum cans, said Paul Epperson, assistant manager of the cafeteria.
At University residence halls, halls must begin their own recycling programs in accordance to the policies of the Association of University Residence Halls and individual hall governments.
Cafeterias at residence halls, however, only recycle the grease from their friers. A company in Topeka collects the grease every two weeks, said Peggy Smith, associate director of student housing food services.
Smith said she and others on a committee of employees from each cafeteria had discussed a comprehensive recycling program, but had not implemented it yet.
Smith cited several reasons for the lack of a recycling program in the residence hall cafeterias, including the expense of buying can crushers, cardboard bailers and other recycling materials for six residence halls now, when a consolidated cafeteria is scheduled to open in Lewis Hall in January 1993.
Smith said other problems included sanitary storage of the recyclable materials, which need to be kept in airtight containers. Also, the back entrances of the cafeterias only have one loading dock each, and trash cannot be placed in doorways where fresh food is delivered, she said.
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+
S628
VOL.101, NO.89
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Jacqueline C. Johnson
Peggy Jarman, an employee of George Tiller, a Wichita physician who performs third-trimester abortions, speaks to House Federal and State Affairs Committee members.
Pro-choicers laud House bill
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Proponents of a bill that would keep abortion legal in Kansas spoke yesterday during the first day of House committee hearings on the bill.
Representatives from organizations including Planned Parenthood, the Pro-Choice Action League and the League of Women Veterans submitted statements
Kansas
1992
Legislature
supporting the bill, which would protect legalized abortion in Kansas if Roe vs.林
to the stage when the fetus can live outside
women without extraordinary medical care.
Kristin Lange, KU student body vice president, submitted a written statement to the House Committee on Federal and State Affairs. She stated her support for a part of the bill that would penalize people who blocked access to health clinics.
In addition to protecting access to health clinics, the bill proposes that:
"It is absolutely ridiculous that any constituency should feel so free to harass and abuse its legislators as the anti-choice forces in the state of Kansas and elsewhere have felt free to do to." Lange stated.
Late-term abortions would be legal if the procedure were necessary to protect
A woman could have an abortion prior
the woman's life or health.
Women under age 16 would be required to consult with a counselor beforehearing an abortion.
NEWS:864-4810
The committee today will hear opponents of the bill. Committee head Kathleen, Sebelus, D.
Topeka, said no action would be taken afterward today.
Roe vs. Wade, a 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision, made abortion a constitutional right and suspended state anti-abortion laws. The court did not repeal anti-abortion laws afterward.
Sometime next week, the committee will discuss the bill and vote whether to send it to the House floor. she said.
If the decision is overturned, Kansas state law will prevail. Performing an abortion is illegal, according to current state law, unless three doctors agree that a woman's life is in danger, or in the case of rape or incest.
Several speakers vested davcited Operation Rescue protests in Wichita during the summer as reason for passing the bill.
Pat Ranson, a Wichita resident and head of Republicans for Choice, said, "Unfortunately, a vocal few in this country have systematically and doggedly over a period of time determined to impose their religious beliefs on our children. We have their own personal and diverse opinions about what the government's role in family planning should be, if any.
"A government powerful enough to prohibit abortion is powerful enough to force abortion," she said. "Most people don't want a government that powerful."
Stan Reeser, a member of the Wichita City Council, voiced support for a section of the bill that would prohibit preventing access to a health care center.
A woman who requested that only her first name, Sylvia, be used, also spoke in favor of the section. Sylvia said she had a sister who was a nurse during the Operation Rescue protests.
She had learned that the fetus' heart was not fully developed and that it would die
"I would do the same thing again," she said. "I can't understand that this choice would possibly be taken away from any of us.
1980
Janet Balk Manhattan hears about abortion protests
Admissions plan would raise Kansas education standards
Bv Great Farmer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Chancellor Gene Budig told a Senate committee yesterday that the aim of qualified admissions would be to challenge students to be and do their best.
"We don't want to exclude students," Budig said. "We want to encourage students to pursue seriously their high school preparation for further study.
"We need to encourage school districts to provide high-quality, forward-looking academic programs and to prepare students for post-secondary education."
Budig and other qualified admissions supporters voiced their side of the issue to the Senate Education Committee yesterday.
Qualified admissions opponents will address the committee at 1:30 p.m. today
would require students to earn a 2.0 grade point average in a college-bound curriculum in high school, score at least a 23 on the ACT or rank in the top one-third of their graduating class.
Budigai said the University of Kansas supported the Board of Qualified admission papers.
The committee is considering a bill that
"Qualified admissions should result in improved education for all Kansans." he said.
The Regents want students to succeed in college. Harman said.
"We need more excellence from our young people at an earlier age," he said. "Unprepared students are slowing the progress of prepared and dedicated students."
Regent Rick Harman said the state's open admissions policy had outlived its time.
"Kansas students deserve the opportunity to be successful at the college level," he said. "Qualified admissions will help us set standards that mean something. Students will be
prepared better in high school for what's coming ata university."
Grant Bannister, student body president at Fort Hays State University, said students supported qualified admissions.
"The wrong message is being sent to high schools now," he said. "Students now are being told that if they meet the low high school graduate, they are ready for college. That's just not true."
Qualified admissions opponents have said entrance standards would deny students, especially minority students and those from rural areas, access to educational opportunities.
John Burke, school superintendent at Valley Falls, about 30 miles northwest of Lawrence, said his rural school district supported qualified admissions.
Bannister said, "the state's open admissions policy denies students access to success."
"You will get what you expect," he said. "If you expect only a high school diploma, students
will get a high school diploma. But if you expect the higher standards defined by this qualified admissions bill, students will meet those higher requirements. We need to expect the best because most students will choose the path of least resistance."
Three legislators spoke in support of the qualified admissions proposal.
State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, and State Sen. Richard Rock, D-Dar Kansas City, said they recently had decided to support qualification of candidates who did the decision was not an easy political one.
"We owe the state's educational system an attempt to improve quality." Rock said. "To
State Rep. Jo Ann Pottorf, R-Wichita, said she once opened qualified admissions.
"But after analyzing the issue, I decided admissions standards would improve the quality of education in Kansas at all levels."
Fatal blaze in jurors' hotel halts Tyson trial
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — A deadly fire early yesterday at the hotel where Mike Tyson's jurors were sequestered forced a delay of his rape trial. The mayor requested a federal arson investigation and security was increased at the courthouse.
The fire at the Indianapolis Athletic Club killed two firefighters and a hotel guest and injured 12. Jurors were safe evacuated.
Hours later, the former world heavyweight champion showed up briefly at the City-County Building, where he is being tried on charges of rape and criminal deviate conduct. Tyson, 25, faces up to 60 years in prison if convicted.
Court representative Joe Champion
said that trial would resume today with the jurors being questioned in court by Marion Superior Court Judge Patricia Gifford, prosecutors and defense attorneys. The interviews will
determine whether any juror was compromised while standing on the sidewalk outside the hotel, where all sheen shielded from public and press.
Sheriff's deputies tightened security outside the courtroom, setting up a walk-through metal detector for media and spectators and bringing in a bomb-sniffing dog. Judge Gifford banned cameras from the second floor, with the exception of three pool cameras.
Mayor Stephen Goldsmith requested federal arson investigators, citing the "unusual coincidence of the proximity of the jury."
Public Safety Director Michael Beaver said that two experts from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Prescription drugs would help with the investigation.
The 15 jurors were led out of the burning building by two court bailiffs and a sheriff's deputy. They were moved to an undisclosed location.
Authorities said that the blaze erupted in a lounge and destroyed the third and fourth floors of the hotel.
Champion said that the jurors appeared to be in good spirits under the circumstances, but said that they were unaware of the deaths.
NCAA
BASKETBALL
No.1, No.2 fall
No.1 Duke and No.2 Oklahoma State lost their status as the last two unbeaten teams in Division 1 basketball last night, clearing the path for No.3 Kansas to take over the top spot in Monday's Associated Press poll if it can beat Oklahoma State on Saturday in Stillwater.
Game stories, p.11
Brown may move again, this time to L.A.
Coach and Manning could reunite
The Associated Press
SANANTONIO - Former Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown apparently has a chance to make the Los Angeles Clippers the fifth pro team on his coaching ledger.
The Clippers would neither confirm or deny yesterday that Brown had taken the job. But their vice president and public relations director Michael Williams said that the team would hold a 10 a.m. news conference today at the Los Angeles Sports Arena to name the new coach.
A television station reported Tuesday night that Brown, fired by the San Antonio Spurs on Jan. 21, will be named the head coach of the Clippers today.
Mike Schuler of KSAT-TV in San Antonio said that a reliable source on the West Coast provided the information that Brown would succeed.
But Andy Roeser, Clippers vice president of business operations, said, "We're trying to get it done. I talked to Elgin Baylor and he's very comfortable that he'll be able to get it within the week. Elgin's got his candidate in mind, and we're talking things out, but we feel the whole thing will be taken care of this week or over the weekend."
After the Clippers beat Dallas Tuesday night, with Mack Calvin acting as head coach, owner Donald Sterling declined comment on the report.
Asked if the courting of Brown is one of the worst-kept secrets in history, Roesel said, "It's not."
Calvin directed the team again last night at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood against the Los Angeles Lakers. The Clippers said when Schuler was fired that Calvin would be only an interim coach. Brown could not immediately be reached for comment
Brown's first two pro coaching jobs were with Carolina in the American Basketball Association and Denver in the ABA and NBA. Calvin was a player on both of those teams.
Calvin said, "I played for Larry for seven years, two with Carolina and five years with the Denver Nuggets. I have a tremendous amount of respect for Larry, if he is the coach."
With the Clippers, Brown would be reuilted with forward Danny Manning, who helped lead Kansas to an NCAA championship in 1988.
Brown's firing in San Antonio marked the first time he had been terminated in his 20 years of a roller-coaster career.
Brown's record was 153-131 as coach of the Spurs. He experienced his first losing season as a coach his first year with San Antonio, when the team finished 21-61 in 1988-89.
Then, in 1989-90, with the addition of center
David Robinson, he guided the Spurs to the best single-season turnaround in NBA history with a 56-26 finish, the franchise's best
ever. The Spurs ended last season at 52-27, winning the Midwest Division for the second consecutive year.
fessional game, usually leaving following a successful stint.
Before coming to the Spurs, Brown shuffled between the college and pro-
Schuler was fired Sunday after the Clippers lost 10 of their previous 15 games.
The Jayhawks won the NCAA championship in 1988 before Brown returned to the proranks in San Antonio the next season.
He coached Carolina from 1972-1974, then moved to Denver until 1979, when he left for a two-year tour at UCLA. He then spent two years with the NBA's New Jersey Nets, moving to Kansas in 1983.
Larry Brown
2
$ ^{11} $University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6. 1992
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater 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 $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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County board OKs music festival permit; organizer allays security, safety fears
By Andy Taylor
Kansas staff writer
The Douglas County Commission voted2-1 last night to approve a temporary business permit for a Lawrence bar owner who is planning a college-oriented music festival near Lawrence in May.
The commissioners questioned the bar owner, Reed Brinton, about security and possible problems with traffic flow and property damage. Brinton is co-owner of Benchwarmer's Sports Bar and Grill. 1601 W. 23rd St.
"We'll have shuttle buses going to the concert every 15 minutes," he said. "This will reduce the traffic by 50 percent. Plus, the gravel road leading to the field will be sprinkled with water before the concert begins and ends in order for the dust to settle."
Brinton said he had already taken the necessary steps to get security officers for the event.
The concert, called the River Valley Music Festival, is slated for May 9 in a field one mile east of Endora.
"There will be security guards surrounding the site," he told the commissioners. "And there should be one security officer for every hundred people. With security like that, there won't be anybody leaping over fences or getting into neighboring vards."
Brinton also said traffic safety should not be a concern at the concert.
Brinton said that he originally planned to have the concert in Johnson County but that he chose the Eudora field because of easy access from Lawrence by Kansas Highway 10.
Along with the business permit, the commission granted Brinton a license to sell cereal malt beverages at the concert.
Commissioner Mike Amyx, who voted against the permit, said he did not want Douglas County to be responsible for possible damages at the event.
"If something goes wrong, obviously we'll be the ones left with the blame," Amvx said.
Commissioner Louie McElhaney, who voted for the permit, said his biggest concern was whether people living near the event would be disturbed.
Donald Bruce Jr., 29, was arrested yesterday in connection with the death of a 23-month-old boy. The death occured in a home in the 1000 block of East 23rd Street. Police responded to a call at 9:17a.m. yesterday and arrived at the home to find the boy, Eric Burr, was not breathing. An autopsy will be performed today to find the cause of death. Lawrence police reported. Police still are investigating the case.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student was sexually battered and sodomized by an unidentified man at 2:45 a.m. Tuesday while she walking in the alley behind her house in the 1200 block of Louisiana, Lawrence police said. She described the attacker as a 6-foot, 165-pound man in his 20s. There are no suspects and no one has been arrested, Lawrence police reported.
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Partly cloudy in eastern Kansas with more sunshine in the west. In the north, the highs will be in the mid to upper 40s and the lows will be in the mid 20s. The south will have highs in the low to mid 50s and lows in the mid 30s.
Kansas forecast
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Dodge City
52/22
Wichita
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Weather
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Friday
Partly cloudy High in mid 40s
Saturday
Fair to partly cloudy High in low 40s Low in 20s
Fair High in 20s Low in 40s
ON CAMPUS
OAKS Non-traditional Student Organization will have a lunchon meetingat11:30a.m.today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union.
The Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
The Graduate Student Council will sponsor a reception at 5 p.m. today at the English Room in the Kansas Union for John Dobson, candidate for vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service.
The Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge
The KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. today in the Kansas Union
Union.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
- Poets Alive will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union.
The KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7.30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
The Homeless Awareness Week Committee will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Janice Grady, field organizer for the National Coalition for the Homeless, will speak.
GLSOK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
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Register in SUA office by Thursday Feb. 13, 4:30pm Prizes will be awarded, and winners qualify to represent KU at the ACUI regional tournament in Manhattan
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
CAMPUS / AREA
3
Invisible racial lines still divide students
By Svala Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
When Brian Rainey goes to class, he is usually the only African American in the room.
Of 25,168 students enrolled at the Lawrence campus last fall, 678 were African Americans.
"I wish there was someone else there that I could relate to, but there is not much I can do about it," said Rainey, a Kansas City, Mo., senior.
Black History Month
Rainey said that he thought racism was not a major problem on campus, but that the same could not be said about other parts of Lawrence.
"I hate it when I go to a store and the attendant stares at me and follows me around," he said. "You can't get hurt, but you can feel they don't trust you."
Tracy Moore, St. Louis senior, said that being an African-American student at a predominantly white university was an important part of what she as though she needed to prove herself.
"I sometimes get the feeling I have to say something clever at the beginning of the semester so they think I am here because I earned it, not because I am on a minority scholarship or the University just let me in," she said.
Most of the people Moore has met on and off campus have been white. Most of her friends are African-
American, she said.
MARC J. RICO
"You tend to be with people who are similar to you," she said. "You think they will understand at least some of the things you are talking about."
Amy Epnemer, Kenilworth, Ill., junior, said she had one African-American friend, whom she had known since high school, at the University of Kansas.
"They just seem kind of unapproachable, in their own cliques," she said. "I think they don't want to make me feel important, since they we are prejudiced."
Last fall, Epmeier's sorority arranged a Halloween philanthropy with a Black fraternity and a Black sorority, she said.
She does not remember any African-American woman participating in rush for her sorority, and most African-American women who want to live in a Greek house join the Black sorority she said.
"The they think they will not be asked back to the other houses," she said.
"They don't give people a chance to accept them."
Eric Doherty, Leawood freshman.
said he did not think race relations were a big problem at KU.
"If someone stands next to you in line who is different from the group, you make a comment," he said. "It is just human nature. But I have never seen anything rude taking place."
Doherty is in a fraternity in which most of the members are white, but he said minority students were not discouraged from joining.
"I have never seen anyone turned
upholstery to his race or background," he said.
Charles Karanja, Nairobi, Kenya, graduate student, is in his first semester at KU, but he said he was used to being in a minority, he said.
"In Kenya I went to a predominantly white high school, and I was an undergraduate at the University of Texas," he said.
He said that he was one of only a handful of Blacks in the University's master of Business Administration program, so that it did not interfere with his studies.
Karanja said he received a harassing phone call after he had been in lawrence two weeks. The unidentified "ginger" and told him to go home, he said.
"If I got a call like that every day, then I would have something to worry about," he said. "It is just one person out of 26,000 students here. It is not going to bother me."
NINA DAVIS
African Americans, feeling isolated in a white student population, can be perceived as unsociable by whites
Photo illustration by Brian Schoens/ Special to the KANSAN
1986
Derek Nolen/KANSAN
Charles Gienau, a facilities operations employee, looks at the aftermath of a runaway truck. While loading tree-limbs onto the back of the facilities operations truck, Gienau noticed the truck beginning to roll. The truck rolled downhill and hit a car, pushing it out of its parking space. No one was injured.
Runaway truck!
Turner denies drug charges
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
Former KU affirmative action director James "Skip" Turner denied yesterday that he had sold drugs to a Lawrence transient charged with first-degree murder.
Turner took the witness stand for about 25 minutes during second-day testimony in the trial of Kenneth L. Morris, who is charged with the murder of Danny Davis, 40, of Lawrence.
Defense attorneys pressed Turner on Morris' allegations that he had sold Morris cocaine the night Davis was killed. But Turner denied he had sold any drugs, just as he had denied the charge during a preliminary hearing in October.
Morris is charged with bludgeoning Davis with a golf club early Aug. 8. Davis died Aug. 13.
During his testimony yesterday, Turner said he went to Davis' house, 619 Illinois St., about 8 p.m. Aug. 7. Turner said he went with Davis to the Jet Lag Lounge, 610 Florida St., for about 15 minutes, and then went to his house with Davis and Davis' girlfriend
to play pool.
The three then returned to the Jet Lag Louge about 1 a.m. and about 1:35 a.m. Tester ternished
Turner estimated that Davis drew a number of wives of him. Iwu juxed
drinks and 13 12-ounce beers while together. He said that he had had two vodka tonics and two glasses of white zinfandel.
James Turner
He testified that he took Davis' girlfriend home and then took Davis to the house on Illinois Street. The house was locked and Davis could not get in, so Turner offered him a credit card to open the back door with.
Turner testified that he then saw two people in the carport: a dark-skinned, heavy-set woman and a man with a long, blond ponytail and tattoos on his arm. He could not, however, identify the man positively as Morris.
Davis talked to them and then
crawled through a basement window to enter his house, but Turner did not see them after that, he said.
Davis opened the door from the inside for Turner, who went into the house and talked to Davis for about five minutes, then went home, he said.
Francis Cuppage, a professor of pathology at the University of Kansas Medical Center who performed an autopsy on Davis, testified yesterday that cocaine and Valium were found in Davis' blood before he died.
During testimony, Turner denied giving Davis cocaine or Valium, and he said he did not see Davis take any drugs in the hours before he was bludgeoned. Turner said that the only time he had seen cocaine was on television.
Defense attorney James Rumsey said that Turner's claim that he left Davis' house about 1:45 a.m. Aug. 8 conflicted with the police report filed about the case, which said Turner left the house about 3a.m.
Morris testified during the October preliminary hearing that Turner left Davis' house about 7 a.m.
Turner resigned as KU director of affirmative action in early November.
Student Senate opposes parking plan
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate voiced its disapproval with the KU Parking Board and University Council at last night's Senate meeting.
Senate unanimously passed a petition objecting to a decision that could make parking lot 14 restricted to students until 8:30 p.m. Students now can park in the lot after 5 p.m.
The lot, situated behind Fraser Hall, has 22 permit spaces.
The petition said that students
were given lots of Paterson Library
and other campus resources.
The council recommended the 8:30 p.m. restriction to Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor. Shankel will make the final recommendation to Chancellor Gene Budig soon.
Jason McIntosh, senior senator and co-author of the petition. said theeti-
tion could help Shankel make a recommenda-
dation favorable to the students.
Shankel said that he would take the petition into consideration when making it.
"It is useful to know what the students think," he said. "Between the faculty and the students, we have two diametrically opposite views."
McIntosh said that about 600 students had signed a different petition protesting the recommendation.
Classified Senate and the University Professional Staff Association supported the position taken by Student Senate, he said.
"If the students get together with Classified Senate and UPSA, we can change this," McInish said.
Mica Ashmore, All-Scholarship Hall Council senator, said the proposed change would affect students who live in the scholarship halls near lot14.
The construction of Amini Scholarship Hall in the 1300 block of Louisiana meant losing about 15 parking spaces in the area, he said.
The lack of parking raised safety concerns, Ashmore said.
"Lot14 is close to Miller and Watkins halls," he said. "There a lot of women walking alone at night."
One reason parking services gave for the proposed change was that faculty said they could not park close enough to their offices if they had office hours at night.
But Patrick Dilley, graduate senator, said that the students he talked to were not happy with the decision.
"I think it is unfair for faculty to have office hours at night where students couldn't park to see them." he said.
Dilley said parking services needed to be revised.
"Who are they serving?" he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
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Proposed policy cuts into freedom of speech
I sincerely hope that what I am about to tell you bothers someone else on this campus besides myself, because if it doesn't, I'm afraid we all are in serious trouble.
Did you know that if the University Council and the chancellor today approve a new policy limiting free speech, you and I will lose our First Amendment right to free speech while on University grounds?
That means we will be less free to communicate openly, discuss and voice our opinions on campus than we will be off campus.
The new policy,which is nothing more than a hate-speech code like those already found to be unconstitutional at the universities of Michigan and Wisconsin, would prohibit certain kinds of speech viewed as discriminatory or offensive to minorities.
This vague policy would limit speech that;
*is addressed directly to individuals and meant only to threaten violence, property damage or imminent lawless action.
"and that has no essential part of any exposition of ideas and (is) of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from (it) is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality."
Although I accept the first limitation
PENGULI
Karen Vaughan guest columnist
because it is based on strong legal authority, I cannot accept the ambiguous and overly broad terminology used in the second.
I can't tell speech exposition of ideas of a sort? And who gave the University of Kansas the power to decide what has what is "truth," and what is "morality"?
I would be very interested to know just whose "morality" will determine the kinds of speech I and my fellow students will be allowed to use on campus.
Although I am proud to be a student at this university, I am shocked that our administrators would even consider me. We restrict our constitutional freedoms.
Surely they have succumbed to the pressures of political correctness and will regain their sanity today when they vote to do away with this outrageous infringement on our personal freedoms.
I strongly agree that racial slurs.
sexist jokes and insensitive comments are deplorable. But it is not by prohibiting them that we help the victims and promote cultural understanding
It is not through less speech that this truth, as all truths, will be known, but through more speech. Whether we like it or not, we learn not only from those we agree with but also from those we would never agree with.
As one of my professors once said to me about his encounter with the Ku Klux Klan, "You don't know what a skunk smells like until you are standing next to one."
I believe he was right. We cannot foster understanding and tolerance if we choose to shield ourselves from the problem.
If anyone is going to take away our First Amendment right to free speech then let it be the Supreme Court.
But KU, get off the "politically correct" bandwagon and start uphooling the values and principles for which you have always stood. If you don't, I know at least one KU student who will be waiting anxiously for the day when she can walk down that Hill and back to freedom.
- Karen Vaughan is a Tulsa, Okla., graduate student majoring in journalism.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
City has to protect residents
The loss of lives proves a new system of protecting pedestrians and bicyclists is roadless.
and bicyclists is needed
It is a shame that something bad has to happen before people who have the power to make changes actually take the initiative to do so.
The Lawrence City Commission was approached at its Nov. 5 meeting by the head of the Babcock Tenants Association with a request for a pedestrian crosswalk on the corner of 17th and Massachusetts streets. The request was supported by a petition signed by several Babcock residents. The commission denied the request, saying research indicated that the intersection was just too busy for pedestrians regardless of whether there was a crosswalk.
Residents of Babcock Place Apartments, which are near the intersection, complained about the dangerous intersection several times without results.
Unfortunately, their requests for a cross-walk were proven valid last week when a woman was fatally hit while trying to cross this very intersection. Surprisingly enough, the 86-year-old woman was a walker. If a fit 86-year-old can get hit while trying to cross this intersection, what kind of assurance does this give to anyone else trying to cross
the street?
The commission currently has another shot at granting requests to improve safety for pedestrians and cyclists.
The death of a KU professor last semester resulting from a bicycle accident, also involving a motor vehicle, has prompted a Lawrence environmental group to encourage the city to begin a system of greenways. Greenways, which are pathways for pedestrians and cyclists and are separate from roadways, would not only provide safety for pedestrians and cyclists but also help preserve the environment.
Too bad the commission did not carefully look into the requests of the Babcock residents in November. As taxpayers, Lawrence residents should be assured that at least some of their money is being used to protect their lives.
It is hoped that the commission has learned from the death of the Babcock resident and will be more careful the next time it reviews requests that pertain to the safety of Lawrence's citizens. Granting the proposal for the greenways would be an excellent opportunity for the commission to do its part in ensuring the safety of future lives.
Sobriety checkpoints illegal
Tiffany Lasha Hurt for the editorial board
Random searches by police aimed at stopping drunks violate constitutional rights
The Bill of Rights, Article V, section four forbids unreasonable searches and seizure and provides that search or arrest warrants be issued only upon probable cause. With that in mind, does a police officer have the right to stop any car on the road and request the driver submit to a sobriety test?
Johnson County District Judge Franklin Davis says no. Checkpoints violate a state law requiring reasonable suspicion that a crime has been committed before police can stop someone. Yet Attorney General Bob Stephan advises to continue this practice.
Only six percent of drivers stopped at checkpoints in Johnson county last year were charged with driving under the influence or other offenses. No statistics were available on how may of those charges resulted in convictions.
The motivation to reduce drunk driving is commendable. But the method of violating constitutional rights is not. Judge Davis said that the checkpoints were illegal if no law specifically authorized them. If Kansas voters feel strongly enough about legalizing checkpoints, they should encourage the Legislate to make an amendment authorizing such searches. Until then, the practice of stopping cars randomly, without probable cause, is illegal and should be discontinued.
Kate Kelley for the editorial board
Gaines will be missed
This time last year I attended the last Biology 104 class taught by Gaines in Hoch Auditorium. Professor Gaines brought the subject of biology to life.
I hope Pope. Finney is reading this morning.
I was appalled and shocked to learn that professor Michael Gaines was resigning from his position at the University of Kansas because of the lack of support from the Legislature.
He taught the class the fundamentals of subjects such as cancer, AIDS and birth control — topics of frequent discussion in our society today.
Starting the first day, when he entered out of darkness into a spotlight to the music from "2001: A Space Odyssey," Gaines made it clear that we were not just 600 KUIDs sitting in those seats.
He memorized our faces and names from photographs we took for him. At any given moment he could pick you out from among the other 599 and ask how you felt about the topic of the day.
I was a non-believer myself of this phenomenon until I bumped into Professor Gaines one day at the Union, and he greeted me by my first name.
I've taken other large lecture courses, but no other instructor has ever made me feel I was more than just a KUID (many will never know when they see me that I ever attended their class).
Whether it was competing for free movie passes by playing Biojeopardy, eating free doughnuts for breakfast from Professor Gaines, or eating a birthday cake that he brought celebrating Charles Darwin's birthday, Professor Gaines made the class interesting, challenging and enjoyable.
I guess what really sold me the most was that during the summer after report cards came. Professor Gaines mailed me a personally signed letter.
It congratulated me on my performance in his class. It offered not only an open invitation to visit him, but letters of reference if I ever needed any.
His class should not have been titled Biology 104; it should have been titled What-You-Need to-Know-to-Be-an-Informed-Person 104.
I want to address the negative attitude expressed in Carma Padra's letter of Jan. 28.
Munro Richardson Kansas City, Mo. jurion
Safe sex with condoms
Lettersto the editor
Latex condoms do decrease the risk of contracting HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases.
If used properly, with nonoxynol-9 spermicidal lubricant inside and outside the condom, latex condoms are 98 percent effective at preventing these transmissions.
Eighty percent of college students are sexually active.
It is obvious that for many, abstinence is not a choice they have made for their lives. And, for most college students, long-term mutual monogamy is a future goal, not a present reality.
Although these may be Paden's personal choices, and good ones, they are not, nor do they need to be, everyone's.
Wichita graduate student
Gaywyn Moore
Both referred to what I felt was a misleading advertisement by a business that advertises in this paper. I have been told by the staff that I
Since November I have been trying to get either a classified ad or an editorial letter in this paper.
Advertisers' influence
I asked the business staff of this paper why I could not buy the classified ad and was told that they would not run the ad because it was unfavorable toward one of its good customers. I then asked what a student who had a complaint about an ad by such a customer could do. I was told to put papers around campus.
could not use the name of the business in a letter to the editor.
I thought that the student paper, subsidized by student fees, was to serve the students, not advertisers. Apparently I was wrong.
Maybe my complaint would have been dismissed by most of you reading the paper. But since I cannot afford to pay as much as "good customer" does, day after day, you won't get the chance.
Kelly Farrar Lawrence graduate student
Not all women are alike
Before one hastily generalizes that "this is what life is like for every woman," one should probably consult "every woman" to validate that statement.
For example, I am a woman, but I find Rebecca Pickens' letter on "a man's world" so
pathetic it is amusing. She claims to be an "independent" woman, yet she "cries tears of anger, frustration and fear" because she is worried that society will proclaim her mentally disturbed for reporting some fictitious coworker that may possibly sexually harass her. I'll bet she's a really fun date.
Maybe women such as Pickens should learn to love themselves for who they are and stop hating the male race. Try accepting your own actions.
KANSAN STAFF
Don't blame every problem in your man-hating microcosm on your gender. One person cannot change the world, but she can change herself by not displacing her own inadequacies onto others.
Until you reach a point where you can stop blaming society for your own fears, please do not take the liberty to "make men aware" of the feelings all women supposedly have. You may find it hard to believe but, guess what: There are some women who do not have to "hold back the tears" when they think of men.
Get out of the house a little more often (if you feel that society will permit it) and give men a chance. Sure, not all men are perfect, but not all women are either.
Gretchen Kaufman St. Louis sophomore
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager,news adviser
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olson
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Meyers
Graphics Jeff Meyer/Aimee Brannard
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Campus sales mgr ..Bill Leibengow
Regional sales mgr ..Rich Harbishark
National sales mgr ..Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr ..Ame Johnson
Production mgrs ..Kim Wallace
Marketing director ..Lia Keeler
Creative director ..Kim Clinton
Lead project ..Leah Yount
Classified mgrs ..Kip Chin
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position. Writers whose names should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stuifer-Fint Hall.
Loco Locals
AFTER MAKING HIS CHOICE
MAXINE OF 1900 SPAIN ME
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SON, THIS WOMAN YOU
BROUGHT HERE ... WEI.
IN MY OPINION ... HECK,
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WAIT LET
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WAIT,LET ME EXPLAIN NONSENSE...
MICHAUD C.1992
by Tom Michaud
THE SAME OL TIMES
SESSOR CODE " THE MORAL
EQUIVALENT DELEGEND OVERALL"
THE NEW YORK CITY
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
5
Slashed budget and Congress to reshape CIA
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The leaders of Congress' intelligence committees have drafted a sweeping reorganization plan for all U.S. intelligence operations, including the CIA, the military and electronic spying around the world, according to congressional sources.
Senate Intelligence Chairperson David Boren and his House counterpart, Rep. Dave McCurdy, both D-Okla., substantially agreed on the package, said the sources, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The restructuring would be aimed at shaping America's intelligence capability to fit a world where there is no longer a threat from the Soviet Union. Policy-makers would instead worry about ethnic strife, weapons proliferation and terrorism.
It also would help America's intelligence apparatus, long accused of wasteful duplication, ease into the shrunken budget it will have for fiscal 1993 and beyond.
The sources said the intelligence budget proposed by President Bush last week would represent a cut from its current level of about $30 billion. But the cut would not be as severe as that for the overall Pentagon budget, in which some intelligence spending is hidden.
The Washington Times reported yesterday that the Boren-McCurdy plan would create an intelligence czar. It said CIA Director Robert Reid would create on the plan and would become the new czar.
A source close to Boren, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said yesterday that the proposal had been fundamentally changed and Boren came to agreement on its provisions.
Meanwhile the CIA is considering creating an electronic news network that would update top government officials constantly about world developments that are obtained from intelligence satellites, news reports and spies. Gates has not yet approved the plan.
Mexican aliens find freedom by sprinting through traffic
SAN YSDIDRO, Calif. — Illegal aliens from Mexico have adopted a terrifying, and effective, new tactic of rushing the border en masse and running headlong in traffic.
The Associated Press
Border Patrol agents cannot get their hands on the
Border Patrol, illegals because they are armed, make arrests on the open highway for fear of causing accidents.
Mexican authorities have agreed to take steps to stop the large-scale border crashing, U.S. Border Patrol, U.S. representative Steven Kean said yesterday. No details of the Mexican plan were immediately available, he said.
The Border Patrol will indefinitely suspend plans announced Tuesday to counter the tactic, he said.
the plan could be reinstated if the Mexican efforts fall short.
Authorities had said that the Border Patrol would station 25 to 30 armed agents near the crossing beginning today, and two lanes of four-lane Interstate 5 also were to be closed just north of the border.
The Mexican head of immigration for the Tijuana area, Edmundo Salas, was present during the negotiations, he said. Salas and other Mexican border officials could not be reached by The Associated Press yesterday, a national holiday in Mexico.
William Veal, deputy chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector, said that this situation really had the potential to become a catastrophe. No one has been killed or hurt yet.
border and run straight into traffic, Veal said.
Those steps may not be necessary because of the Mexican government's assurances to the Border Patrol in a meeting Tuesday night that Mexican authorities would help halt the new flood of illegal aliens. Kean said.
Overwhelmed Mexican and U.S. immigration officials could do nothing but stand by as motorists on the U.S. side braked to avert the throng.
Border Patrol agents can't get their hands on the illegals because they aren't allowed to make arrests on the open highway for fear of causing accidents.
The mad dash of migrants into the United States took on organized dimensions two weeks ago, when border agents first saw at least 100 people rush the
In the past, illegal aliens tried to slip into the country alone or in small groups, usually by jumping a border fence when no one was looking. Formerly
pursuing them
the border crossing is a tollbooth-type checkpoint.
California Highway Patrol Lt. Joe Garrison said, "It's a nightmare. We've never seen anything like this before, and until now, there was nothing we could do about it."
Kean said that once inside the United States, most migrants walked straight up the highway median because they knew that Border Patrol policy prevented agents from
Migrants' rights advocate Roberto Martinez of the American Friends Service Committee said that his group did not mind any steps taken by the Border Patrol to prevent death or injury.
So many Mexican migrants have been killed trying to cross the busy freewalks in Southern California that "migrant crossing" signs have been posted.
The new tactic has been used almost continuously for two weeks, and thousands may have made it through, officials said. Using videotape, U.S. officials counted 440 migrants who successfully swarmed across the border last Thursday.
Garrison said that the migrants typically lay in wait until they got a hand signal from a coyote, or smuggler, to rush the border.
Javier Cerritos, the Calexico-based consul of Mexico, said the Mexican government did not have the authority to stop the migrants.
Veal said that the San Diego sector of the border generally accounted for 50 percent of all illegal entries into the United States. In January, more than 60,000 undocumented migrants were arrested, the highest figure ever for that month.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
A woman's choice
Most birth control methods leave the burden on the woman. Here are some of the most common contraceptive devices:
---
The pill
Measured doses of progesterone and estrogen that inhibit the release of eggs from the ovaries.
Condom
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval is pending for a female condom. The vaginal pouch would guard against sexually transmitted diseases and prevent conception.
=
Implants
Tiny tids implanted in the upper arm that release progesterone to inhibit ovulation and implantation.
Q
Contraceptive sponge
Polyurethane
spermicide-releasing
sponge placed over
the cervix to prevent
sperm: from entering
the uterus.
Diaphragm
Rubber dome that covers the cervix, used with a spermicide. The diaphragm is similar to the sponge but fits more smugly over the cervix.
IUD
Changes the uterus lining, somehow preventing eggs from implanting. Some pain, other, others emit progesterone.
Source: Science Digest, September 1986
Vaccine could make women immune to sperm
By Kris Belden
Kansan staff writer
Putting a piece of rubber or some kind of gel on the genitals can be an embarrassing and inconvenient interruption during a passionate sexual encounter.
And remembering to take a pill each day is not always as easy as it sounds.
But all of these common birth control hassles will become avoidable if a contraceptive vaccine that causes women to become immune to sperm is successful.
John Herr, associate professor of anatomy and biology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, created the vaccine and is directing its testing. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp., Raritan, N.J., is financing the research.
Herr said the vaccine caused the voman's immune system to develop antibodies to a protein molecule, SP-10, that appears on the head of a sperm at the peak of its sexual maturity.
"It is a new approach to contraception," said Clare Castaldo, Ortho representative.
Antibodies bind with the sperm, destroying the sperm's ability to fertilize a female egg cell.
Because vaccines are widely accepted in world cultures, the vaccine could help control overpopulation. Herr said. The vaccine was engineered inexpensively, and Herr said that though the marketing was up to Ortho, the vaccine could be cost efficient.
Research has shown the vaccine to be universally effective since all human sperm could have the protein, Herr said.
The vaccine may last for a period of two to five years. Studies indicate that the vaccine would not cause adverse immune reactions in women, Herr said.
The next phase of the project is to test the vaccine to make sure the effects of the vaccine can be reversed and then to eventually test it on humans, said Marguerite Beck of the University of Virginia news office.
Since it works before fertilization, the vaccine is not an abortive drug and is not controversial like other post-fertilization drugs, she said.
One of the aims of the vaccine is to be inexpensive and thus easily available, Beck said. It would prove valuable in controlling overpopulation worldwide, she said.
Contraceptive vaccines have never been marketed anywhere in the
world, said Elizabeth Robinson of Family Health, International, a nonprofit contraceptive research organization in Durham, NC.
Researchers channel more effort into developing forms of birth control for women, but more effort needs to be placed on researching and developing contraceptives for men, said Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare.
"Regulating women's ovulating behavior is easier than regulating sperm production and movement," he said.
The last advance in birth control was Norplant, which became available in the United States early last year. Norplant is implanted beneath the skin of a woman's upper arm and slowly releases progesterone to inhibit ovulation. The device, consisting of two slender silicon rubber rods, can be removed by a physician at any time and is inconspicuous.
Before Norplant, the last significant advance in contraceptives was when the sponge was approved by the FDA in April of 1983, Robinson of Family Health. International said.
Ortho does not expect the vaccine to be approved by the FDA for at least five years, Castaldo said.
From crocodile dung to beaver testicles, birth control methods have a creative, bizarre history
By Katherine Manweiler Kansan staff writer
Birth control methods have been around almost as long as sex.
But some of the methods are noted more for their creativity than their effectiveness.
The earliest known birth control device, crocodile dung inserted in the vagina, originated around 1500 B.C. said Janine Demo, coordinator for health education at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
She said people once thought that the dung acted as a barrier to sperm
"Obviously, men thought that method up," Demo said.
Intrauterine devices (IUDs) were used as a birth control method for camels in early centuries. People
would place pebbles in the worms of camels during desert crossings as a barrier to egg fertilization.
By the early 1900s, IUDs were a popular form of birth control for women. The method no longer is recommended because it can lead to sterilization.
Candyde Waitley, health educator at Watkins, said chastity belts often were used in the Middle Ages to control the sexual activity of women.
A chastity belt is a metal belt with a piece of metal that fits between the woman's legs. There were holes in the metal for waste elimination.
"Men locked these belts on their wives and kept the keys," Waitley said.
in the mid-1600s, King Charles II asked a doctor to invent a device that
would protect him from syphilis and fathering more children. The condom was born.
The vulcanized rubber sheath first was displayed in the United States at the Philadelphia World's Fair in 1876.
Other early substances thought to act as barriers to sperm included honey on cotton balls, sea sponges and lemon peels.
Bizarre methods did not disappear with ancient times. In the early 20th century, birth control method was to mix boiled beaver testicles with liquor. Women would drink the potion in the hope that their testosterone production would increase keeping them from ovulating normally, Waitley said.
A man's limited options
The man has fewer choices for contraception. There are only two methods available in the United States; the condom and sterilization.
Condom
A thin rubber sheath that keeps ejaculated sperm contained. Also is an effective barrier against sexually transmitted diseases.
Gossypol
Derivative of cottonseed taken in pill form. Checks sperm synthesis but does not disrupt hormone production. Available in China. Has side effects of possible impotence
Sterilization
The spermatic ducts are permanently cut or caterized so that sperm cannot pass through. Does not affect libido.
5
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L | | © 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
1944 Universal Press Syndicate
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NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFS
Berlin
East German guards convicted
A judge yesterday convicted and then freed two former East German border guards who shot up to 30 bullets into a young man who tried to vault the Berlin Wall in 1984.
Defendant Uwe Hapke told Judge Ingeborg Temperwin of Berlin Regional Court that he was a product of his Stalinist upbringing.
The trial was the second of its kind since German unification, and its ambiguous outcome reflected the growing dilemma over who to blame for East Germany's crimes.
The case is part of a trickle of investigations into various Communist crimes that is finally reaching, and threatening to flood, countless German courtrooms.
Temperwin ruled that Hapke, 30, and codefendant Udo Walther, 27, were guilty of manslaughter in the Dec. 1, 1894, death of Horst-Michael Schmidt. The judge then suspended both sentences.
Algiers, Algeria Deaths reach eight in civil strife
Clashes erupted for a second day yesterday outside a courthouse in eastern Algeria after a Muslim cleric was sentenced to prison. Eight people have died and scores have been injured.
In Aligiers, 3,000 university students, including women wearing traditional veils, attended a service they carried a coffin meant to symbolize the death of their friend. ousted President Chadii Bendibt last month
A five-man committee took power after Bendjedi's departure, canceling a runoff in national elections that the Islamic Salvation Front was expected to win easily.
The violence in Batna, a city of 200,000 about 270 miles east of Algiers, has been the worst in a three-week national crackdown on the fundamentalist Islamic Salvation Front. Six people died in Batna on Tuesday and two died yesterday, state radio said.
United Nations U.N. getting tougher with Iraq
The Security Council increased pressure on Iraq yesterday, renewing its commitment to punishing sanctions and hinting that it might threaten further military action.
In a bimonthly review of sanctions imposed on Iraq for its invasion of Kuwait, the 15-member council decided to keep in place an 18-month-old treaty which all trade with Saddam Hussein's government.
Iraq has appealed repeatedly for an end to the sanctions, but the council pointed to Saddam's baggery and noncooperation with the world community.
Diplomats suggested that tougher action — possibly including a threat of military force — could be taken if Iraq does not fully cooperate with the war effort, chemical and biological weapons facilities.
"Stand by for further news," U.S. Ambassador Thomas Pickering said after chairing a closed-door council meeting.
From The Associated Press
'Suicide doctor' held on two murder counts
Associated Press
PONTIAC, Mich. — Dr. Jack Kevorkian was arraigned on two murder charges yesterday in the deaths of two women who used his suicide machines after saying they could no longer bear their chronic illnesses.
Kevorkian's lawyer predicted that the charges would be dismissed. He noted that no change had been made in Michigan law since 1990, when Kevorkian helped an Alzheimer's patient inject herself with a fatal dose of drugs. A first-degree murder charge in that case was dismissed.
"There is no crime of assisting suicide in Michigan," Geoffrey Fieger, Kevorkian's lawyer, told Oakland County Circuit Judge
Richard Kuhn at a hearing. "Doctor Kevorkian assisted those two ladies. That is not a crime."
The new charges stem from the Oct. 23 deaths of Sherry Mill, 43 of Roseville, and Marjorie Wantz, 58, of Sodus. They were found dead in a cabin north of Detroit, hooked to devices invented by Kevorkian. One of his machines provided a lethal injection, and the other erupted a lethal gas.
Shortly before their deaths, the women made a video in which they described their pain and their wish to die.
Miller suffered from multiple sclerosis, and Wantz was afflicted with a chronic pelvic disease. Neither illness was terminal.
A medical examiner ruled that their deaths were homicides, not suicides.
Kuhn set bail at $5,000 on each murder count and ordered Kevorkian to refrain from assisting any more would-be suicides. Kevorkian was released after posting the required 10 percent bail.
The charges, which included one count of delivery of a controlled substance, were issued Monday by an Oakland County grand jury. They were kept secret until after Kevorkian's arrest yesterday.
County prosecutor Richard Thompson said, in announcing the indictments, that he had to prosecute Kevorkian after the medical examiner announced his ruling.
Kevorkian, 63, a retired pathologist, was arrested while walking near his Royal Oak home.
Coast Guard halts Haiti deportations
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Coast Guard temporarily halted the repatriation of Haitian refugees yesterday at the request of the Haitian government but will resume the program today. U.S. officials said.
The officials, asking not to be identified, said Haitian authorities asked for the delay on grounds they could not assimilate large numbers of refugees at one time. Haiti agreed to resume the repatriations after consultation with U.S. diplomats.
According to the officials, two Coast Guard cutters with 508 Haitians aboard were halted just outside the country's territorial waters while the two governments worked out the agreement.
Since the ban on repatriating Haitians was lifted Friday, 381 refugees have been returned. More than 15,000 Haitians have been picked up by Coast Guard cutters since the exodus of Haitians began last fall
Marlin Fitzwater. White House representative,
said Haitian officials had backed for a election.
"We do want to repatriate in a way that is the most
effective possible," said Fitzwater.
He said there hadn't been any evidence of any retribution against the Haitians sent back to their homeland.
The repatriation program has received sharpterism from human rights and refugee groups on grounds that returning Haitians may be subject to persecution, impoverishment or both. Officials said there was no evidence any of the returned Haitians had been mistreated.
Legislation has been introduced in both the House and Senate to halt the reparations. The House Judiciary Immigration Subcommittee was scheduled later to consider legislation to impose a six-month moratorium on the forced returns.
Sen. Edward Kennedy,D-Mass., is seeking Senate action this week on his bill to suspend repatriations until Feb. 21.
"Reports of continuing violence and threats of violence in Haiti in recent weeks require us to give temporary protection to all Haitians unwilling to return at this time," Kennedy said in a statement.
Irish Protestants kill five in bombing
The Associated Press
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Protestant extremists raked a crowded betting shop with gunfire yesterday, killing five people and wounding nine others in what they called revenge for IRA violence.
The attack on the Roman Catholic gamblers raised the number of dead in political and sectarian violence to 12 this week, one of the grimmest in the province in years.
City residents were still absorbing news of Tuesday's shotgun attack by a distraught police officer on the offices of Sinn Fein, the legal political party that supports the outlawed Irish Republican
Army. The officer killed three Catholics and later took his own life.
Yesterday two women walked into the Sean Graham's betting shop in Belfast about 2:20 p.m. and opened fire with an assault rifle and handgun before making their escape. Police said the gunmen killed five people and injured nine.
Residents ran from nearby pubs when they heard the shots and screams. They said that the shop floor was carpeted with blood, bodies and the cartridges of spent bullets. Mothers and siblings of the dead were pulled away, crying and shaking.
The Rev. Anthony McHugh, a
Northern Ireland Scotland Belfast Gunmen open fire in betting shop
Scotland
Northern Ireland
Belfast
Gunmen open fire in betting shop
Ireland Dublin
Britain
Wales
Map area
0 50
Miles
Knight Rider Tribune
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Map area Miles
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Catholic priest, administered last rites.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6. 1992
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Regents request academic review
A review of academic programs mandated by the Board of Regents has some KU professors concerned about what the outcome of the assessment will lead to.
By Jenny Martin
All six regent institutions were asked to develop review processes to examine their academic programs.
Kansan staff writer
"Last year the Regents became concerned with the lack of adequate resources for the universities to continue as they had in the past," said Frances Ingemann, presiding officer of the Senate Executive Committee.
Each institution will submit its plan for a review program to the Regents in March.
Concern has been expressed by legislators and Regents that there could be unnecessary duplication of programs within Regents schools, and that state resources might be better spent without overlapping programs, she said.
The idea behind the assessment of academic programs is that resources would be reallocated from one program to another, Ingemann said.
"I suppose part of faculty concern is if there is to be mandated elimination of programs," she
sity did not know if the elimination of programs would take place at all.
Tom Reisecker SenExchair said that the Univer
Every program will be looked at for its quality, need, cost effectiveness, service and relationship to the University's mission statement. Faculty, staff and students within each program will be elected to committees that will be responsible for providing and organizing information on the programs.
"There will be continued pressure for the University to demonstrate good use of funds," he said. "But it's entirely possible that all of the programs are already being efficient at using resources."
Hammond-Paludan said that if resources could not be made available, it would be a difficult to decide what programs would be discontinued in order to bring others up to desired standards.
Evaluations of the information will take place first at the school or college level by an elected committee.
Allan Press, member of University Council, said that a program review was good because it identified areas that a department needed to strengthen as well as those that were already strong. But he said he was concerned that hostilities would be created between departments if funds were reallocated from one program to another based on the review results.
The school or college dean will submit the department's materials to the vice chancellor for academic affairs for a second evaluation. After an evaluation is made by the vice chancellor and a University-wide committee, the second evaluation will be submitted to the chancellor. Final department assessments are due from each Regent institution by December 1992.
Board of Regents staff member Martine Hammond-Paludan said that the Regents wanted a clear picture of the strengths and weaknesses of the individual departments.
"If the review involved programs being ranked, I think this would be very destructive." Press said.
*Because of limited resources, many programs are under-funded, causing the institution to sink into
mediocrity," she said.
Nancy Dahl, member of SenEx, said that she was concerned about the amount of time that the review would take.
Similar concerns were voiced at last week's Senate Executive Committee meeting. Faculty had heard that the review would result in a ranking of programs. Del Brinkman, vice chancellor of academics, told reporters that they identified the strengths and weaknesses of individual programs but not necessarily rank them in order.
KU job fair offers hope against recession
ENVIRONMENTAL N
R&D
publications, inc.
LAWRENCE KANSAS
BvJanetRorholm
Kansan staff writer
Employers at a job fair sponsored by the University placement center said yesterday that despite the saging economy, job openings existed.
But jobs are not asplenty this year as in other years because the work force has been fairly stable and there is no employee turnover rate, one employer said.
More than 600 students turned out to talk with employers, and about 45 companies came to check out KU students as a part of the important director of university placement.
Hartley said she was overwhelmed by the students' interest. She attributed the large turnout to the amount of publicity about the fair.
"We never expected so many students to show up." Hartley said.
good reputation of the business school.
David Anbari, who represented Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said the bank would not be hiring as many interns or permanent employees this summer as normal, but that it would still need people.
"In our business, we're always looking for new employees," he said. "This year it isn't as high, but we still overhire so that we have enough people."
Ambari said that the bank tried to visit as many schools in the area as possible, but that the bank liked the University of Kansas because of the
"Our experience at KU has been good; you don't find many specialists," he said. "We like that because we want generalists — people with a general background have proven to be more consistent in long-term development."
Clem Sheridan, representative for Dillards department store in Kansas City, Mo., also praised KU students and graduates.
"KU has a strong business school," he said. "We've had good results with past candidates. They've been real successful at our institution. That's one of the keys that keeps us coming back."
The State Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services provides practicums and internships.
Linda Perrier, SRS representative,
said that SRS would not be hiring as
many students because of budget con-
cerns. She said she hiring freeze had
been lifted, she said.
She said that the profession seemed to be going through a backlash from the freeze. Not as many people were interested in social services.
Dan Resnick, also an SRS representative, said he thought it was interesting that people with a degree in some field could afford welfare wanted jobs in that department.
- "Students with a degree in English or history are finding out that their
Students visit Kelly Calvert, R & D publications representative at the fair. degree is not as marketable as it was job," Eigh said. "I am not exactly the before," he said. other, I have a 4.0
Despite the fact that fewer jobs will be available, some students who attended the fair and were close to graduating did not seem to be worried about finding a job.
"I think there are jobs out there. You just have to look harder for them," said Brian Varney, Kansas City, Kan., senior. "I'm not concerned."
Ann Egli, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said she was just beginning her job
"I'm not concerned about finding a
ations represent at the fair.
job," Egi said. "I am not exactly the typical student either. I have a 4.0 grade point and I'm in tons of activities. I think the jobs are out there for the right people."
Michael Sweargin, Wichita senior,
said that he already had a job offer
in Chicago, but that he was planning to
to go graduate school.
"I'm just getting a feel for what it is out there," he said. "I think I'd be more valuable at a job with an MBA. There are jobs out there, but you might have to take a job lower than what you want to."
Stephan files gambling lawsuit against Finney
By Greg Farmer and Gayle Osterberg
Kansas state funders
Stephan filed the suit with the state Supreme Court to force Finney to submit an American Indian gaming compact to the Legislature for its approval.
TOPEKA — As he promised earlier this week,
Attorney General Bob Stephan filed a lawsuit yesterday against Gov. Joan Finney and Kansas American Indian tribes.
Earlier in the legislative session, Finney signed a compact with the Kickapoo Indians allowing them to open a casino on their reservation near Hiawatha. At that time, Stephan said the compact was not binding without the Legislature's approval.
"I want the governor to acknowledge that the Legislature must be given the opportunity to ratify the Kickapoo gaming compact and any other Indian
gaming compacts before they legally take effect," Stephan said. "It is important to provide a definitive judicial answer to this question."
In a letter to Stephan yesterday, Finney directed him to use the judicial system to answer the American Indian gambling question.
"I would characterize such a lawsuit as a friendly
treat. But it is the civil way to get
things settled, she wrote.
In addition to affecting the Kickapoo Indians' plans, Stephan's legal action would affect proposals by the Sac and Fox Tribe and the Potawatomi Tribe to build casinos in the state.
J. R. Thomas, a member of the Kickapoo Indians' tribal council, said that revenue from a casino could be used to pay for social improvement programs on the reservation.
"The Legislature has fought this all along." he
According to federal law, gaming compacts between a state and an American Indian tribe must be approved by the Secretary of the Interior.
Finney met Monday in Washington with Manuel Lujan, U.S. Secretary of the Interior. Lujan told Finney he could not approve the gaming compact with the Kickapo Indians until the state decided whether the Legislature must sign on to the compact.
said. "They've got us at the bottom of the barrel. We have the opportunity to make something out of our lives, and they just want to keep us down there."
Bob Walker, representative of the Department of the Interior, said, "This is the first time we have run into this problem. This is a relatively new law. Up to this point, the question has not been the role of the governor versus the role of the Legislature."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
9
Recycling Freon offers prevention of further ozone damage to Earth
By Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
Although NASA announced this week that depletion of the ozone layer had reached alarming proportions, professors at the University of Kansas said students could help prevent further damage.
Diane Debinski, professor of environmental studies, said recycling Freon gas was the best way students could prevent destruction of the ozone layer.
She said Freon gas, found in refrigerators and air conditioners, was the most common of the chlorofluorocarbons, generally known as CFCs.
In products such as deodorants and hair sprays, most of the propellants that once contained CFCs are no longer in use, she said.
When CFCs are released, their chlorine molecules steal oxygen molecules from the ozone layer, causing holes in the atmosphere, she said.
According to the NASA study, high levels of ozone damage were found above the Northern Hemisphere.
"Students do not worry about the damage because they think, 'If it is in Antarctica, who cares?'" she said. "The problem is, they should care."
The ozone layer protects the Earth from the ultra-violet rays emitted by the sun. Exposure to UV rays can lead to skin cancer and cataracts, as well as plant life damage, she said.
"Students do not worry about the damage because they think, 'If it is in Antarctica, who cares?'
Diane Debinski Professor of environmental studies
Debinski said students should make sure Freon was properly recycled when they had their refrigerators or car air conditioners repaired.
Robert Glicksman, professor of law administration, said businesses that service vehicle air conditioners had been required by law to provide Freon recycling since Jan. 1.
He said the law was part of the Clean Air Act of 1990, enforced by the Environmental Protection Agency. However, Glickman said that businesses servicing refrigerators and other types of air conditioners were not yet legally responsible for recycling Freon.
*If students are truly concerned about protecting the ozone layer, they can ask to see the evidence of the business' training and certification," Glicksmansaid.
If a repair service fails to provide the information, students can contact the regional office of the EPA in Kansas City, Kan., he said.
Students also can prevent further damage by not trying to fix their own air conditioners and refrigerators, he said.
However, Glickman said it would be awhile before positive results came from ozone testing because so many CFc remained in the atmosphere.
"Even if we stopped emitting all CFCstoday, additional damage would continue for decades," he said. "Things would get worse before they got better."
Gaylen Liska, assistant director of vehicle maintenance for facilities operations, said that when campus-owned vehicles were serviced the Freon was recycled.
He said the garage had been using a recycling system since June. The process of recycling Freon did not cost extra when repairing a car's air conditioner.
"It was pretty expensive to get the system," he said. "But we are all into clean air and that is just a price you pay."
Marla Webster, an employee at AAA Automobile Electric & Air Conditioner, 716 E. Ninth St., said the shop recycled Freon.
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10
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
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'Fatal Vision' killer seeks retrial
RICHMOND, Va.—Attorneys for convicted "Fatal Vision" murderer Jeffrey MacDonald told a three-judge appeals panel yesterday that physical evidence excluded from MacDonald's 1979 trial could have proven him innocent.
Associated Press
The former Army Green Beret doctor convicted in the 1970 killings of his pregnant wife and two daughters is asking the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to order a new trial.
The case became a best-selling book and television miniseries, both called "Fatal Vision."
Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz told the judges that attornes discovered evidence of blonde wig fibers in 1990, corroborating MacDonald's account that intruders killed his family.
MacDonald claimed the intruders were hippies, including a young
Dershowitz said defense lawyers couldn't have learned earlier about the fibers found at the crime scene because the government had misled them.
woman wearing a long. blonde wig.
"The government deflected attention from one haystack to another in which the defense was trying to find a needle," he told the judges.
It was a miracle that lab notes describing the fiber evidence were found by defense attorneys, he said. Attorneys obtained the notes through a Freedom of Information request.
"Anyone can be framed and put in jail as long as the government is selective about what it presents," Dershowitz said later.
"Fibers are nothing more than household debris." DePuzaid.
Justice Department attorney John DePue called the fiber evidence inconsequential. DePue said other fibers that didn't match items owned by the family also were found at the scene.
MacDonald was convicted in the 1970 stabbing and clubbing deaths of his 26-year-old wife, Colete, and their two young daughters.
MacDonald, 47, is serving three consecutive life prison terms at a federal prison in Oregon. He didn't attend the hour-long hearing.
He testified that he heard his wife screaming from a bedroom but was unable to reach her before an intruder stabbed him. MacDonald suffered stab wounds that prosecutors said were self-inflicted.
MacDonald was a doctor at Fort Bragg, N.C., at the time of the killings. He told Army investigators that he fell asleep on a床 in the family's apartment and awoke to find four people standing over him.
A federal judge turned down the request for a new trial last July.
Professor in Maine rigs son's grades
The Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Maine — A professor at the University of Maine at Augusta has been suspended for one year for his role in a grade-rigging scheme involving his son, the school said.
favors for his son.
UMA President George Connick said Tuesday that Roger Teachiout was suspended for one year as of Jan. 2 for allegedly arranging for several teachers at the college to do special
The university has declined to name the student involved, but several faculty members have identified him as a potential alumna. The science professor Roger Teachout.
The university administration contends Teachout's son received 56 academic credits for work he did not complete. The school said the credits amounted to two years worth of work toward a bachelor's degree in public administration.
Connick said that the issue was not whether the younger Teachout had done any of the course work but whether, as a faculty member's son, he received special treatment and was given lower standards than other students.
acceptable is not holding all students to the same standards." Connick said.
Earlier, the university fired Russell Cotnoir, chair of the Department of Business and Governmental Sciences, for allegedly giving unearned academic credits to a student.
"The issue of standards is in the hands of the faculty. ... What is not
In addition, two other faculty members have been reprimanded for their alleged roles in the grade-rigging scheme.
The two professors have filed grievances asking that letters of reprimand be removed from their files, and Cotnoir has filed a grievance asking for his job back.
Philadelphia plagued by federal housing waste
The Associated Press
Michael Smermonch, Philadelphia regional administrator for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, said Tuesday that HUD could not risk more money spent on the project, known as Southwark Plaza.
PHILADELPHIA — The federal government has frozen its funding of one of the nation's most expensive public housing reconstruction projects because of overspending by the troubled Philadelphia Housing Authority.
HUD's grant for the project, $48 million for four years, was the largest single reconstitution grant ever made by the agency.
Federal officials decided to step in
According to an internal memo obtained by the Philadelphia Inquirer, HUD said the project was out of control and raised numerous questions on why money was spent and little work had been done.
after an audit showed that $5.8 million spent by the authority had produced no usable architectural drawings, the renovation was more than two years behind schedule and the final cost was projected at $57.2 million, $14.4 million over budget, Smerconish said.
Saidel, who became chairperson in
City controller Jonathan Saidel, the housing authority's chairperson, said HUD officials ordered him to open a separate bank account for federal housing funds and refrain from signing any new contracts.
January 1990, portrayed himself as an outsider fighting corruption and backscratching at the authority.
The housing authority has a 1,700-person payroll, with more than 700 maintenance workers. The authority, with 80,000 tenants and an annual budget of more than $150 million, is notorious for the diapidated condition of its housing and its poor maintenance record.
Rendell said he had formed a task force to review the operations of the housing authority and the city's three other housing agencies. The task force is to report by the end of March.
Mayor Edward Rendell, who took office last month, said the housing authority was in disarray and promised changes.
RICHARD GERE KIM BASINGER
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RICHARD GERE KIM BASINGER JAMA THURMAN 'FINAL ANALYSIS' ERG ROBERTS
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
11
KU women beat Sooners 75-56
Jayhawks first in Big Eight despite three injured starters
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team rolled passed the Oklahoma Sooners 75-56 last night at Allen Field House.
Kansas' nation-leading defense, holding its opponents to 53.2 points a game, stifled the Big Eight Conference's highest scoring offense, averaging 86.4 points a game. The Sooners shot only 39.1 percent from the field and committed 24 turnovers.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said she was concerned about Oklahoma's offense coming into the game.
"We were so concerned with how well UO shoots the ball and how often they put it up." Washington said. "I think our defense was active most of the game to slow them down."
The No. 17 Jayhawks have sole possession of first place in the conference at 6-1 and 17-3 overall. Kansas has competed against every team in the conference winning six straight after losing the conference opener to Missouri 57-56 in Columbia.
Kansas was led on the offensive end by junior guard Stacy Truitt, who had 17 points off the bench. Truitt is the team's leading scorer averaging 11.3 points a game.
Seniors Terrilyn Johnson and Danielle Shareef added 14 and 12 points, respectively. Freshman Angela Aycock was the only other Jayhawk in double figures with 11 points.
Shareef led the team in rebounds with 10 while Aycock and Johnson grabbed seven rebounds each. Johnson also grabbed five steals.
Johnson credits the Jayhawks team defense with another strong performance.
"Our entitle defense had a lot to do with their turnovers," Johnson said. "We could have done a better job blocking out toward the end but overall it was a strong performance."
The Jayhawks outrebounded Oklahoma 40-33. Kansas grabbed 16 offensive boards despite being one of the smaller teams in the conference after losing center Lisa Lata and forward Marthe McCloud to injuries earlier in the season.
Kansas' offense continued its resurgence, shooting over 50 percent from
the field for the second consecutive game. The Jayhawks hit on 30 of 60 shots for 50 percent against Oklahoma. They shot 51.5 percent Sunday in Manhattan, beating Kansas State 82-52.
Truitt credits team effort in the Jayhawks' recent success.
"Everyone knows they have to step up a notch because of the injuries we've suffered," she said. "We still have our goal of winning the Big Eight and then going even further than that."
Kansas lost three starters for the season because of injuries. Tate suffered a stress fracture in her left leg and only played in five games for the Javhawks this year.
Senior guard Tanya Bonham and McCloud both suffered knee injuries that sidelined them for the season. Bonham will undergo surgery Feb. 10 and McCloud is not expected back until the second half of next season.
Kansas will open the second round of conference play against Oklahoma State on Saturday at the field house. The Jayhawks beat the Cowgirls 64-60 Jan. 29 in Stillwater.
Oklahoma State is in a third place tie with Missouri, both at 4-3 in conference play, while Nebraska holds the number two spot at 5-2 and 15-5.
Kansas 75
Player M F G FT R A F T 3 T
Aycock 25 1/1 1/2 7 1 11
Johnson 34 6/14 2/2 7 2 14
Wurzelbach 28 4/13 2/2 7 1 14
Wurzelbach 14 9/12 1/2 1 14
Hart 34 0/3 2/5 4 6 1
Trout 33 6/10 4/4 3 1 27
Trout 16 0/3 4/3 1 2 7
Kilner 16 0/3 0/1 2 0 9
Kilner 16 3/8 0/1 2 0 9
Money 12 4/8 0/1 1 2 4
Percentages: FG 50% (30/60) FT 67% (11/18)
Three-point goals: 4 (Kite 10; Kite 11)
Siblings: 3 (Johnson, Shareef, Muancy); Steals: 15
Johnson: 5 (Johnson, Aflock, Shareef 5)
Shares: 2 (Aflock, Shareef 5)
Oklahoma 56
Epps 30 2/10 23 3 5 3 6
Guffy 32 2/10 23 0 7 2 14
Wade 25 5/6 0 0 1 1 3 10
Solomon 37 6/0 0 0 1 1 3 10
Xostera 33 6/14 0 2 4 1 14
Black 16 4/9 0 0 4 0 4 8
Walker 2 0/2 1/2 0 4 0 1
Ritchie 9 0/3 0 0 0 0 0
Ritchie 9 0/3 0 0 0 0 0
Hopkins 5 0/0 0 0 0 0 0
JAYB
21
4
ONERS
5
Percentages: FG 39% (25/48) FT 10% (11/18)
Percentage of kickoffs: GF 75% (16/24) KF 5%
Kickoffs: 1 Guffy, Wightle; Starks 1 (Eppy, Guffy, Macdonald) 3. Bluck 2. Technicals none!
Haltima: Kansas 90 Oklahoma State 27
Haltima: Kentucky 43 Minnesota 19
Kansas senior forward, Terrilyn Johnson, swats the ball in last night's 75-56 victory at Allen Field House.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Four join world league
Kansan staff report
Four former Kansas football players were taken in the World League of American Football draft recently.
Curtis Moore, who played at Kansas from 1986-1990, was taken by the Ohio Glory in the 15th round. Moore, who is from Wichita, was the 155th pick overall. Moore was drafted by the Houston Oilers of the National Football League in 1991, but was later cut by the team.
Mike Norseth, who was taken in the second round by the Birmingham Fire on Tuesday, played quarterback at Kansas during the 1984 and 1985 seasons. Norseth, the 27th pick overall, spent 1986-1989 in the NFL with the Cleveland Browns and Cincinnati Bengals.
Also taken in the 15th round was Peda Samuel, who played at Kansas from 1986-1988 Samuel, from Iola, played receiver for the Jayhawks but was selected by the New York-
New Jersey Knights as a cornerback. Samuel was the 161st pick overall.
Pat Jackson, a wide receiver from K-State, was taken by the New York New Jersey Knights in the tenth round. Jackson was the 105th pick.
Jordan suspended
Earlier in the day, the NBA fined Jordan $5,000 and suspended him for one game for bumping a referee in Chicago's triple-overtime loss Monday night to the Jazz at Utah.
Two players from Kansas State were also taken in the WLAF draft. Maurice Henry, a linebacker, was taken in the sixth round by San Antonio. He was the 58th selection overall.
B. J. Lohsen, a punter who played for the Jayhawks in 1988 and 1989, was taken by the Frankfurt (Germany) Galaxy in the 23rd round. Lohsen was the 250th pick overall.
PHOENIX — Michael Jordan, suspended for the first time in his NBA career, wished his teammates well yesterday and then left for the All-Star weekend.
The Bulls, minus Jordan, played the Phoenix Suns in Phoenix last night.
The Associated Press
Jordan, who played golf Tuesday at the Phoenix Country Club, was not available for comment.
However, Jordan had arranged before the six-game road trip to have his private jet fly him from Phoenix to Orlando, Fla., site of the All-Star Game on Sunday, team representative Tim Hallam said.
"I would imagine he's probably going straight to Orlando," Hallam said. "I think his family was coming down for the game. But that's just my guess."
Scottie Pippen, the team's other top player, said Jordan visited most of the players in their rooms after he got the news.
Magic ready to play in all-star game
RALEIGH, N.C. — Magic Johnson told an audience of college students last night that his health dictated his decision to play in Sunday's NBA All-Star game.
The Associated Press
ern Conference All-Star team.
The former Los Angeles Lakers' guard retired from the game in November when he tested positive for the HIV virus, which can lead to AIDS.
Johnson's participation in the All-Star game has been criticized by some of his contemporaries. Charles Barkley of the Philadelphia 76ers said he didn't think Johnson should play in the game.
"There have been no problems," Johnson said addressing a student gathering at St. Augustine's College. "My wife and baby are healthy. I'm looking forward to playing in the All-Star game."
Also, Johnson's intentions to play in the Olympics drew fire from the Australians, whose team doctor said his country's players should boycott the Games if they would have to play against Johnson. That position was later contradicted, although the decision has been left to individual players.
AIDSepidemic.
"No question about it. The safest sex you can have is no sex," Johnson said. "But as I say that, people cringe. But I'm going to say it one more time. The safest sex is no sex."
"Our community is denying the problem," he said. "We must get out of the denial.
"I don't want what happened to me to happen to you," Johnson said.
Johnson said some in the African American community were trying to deny their susceptibility to AIDS.
In a poll of NBA players, 96 of the 132 players asked said they thought Johnson should play in the game.
Johnson was voted to a starting position by the fans and a 13th position was created for him on the West-
Johnson also urged the audience not to be afraid of those suffering from AIDS.
Johnson also delivered his appeal for young people to be wary of the
"You don't have to be scared of them," he said. "Embrace them. Show them love."
'Hawks hope to lasso Cowboys' Houston
Jordon will play despite abdominal strain. Richey is still out with ankle stress fracture
By Lyle Niedens Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Roy Williams said yesterday that he was not yet sure how the No. 3 Jayhawks were going to stop Oklahoma State on Saturday.
But then again, before Nebraska's 85-69 upset of the Cowboys last night in Lincoln, Neb., no one else had figured out how to stop the No. 2-ranked Cowboys either. Oklahoma State, 20-1, rolled through its first 20 games, beating opponents by an average of 20 points a game.
"Ihope we can think of some ways to stop them between now and Saturday," Williams said. "I think they have tremendous leadership and tremendous experience."
Houston, known for his bruising inside play, has expanded his outside game this season and is shooting 37 percent from three-point range.
that leadership and experience begin with 1991 co-Big Eight Player of the Year and All-American candidate Byron Houston. The 6-foot-7 forward has started each of his four years at Oklahoma State and is averaging 21.7 points and 9 rebounds a game this season.
"I think they have tremendous leadership and tremendous experience."
"I probably have as much respect for him as anybody we've ever competed against," Williams said of Houston.
As a result, the Jayhawks' first priority Saturday will be keying on Houston. Williams said the Jayhawks not allow him to have a great game.
Roy Williams Kansas basketball coach
"If we allow them to throw the ball into him, all he does is foul out your whole team," Williams said. "What we have to do is cut down on Byron's production. I don't want Byron to shoot 70 percent for the game, and also I don't want Byron to have all of our post players sitting next to me. We've got to be able to play defense on him without foiling him every time."
Duke (17-1, 8-1) had its bestrun early in the game, a 9-0 stretch that turned an 11-7 deficit to a 16-11 edge.
Richard Scott, a 6-7 sophomore forward, and a 6-2 senior forward Alonzo
As the second half wound down, North Carolina had to rely on free-throw shooting, and came through by making 12 of 14 in the stretch.
The Tar Heels (16-3, 6-2) opened the second half with 10 straight points but Duke kept the game close.
The Blue Devils missed their first four shots in the second half and committed five turnovers in five minutes.
Hubert Davis led North Carolina with 16 points. Montross and Kevin Salvadior had 12 and Brian Reese had 10.
Derrick Phelps hit two foul shots with 44.5 seconds remaining to give the Tar Heels a two-point lead.
Duke recovered and tried once more, but Laettner missed again and Phelps came away with the rebound, dribbling into the corner and preserving the victory.
North Carolina also snapped Duke's Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season winning streak at 11 games.
The Blue Devils, trying to work the ball for the last shot, got the ball to Laettner, but he missed an inside onehander over Eric Montross with 24 seconds left.
Brian Davis led Duke with 17 points. Thomas Hill had 16, Laettrie 12, Bobby Hurley 11 and Grant Hill had 10 for the Blue Devils.
N. Carolina knocks off unbeaten Blue Devils
Jamison will likely be the two Jayhawks that draw the defensive assignment against Houston. Jamison said that he would not do anything different in guarding Houston than he had done against other opponents this season.
The Tar Heels clawed their way back, taking a 20-19 lead on a three-point play by Hubert Davis at 9:27. The lead would be exchanged ten more times down the stretch before Thomas Hill connected on a jumper from the right baseline with two seconds left before intermission for a 39-38 edge.
The Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Christian Laetner missed two potential game-tying shots in the final second yesterday as No. 9 North Carolina knocked off No. 1 Duke 75-73, ending the nation's longest winning streak at 23 games.
The loss by Duke, combined with No. 2 Oklahoma State's loss at Nebraska, left no undefeated Division I teams.
In addition to Houston, Williams praised Oklahoma State's three-guard offense and said that 7-ocean Bryan Reeves' size presents a prob-
"With our principles of defense, we'll play the same way against him as we do anybody," he said. "We just have to play the war we know how to play."
"I just think they're a fantastic basketball team," he said.
■ Kansas guard Patrick Richey had three staples removed from his right ankle Monday and will probably begin running next week, Williams said. Richey had surgery Jan. 21 to repair a stress fracture in the ankle.
- Point guard Adonis Jordan has a strained abdominal muscle and will wear a girdle around his stomach for protection, Kansas trainer Mark Cairns said.
Injury update:
The Associated Press
Cornhuskers shock No.2 Cowboys
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska point guard Jamar Johnson picked the perfect night for his best performance in a Cornhusker uniform.
The sophomore, who sat out last season under the NCAA's Proposition 48 rule, scored a career-high 25 points against Oklahoma State's pressure defense to lead Nebraska to an 85-68 upset of the No. 2 and previously unbeaten Cowboys.
"I thought he was brilliant, domineering. I think that's the kind of player Jamar is," Nebraska coach Danny Nee said. "I think he has the potential for this high level of play every night. And he did it against great players."
Johnson said his major concern coming into the game was hanging onto the ball against the tough man-to-man defense of Oklahoma State.
Johnson, who hit 7 of 8 free throws, led a Nebraska parade to the charity stripe where the Huskers hit 25 of 31 shots for the game, 21 of 25 in the second half.
Nebraska forward Eric Piatkowski said, "I could tell when I looked at the guys at the line we were really confident. We really wanted to win and we had to make those shots to have a chance."
The Huskers (15-4, 3-3 Big Eight) trailed 5-0 early, then opened an 18-11 lead with 11:30 remaining in the first half. The Cowbys (20-1, 4-1) repeatedly cut the Nebraska to one or two points before a 5-0 flurry gave Oklahoma State a 28-27 lead with 2:53 left in the first half.
Johnson hit a 3-point field goal 15 seconds later and Nebraska never trailed again.
12
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6. 1992
Students counsel abused women at center
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Curiosity got Laura Leonard interested in working with battered women in Lawrence.
Seeing some of her friends in desperate, threatening situations, Leonard wondered what was being done in the community for battered women.
"I saw that there was a need in the community and thought it was not being met," said Leonard, Lawrence graduate student.
Then she saw a flier for Lawrence Women's Transitional Care Services and realized that people were addressing the issue of battery.
"I went into training curious, and I been at WTCS ever since," she said.
That was in January 1991.
Today, Leonard is one of about 25 KU students volunteering at WTCS, a battered women's and children's shelter in Lawrence.
Laura Farha, community facilitator, said that about 12 KU students were training to be shelter volunteers
She said students trained three days a week for about three weeks. After that, Farha said, each volunteer will do three on-the-job training sessions before beginning work at the shelter.
The initial training includes a series of workshops that cover topics range from
to the effects of domestic violence on children, Farha said.
"By around the first week of March, we hope to have a bunch of new, energetic volunteers," she said.
Farha said the students who volunteered would work as women's or children's advocates. She said that about two-thirds of the trainees would be women's advocates and the other third children's.
Female advocates work with women and children within the shelter, but male advocates, who are not trained to administer medicine outside the shelter, she said.
Farha said that advocates also ran the children's support group but that only formerly battered women could run the women's support group.
Shonna Terry, Gallatin, Mo., junior, who has worked as a women's advocate since her training in November, said her work involved answering calls on the crisis hotline, counseling women and getting them out of their homes and into the shelter.
She said she worked four to eight
workdays. Each volunteer must
work at least 10 hours.
"You get more out of volunteering than you put in." Terry said. "But it's trying when women go back and do things you wouldn't advise. Still, there are more positive experiences than negative ones."
Although one becomes emotionally
About domestic abuse
Lawrence Women's Transitional Care Services offers the following services.
Shelter
- A safe residence for women in transition, particularly for battered and abused women and their children
- A supportive atmosphere where residents may make informed decisions and positive changes in their lives
- Practical assistance with housing, employment, welfare, emergency clothing, food and parenting skills
The Shelter House has a 30 day limit on Emergency Housing
24 hour crisis line----841-6887
- Crisis intervention for victims of violence in the home
- Information about woman battering
- Emotional support for women experiencing distress due to violence in the
- Emotional support for women experiencing distress due to violence in the home, divorce or separation, bereavement or other serious lifestyle changes
- Peer support for women and their dependent children who are from battered
Peer support advocacy
- One-to-one advocacy for resident women and children
involved in volunteering, Terry said, it is sometimes difficult to identify personally with the battered women.
- Women-in-transition weekly support group
Terry said she thought more students would do volunteer work if they knew the good they could do.
"Some cases are so extreme," she said. "From training, I can relate, but I'm still not a battered woman."
"It is hard to take the first step," she said. "Most students don't think they have the time, but once they started learning benefits, they would make time."
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
--co-sponsored
The Company of America
BLACK MEN OF TODAY
www.co-sponsored.com
sell us your clothes!
We buy recycled clothing
and accessories daily
and offer
40% cash/60% trade.
ORRIZONA TRADING CO.
734 Massachusetts
749-2377
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
gifts of love
800 Mass
749-4333
Compact Discs
Impact Discs
$5.95 each
50 more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Donor Center Help yourself by helping others
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9:5-10
816 W. 24th St.
Behind Laird Noller Ford
* * * * * *
Open Mon - Thurs 8am - 6pm
Fri 8-6pm Sat 9am - 1pm
SALONS
Save lives by giving plasma!
$15 dollars for first donation!
KU
KU
BOOKSTORIES
May '92 Graduates
KS Union 864-4640
Order your graduation announcements on the following dates:
February 17th, 18th and 19th
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Orders must be prepaid
Visa, Mastercard, Discover &
American Express Accepted
KU
KU
Burge Union
864-4640
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
Tired of your old Nintendo Cartridges? Bring them in and trade them for new or used CDs, Tapes or Posters!
SUA
THIS WEEK
--co-sponsored
The Company of America
BLACK MEN OF TODAY
www.co-sponsored.com
7:00 Tuesday, Feb 4
7:00 Wednesday, Feb 5
8:00 Saturday, Feb 8
MYSTERY TRAIN A FILM BY JIM JARMUSCH
RMC
CD's
$5.98-
$9.98
RECYCLED MUSIC
Compact Discs
Cassettes
Posters
841-1RMC
Tapes
3 for $10
*BUY
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*TRADE
*716 Mass
*841-1RMC
Downtown
Lawrence
GIANT SUBWAY POSTERS $12 SMALL POSTERS $4
864-SHOW
7:00 Thursday, Feb 6
4:00 Saturday, Feb 8
plus
Friday, Feb 7, at 7:30 & 10:00
at Hashinger Hall
R
Classified Ads
Straight out
Straight out of Brooklyn
films are screened in Woodruff Auditorium
Tickets are $2.50 at the Sun Box Office
FEBRUARY
BLOWOUT
in progress.
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
100s Announcements
He pulled her close and gazed deep into her eyes. He began to nibble softly on her ear while he gently worked her hair loose. As he ran his fingers through her hair, he came to a horrifying realization...His dream girl had split ends! In disgust, he went his separate way and left her standing alone on Valentine's Day.
A Lesson in Passion
105 Personal
For Valentine's Day,
HWR Incorporated
842-1253 1031 Vermont
Give Him Hair He Can't Resist! CALL HAIR INC. TODAY AND MAKE AN APPOINTMENT
Your Valentine's Day date depends on it!
Anne - the date dash starred it all two years ago today. Summer concerts, FM, OK State, the gazeebo -what's next? Bottle 'but another session in the Norwegian Room? Talk dirty! Love, Gamma
Tess, we met at the Powerpill. I'm the Bad Boy Tess, with the "House of Silence. Reply at the Box."
110 Bus. Personal
Hey Sam, What a afterthighmaster, Buns of Steel? It's only a 1-800 *a way*!
English tutor: to help foreign students with composition or conservation. Call Alan 845-4723.
Wanted: Pernal partner for 2-3 mornings weekly. Prefer nearby 27th Street. Call Kevin
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--feeling confused, anxious, blue? Counseling can help. Students rate Mary Beth Bethel, M, BM-347-3728.
EUROPEAN TAL HEALTH & HAIR CATION
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120 Announcements
Douglas County Rape Victims Support Service offered confidential, on-giving support groups for victims/survivors of rape/sexual assault. Call Headquarters Counseling Center 841-2345
For an anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841:245. Headquarters
Gay Laishan Peer Consultation. A friend, under-
graduate law student, seeks counsel from
byron counsellors. Headquarters: 841-250
and 841-370.
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who someone is - call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
WANTED: St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen. Contact 749-6351 For More Information
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support
group. Tuesdays to 6 call headquarters or K U
101. Call 212-553-3828.
SUFFERING FROM ABORTION?
Write
Hearts Restored
Bowl 94
Ginnell, Ks #7/318
Confidential Response will follow.
EXCEL
Academic Excellence Workshop for students who want to Study Smarter, Not Harder
FREE!
Thursday, February 6, 7-8 p.m.
offered by the Student Assistance Center
INTERESTED IN SERVICE!
ALPHA
PHI
OMEGA
National Service Fraternity wants to reactivate at KUI
for more info call 816-373-8667
Ask for Patrick or Judy
Hillel
Events of the Week
Thursday, Feb. 6
Thursday, Feb. 6
Open Forum Meeting
8:15 pm, Kansas Union
Friday, Feb. 7
Shabbat Dinner
6:00 pm, Hillel House
(RSVP by Thurs. Feb. 6)
Saturday, Feb. 8
Fire and Ice Program (Havdalah and Ice Skating) 5:30 pm. Hillel House and
Sunday, Feb. 9 & Monday Feb.10
UJA Phone-a-thon
For rides and more information call 864-3948
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE I
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841.2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
D
TWO TO ONE
Two ears and only one mouth!
That's normal (even for pastors!)
Advice,yes;
but even moreLISTENING!
Stop by anytime!
And that's what counselling means (especially for pastors).
Lutheran Campus Ministry by students and for students
1204 Oread 843:4948 Worship: 10:30 a.m.
StiHot!
SPRING
BREAKS
LAST CHANCE!
S
DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDale $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND / $68
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11th Annual Celebration!
SKI & BEACH
BREWS
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You can EXCEL. Academically. Learn strategies for studying smarter, not harder. Learn to maximize time spent on reading assignments. February 6, 7 p.m. 4025 Wesley FREE!
130 Entertainment
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 7
JACKOPIERCE
BENCHWARMERS
AT
2 FOR 1 WELLS
SPRINGBREAK VACATIONS! Enjoy a warm and exciting vacation in New York City. Call ENTER 842-3810 or visit www.springbreak.com/Carolyn/
POP POPPINS
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 8 AT
BENCHWARMERS
2 FOR 1 WELLS
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
13
bon't miss Miss Mab Mob featuring Grant Hart from Dau Du Sunday 16. Bottleneck 14 & over 9/12
*Free Party room at Johnny's TawnUP & Under*
*Free Party room at Massachusetts* 842-037-8271
USE DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
140 Lost-Found
FOUND Textbooks in J-School. Claim in room 103
6-100 m
Found, set of keys in front of the Children's Learning Center in Dole on Friday afternoon, 865-0118
WATCH found. In Burge UNion parking lot before Xmas. Call to claim: 684-3847
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babysitter Needed car and phone a requirement
Preference a mum or an old boy call 749-281-3650
Housekeeper needed: very flexible hours with
*e.g. pay't, phone and car must a-rd* 749-8314-891
OUR COURSELORS want for private Michigan gambys/girlsummer camps Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymmastics, hiking, fishing, kayaking, camping, crafts dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, maintenance, Salary $1090 or more plus R&H: Marse Legeer 1765 Maple, IL 61083
Counselors/support staff *children*s camps/northeast top salary, hb/dl/ laundry, travel allowance Must have skill in one of the following activities: dance, drama, drivers, drums, drumming, field basketball, golf, guitar, gymnastics, hockey, tennis, basketball, kitchen supervisor/workers, lacrosse, mature education, nature, photography, piano, rock music, secretary, soccer teams, track, waterkids, weights, wood for an interview on Wednesday, Feb. 19 from 1:4pm in the Regionalist & Athletic Center.
Cruise LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 - month of World Travel; Hawaii,
Mexico, Canada, Puerto Rico, Greece,
Guides, Waiters/Wafter, etc. - Holiday, Summer
and Career Employment available. No Experience
required.
Daycare Assistant Driver Christian Daycare
Tuesday Thursdays 7:30 a.m - 8:30 a.m 11:00 a.m - 12:00 p.m
Sundays 11:00 a.m - 12:00 p.m
Do you like working with children? Stepping Stones is hiring to room room adaes to work 8:31 MWF. Position positions also available. Apply at 1100 Wakarausa
FAST
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FUNDRAISING PROGRAM
Fraternities, sorories, student clubs. Earn up to $1250 per year. See course description. And if A's WACE WCIT for calling 1860-932.
LABORATORY ASSISTANTS
Full time babyssitter for one-year old in our home.
Phone evenings 842-577-4777
Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or related science. Laboratory experience desirable. Part-time may be available 15-28 hours a week. Apply online at loreal-8-sworkday. M-F. Submit application with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to the Office of Student Services, New Street, An Equal Opportunity Employer. M/F/H/U
Native Chinese speaking man or woman to care for lively six year old American boy. Purpose: teach Spanish and English to children who can accept set limits to ages and the Nintendo. He is a fun, intelligent, witty kid. You will need a car $30. AWD is required.
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN. 4/Rm. prices Daya194. $149.
Pamana City $139. Kitch, Wirtfr & Trans Available
CALL CMat! 800-423-3248
Need a job? We are looking for distributors. Excellent pay! no experience required! Start Now! Send Long S.A AIBV Employee Galaxy Distributors Job Position at S.A AIBV Part time now Full time in summer, answering phones, showing apartments, and general office work. Must be available at least 2 hours mornings by 9 O M F. Possibility of 10-20 brushes a week until Max mid May then skyscraping w/ through mid August. Must
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS! National Parks
Job: Help build a new park in Saskatchewan.
Save for Free application: T18 East
West, 450 West 6th Street, T18 East
West, 450 West 6th Street.
Stap2 Step3 is looking for honest and reliable Convenience Store clerkes. Great part time job for college students. Must be able to work weekends and holidays in person at Lawrence Stap2 5 at 10N 3rd.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT | June three August at:
Camp Lincoln, Lake Campus, Lake Huron in Minnesota.
Provide leadership and teamwork to staff men and women, expand horizons, rewarding work with children, develop leadership skills. 30 hours of summer training required. Courses are available at the Placement Office, Burge Union. Sign up, in advance, for a personal interview.
45 positions at the Rock Springs 4-H Center near Jurassic City, KS. Recruiting instructors, food service workers, and office assistants board, and a cash salary. Representatives at KU. Job date Feb. 5, or call 918-723-9211 for an application.
WANTED Student daycare providers for 3-month old infant. Must have own transportation and speak English. For more information, call 842-5559 after 5:00 p.m.
Wanted, mother's helper. Must be female, have one car, have a license & be available on夕六、夕七、夕八、Wednesday, & Friday: Approximately 1/tbs/wks until Spring Break, 20-30 hrs/wks, after Spring Break.
Tennis juniper-summer kids 'camps northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an orientation on Wednesday. Fee: $150. The Regionals and Broad Room in the Kansas Union.
Waterfront Job: WS1-Summer Children's Campus-Northeast Men and Women who can teach children (to swim, coach team team, waterskiers, beach volleyball) in a beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday, Feb 19 from 1am-5pm in the Waterfront Building at 750 Park Avenue.
225 Professional Services
COVOTE BIKE SHOP
9th & Connecticut - 832-2484
Check Our Prices
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 39 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FAVOR FACTORY THE ULTIMATE in service. Let us
provide you with the video and library
returns. Call us NOW: 793-8403
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est quality work, references Perry'975.5912
DUI/TRAFFIC
• Criminal Defense • Take IDs.
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
Former Prosecutor
16 Lead UMh 749-0087
RKC is the home for the new call 749-4708
Make an appointment with our P.C. a turnover to your home or office. Students rates. 842-3244
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding & portraits. Instant ID photos; student prices call Rochii 81-9699
RICK FRYDMAN
Attorney at Law
DWL/Traffic
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 405-6878
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more.
Graphic Arts, Inc.
921/12 Mass. 1401-171
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
DONALOG STROLE
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROBE
16 East 13th 842-1133
16 East 13th
Tried of taking帐业 at buyback time? Get $1.
$1 more per textbook and say when buying it
because you can pay for it at the store.
Word Processing Service. Term paper, thesis.
Word Processing Service. Term paper, thesis.
Word Processing Service. Term paper, thesis.
Word Processing Service. Term paper, thesis.
Computer Printed Pages.
Computer Printed Pages.
Computer Printed Pages.
235 Typing Services
1-dier Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type (M42-2063, days or evenings)
1+ | Typing-NP, WLites, term papers, resumes,
824-87544, after 3.50 wkds anytime wkends.
Anything typed/weighted Quite reasonable word processing (call 843-460-1257 leave message if n)
KS Professional Word Processing, accurate and
additional caller. ifp 81. m41. 6345
Let Wendy, a recent UK English grad, polish and type your papers or resume. Call Full Circle Services at 841-7943 for all your word processing and English tutoring needs.
PINK A LA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Scheduled opportunity for success! Now 'Call' NOW: 748-3040
Word Perfect Word Processing Laser Printer
Near campus $1/60 double spaced page
Call #642
Word processing, applications, term papers,
discussions, resumes, Editing, corruption, flash
videos, email correspondence.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
ANT Premium 200, 2MB RAM, 8062? Math Copper
ANT Premium 300, 2MB RAM, 8062? Free Support,
DURAGO Original, DURAGO Original
BARGAIN: Two brass traase lamps with plated
coatings. 280mm x 145mm. Price: £99.99
in type cast mastboxes 60, 79-1499 any time.
www.electricalmast.com
91 "mountain bike series" 350 "Paramount, owned
& maintained by Shop Mechanics $650,842-9617
92 Cannonadle racing bike Never ridden. Brand new $500 00 offer #82-4021
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition
Some with automatic document feeders and
sorters. $499.00 up on base used. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0292
nets, baseball cards, insignias, wholesale
stuff and other merchandise. stuff it will blow you away! QUANTILHIL S'FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Friday,
Saturday through Sunday. Call 842-643-6161 Visa and Mastercard welcome
Giant Sedona ATP. 24 inch frame, 18 speeds, two sets of tires,
$208.00-850
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art, and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade dolls, children's bath toys, Baby Penthouse vintage clothing, books, carnival glass. Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising magazines, vintage clothing. Duction, military collectibles, country furniture
King size waterbed for $250 or best offer. Call 865-9028.
Car stereo1 Denon tapecad2 Rockford Fos Gate
75mm 1cm Acoustic Bose 6,9 call; 794 799
Printer Mouse and Modern. No hard drive. Student Word Perfect Included. $60/HOU 841-7198
www.houu.edu
Olympus M.Zuiko Camera (fully automatic or manual
autofocus) Tamron teleconverter Tamron bag $100 KU medical
stabilizer Tamron bag $99
Roland D-50 professional synthesizer/keyboard
with 840 keys and 244 keyboard cards. 99% new.
891, $302.80
Mountain Bike, Blanch, Sweet Ride, Must See,
last week due, $250 mg, Call Cach 844-7377
Mountain Bike, Bridgestone MP-2, Race ready,
www.bridgestone.com
Sharp laptop computer 640K Two 31/2"F D. Excellent condition 832-403-401.
Raleigh Bike, good price, $50. Sears Dorm fridge
$90. Call Aaron 865-3844
Sony CDP 370 CD Player $130.00 and 10-band kit
$100.00 Call 749-0231
1979 Buck Regal Limited, 7.00K actual mileage
4 .9 Engine, runs very good, $1500, 865-4398
1982 Buck Regal Limited, 7.00K actual mileage
4 .9 Engine, runs very good, $1500, 865-4398
340 Auto Sales
190 Chevy S10 pickup V6 longbed sg, excellent condition.
low loan value; $250/offer; 84-271-2277.
180 MBW 320 Sport Version 98k Sunproof, 5 speed,
AC, K230 B4U82 1802-2kn leave message
Ski18s Boot Kit. Raichi & Norda. Sizes
10 & 11 $8 each, call OB. Call Jennifer 843-9233
85 Jetta 4-DR, A/C, Cruise, 91, AM/FM Car
61.000 ml; Garaged, $4,275, 5d, 660-699
Choose from thousands of starting $25. Free 24-hour
Recordings According to number 801 - 797-3299 - Copyright
CLASSIC 1986 Chevy Impala convertible $10 or best offer. Call Impala Preacher 341-842-9744
KU basketball tickets wanted! Call 829-9430. Leave a message!
Volkswagen Bug For Sale, fair condition, $500 cash,
799.617
Wanted 2- non-student BBall tickets, ticker.
Feb. 15 Call 864-7349 night, 842-5430
370 Want to Buy
WANTED one non-student B Ballistic co r on 15n,
Shanna Baum 467-468 leave message
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing a 1-bedroom apartments. Access from KU. On bus route Fully furnished apartment with pool. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trash disposal. Chippewa 1741. 714 W. Callchi. Call
Available Now. Private - BDR Apt. Close to camus $295/mo. No Patek BD4-966-1931
合
Available now! Huge, unique iPad 1.8DGB Great
mobi no,毛本. Needs 1 pet. Needs 14-638 bighit
841-6809
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, 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 on this newspaper are available on all equal opportunity basis
FEB RENT FREE! Clear, non-smoking females needed to赴 townhouse $167/m. 1-wk. W/MD
Furnished room for responsible (female) Near K U 814-6254
FORKENT 2-bhd 2a2no BD/W,D wookup carport,
DW Compactor, on golf course, on KU hts RH,
KUB WOOLEN, on golf course.
South Dartmouth
1, 2, 3, 4
Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
- Small pets OK with deposit
Central air
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Inexpensive gas heat
Furnished rooms on Tenn. and Kentucky. Share utilities. Close campus and downtown. $150 per room.
Hillview Apts $15 lease signing signout 1 & 2 bed
room apartments $23 & $85 plus deposit. On
charge: $100 per month.
Louisiana Place Apts. Now leasing nice B2R ApT bordering Campt Beautiful view to the city Call **WEST**
2166 W.26th 843-6446 Open 10-5,M-F
New 2BR BLE to campus. Available Now! All Appliances, $450/MO. Low utility. Cable tolls 842-797-3860.
Now leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bedroom Apartments for $10 per month. Low utilities, all amenities and facilities. Great maintenance and management. Quality at the best价店 in town. 841-6866. Spanish Great Apart
Large lge 1d+ studio Avail. now at 1339 Ohio $230 +
$252 + utilities. 749-7568
24TH & EDDINGHAM
SHORTTERMLEASES NO AVAILABLE on tu
b.2pt, bpr.apt, 2/1/bath townhouse.
NOW LEASING FOR FALL STUDIES. 1, 2, 3 bedrooms in all new locations and close to campus. Call no between 9-5 for information and to reserve a room. First Management, Inc. 740-158-1661, 841-846-
One bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place. Furn.
电话 805-4360 or leave a message.
电话 805-4360 or leave a message.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month.
Call 842-7688
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
(Next to Benchmark)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
9th & Avalon 842-3040
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
STOP PAYING RENT. Move into a great 218 BATH, ROOMY POOL AND CARPET. Low interest rates make it excellent time to buy. For more info on this or other current listings, call Jim Regal at Calvin Skipper & Associates.
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232.
SUNRISE
---
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
*Luxurious 2,3,&4 Bedroom TownHomes*
*Garages; 2!/2 Baths*
*Microwave Ovens*
*Some with Fireplaces*
*On KU Bus Route*
*Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts*
841-8400
---
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive, You're About to Get an Education.
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat any time you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
Ask about our "Upperclassman Special" or out $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next
Sublease Studio Apartment available for summer rental $366.00 + u-utilities per month. Call 822.6037
Sublet 2 frpt apt. W/D, FREE storage, pets ok. $400 plus. hotel billing 841.2640
Fall!!
Naismith Hall
Call now to reserve your room
meadowbrook OPEN HOUSE
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence,KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Sat. Feb. 8th 11-2
Sun. Feb. 9th 1-3
Showing studio and 1&2
Bdrm. Apts.
Now Available;
Lighted Tennis Courts
Studio and 2&3 Bdrm. Apts.
2 Swimming Pools
On KU Bus Route
On KU Bus Route
Laundry Facilities in most buildings
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Close to Campus (Sorry No Pets)
Mon - Fri 8-5:30 Sat. 8-5 Sun.1-4
842-4200 15th & Crestline
Meadowbrook
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Microwave
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths close to campus, furnished. Call 749-898-376.
- On Bus Route
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
430 Roommate Wanted
$355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mon.-Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat.10-4p.Mon.Sun.12-4p.Mon.
Ask About Reduced Security Deposit!
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
Cool 4th lounge demand needed Large house E. of
Mass 1800/mm & Utlfs. M/U not important 749
1 non-smoking roommate needed for 3bedroom furnished duplex on bus route with a full bath, WD, DW, microwave & garage. Large bedroom $155 plus 1/3 utility. Please call 749-2181 after 6
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
WASHER/DRYER/GAGE/AON/ BUS
NISHED MOVENIMMEDIATELY RENT IS
NIGGLE, CALL BAG 843-17271
Female housemate wanted. House border campus-
non. Smoker and no pets. 749-2644.
Room female roommate needed! Non-smoker. Till the end of May. Rent $192.50 plus 1/2 utilities on bus route. If interested, please call 865-0338, leave message.
Female to share 3 bedrooms, new apartment, near campus. Call 842-2757.
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female roommate wanted for 2 bedroom. Have own room and walk in closest. $240 + 1/2 util. On bus route. Call 865-0194 Available now!
$10 million paid, 798 students.
One female student for a furnished 5 Bdrn. Town
Furnished master bedroom available immediately in new 3-bedroom townhouse on bus line. $249/mth plus 1/8 utilities. Fireplace, patio, and tennis. Call John Picei 1-913-401-381.
Need roommate for 3 bedroom furnished apartment on bus route. $200 + 1/1 utilizers 841-9125.
Nice room in a house near campus available Feb. 15
$170 utilities paid, 799-7385.
Roommate Matching. We do the work. We check references, match preferences. Low rates. For info, write DoubleCheck/1020 W. Number. KS 6052 or call Dax at 14283/2430 today!
Roommate Wanted 3 BR Town home, smoker prefers
1/3 utilities + 1/rent, nets $85-962
Reliable Trouble maker to maker LRG 2BR 1/600 i/mol 170. Cll Make 842-5446
Roommate needed. 6 bedroom house, male or female,洗衣er, dryer, dishwasher, all the amenities.
One female student for a furnished 5 Bdnr. Town house located on bus route. W/D, pool, parking $170/m + 1/suitcases. Anytime 842-767-0. Reliable Tender to maker share LRG 2BR
KUASAP $200 /m0 Catly 1-649-7009
KUASAP $200 /m0 Catly 1-649-7009
Roommpt apt. 300/m0
Roommpt apt. 300/m0
Roommate wanted: female non-female for 4-bdm only yikes to Union. Non-register negotiable. 814-4295
Roommate needed - Large 2 bedroom at Park 25
943-868-0016 or roommate available.城
id: 448-448 or 843-299-0016
Roommate needed, 2-bedroom-Duplex, $150.00
1/2 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1168
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Words set in **Bold Face** count as 3 words.
Words set in **ALL CAPS** or **BOLD FACE** com
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE as 5 words
Centered lines count as 2 words
Roommate wanted ! non-smoker for 3 bedroom furnished duplex with 2 full bath, DW, DW, microwave, and garage. Rent negotiable Call #8148 Leave message.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Roommates needed 3bedroom behind Hillcrest Plaza. 200 utilities and Cabled.笔48-4510
Blank lines count as 7 words.
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370 want to buy
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(phone number published only if included below)
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University Dial Kansas
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
AJ CUMMER PAGE STUDIO
"Man, there's an old-timer with one foot in the wastebasket."
14
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 6, 1992
HFC
layhawk Bookstore
at the local bookstore
JBS Briti-Bus
Call for Special Charter Rate Mon-Thurs $ \cdot $ 843-3826
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Council Travel offers domestic student airfares in selected markets! Call for info, and a free学生 travel catalog!
Council Travel
1634 Omington Ave.
Fountain, IL 60901.
1-800-475-5070
QST
KU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB
NEXT MEETING:
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1992
6:30 P.M.
LEARNED HALL. RM. 1014
Few are aware of HPV disease
Most college students know what HIV stands for.
Virus is larger threat for people than HIV
By Katherine Manweiler Kansan staff writer
But they need to be equally aware of HPV, another sexually transmitted disease that affects one in 10 sexually active students, said Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"The HIV prevention message has
the same effect very well to the other
SSTDs." The message
Human papillomavirus (HPV) causes warts, or lesions, on the genital tracts of men and women.
HPV is more common in women because the cervix is highly susceptible to the virus. Nationwide, the HPV infection nationwide has increased 500 percent in the past 15 years. Buck said
In the past five years, Watkins has diagnosed about 1,400 women and 500 men with HPV, Buck said.
Barbara Schnitiker, director of nursing at the Douglas County Health Department, said 419 cases of HPV had been diagnosed there in 1991.
"We can get rid of the lesions and the manifestations of the disease, but we can't get rid of the virus," Buck said. "That is not something that people need to be afraid of."
He said the treatment of HPV was comparable to the treatment of strep throat. The symptoms can be treated effectively, but the strep never disappears.
Buck said HPV could be controlled.
A study conducted at the University of California-Berkeley indicated that more than 40 percent of college women have signs of the virus that leads to HPV present in their genital tract. That does not mean that those women have HPV, he said.
Certain factors probably need to be present in order for the virus to become active, he said. Not all of the factors are known, but smoking and sexual activity are two common ones
People can contract HPV from someone who does not have genital warts. Buck said.
According to research from the American College Health Association, ask force, sexually active college-students should be likely to be exposed to HPV than to HIV.
Treatments for HPV include cryotherapy, which is the freezing off abnormal tissue and warts, and 5-fluor
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS!
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Buck said the only way to cut down on HPV exposure was behavior modification, such as abstinence. Several HPV patients at the University of Kansas have decided to abstain from sexual activity since being diagnosed with the disease.
From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course!)
842-3232
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
*Open for Lunch*
The best form of protection against HPV transmission through sexual activity is the use of vaginal spermicide and a condom with Nonoxynol-9.
but not cured.
"The vast majority of these infections are not going to be precarious," he said. "But from a practical point of view, we can't tell which ones may be a problem someday."
WARNING
Follow-up visits every few months for the first year after diagnosis of HPV are important, Schnitker said.
Buck said all HPV infections needed treatment because HPV could initiate cell changes that could develop into cervical cancer. Buck said.
Only $3.49 $^+_{tax}$
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People who practice long-standing mutual monogamy are at low risk for HPV, Buck said.
rouracil cream, a cream used to treat external warts.
tops only .75¢)
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good Thurs. only.
---
Classes Now Forming! MCAT GMAT GRE LSAT
CLASS START DATE EXAM P
MCAT February 11 September 19, 1992
GMAT February 10 March 21, 1992
GRE February 5 April 11, 1992
February 13
February 11 June 15, 1992
February 12
THE RONKIN FUNDATIONAL GROUP
Call Now To Register 843-0800
708 W. 9th St. Suite 6
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Starts With A Jayhawk Visa Or MasterCard Of Your Choice.
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S628
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.90
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358.
FRIDAY,FEBRUARY7,1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Anti-abortion activists rally in opposition to bill
Proposed bill would protect abortions, clinics in Kansas
By Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA—Opponents of a bill that would keep abortion legal in Kansas if Roe vs. Wade is overturned expressed their disapproval yesterday at the Statehouse.
In the second day of House committee hearings, religious leaders, doctors and representatives of anti-abortion groups, people scheduled to speak yesterday.
Speakers attacked every section of the bill, saying it used vague terminology and offered more protection for women who performed abortions than for women.
"The most frightening specter of this bill is that it encourages a careless and self-serving style of medical practice that potentially causes grave harm to women in crisis," said Paul Davis, a physician. "Once doctors have a license to kill, they have a duty to kill."
Pat Adair, who said she had counseled women outside health clinics that performed abortions, called the bill the "abortion clinic protection act."
She spoke about a section of the bill that would require any woman under age16 to be counselled before having an abortion. The counseling could be done by anyone licensed to practice medicine, psychology or nursing, or anyone licensed as a social worker or professional pregnancy counselor.
"The counseling addressed in this bill is a deceptive and most assuredly mislabelled." Adair said. "Isn't that the fox to guard the chicken house?"
In addition to the section concerning minors, the bill would make abortion legal in all cases in which the fetus reaches a stage where it can survive outside the womb without extraordinary medical measure.
A late-term abortion also would be legal if the woman's life or health were threatened or if the fetus was affected by serious deformity or abnormality.
Mary Kay Culp, a representative of Kansasans for Life, said that the term "health" was defined broadly by Roe vs. Wade and that unless the definition in the Kansas bill was more specific, the definition could include a woman's physical or emotional health.
No woman seeking a late-term abortion would be turned down under the bill. Culp said.
Michael Peil, a physician from Wichita, questioned who would decide when a fetus was viable, meaning it could live outside the womb.
"The anticipated need for routine life-sustaining measures would make the unborn baby nonviable," Peil said. "The occasional need for routine surgical procedures to allow normal feeding would make the unborn baby nonviable."
Peil also questioned the standard by which a fetus would be determined to be human.
"This is a vague description," he said. "I would challenge you to get a consensus from the medical community as to what physical abnormalities as to qualify under this definition."
Opponents crowded into the hearing room, and overflow spectators clustered around a speaker set up outside the room.
Kathleen Sebelius, D-Topeka, head of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said the committee would discuss the bill sometime next week and vote on whether to pass it to the House floor.
POLICE
Father Regis Hickey, center, of Atchison, waits to voice opposition to the proposed abortion bill.
Speakers ask Senate committee to oppose qualified admissions
By Greg Farmer Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Ladi Hernandez, edu-
TOPEKA-Ladia Hecation adviser to Governor. Joan Finney, told a Senate committee yesterday that the governor did not think qualification would solve the problems in the Yemen education
the Kansas educational system
Kansas
1992
Legislature
at1:30 p.m. Monday and is scheduled to vote at the conclusion of debate on whether to send the bill to the Senate floor.
"She feels, as I do, that qualified admissions is not the answer." Hernandez said. He indicated that such an admissions policy would punish those who do not qualify, rather than alleviate problems for such persons.
Hernandez was among qualified admissions opponents who spoke to the Senate Education Committee, which was hearing the second day of deliberations on a bill that would establish admissions standards at Board of Regents universities.
The bill would require students to earn a 2.0 grade point average in a college-bound curriculum in high school, score at least a 23 on the ACT or rank in the top one-third of their high school graduating classes.
Qualified admissions supporters,
including Chancellor Gene Budig,
and their families.
The committee will debate the bill
Hernandez said a process to improve education in Kansas needed to be introduced from a lower level.
"It doesn't make sense to make changes
at Regents universities and think
about Regents universities and think
said "We should start at the bottom."
Mark Tallman, coordinator of governmental relations for the Kansas Association of School Boards, said the proposed qualified admissions bill.
"We believe students should be given a chance at educational progress through admission to college, even if statistics indicate they will probably fail," Tallman said. "Some will succeed despite the odds."
Jennifer Hamlon, a student representative from Emporia State University, said she represented students at Emporia State who thought a student's worth could not be judged by a grade point average or a test score.
"Our students feel that everyone is
At the Statehouse
Here are some items currently being discussed.
Duke resolution
Rep. Gross introduced a resolution rejecting former Ku Klux Klanman David Duke's candidacy in the April 7 Kansas presidential preference primary. David filed for the primary Monday.
Presidential primary
The Senate, which voted Tuesday to repeal the Kansas presidential preference primary, passed the legislation on to the House of Representatives. The House and the governor must approve the bill for the April 7 primary to be canceled.
American-Indian gaming
Brian McAan, former attorney general of Nevada, told the House Federal and State Affairs Committee he thought the Kansas Supreme Court could rule on whether the governor or the legislature should enter into gambling compacts with American-Indian tribes. Kansas Attorney General Bob Stephan filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Finney and Kansas American-Indian tribes to force Timney to get legislative动于compacts
Washburn University
A bill establishing Washburn University as a state institution was introduced yesterday in the Senate. The bill would place Washburn under control of the Board of Regents, and the state, rather than Topeka residents, would finance the institution.
entitled to an education," Hamlon said. "Despite previous success or failure, all students have the potential to learn. Denying an individual the opportunity to utilize his or her potential is denying an inherent right."
Kay Coles, a representative of the Kansas National Education Association, said all students would not have
"Adding courses to enable each student to have the opportunity to enroll in all of the pre-college preparatory classes being recommended simply is beyond the financial capability of many school districts," she said.
the opportunity to fulfill the standards of the qualified admissions bill.
16 killed when plane hits motel in Indiana
The Associated Press
EVANSVILLE, Ind. — A military transport plane practicing takeoffs and landings plunged into a motel and restaurant yesterday, killing 16 people, authorities and witnesses said. At least 19 were inured.
Burning fuel was sprayed hundreds of feet, sending flames 60 feet into the air and creating a tower of black smoke visible for miles.
"It looked like Pearl Harbor," said Mark Whitehead, who lives nearby and rushed to the scene.
The Lockheed C-130 four-engine turboprop plane crashed into the rear of a JoJo's restaurant and the north side of the Drury Inn motel shortly before 10 a.m. It had just taken off from Evansville Regional Airport, about a mile away, said Sgt J. R. Rhodes, Indiana state police.
Five of the dead were members of the Kentucky Air National Guard's 123rd Tactical Airlift Wing. They were on a pilot proficiency training mission, Guard representative David Altom said.
The cause of the crash was not yet known. A team from Scott Air Force Base in Belleville, Ill., was investigating the crash.
Rick Woods, chief deputy coroner for Vanderburgh County, said that nine people died in the motel and two others were found dead in the restaurant. He said that no additional victims were expected to be found.
Guard representative Altam said the airplane was making touch-and-go
Lake Michigan
Mich.
Gary
Indiana
Indianapolis
Ohio
ncinnati
Military plane crashes into restaurant
Evansville
Ky.
N
0 50 Miles
Map area
Knight-Ridder Tribune
landings, in which a plane touches down and takes off. immediately.
"They did two touch-and-gos. They asked permission for a low approach and were taking off when they fell into the hotel." Altom said.
Fredd Pratt of Bozeman, Mont., said he saw the plane drop.
Yesterday, at least five of the victims were treated at hospitals and released, and 14 people were admitted for burns and smoke inhalation.
University Council rejects resolution limiting abusive speech
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
After heated debate yesterday, University Council rejected a resolution that would have tried to limit the abuse of free speech on campus.
The resolution said that the University of Kansas supported the right of all groups and individuals to free speech except when that speech directly threatened someone with violence or property damage. The resolution also would forbid the use of language that has no moral or social value.
Maggie Childs, head of the committee, said the purpose of the resolution was to stimulate debate on campus about an important national issue.
The Human Relations Committee wrote the resolution, which SenExx
"Our proposal aimed to accomplish two things: to protect free speech as wideb as possible and to protect indi-
digenous from verbal harassment.c Childs said.
She said that the right to free speech was protected but that verbal 'stimulation and harassment of minorities on campus did not deserve the First Amendment protection.
Tim Miller, board member of the Douglas County chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, asked the Council to reject the proposal because it inhibited free speech.
"The proposed policy could open up p
up a new office and should be rejec-
tion." Miller said.
"Although it was well intended, the real effect is going to be inhibited speech," Castro said. "It's bad for democracy and for education when you lose the ability to hear different ideas."
In other business, the Council passed a recommendation from the Human Relations Committee concerning educational programs for members of ROTC. It will be recommended to ROTC that students and faculty in the program attend workshops to address the problem of prejudice against gay, lesbian and bisexual people.
Mike Castro, Plainfield, N.J., law student, spoke to the Council against his resolution.
KU is not alone in consideration of speech policy
"The Human Relations Committee believes that the Department of Defense will change its policy and that preparations for that eventuality should begin now." Childs said in a letter to SenEx.
By Svala Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
The University Council's rejection of a hate speech code for the University of Kansas focuses on a constitutional question that has generated controversy and court challenges at universities nationwide.
Increased racial tensions, the political correctness movement and greater awareness of minority issues have caused universities to consider and to implement codes restricting harassing speech. 11 issues are First Amendment protection.
At issue are First Amendment protections guaranteeing freedom of speech.
Stanford University has a free speech and harassment policy that prohibits harassing speech.
The Stanford code specifies that speech is not acceptable if it intertentally and directly insults
Jennifer Westerlind, associate university counsel at Stanford, said the policy was not passed quietly.
people on the basis of sex, race, color, handicap, religion, sexual orientation or national and ethnic origin.
No case has been tried under the policy, which never has been challenged, she said.
John Overdeck, co-president of the Association of Students of Stanford University, said that the association had urged the university to reconsider the policy but that students were divided on the issue.
"Personally, I don't exactly like the policy." Overdock said. "I don't know why a university
would need to make its own rules concerning this issue."
James Rhatigan, vice president for student affairs at Wichita State University, said regulations did not work to stop hate speech.
None in the Kansas Board of Regents schools have a speech code apart from the federally required harassment policies.
Scott Rutherford, member of the Human Relations Committee and ROTC student said, "It's not looking like ROTC is going to be kicked off campus, so we discussed how to improve the climate on campus with sensitivity training and some interaction."
Francis Heller, professor emeritus of law administration, said the KU resolution was built partially on the idea of "fighting words." He said the idea came from a Supreme Court ruling in the 1930s.
"Fighting words have no other purpose than to precipitate violence," Heller said. "If an expression has any kind of social, intellectual, political or aesthetic value, then it should be allowed."
Members questioned whether the review would look at non-instructional
The Council also discussed a draft document of the review of academic programs mandated by the Board of Regents.
and support programs as well as academic programs. Members also expressed concern that provisions were not made for the burden of time, effort and cost that the review would place on departments.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for
academic affairs, said the review was being revised every day to ease the burden on academic departments
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said methods to review non-instructional programs were being discussed.
2
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, K6045.
Morning fire leaves GSP women in cold
A fire yesterday morning on third floor west at Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall forced residents to evacuate for about two hours, but no one was injured, according to GSP-Corbin residents.
By Shelly Solon
Shannon Beal, resident assistant on the floor, said the first fire alarm went off about 8:30 a.m. in response to a fire in a plastic trash can near the elevator.
Kansan staff writer
Beal said Stacie Siebert, Garden City freshman, and Dana Zachgo, Salina freshman, used a fire extinguisher on the blaze.
"We thought we got it out, but I guess it started up again," Zacho said. "A cleaning lady came up after that and tried to put it out, but it started up
Zachgo said she and Siebert saw the fire and Siebert grabbed the extinguisher
Bealsaidthetwowomenweretested for smoke inhalation but were not injured.
Although the fire department and police did not give an official cause for the fire, Beal said that it apparently was not intentionally set.
"They thought it was probably caused by a cigarette or something like that," she said.
Students returned to the building by about 10.05 a.m, Beal said.
Cara Smith, Shawne freshman and floor president, said most people did not take the alarm seriously at first because there had been so many pranks and false alarms in the past.
"The trash can burned down to about three inches," Smith said. "The alarm caught it quickly, but by the time people got out, the smoke was so thick you couldn't see."
again."
A memorial service for Stephen Goldman, associate professor of English, will be at 3 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Smith said people had to go down the back stairs to leave the building because of the smoke.
The Geography Department Colloquium will meet at 3:30 p.m. today at 317 Lindley Hall. Ghazi Falah will present in "Invisible Aspects of Palestinian Human Geography as Reflected in Israeli Sources."
ON CAMPUS
■ Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
"It still stinks horribly on the floor," she said. "There were no major damages."
The Homeless Awareness Week Committee will sponsor a multi-media presentation and discussion at 7:30 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
The Homeless Awareness Week Committee will sponsor "Habitat for Humanity Workday" from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. The committee will sponsor a soup kitchen supper at 6:15 p.m. Sunday at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
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Investigation continues in Lawrence boy's death
Kansanstaffreport
Lawrence police said they were following more than 25 leads in the investigation of the death of a 23-month-old boy Wednesday.
Police arrived at the 1000 block of East 23rd Street at 9:17 Wednesday morning and the boy was not breathing.
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Bruce has not been formally charged. His first appearance in court is scheduled for 11 a.m.
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6
University Daily Kansan/Friday, February 7, 1992
CAMPUS / AREA
3
Police 'arrest' 50, give bail money to charity
Cancer society hopes to raise $3,500 through fundraiser
BvKatherine Manweiler
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence police officers arrested three staff members at Watkins Memorial Health Center yesterday.
Jody Woods, director of nursing at Watkins, was handcuffed and blowing kisses on her way out the door. Woods chuckled as many members of the Watkins staff gathered to observe the arrest.
She had a parting comment for her daughter, "Judy, go find Mom some money."
But the police officer who arrested Woods was off duty, and the money went to the Douglas County unit of the American Cancer Society.
Woods was a surprise participant in the second annual Jail and Bail fundraiser for the society.
Jim Strobil, Watkins director, went to jail and collected $200.
Candyce Waitley, health educator
at Watkins and American Cancer Society board member, arranged Strobl's surprise arrest. He and the others were taken to a makeshift jail at Lawrence Riverfront Plaza.
Strobli he made nine phone calls and raised $200 for bail in 30 minutes. Jim Boyle, Watkins associate director, raised $110. Bail totals ranged from $100 to $250.
People could volunteer to be arrested or pay $15 to arrange a surprise arrest for a friend. Those arrested could have someone arrested for free.
Patti Stultz Winn, head of the Jail and Bail program for Douglas County, said the society hoped to raise $3,500 from the program. The fund-raiser generated $3000 last year.
Winn said the society arrested about 50 people yesterday who made telephone calls for bail money.
*They call their friends, family members and co-workers," she said.
Several well-known members of the Lawrence community were arrested. Kimberly Matthews, the Baby Jay mascot, was arrested for harassing other birds.
Matthews, Salina junior, said she volunteered to be arrested and spent her lunch hour making telephone calls.
Washburn said off-duty Lawrence police officers volunteered to arrest people.
Jennie Washburn, president of the Douglas County unit of the American Cancer Society, said the money would go directly to the national office of the society before being redistributed to Douglas County.
"Our primary focus is research, and our money is also donated to patient services and education," Washburn said.
C. M. S.
Laurence, KS
"We make sure that they're friendly arrests," she said.
Jody Woods, director of nursing at Watkins Memorial Health Center, prepares to call several friends to raise $200 bail for the American Cancer Society.
Jutie Denesha / KANSAN
Lack of minority faculty members stifles diversity goal
Darren Rennett JKANSAN
Burns Morris, visiting professor of journalism, is one of the University of Kansas' 23 African-American faculty members.
[Photograph of] Ralphael H. Wilson, professor emeritus in the Department of Sociology and Psychology at the University of South Carolina.
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
For many years, the University of Kansas has made cultural diversity a primary goal.
Brower Burchill, associate vice chancel-
affairs, has been at the University for 24 years, and said the University had been working on a more diverse campus since he arrived.
Black History Month
THE LORD OF THE RINGS
But African Americans represent only 2 percent of all faculty 12 percent of all students
Of the 1,163 people with faculty status in 1980, 25 were African-American, and that number dropped to 23 in the fall of 1991.
Burchill said these numbers were not adequate for the culturally diverse campus that the University wants.
"We need a better diversity of faculty," he said. "But it's not an easy goal to achieve."
University officials and faculty members said the University had difficulty compet-
Barbara Ballard, acting dean of student
life, said: "There is a fairly small population of Blacks to choose from in terms of higher education. Industry also competes with them. Money-wise we just can't compete."
Dave Shulenburger, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, agreed that the University could not compete in terms of salary.
"As it is, the University of Kansas salaries are 48 percent off of peer institutions," Shulenburger said, "so in general, we aren't competitive as we can be. If we want to recruit, we have to be a lot better than that."
One recruiting attempt that KUhas made is through an Academic Affairs fund. Departments that are trying to recruit a professor can apply for up to $10,000 from the fund to make the package more appealing. Shulen burger said.
KU administration and faculty also are trying to increase the amount of minority faculty by recruiting more minority students. The plan is to get more students, retain them and encourage them to go on to graduate school and join the faculty.
Faculty members say they are encouraged by the increasing amount of minori-
Bob Sanders director of the minority
graduate teaching assistant program, said he thought the number of minority professors in the work force should start to increase by the year 2000.
Carlos Fleming, Cleveland junior and member of the Black Student Union, said that he respected the University for its efforts but that it had fallen short.
"True integration is trying to make the community equally diverse," Fleming said.
He said the Office of Minority Affairs should have more say in who the University hires.
"We want someone who is more sensitive to minority affairs," he said. "Part of the reason that we want more Black teachers is not to have another body, but to have an
image we can look up to."
Barbara Ballard said she understood students who felt uncomfortable because there were not many African-American professors.
Fleming said minority professors should care about and understand the issues of African-American students.
Ballard said minority faculty members were important as role models because they were people that students could identify with and feel more comfortable with.
"Diverse culture is also important for those other than students," she said. "Faculty and staff benefit as well when they are exposed to different cultures. It's also important to white students. They can benefit from minorities by experiencing new things."
Hoch loss means Boys State will relocate
By Raniit Arab
Kansan staff writer
For the first time in 29 years, the American Legion Boys State will not conduct its leadership program at the University of Kansas.
The loss of Hoch Auditorium was a factor in the decision to move the program to Kansas State University.
Judy Walters, executive secretary for American Legion Boys State, said a committee decided to move the week-long conference because KU could not accommodate a schedule change.
She said the conference was moved from the week of May 31 to the week of June 7 so more students from Wichita and Topeka could attend. The students would have been in school during the originally scheduled week.
"It will be awkward to regroup in Manhattan," she said. "I think Boss State has become associated with Lawrence and KU over the years."
Approximately 800 students are expected to attend the 1992 conference, and the move to K-State may
However, Walters said the decision to relocate was not easy.
affect KU's future enrollment, Walters said.
John Pattinson, KU director of conferences and programs, said the Hoch fire made it difficult to schedule conferences for more than 400 people.
As a result of the Hoch fire, the only auditorium with seating for more than 400 people is Woodruff
"I am sure that KU may lose a few students because of this," she said. "It is very unfortunate."
She said the American Legion would try to move the Boys State program back to KU for 1993.
Auditorium in the Kansas Union, which seats about 500.
Many of the classes that met in Hoch were moved to the Union, making it more difficult to schedule conferences, he said.
Pattinson said smaller conferences had to be relocated to make the auditorium available for larger groups.
"We have basically been trying to shuffle around with what we have left," Pattinson said. "Conferences that last two or three days are much harder to get in."
been relocated on campus but that none had been canceled.
Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing, said the loss of Hoch would affect the number of summer programs at KU.
Stoner said the loss of Hoch caused a domino effect in terms of available space at the University.
He said other conferences had
"The real issue here is that we have lost our flexibility," he said. "If Hoch had been available, we could have rearranged some of those dates and accommodated Boys State."
Jurors hear Morris trial summations
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
Attorneys presented closing arguments in the murder trial of Kenneth L. Morris yesterday, and the jury recessed without delivering a decision after deliberating for about two hours.
Morris, a transient, was charged with the first-degree murder of Lawrence resident Danny Davis in August. Davis was bludgeoned with a golf club Aug. 8 and died at the University of Kansas Medical Center on Aug. 13.
In his closing argument, James Rumsey, Morris' attorney, questioned the reliability of the notes taken during an interview of Morris in Phoenix, where he had been arrested for burglary.
Craig Shanks, Lawrence police detective, took notes during the Aug 17. interview with Morris in which the defendant confessed to the murder.
Rumsey said Shanks had left conversation out of his notes and the 13-page interview transcript because it could have been coercive or intimidating conversation that forced Morris to confess.
Rumsey disputed a forensic serologist's testimony that the stains on Morris' jeans were consistent with test results from Davis' blood.
Also, blood stains found on Morris' jeans could have been his own, Rumsey said.
He said the blood type and enzyme makeup were common to a large percentage of white males and females in the United States. Rumsey also questioned why Morris had not been given a blood test to compare with the blood on the jeans.
No fingerprints found at the crime scene belonged to Morris, according to the testimony of a print identification expert, Rumsey said.
In his closing argument, Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells emphasized Morris' Aug. 17 confession to the murder.
"A confession is the Rolls-Royce of evidence, ladies and gentlemen." he said.
Morris knew details about the morning Davis was beaten, such as where items in the house were situated and what Davis was wearing when he was beaten, Wells said.
Wells spoke about testimony of Joe Whitten, Davis' roommate at 619 Illinois St., who found Davis on his bed in his underwear with several lacerations on the left side of his head. Whitten had said he could see sections of Davis' brain.
Wells said that two doctors from the Med Center also had testified that Davis had five lacerations on his head, his skull was shattered and that his injuries could have been caused by a golf club.
The jury asked that the court reporter re-read to them part of Lawrence police Sgt. Carrol Crossfield's testimony in deliberation. Douglas County district court does not allow jurors to take notes during trials because individual notes could conflict.
The jury will resume deliberation today.
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University Daily Kansan/Friday, February 7,1992
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Rhetoric is all that President offers in State of the Union
Let me recount the latest tale of George Bush, Master Rhetorician.
Listening to Bush give his State of the Union Address the other night, arguably the most listened-to speech of the year, I concluded that the art of effective expression may be dead—or at least retired to some South Florida beach-front condo.
While Bush outlined his plan to "increase the nation's good," I tried to convince myself that Bush was just using a common-sense approach to the nation's current confusing and disturbing problem: the recession. But sometimes Bush spoke more nonsense than common sense.
in long, rambling sentences, often pausing for air and overaerger applause. Bush urged us to "remember what in the dailyness of our lives we forget," that the United States is strong and kind and can kick anybody's but including any 'ol' recession. Of course, I am paraphrasing
What wdoften forget that somebody actually writes this stuff. I wonder if they tailor his speeches toward his bumbling, rambling rhetoric and his folksy attitudes. It is kind of like being a speechwriter for Porky Pig and scripting in the stuttering.
Many parts of the speech reminded me of my high school pep rallies. The cheerleaders or football players that would stand before a bored student body and try to elicit some response. Often, when they could not say something well, they would say it loud: "WE'LL KICK RECESSION HIGH'S BUTT THIS FRIDAY."
Similarly, Bush's rallying cry was, "We are going to lift this nation out of hard times... and those who would stop us better step aside we look at hard times and I make this vow: THIS
KC
Trauer
Guest
columnist
WILL NOT STAND. "
Stirring.
And like high school. Bush still had a whole crowd booting and yapping for him, except for the Democrats who were like the freshmen, always being made fun of.
All through the speech, Bush tried to convey his sincerity with a lot of "from my heart's" and his forcefulness with an occasional "MUST END" or "MUST BESTOPPED." But there was a drought of good metaphors and imagery. When there were some metaphors, they were often awkward and isolated, such as when he off-handedly called inflation "that thief."
There was an occasional gem. "This is a fact: Strength in the pursuit of peace is no vice; isolationism in the pursuit of security is no virtue."
But here is another fact: Clarity at the expense of artful expression is no vice; continuing shallow policies at the expense of the American public is no virtue.
Bush's plan to re-toot tax-withholding policies has been called "gimmickry" by some members of his own party. And if Bush had his way, he would have the American people convinced that tax credits were the cure for cancer.
But as one great rhetorician said, "It is true that you may fool all the people some of the time; you can even fool
some of the people all of the time; but you can't fool all of the people all of the time."
Meanwhile, I think Bush wanted to convey through his address that he was this nation's star quarterback, back from one championship in the Persian Gulf, and after spending a couple of months at Disneyland, ready to fight for another here on the home field.
And while listening to our quarterback's kick-butt rhetoric, I wondered if Bush had a better mastersy over our language than a high school football player, if we might have been inspired for once. That is so rare for politics these days, once the most fertile ground for silver-tongued speakers who sowed into their speeches great words that bloomed into great ideas
Who will ever match up again with someone like Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his first inaugural address:
"Yet our distress comes from no failure of substance. We are stricken by no plague of locusts. .. Plenty is at our doorstep but a generous use of it languages in the very sight of supply. Primarily this is because the rulers of the exchange of mankind's goods have failed through their own stubbornness and their own incompetence, have admitted their failure and have abdicated. .. The moneychangers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. We may now restore that temple to its ancient truths."
George Bush, take your Mickey Mouse rhetoric and go back to the Magic Kingdom.
KC Trauner is a Dodge City junior majoring in journalism.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU parking problem persists
Unfair parking restrictions limit student access to campus lots,
threaten personal safety
The University Council will be considering in the next few weeks a proposal that would cut back student access to the parking area behind Fraser Hall. Under current policy, the area is reserved for faculty from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students are allowed to park in the area without restrictions at any other time. However, the proposal being considered would eliminate student access until 8 p.m. That would be detrimental to student access and student safety.
Clearly, the question isn't about giving every student the right to park on campus. It is about student rights and safety. If the parking area behind Fraser were lost, it would be only one of several recent eliminations of student parking.
Most likely, there are more students driving on campus at night than faculty. What prompts the University and parking services to take student slots away?
It isn't safe, nor fair, to require students who have to drive to campus at night to park as far away as Memorial Stadium. Until campus lighting greatly improves, students
need more parking access on campus. The farther someone has to travel at night, the greater the possibility of an incident. The risk of an accident outweighs any possible benefit of additional faculty parking
Several members of the Student Senate, led by Jason McIntosh and Robert Thompson, have started a petition to address the problems of restricting parking. This action should be applauded for the activism it takes to preserve student rights. Yet, the burden should rest upon every student to take an active part in securing his rights. If students allow their parking spots to be taken away now, it will start a ball rolling that will never stop.
This year, the University reserved 7,182 parking stalls for students, according to the Parking Department. It sold 8,784 parking permits. Overselling student parking and at the same time removing parking spaces is irresponsible of the University. Until students make their voices heard, the University Council, faculty and Parking Department are going to consider student parking spaces fair game. That isn't right and it shouldn't be allowed to happen.
Female condom is good option
Stephen Martino for the editorial board
New contraceptive device has advantages over male condom in the prevention of STDs
The definition of condom is about to change. It is no longer a contraceptive device just for men. There are now condoms for women.
It may seem an unlikely concept, but the condom for women has several advantages compared with condoms for men.
They can be inserted up to two hours before intercourse. They are made with a thicker latex and therefore are more effective in preventing pregnancy and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. The female condom is also less likely to leak or tear.
There are also advantages for men. Supposedly, the condom will not reduce sensation because it has a looser fit than the condom for men.
The condom also gives people one more choice of contraceptive. If people have more choices, they are more likely to find the one that best suits their own needs. We hope that will lead to people using contraceptives more often.
But the most important benefit of the new condom is that it gives women more control. Although there are other birth control options available to women, such as the pill and Norplant, most do not provide protection against STDs. A diaphragm does provide some protection against STDs, but it is not effective unless properly inserted. With the new female condom women no longer have to rely on men to take the initiative.
There is one drawback. Female condoms are expected to cost $2 to $3 each. This could become costly for people who are very sexually active or deter some people from buying the condom.
Maybe the cost will decrease as the condom becomes more widely marketed or the demand increases.
But the advantages of the female condom far outweigh this disadvantage. In a time when AIDS cases have reached epidemic numbers, it is imperative that people have as many choices of contraception as possible. It is simply not enough that women have protection against pregnancy. They must also have protection against STDs. This new condom offers just that.
Amy Francis for the editorial board
International perspectives
**Saudi Gazette**, Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, on the U.N. summit:
Leaders at the U.N. Security Council summit attempted to strengthen the council's role, apparently in order to maintain the post-Cold War statusquo. Commendable aspects of their call were the desires to safeguard peace, to respect human rights and freedoms, and to guarantee the establishment of what Russian president Boris Yeltsin called "legal and moral standards." Despite China's objections, its declaration briefly mentioned the virtues of democracy.
Regardless of the details, most of the nations were willing to buy at face value the call for maintaining world peace. Any nation that swears by this slogan raises the value of its political system because no one has ever dared question the meaning of this byword ...
The trouble is that the Security Council summit will further alienate the United Nations as a free global organization. With the exception of China, four permanent veto-poweres are now aligned and Britain does not favor ... granting
Germany, Japan or any major developing country the same power.
The summit, therefore, did not succeed in giving the U.N. the new image it will need in a changing political atmosphere. The U.N. may be weakened if it becomes an extension of the foreign ministers of the four veto power nations...
The world is slipping back into the days that brought an end to the League of Nations. Post-Cold War Europe is no longer a stable continent. Widespread fear of ethnic bloodshed exists. U.N. attention has been focused on what derogatively used to be called the Third World. But peace may be threatened in other areas.
Gulf Daily News, Manama, Bahrain, on the Bush-Yeltsin meeting;
President Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin's historic first summit ... represents a turning point in the nuclear age.
Perhaps Yeltsin's idea of a global anti-mislea shield is overly ambitious, but at least the two nations are seeking sweeping arms reductions and searching for common ground.
However, the threat of a nuclear holocaust will remain real during the Cold War transition period because some nations are pushing desperately to acquire weapons of mass destruction and the means to deliver them.
Close international vigilance is especially needed to ensure that dangerous materials and technology do not fall into the hands of terrorists or tyrannical leaders.
But certainly the world will be a much safer place when the former Soviet Union arsenal is cut, making the threat of global nuclear war more distant at than any time in the atomic era.
The United States' determination to destroy the existing system in Cuba seems cruel and misplaced. There are many worse countries than Cuba in the world. Indeed, Cuba's social and economic indicators are far superior to many of its Latin American neighbors.
New Vision, Kampala, Uganda, on U.S.
Cuba:
Now that the Cold War is over, why not let
Cuba continue to follow a socialist road without external interference? If it collapses without a trade blockade and sanctions, then it will demonstrate the hopelessness of socialism. If it works, then we will learn that there is more than one way of running a country.
The Guardian, London, on Russias
Russia's ambitious program of economic reform — now a month old and still deprived of Western help — is looking more precarious ...
Two years ago the shock therapy applied to the Polish economy ... eliminated the long queues almost immediately and started to attract more supplies back into the shops, albeit at prices unaffordable to many people. This has not happened on the same scale in Russia.
This is mainly because Russia ... has not been given a "stabilization" program ... to finance essential imports and maintain the value of the ruble. If this doesn't happen quickly, there is a risk that hyperinflation will become endemic. Stabilization is an essential
cornerstone without which the new republics \*could face economic and social disintegration.
Gulf News, Dubai, United Arab Emirates,
on the Non-Alignment Movement meeting
in Cyprus:
The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) is suffering from a "crisis of confidence" due to the disappearance of the global context that gave it a well-defined, even aggressive role. The end of the Cold War has deprived the movement of the familiar no man's land, which suited it admirably, and enabled it to exploit to the fullest the rivalry between the two superpowers ...
For sometime now, the consensus among the member nations is that NAM should shift its focus from politics to economic and social issues. Throughout its existence, NAM looked more often than not as if it had been highjacked by radicals leaning toward Moscow during the Cold War era. But now it has no serious ideological disagreement as to how it should shape its future.
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, newsadviser
Editors
TOMEBLEN
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochelle Dionn
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Meyers
Graphics Jeff Meesey/Aimee Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
Campus sales mgr ... BillLeibengood
Regional sales mgr .. RichHarbargher
National sales mgr .. Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr .. Ame Johnson
Production mgrs .. Kim Wallace
Marketing director .. Lisa Keeler
Creative director .. Leanne Keeler
Classified marr .. Kim Chin
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
**letters** should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. The Kansas姿态 should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 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 newsroom, 111 Stuifer-Flint Hall.
Stick
I WISH YOU'D STOP DRAWING THESE SILLY STICK FIGURES!
HUH?
THEY'RE CRUDE, UGLY,
UNREAL, UNCONVINCING;
I CAN'T RELATE TO
THEM AS INDIVIDUALS.
YOU KNOW YOU'RE
CAPABLE OF
DOING SO
MUCH BETTER!
I THought
I WAS DOING
A DECENT
JOB...
YOU
WOULD!
I WISH YOU'D STOP DRAWING THESE SILLY STICK FIGURES!
HUH?
THEY'RE CRUDE, UGLY, UNREAL, UNCONVINCING; I CAN'T RELATE TO THEM AS INDIVIDUALS.
you KNOW YOU'RE CAPABLE OF DOING SO MUCH BETTER!
I THought I WAS DOING A DECENT JOB...
you WOULD!
you SHOULD BE DRAWING CARTOONS THAT HAVE TASTE, SYMPATHY, DEPTH, OBSERVATION, HUMANITY, ATTENTION TO DETAIL...
I THought I WAS JUST SUPPOSED TO BE FUNNY...
ALL I GOT OUT OF YOUR LAST CARTON WAS A PAPER CUT...
PROMISE ME YOU'LL CONSIDERPUTTING MORE EFFORT INTO YOUR WORK?
WELL...
I'LL THINKABOUTIT.
NOW, IF WE CAN ONLY GET JOAN FINNEY TO PUT LESS EFFORTINTO HER JOB, THISUNIVERSITY'LL BEAGREAL PLACE TOHANG OUT AGAIN...
THEY'RE CRUDE, UGLY,
UNREAL, UNCONVINCING;
I CAN'T RELATE TO
THEM AS INDIVIDUALS.
you KNOW YOU'RE
CAPABLE OF
DOING SO
MUCH BETTER!
I THought
I WAS DOING
A DEGENT
JOB...
you would!
you SHOULD BE DRAWING
CARTOONS THAT HAVE
TASTE, SYMPATHY, DEPTH,
OBSERVATION, HUMANITY,
ATTENTION TO DETAIL...
I Thought
I WAS JUST
SUPPOSED TO
BE FUNNY...
ALL I GOT OUT OF
your LAST CARTOON
WAS A PAPER CUT.
bv David Rosenfield
YOU SHOULD BE DRAWING CARTOONS THAT HAVE TASTE, SYMPATHY, DEPTH, OBSERVATION, HUMANITY, ATTENTION TO DETAIL...
I thought I WAS JUST SUPPOSED TO BE FUNNY...
ALL I GOT OUT OF YOUR LAST CARTOON WAS A PAPER CUT...
PROMISE ME YOU'LL CONSIDER
PUTTING MORE EFFORT INTO
YOUR WORK?
WELL...
I'll THINK
ABOUT IT.
NOW, IF WE CAN
ONLY GET JOAN
FINNEY TO PUT
LOSS EFFORT
INTO HER JOB, THIS
UNIVERSITY'LL BE A
GREAT PLACE TO
HAVE OUT AGAIN...
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 7, 1992
5
Haskell still seeking a KU link
Despite money cuts, teacher education program will start in '93
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
Officials at the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College will continue to build their relationship, and Haskell officials say they will proceed with new programs despite budget cuts.
Officials from the schools met with city leaders to discuss yearly goals at a luncheon at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union
Haskell, a federally-financed college, lost $1.7 million to budget cuts.
But Angelita Felix, dean of instruction at Haskell, said the college's teacher education program was expected to begin in 1993.
"The program is moving along quickly," Felix said. "We're going to have to cheerlead to the federal government to get our money. It's kind of dishearling to build a program and then to have the budget cut like this."
Bob Martin, president of Haskell, said the cuts would require Haskell students to pay more tuition.
"This means that the students would pay about $500 in tuition, " Martin said. "That might hurt our enrollment numbers a little bit. But we still have a
"We are still thinking that our relationship could be improved and strengthened."
Bob Martin President of Haskell
long-range goal to attract 2,000 students by the year 2000."
Martin said Haskell and the University were taking stents to improve their relationship.
we are imaizing a matriculation agreement between Haskell and KU so that Haskell students can easily matriculate to KU," he said. "We are still thinking that our relationship could be improved and strengthened."
Hannes Combes, executive education assistant at Haskell, said a new organization, Friends of
Haskell, had discussed several ways to improve cooperation.
"One of the things we are looking at right now is a faculty exchange," Combesat said. "We may have several staff exchanges as early as fall. We are also looking at transfer credit and conducting cooperative research studies."
She said the group's biggest concern was the transfer of Haskell students to the University.
"Our biggest focus is to get students from Haskell to attend KU with as much ease and as little disruption in their academic studies as possible," Combest said.
She said that more than 50 students from Haskell attended KUlast semester.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that the University had considered creating several Native American studies courses but that budgetary expenses would restrict a full departmental program.
"Budget restrictions at all places keep us from doing a lot of expensive things," Brinkman said. "From the standpoint of both universities, there are a lot of things we could do more."
Martial Arts DEMO
presented by:
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club
At Oliver Hall-Monday Feb. 10
At 7:00pm - EveryoneWelcome-
Self-Defense
Sparring
Board & Concrete
Breaking Featuring: 4th Degree Black Belt-Ed Brunt
10
TAE KWON DO
Apartments
230 Mount Hope Court
Holiday
Directly East of Lawrence Holidome (behind Coastal Mart)
FREE RENT
during February,1992 2 bdr. apts.starting at $385.
*Coming this spring: 3 & 4 bdr. apts.
Convenient to:
- Daycare Center
- On Bus Route
- Food Mart
- Liquor Store
- Laundromat (coming soon!)
Entrance
- West Turnpike Entrance
THOUGHT-PROVOKING!!! PROVOCATIVE!!! HILARIOUS!!! The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts New Directions Series Presents the
For information or tour call 843-0011
Obie-Award Winning Writer Actor Comedian Commentator
SPALDING GRAY
---
Monster in a Box
KU student tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office, Liberty Hall, and the SUA Office, Kansas Union, all seating is general admission; student tickets are only $8, to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3892
[FEBRUARY 24]
Supporters invited by the KU Studi Award Secretary have been awarded the National Science Foundation (NSF) New York Research Foundation (NYRF) Award in lieu of the national Honorary Degree.
Gray's 12th autobiographical monologue, it begins where Swimming to Cambodia left off. Don't miss Gray describing what happened as he tried to complete his first novel and "the dizziness that comes from too much possibility."
"An Evening with Spalding Gray:
Get psyched to see Spalding Gray live!!! The SUA Film Series will present Gray's award-winning
Swimming to Cambodia February 20 (7 p.m., Woodruff Audunton) and February 21 (8 p.m., Hashinger Hall). For more information, call 864-54-HOW.
[FEBRUARY 25]
8:00 P.M. MONDAY & TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24 & 25, 1992 LIBERTY HALL
1/2 Price for 84 Students!!!
FEBRUARY IS KU MONTH AT Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlets
Throughout the month of February, you'll receive an additional 10% savings
BUGLE BOY
OUTLET STORE
WOMENS, MEHS & CHILDREN'S WEAR
GITANO
GITANO FACTORY STORE
off your purchases at all participating outlet stores. Just present a valid KU ID. Since you'll always find great savings to 60% at our outlets, this is a great opportunity to save really big! (And, it's a great place to take your parents when they visit.)
BUGLE BOY • GITANO • BALLARD'S SPORTING GOODS • JONES NEW YORK • CAPEZIO
THE VILLAGER • WESTPORT • BOOK WAREHOUSE • ONEIDA • PERUVIAN CONNECTION
L'EGGES, HANES, BALI • WALLET WORKS • HOUSEWARES • MAIDENFORM
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AMERICAN TOURISTER • PAPER FACTORY • BRYAN CHILDREN'S FASHIONS
TOY LIQUIDATORS • MARK'S PLAZA JEWELERS • DUGOUT SPORTS • BAND JAMS
RIVER CITY GOLF • YE OLDE SUGARSHOP YSEMET • RIVER CITY MARKET
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Mon.-Wed. 10am-7pm; Thurs.-Sat. 10am-9pm; Sun. 12pm-5pm
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Flowers
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(Order early!)
THE FLOWER MARKET
82 Iowa
843-5115
Valentine's Day
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
VOLKSWAGEN
Earn $15 Cash!
The Lawrence Donor Center!
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Noller
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8:00 am - 6:00 pm
Fri 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
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Earn $15 for first plasma donations!
Earn $10 for whole blood donations!
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Save lives!
Enjoy movies or
study while
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LUV-A-Grams Cupid Delliveries Balloon in A Box
Three foot Metallic Heart Balloons Stuffed Animals
Candy Harney Kisses Cuddles-N-Kisses Bouquets
Balloons'n More 609 Vermont 749-0148
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Mountain Bike Tires
We stock all the hot tires!
We stock all the lot tires!
Panaracer Smoke
Tioga Mud Dawg
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Specialized GC
Discounts may not be combined with any other special offers
Franchised Bicycle Dealer for:
CANNONDALE • GIANT • FUJI • FISHER
BRIDGESTONE • TERRY • OFFROAD • KESTREL
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916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642
Fun Time Video
Offers Reward $200 CASH
For information leading to arrest and conviction of person(s) cutting locks to video games in following halls: Oliver Hashinger Ellsworth IRP. McCollum
missing are four S.N.K. game cartridges. These are black, have name of game on them and measure 5"x7"x1/2". Suspect may be resident of Ellsworth Hall. Complete confidence for information.
Call 842-7337 or 842-6729
SNITCH AND BE RICH
6
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 7, 1992
ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT
HAPPENINGS
BARS
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill, 1601 W.23rd St.
Friday: Jack O'Pierce, 10.p.m.-1
10.a.m.; cover charge: 6
Saturday: Pop Poppins, 10.p.m.-1
10.a.m.; cover charge: 6
The Bottleneck
Bogarts of Lawrence
611 Vermont St.
Saturday: Lonesome Hounddogs,
9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.
cover charge: $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Friday: Nic Cosmos/Kents,
10 p.m.-2 a.m.; cover charge: $3
Saturday: Caribe, 10 p.m.-
2 a.m.; cover charge: $3
Monday: Open mike; 9:30 p.m.-
2 a.m.; no cover charge
Wednesday: Fang O'Love,
10 p.m.-2 a.m.
Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St.
The Brass Apple, 3300 W. 15th St.
Tuesday: Karaoke night, p.m.-1
3 a.m.; no cover charge
Wednesday: Karaoke night, 10 p.m.; no cover charge
Flamingo Club, 501 N. Ninth St.
Friday, Saturday: topless
dancers, dnoon-1 a.m.
cover charge: $2 or a two-drink
minimum
Thursday Karaoken night
9 p.m.-2 a.m.; no cover charge
Monday: Poetry Slam, 7p.m.
The Jazzhaus of Lawrence, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Henry T's Bar & Grill, 3520 W Sixth St.
Friday, Saturday: L.A. Rambers;
10 p.m.-1:30 a.m.
cover charge:$3
Wednesday: Brave Combo, 10
p.m.1-30 a.m.; cover charge: $3
Thursday: The Picadors, $1
n.a.m.
1:30 a.m.; cover charge: $3
Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St.
Friday, Saturday: SocialCircle;
9:30 p.m-2 a.m.; cover charge:
$1
The Power Plant, 901 Mississippi St.
Friday, Sunday: alternative musicnight
Riverside Bar and Grill 520 N. Third St
Riverstone Bar and Grim
520 N. Third St.
Friday: NiteCrew
9 p.m.-1 a.m.; cover charge: $2
Saturday: Streets
9 p.m.-1 a.m.; cover charge: $2
Shiloh, 1003 E. 23rd St.
Friday, Saturday; cover rock; 9
p.m.-1 a.m.; cover charge: $3
Saturday; Dance lessons,
7:45-8:45 p.m.
ART EXHIBITIONS
The Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St
Tuesday: Karaoke night
9 p.m.-1 a.m.; no cover charge
Spencer Museum of Art Beyond the Floating World: Japanese Prints in the Twentieth Century runs through March 15
Mexican Retablo Painting:
The Art of Private Devotion
runs through March 8
Documenting the American Dream: FSA Photographs of the Great Depression runs through March 8
THEATER
Lawrence Arts Center
Ninth and Vermont streets
Saturday: 10:30 a.m. & 1:30 p.m.
Sunday: 1:30 p.m. & 3:30 p.m.
"American Tall Tales"
admission: $4
Inge Theater Tuesday, Saturday: "The Blonde"
8 p.m.: $3. students
KU Theater for Young People
Saturday: "Crying to Laugh"
Crafton-Premier Theater
2:30 & 7 p.m.; all tickets: $3
MUSIC
Friday, Saturday: Joshua Bell violin, Crafton-Prayer Theater 8.p.m.; tickets: $8 and $.50
Monday: Winter Concert: Jazz Ensemble I and KU Jazz Singers Crafton-Preyer Theater 7:30 p.m.; tickets: $2 students
The Lawrence Arts Center
200 W. 9th St.
Thursday: "A Celebration of the Life and Work of Langston Hughes";
7:30 p.m.; $5 donation
LITERARY EVENTS
CRAZY FER COUNTRY
0
By Kris Belden
NEDAY A STRANGER WITH A GEE-TAR RODE INTO TOWN.
'Light country' crosses over
Kansan staff writer
A town that until then was full of college students who listened to alternative pop music.
But over the airwaves, the stranger twanged his way into some of the lil' whippersnappers' hearts.
The stranger was country music, and the town could be Lawrence. More and more Americans are listening to "light country" artists like Garth Brooks, and college students are no exception.
"My parents listen to country music, and they said that I'd listen to it when I got older," said Jillene Wahl, College senior. "Sure enough, I do."
Country is everywhere in Lawrence, from jukeboxes at bars to student radio stations. Students are buying more country tapes and compact discs than ever, and some are even learning to dance to country music.
The recent Garth Brooks television special helped attract people to country music because Brooks came across as straightforward and likeable, MacWilliams said. The image country musicians present during interviews and in their music makes the music more appealing, he said.
"A lot of people are fed up with the over-slickness of pop music," said Bob McWilliams, announcer for the KANU "Flint Hills Special" radio show. "The mainstream, over-produced stuff is fairly impersonal. There's not much humanity in it."
Scott MacWilliams, Lawrence senior, runs the KJHK radio show, "Lawnchair Review," which features Cajun, Irish, bluegrass and country music. He said that more people than usual called to request country songs this semester.
Musicians like Brooks attract people who are not or ordinarily country music fans and do not like the twangy sound of most country music, MacWilliams said.
It is this human aspect of country music that attracts some students to country instead of Top 40 music, he said.
Karri Wene, Overland Park junior, said that it was good that country music is becoming more popular but that the kind of country music that is becoming popular had not really become so in its own right.
"It's bad that it has to come back on a more pop-
mic scale." Wene said.
Streetside Records employee Doug Shultz said that he had seen a recent increase in the number of college students buying country music.
Most students buy what Shultz called "light country" music. "Light country" includes music by artists such as Brooks, and does not have the "deep country" sound of artists like Hank Williams, he said.
Shultz said Brooks' recent popularity attracted college students to country music. Brooks has an unprecedented three albums on the country music charts at the same time. At the American Music Awards, Brooks was voted the best male country artist of 1991. His song "The Thunder Rolls" won top country single honors for last year, and his "No Fences" was voted best country album
Randy Travis, Clint Black and George Strait are also considered popular "light country" musicians.
Students sometimes act embarrassed when they buy the albums, Shultz said.
"They sort of apologize for it," Shultz said.
Susie Jauerning, Leavenworth sophomore, said she thought country music no longer had the traditional country sound.
"It's not aswangy as it used to be," she said.
Country music has more meaning than rock music, and the increasing number of younger country musicians makes it easier for college students to identify with it. Jaunergaid is.
Vern Oelschlag, owner of Shiloh, a country-western bar and dance club in Lawrence, said he had seen a sudden increase in college-age students attending the dances
"We've been getting a younger group here," he said.
One country music fan, Amy Stout, Wichita junior, has been going to Shiloh for at least two years.
"All through my school, I thought,
I'm the last person on God's green earth who will like country music," she said. "Never say never."
OOKS
Garth Brooks, shown on a poster above, and other country music artists have become increasingly popular. Many local bars and night clubs play country music as much as they play traditional music.
Plot, script of 'Shining Through' don't sparkle
By Kris Belden
Kansanstaff reviewer
Take a passionate love affair and add to it a World War II spy mission. What sound like ingredients for a fan fiction do not deliver in "Shining Through."
The two plots in "Shining Through" are divided, not intertwined. The first half is comical and deals with the beginning of a relationship between Ed (Michael Douglas) and Linda (Melanie Griffith). The second half of the movie is an action-packed spy thriller. If these two elements would have been combined throughout the movie, it could have been excellent.
Except for Linda, none of the characters are fully developed. The first half of the movie depicts Linda anything but the average woman of the
★★★ Decent entertainment
Ratings:
★ Buy a few beers instead
★ Wait and rent the video
★ Decent entertainment
★ Don't miss it
late 1940s. She is clever, bold and honest. In fact, she is more daring than the woman of the late 1800s Griffith played in the movie "Working Girl." Ed remains a man of mystery throughout the movie.
Along with being underdeveloped, the script is at times very unrealistic.
passport or any border checks. Realistic? No. Especially since Linda and Ed have so many problems leaving Germany at the end of the movie.
When Linda goes to Germany as a spy, armed with a fancy fake-bottomed spy purse, she miraculously rides a train into Germany without a
But the movie is not without some positives. Any movie starring the duo of Griffith and Douglas is not all bad. Despite the underdeveloped plot, both are fantastic in their roles.
and the movie has a realistic and intense post-breakup confrontation. When Ed returns from the war after breaking up with Linda because of their differences concerning the war, the two first talk with a tone of forced civility. But as their anger increases, they squabble and cry.
"Shining Through" has great actors and a great scenario. But the underdeveloped plot and the poorly written script prevents the movie from being one of the season's blockbusters.
Billboard magazine sez:
TOP TWENTY ALBUMS
1. "Ropin' the Wind," *Garth Brooks*
2. "Nevermind," *Nirvana*
3. "No Fences," *Garth Brooks*
4. "Dangerous," *Michael Jackson*
5. "Cooleyhigharmony," *Boyz II Men*
- "C.M.B.." Color Me Badd
6. "C.M.B.," Color Me Badd
7. "Too Legit to Quit," Hammer
8. "Time, Love and Tenderness," Michael Bolton
9. "Achtung Baby," U2
10. "Metallica," Metallica
11. "Diamonds & Pearls" Pt.
11. Diamonds & Pearls, Prince
12. "Unforgettable," Natalie Cole
13. "Emotions," Mariah Carey
14. "We Can't Dance." Genesis
15. "Luck of the Draw," Bonnie Raitt
16. "Use Your Illusion I," Guns N' Roses
17. "Garth Brooks," Garth Brooks
18. "Use Your Illusion II," Guns N' Roses
19. "Waking Up the Neighbors," Bryan Adams
20. "It Only Hurts When I Cry," Dwight Yoakam
TOP TWENTY SINGLES
1. "I'm Too Sexy," Right Said Fred
2. "I Love Your Smile," Shanice
2. Blow Your Mind, Balance
3. "Diamonds & Pearls," Prince
and the N.P.G.
4. "Don't Let the sun Go Down on Me," George Michael e elton John.
5. "To Be With You," Mr. Big
6. "All Love, Color Me Badd"
7. "Tell Me What You Want Me To Do."
8. "Tevin Campbell"
8. "Remember the Time," Michael Jackson
9. "Smells Like Teen Spirit," Nirvana
10. "Can't Let Go," Mariah Carey
11. "Finally," CeCe Peniston
12. "Mysterious Ways," U2
13. "The Way I Feel About You," Karvn White
14. "Good For Me," Amy Grant
15. "Zleget 2 Quat, Hammer"
16. "Vibeology," Paula Abdul
18. Vineology, Mike Abun
19. "Keep It Comin.", Keith Sweat
17. "Keep It Comin," Keith Sweat
18. "I Can't Make You Love Me,"
Bonnie Raitt
19. "Masterpiece," Atlantic Starr
20. "Black or White," Michael Jackson
The Associated Press
MTV is here to stay, cable company learns the hard way
The cable television company that dropped MTV for a pay-per-view music video channel is learning to its craft, like MTV, rock 'n' roll, is here to stay.
Dallas-based Sammons Communications Inc., with about 50 cable systems in 19 states and 920,000 subscribers overall, on Jan. 1 dropped MTV from its systems serving Johnson City, Tenn.; Bensalem, Pa.; and Vineland, N.J.
The cut affected about 109,000 households. At the same time, Sammons hooked up the Video Jukebox Network, a Miami-based music video service which uses a 900-number call in system and charges up to $2.50 for each viewer request.
This was a Very Bad Idea, even though it made business sense. Instead of paying MTV for its service, say about 20 cents a subscriber, the cable system would actually receive a share of the jukebox earnings.
Good business, bad public relations: Viewers' reactions were instantaneous, vocal and outraged.
Grass-roots groups sprang up overnight, sponsoring call-in protests, rallies, petition drives, cable office picketing and other political ructions.
In Vineland and Bucks County, the Viewers Voice for MTV urged a boycott of movie and sports TV channels. It even pressured a local government to table Sammons system's license application until the issue was resolved.
Sen. Albert Gore Jr., D-Tenn., visited the T-Cities (Johnson City, Kingsport and Elizabethton) drumming up local support for a cable regulation bill that whizzed through the Senate last week, 73-18.
MTV, meanwhile, is trying to put the best face on things.
"Obviously, cable operators pay license fees to their valuable services, to ESPN and CNN and MTV," said Marshall Cohen, senior vice president for research and strategic planning at MTV Networks, the music channel's
parent.
"And MTV is certainly one of the most valuable services that a cable operator has to offer, especially when you consider the demographics of the 18-to 34-year-old, the 12 to 34," Cohen said.
Those are the homes that are the biggest subscribers to cable, Cohen said. "In the younger demographics, cable today is viewed almost as a necessity."
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 7, 1992
NATION/WORLD
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFS
Kansas City, Mo.
IRS may have made $40 million goof
The Internal Revenue Service said that it mistakenly told more than 36,000 taxpayers filing electronic returns across the nation that they would be getting refunds.
Many of those people already may have borrowed money against the refunds, and an accounting firm says banks could stand to lose $40 million.
James T. Manuszk, an IRS representative in Wichita, said the computer glitch was a nationwide problem with Microsoft's server system.
Janice Lawrence, a representative with an IRS office for Kansas in Wichita, said the error was caused by a now-unknown software problem.
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Blast at bus depot injures one person
An explosion in a Belfast bus depot injured one person yesterday, continuing a spiral of political and sectarian violence that has claimed 27 lives this year.
Twelve people have been killed since Sunday, and political and religious leaders said there was a new climate of fear and hopelessness in both the Protestant and Roman
Catholic communities.
Police said the blast yesterday occurred when a device exploded in the main bus depot in north Belfast. ...
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
There's a wash in chance and a day later Protestant extremists opened fire in a crowded Belfast betting shop, killing five persons and wounding seven.
Madrid, Spain
Separatists blow up military minibus
A car bomb thought to be planted by Basque separatists destroyed a passing military minibus yesterday, killing its five occupants and wounding seven people on the street and in nearby buildings.
Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez angrily condemned the attack, illustrating the inability of the government to stop terrorist attacks by Basque militants despite a recent crackdown.
The blast came several days after reports that the separatist group ETA, an acronym for Basque Liberty and Homeland, was preparing to stop attacks for several months to promote negotiations. Gonzalez repeatedly has insisted that the attackers lay down their arms for good before talks begin between the government and ETA.
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Microsoft Word 5.0
Come see the latest and greatest in Macintosh word processors, Microsoft Word 5.0 demonstrated by Microsoft Corporation.
On Tuesday, February 11th, Jan Bodeux from Microsoft, in conjunction with MacSource, will demonstrate Microsoft Word 5.0 at 9:30 A.M. and again at 1:30 P.M. in the Academic Computer Center Auditorium on the University of Kansas Campus.
Special One Time Offer
Free competitive upgrade coupons to Word 5.0 for $99 $22
Must attend to be eligible. One coupon per person. Academic version only.)
Microsoft WORD
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The best support team for the Apple Macintosh*. Anycheer.
For additional information, call 749-4554
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HOMELESS AWARENESS WEEK
[February 3-9]
SOUP KITCHEN SUPPER
TAKERS
MARY K. MEYER
Director Shalom Catholic Worker House K.C., Kansas
LOCAL HOMELESS PEOPLE
sharing their stories and situations.
HOMELESS
AWARENESS
WEEK
[FEBRIARY 3-9]
SOUP KITCHEN SUPPER
TAKERS
MARY K. MEYER,
Director Shalom Catholic Worker House K.C., Kansas
LOCAL HOMELESS PEOPLE
sharing their stories and situations.
6:15 PM
DEPT OF ST. LAWRENCE
CATHOLIC CAMPUS CENTER,
1831 Crescent Rd.
SUNDAY, FEB. 9
The community dinner of soup and bread will bring and end to the events of Homeless Awareness Week. The cost is $3.00 per person and the proceeds will go to the Salvation Army Shelters and the Shalom Catholic Worker House and Homeless Shelters.
6:15 PM
INVITATION OF ST. LAWRENCE
CATHOLIC CAMPUS CENTER,
1631 CRESCENT RD.
SUNDAY, FEB. 9
Sponsored by Saint Lawrence Celtic Center, ECM, KU Students Against Hunger Habitat for Humanity, The Lawrence/ Douglas County Coalition for the Homeless
8
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 7, 1992
OLYMPICS GUIDE
winter olympics
Room with a view
Each room in the Olympic village accommodates two athletes.
Balcony Kitchenette Living area Television: Picks up four th international signals.
Albertville'92 World comes together in the French Alps
Skiers, skaters and sledders from 63 countries will test their mettle seeking gold in Albertville beginning Saturday. This will be the last time the Winter Games will run the same year as the Summer Olympics. Winter athletes will meet again in two years in Lillehammer, Norway.
C
Magique
the Olympic mascot
Third time's a charm
■ Albertville is the third town in the French Alps to host an Olympics. The others were Chamonix in 1924 (first Winter Olympics) and Grenoble in 1968.
COFFEE TREE
More than two million meals will be served at the Games.
20 tons of steaks
26 tons of cheese
800,000 rolls
12,000 loaves of French bread a day
Let the Games begin: Schedule of TV events
(Lawrence time)
CBS will broadcast the Games with additional coverage by TNT; TWT will set a more specific schedule as the Games unfold. CBS will have a wrap-up show each night from 10:30-11: Television schedule times, which are subject to change, are for CBS except
M=Men's event; W=Women's event; UT=Unified Team of former Soviet republics
Saturday, Feb. 8
3-5 p.m. Hockey, alpine skiing (M, downhill practice); ski jumping practice.
Sunday, Feb. 9
8-11 a.m. ; Cross-country skiing (W, 15k), freestyle skiing (M& W, ballet preliminers); hug (M, singles heats); hockey (W, 15m); Luge (M, singles heats); hockey (ius vs. U.S., live); ski jumping (Normal hill); speed skating (M, 3,000m)
7-10 p.m.; Alpine skiing (M, downhill); figure skating (Pairs short program)
Monday. Feb. 10
6-8 a.m. : Hockey (UT vs. Norway, live); Alpine skiing (M,
combined downhill), cross country (M, 30k), luge (M,
singles finals); speed skating (W, 500m preview).
11-11:30 a.m.: Highlights, features and previews
**How they're made:**
Handcrafted of colorless crystal set in bronze, silver and gold. Artists have engraved back of medal with decorative motif symbolizing mountain, along with five Olympic rings in foreground. A laurel branch is at top, with "XVI Olympic Games" in French and English at bottom.
**Number awarded:** 330
6-8 a.m.: Alpine skiing (M, combined skating, live); bathonth (W, 7.5 km, lifesaving) (Finnland vs. Poland, live).
Alpine skiing features and scenes on tapes.
Noon-S.p.m. on TNT: Bathonth, figure skating, hockey, luge,
Alpine skiing, speed skating
7-10 p.m.: Alpine skiing (M, combined skating); figure skating
(pairs long jump), program skiing (U.S. vs. Germany highlights);
ugle skiing (Germany).
11-11: 30 a.m. : Highlights, features and previews
Noon-5 p.m. on TNT: Cross-country skating, figure skating,
Alpine skiing, ski jumping, speed skating
7-10 p.m. on NBC: Speed skating (M), luge (M),
finals, finales, speed skating (W, 500m)
Tuesday, Feb. 11
8-6 a.m. Alpine skiing (w, combined downhill), białystok
(M10;) hockey (Norway, Canada, Alaska). Nordic combined
(M20;) skiing (Norway, Canada, Alaska).
(cross country skiing, 15k, live)
11-11-30 a.m.: Highlights, features and previews.
Noon-5 p.m. on TNT: Blutton, figure skating, hockey, luge,
Alpine skiing (M, combined downhill), freestyle skiing
7-10 p.m.: Alpine skiing (W, combined downhill), freestyle skiing
(M& W, moguls preliminaries); luge (W, singles, final heats); speed skiing
(W, 1,500)
Wednesday, Feb. 12
Olympic Games
Heavy medals
Thursday, Feb. 13
6-8 a.m. Alpine skiing (W, combined slalom, live); cross-country skiing (W, skis, live); figure skating (M, short program preview); hockey (Poland vs. Italy, live). Speed skating (M, 5,000 m, live).
10-13 a.m. Highlights; highlights and previews.
Noon-5 p.m. Alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, figure skating, hockey, lage, Alpine skiing, speed skating.
7-10 p.m. Alpine skiing (W, combined slalom), figure skating (M, short program); freestyle skiing (M, W& moguls finals); hockey (U.S. vs. Finland highlights).
Friday, Feb. 14
6-8 a.m.: Białtown (W, 3x7.5k relay), figure skating (lee dancing preview); hockey (UT vs France, live); lugge (M, doubles, final heats); ski jumping (team, large hill, live).
11-11:30 a.m.: Highlights, features and previews.
Noon-5 p.m.: on TNT: Białtown, figure skating, hockey, lugge, Alpine skiing, speed skating.
7-10 p.m.: Figure skating (lee dancing compulsories); ski jumping (Team, large hill); speed skating (W, 1,000m).
Creators: Lalique, French glassmakers
Saturday, Feb. 15
Noon-5 p.m.: Bobslied (Two-man bath), cross-country skiing (M. 15k, W. 10k) freeskiing (M.W. hears, preliminaries); hockey (M.
6-10 p.m.: Alpine skating (W, downhill); figure skating (M, long program); speed skating (M, 500m).
Sunday, Feb. 16
8-11 a.m.: Bathmat (M, 475 sk relay), hockey (Czechoslovakia,
vs. Switzerland, live), speedskating (M, 1,500m, live).
2-30:5 p.m.: Freestyle skiing (M&W, a wortals finals), hockey
(Canada vs. UT, live), speed skating (M, 1,500m)
Alpine skiing (M, Super G), bobsled (Two-man, final
heats), Alpine skiing (Ice dancing, original program), ski jumping
(large hill)
Monday. Feb. 17
6-8 a.m.: Alpine skiing (W, Super G, live); figure skating (preview of ice dancing froes); hockey (Germany vs. Poland, live); Nordic combined (team/ski jumping, normal hill, live)
Noon-5 p.m.: Cross-country skiing (W, 5k4 relay), hockey (Sweden vs. U.S., live), speed skating (W, 5,000m)
7-10 p.m.: Figure skating (ice dancing, free dance program);
hockey (highlights and preview of medal round); Nordic combined (team/ski jumping, normal hill)
Tuesday. Feb. 18
6-8 a.m.: Alpine skiing (M, giant slalom, live); short-track speed skating (M&W heats); speed skiing (M&W group 1, live).
11-11:30 a.m.: Highlights, features and previews
Noon-5 p.m. on TNC: Cross-country skiing, curling, figure skating, hockey, alpine skiing, speed skating.
10-10 p.m.: Alpine skiing (M, giant slalom), hockey (quarterfinal highlights); speed skating (M, 1,000m), short-track speed skating (M&W heats), speed skiing
Wednesday, Feb. 19
8-6 a:m. Alpine skiing (W, gant glacial, live); biathlon (W, 15k,
live); figure skating (preview of women's short program); speed
skiing (W, 15k).
11-11:30 a.m.: Highlights, features and previews.
Noon-5 p.m. on TNT: Biathlon, curling, figure skating, hockey,
Alpine skiing, speed skating
7/10 p.m. : Alpine skating (w, glant slalom); figure skating (W, short program); hockey (quarterfinals final).
Thursday, Feb. 20
6-8 m. a.m.: Alpine skiing (W, slalom, live); short-track speed skating (W, and 3,000 m.) relay; speed skating (M, 10,000 m.).
0 0 a m! Highlights, features and previews
Noon-5 skating, curling, figure skating, hockey
Alpine skiing, speed skating
7-10 p.m.: Alpine skiing (W, slalom), biathlon (M, 20k);
short-track speed skating (M, 1,000m and W, 3,000m relay); speed
skating (M, 10,000m); figure skating (preview of women's long
program).
Fridav. Feb. 21
6-8 a.m.: Loss-country skating (w. 30k), figure skating (preview of women's long program), speed sking (W.M semifinals, live)
9-11 a.m.: Cross-country skiing, Noon 5-p.m. on TNt. Blatton, curling, cross-country skiing, bobled, figure skating, Hairy, alpine skiing, speed skating
7-10 p.m.: Bobled (4-man hats), figure skating (W, long program); bobsley (semifinal highlights).
Noon-5 p.m. ; Hockey (bronze medal game, live); short-track
Noon-5 p.m. (W 500m, and M 500m relay, live); speed skiing
6-10 p.m.: Alpine skiing (M, slalom), bobsled (4-man, final heats);
p.m.: figure skating (exhibitions).
Saturday, Feb. 22
3:30-5 p.m.: Alpine skiing (exhibitions), hockey tournament
(recap)
Sunday, Feb. 23
7-10 p.m.: Closing ceremonies and wrap up.
Security personnel:
OOO
Security blanket
Security will cost France $31 million
2,650 gendarmes, 1,950 regular police, 1,270 firefighters, 2,060 military troops, medical and
nurse.
**Security duties:** Guard against terrorist attacks, guard athletes and families, patrol Olympic villages, control highway traffic, patrol areas, ensure electricity and telecommunication facilities
Passing the torch
Who: Human relay consists of 5,000 young people ages 15-20.
Relay began Dec. 14 in Paris, Torch is carried through 2,000 trees and villages over 5,000k, and will arrive in Albertville on Saturday.
sims of
5-20
**How:** Runners averaging 10k an hour transport torch average of 90k a day.
Paris
FRANCE
Albertville
0 200
Miles
Chicago Tribune Stephen Ravenscraft, Vassai Omer D. Don Sina Jule Sheer, Denish Dumon, Steve Little, Stephen Wennerds, Rick Z. Riese and Tracy Human
ARTISTS Stephen Ravscenski, Vassin Oner D., Don Sena, Jules Siebe, Dennis Odone, Steve Little, Steve Crevengs, Rick Tuna, Nancy L. Reze, Tracy Merman
SOURCE: Chicago Tribune, Alberville Olympic Organizing Committee, news reports
Edited by Jeff Meesey,
Daily Kansan
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CONGRATULATIONS TO ALPHA XI DELTA FROM SIGMA DELTA TAU!
The Women of Sigma Delta Tau would like to welcome the new members of Alpha Xi Delta.
University Daily Kansan / Friday. February 7. 1992
9
AP chief will get journalism award
Kansan staff report
Louis Boccardi will receive the William Allen White Award for Journalistic Merit today at the Kansas Union.
Boccardi is the president and chief executive officer of The Associated Press. He is in charge of a staff of 3,200 employees.
John Ginn, Knight professor of journalism, said that he had known Boccardi for many years and that Boccardi was an excellent choice for the award.
"He manages the largest news gathering agency in the nation and has done so with distinction," Ginn said. "He's a very warm, sincere man who is very intelligent and cares a great deal about the values of journalism."
Yesterday Boccardi answered questions from students and faculty
about a variety of topics concerning journalists.
Boccardi discussed the role AP played in the release of former hostage Terrv Anderson.
Anderson an AP correspondent in their rent when he was taken hostage in 1985.
Boccardi said that the hostage situation had made him more aware of how perilous it could be to work as a foreign correspondent, although there was not a shortage of people who wanted to work abroad.
"It can be dangerous in parts of the world, but we have to be there," he said.
Boccardi said he tried to separate his role as Anderson's boss from his journalistic self.
"I didn't know what else to do," he said. "He was my man. Who else was
Anderson's release lifted a burden off the AP. Boccard said.
going to work for him? "
He said he would never be able to talk about most of the things that he and others did to help release Anderson.
"The time to get that fixed was not in the heat of the battle," he said.
Boccardi said that advanced equipment had improved the quickness of news gathering.
He said the AP was trying to get a better set of ground rules from the Pentagon concerning the handling of press during future wars.
Boccardi said the Persian Gulf War received the worst firsthand coverage of a war he had seen.
Sometimes it is easy to get caught up in the equipment, he said, but equipment is just a tool.
JOSÉ SALVADO DEL CABOT
Louis D. Boccardi
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Congratulations,
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Love,
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
Hey Students!!!
He's Brilliant!
Talented!
Stunning! A Real
Super-Star!
JOSHUA
P
8:00 p.m. Friday, February 7, 1992
At his age (24), most people are trying to decide what they want to be when they grow up...he's already a regular guest on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show playing a Stradivari "fiddle" made in 1732.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
with Andrew De Grado, Piano
Student tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved; KU student tickets are only $8 & $6.50; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activism Fee, Swearback Society, and the Kansas University Endowment Association.
From the Hollywood Bowl to the White House, Joshua Bell captures audiences everywhere!
Don't miss the pre-performance lecture/demonstration with Mr. Bell and Daniel Politoske, KU professor of music history, at 6:45 p.m. in 328 Murphy Hall.
1/2 Price for KU Students!!!
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We buy recycled clothing
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AZIZON & TRADING CO.
734 Massachusetts
749-2337
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50 more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9-5:30
Attention!! May'92 Graduates
KU
DONATION FOUNDATION
KS Union
864-6460
Order your graduation announcements on the following dates:
February 17th, 18th and 19th
February 17th, 18th and 19th
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Orders must be prepaid
Visa, Mastercard, Discover &
American Express Accepted
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
KU
INDUSTRIES
Burge Union
864-4640
TUTORING WORKSHOP
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1992
PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION
9:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M.
(Can bring a sack lunch)
There will be a sign-up table on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union on February 5,6, or 7
or Call Matt Todd at 842-0706
sponsored by Students Tutoring for Literacy
With a Valentine Personal in the University Daily Kansan
CUPID
MAKE YOUR VALENTINE LAUGH!
Dear Valentine,
Are your legs tired?...'cuz you've been running through my mind all day!!!
--Brian W.
CD
How? Come by the Kansan business office to place your ad before 5 p.m.- Monday February 10.
We'll even send that"someone special"a postcard telling him/her to watch for a message from you in the Kansan!
The University Daily Kansan 119Stauffer-Flint 864-4358
HURRY!!!! only 3 days left!!!
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I
"and God bless Uncle Charlie and fluffy hamster, and could I please have a really cool Nivana poster?
It's kind of you to remember fluffy hamster, but you can find all the cool posters you need at the Love Garden.
and they just got a bunch in--Nirvana, Teenage Fanclub, and more!!
UPSTAIRS
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936 1/2 Mass. St.
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Tyson's accuser said he was rich and dumb, witness says
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — The beauty pageant contester who accuses Mike Tyson of rape she wanted to go out with him because he was rich and dumb, another contestant testified in the boxer's trial yesterday.
"You see what Robin Givens got out of him?" *Madelyn Whittington recalled the woman as saving.*
The former heavyweight boxing champion divorced actress Givens after a stormy eight-month marriage in 1988.
"She told me Mike Tyson had asked her out, and I said, 'Are you going?' And she said, very excited, 'Yes, of course! This is Mike Tyson. He's got a lot of money. He's dumb,'" Whittington told the court.
Tyson's trial resumed after a one-day interruption caused by a fatal fire at the hotel where the jury was sequestered.
Superior Court Judge Patricia J. Gifford excused one juror from service, citing his state of mind, and replaced him with an alternate.
The fire killed two firefighters and one elderly guest and injured 12 others. The 15 jurors escaped unharmed.
Federal investigators helped investigate the cause of the fire.
"All the preliminary indications are, this was not arson," Prosecutor Jeffrey Modisett said.
"I'm not implying we have any evidence at this time of wrong-doing, but I do think it is important for the people of this community and the families of the victims to know that no stone was left unturned," Modiise said.
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SPORTS
'Hawks, Cowboys in shooting match
Stillwater fight may determine top spots
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior point guard Adonis Jordan missed a team bus to the Jayhawks' game at Oklahoma State last season.
Asaresult, Jordan was left behind in Lawrence and did not play in the game.
But despite his absence, the 'Hawks took the Cowboys into overtime at Galagher-Iba Arena before falling 78-73. The Jayhaws had a chance to win when guard Sean Tunstall missed two free throws at the end of regulation.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said the Jayhawks were in a good situation last season even though Jordan did not play.
"I wouldn't mind being on the free throw line with a two-shot foul with 2 seconds left," Williams said of tomorrow's game with No.2 Oklahoma State. "If you could guarantee me that, I leave his butt home again."
However, the Jayhawks probably will need Jordan against the 20-1 Cowboys, who lost their first game of the game on Wednesday night at Nebraska 85-69.
No.1.ranked Duke also last Wednesday night to No. 9 North Carolina.
meaning that a victory tomorrow likely would vault the No. 3 Jawhays to the top of The Associated Press rankings. A victory also would give the Jawhaws a two-game lead over the Cowboys and Missouri in the Big Eight conference race
Beating Oklahoma State at home is a formidable task, however. The Cowboys are 24-1 in the last two seasons at Gallerah-Iba.
Kansas likely will be concentrating on stopping senior forward and All-American candidate Byron Houston, but the Jayhaws also must face a three-guard line of seniors Sean Sutton, Corey Williams and Darwyn Alexander, a trio arguing a combined 32.4 points a game.
Coach Williams said he would not change Kansas' starting lineup despite potential matchup problems for the Jayhawks, and added that he thought the Kansas offense could cause problems defensively for the three guards.
"With the three-guard lineup, it does present some problems, but it also presents some problems on their end," he said.
"I don't think Corey, Sean and Darwyn are laying at night and thinking about how easy it's going to be to guard
Alonzo (Kansas forward Alonzo Jamison).
"Hopefully, we can turn that into our advantage and hide some of the problems it causes us."
Because the Cowboys have only two players — Houston and 7-foot center Bryant Reeves — taller than 6-2 in their starting lineup, it is important for the Jayhawks to be able score inside. Williams said.
"We are going to try to go inside and score and get some fouls," he said.
Kansas will have to play to a rowdy Oklahoma State crowd within the confines of Gallagher-Iba, which resembles a high school gym more than a modern college basketball arena.
"We'll just have to concentrate on what's going on on the court and on our bench and block out the crowd," Williams said.
Kansas guard Rex Walters, who leads the Jayhawks with 16 points a game, said after Kansas' victory at Oklahoma on Saturday that he thought the Jayhawks would do well against the Cowboys.
"We can beat anyone in the country if we play like we're supposed to," Walters said. "If we do the things the coach ask, we're going to win."
Kansas Basketball Game 19
(3) KANSAS JAYHAWKS Coach: Roy Williams Record: 17-1, (5-0)
VS.
(2) OKLAHOMA STATE
Coach: Eddie Sutton Record: 20-1, (4-1)
Game time: 3:09 p.m. tomorrow at Gallagher-Iba Arena in Stillwater, Okla.
Probable Starters
Player Ht. PPG RPG
24-F Alonzo Jamison 6-6 11.2 4.6
34-F Richard Scott 6-7 10.8 4.6
51-C Eric Pauley 6-10 8.5 3.0
23-G Rex Walters 6-4 16.0 3.0
30-G Adomis Jordan 5-11 13.4 3.6
Player Ht. PPG RPG
35-F Byron Houston 6-7 21.5 8.8
50-C Bryant Reeves 7-0 7.9 4.7
5-G Corey Williams 6-2 11.2 3.8
14-G Darwyn Alexander 6-0 10.5 2.7
20-G Sean Sutton 6-1 10.7 3.0
**Game notes:** ■ Kansas leads the all-time series 81-43, including a 28-24 series advantage in Stillwater. ■ Kansas coach Roy Williams is on the coaches' board for the NCAA tournament selection committee. Williams will send a list of the top 15 teams from the Midwest region to the committee on Feb. 15. During the last three games, Jamison has made 19 of 24 field goals attempts, for 79.2 percent. ■ In Kansas' six-game victory streak, Jordan has averaged 5.3 rebounds per game. ■ Tomorrow's game will be televised on Raycom, Channels 9 and 13 in Lawrence, and it will be broadcast on KLZR radio 105.9.
Source: Kansas Sports Network
Kansas signs 23 football recruits
Mayhawks
KANSAS
Bv Jerrv Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
Almee Brainard, Daily Kansan
Kansas football coach Glen Mason said just five short years ago that he could not get the attention of high school football players in Kansas. Now, some of the best players the state has to offer will be Javahawks.
Kansas announced yesterday at a news conference the signing of 23 recruits, including 20 high school students, two junior college students and one transfer student.
read football coach Glen Mason, left, and recruiting coordinator R.D. Helt speak about the 1992 Kansas football signees.
"I'm proud of this group," Mason said of the in-state players, "because five years ago the likes of these guys wouldn't visit the University of Kansas. I know, because I went and knocked on their door and they slammed it in my face. And now we're very successful in our recruiting efforts."
Marnse Dietrich/KANSAN
Mason and his staff signed 11 players from Kansas, including eight high school seniors who were selected to play in the Kansas Shrine Bowl. Also signing were two players from Kansas junior colleges and a native Kansan transferring from Georgia.
The list of in-state signees is highlighted by Parade All-American Jim Moore, who was a tight end at Garden City High School in Garden City. Another top Kansas prospect is Brian Schottenheimer, a quarterback from Blue Valley High School. Schottenheimer, son of Kansas City Chiefs head coach Marty Schottenheimer, passed for over 2,500 yards in two seasons.
The list of out-of-state recruits signed by Kansas includes the Missouri Player of the Year. Ronnie Ward, an outside linebacker from Hazelwood East High School in St. Louis, picked Kansas over Illinois. Ward was honored as the Gatorate Player of the Year in Missouri and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch ranked Ward as the No.1 player in the St. Louis area.
"I feel very fortunate to get him," Mason said. "We were in a fierce recruiting battle with the University of Illinois to get him."
The Jayhawk recruits include four wide receivers, seven interior lineman and four defensive backs. Mason said these were areas where Kansas needed help.
The list also includes the brother of former Kansas defensive back Paul Friday. Hosea Friday of Detroit's Chandler High School was a wide receiver.
"Overall I'm pleased with this recruiting class," he said. "I think we
"Paul went through our program in some very tough times." Mason said. "Paul and his family felt that things are going the right way at the University of Kansas. That's why Hosea decided to come here."
have some outstanding players."
Mason said at the press conference that not all of Kansas' recruits had met NCAA academic requirements vet.
One of the speedier recruits is receiver Andre Carter of Chamberlain HighSchool in Tampa, Fla. Chamberlain coach Billy Turner said the 5-foot-11, 155-pound Carter could bench press 250 pounds and run the 40-yard dash in 4.46 seconds.
Mason said he was a little conservative when the recruiting process started in the fall, thinking he would only be able sign 15 to 18 players. Under NCAA regulations, teams can have only 92 scholarship players at one time.
"He's very fast, but thin," Turner said. "Andre's not impressive when you see him. He's got skinny legs, but that's deceiving. He reminds me of Anthony Carter."
Anthony Carter, no relation to Andre, is a receiver for the Minnesota Vikings and former Michigan star.
Turner said Carter skipped a recruiting visit to the University of Miami after visiting Kansas about three weeks ago.
"He came back and said that's where he's going," Turner said. "He didn't even go to Miami. I think Coach (Pat) Ruel made a bier difference."
Ruel, the Kansas offensive coordinator, is responsible for recruiting in Florida.
Capricious Clippers land wayward Brown
Name Position Height Weight Hometown
Mike Arban OL 6-6 290 Calumet City, Ill.
Dorian Brew WR 5-11 170 Florissant, Mo.
Jason Brown DL 6-4 220 Stanley
Kiley Brown WR 6-2 200 Dallas
Andre Carter WR 5-11 155 Tampa, Fla.
Charles Davis DB 6-0 185 Tampa, Fla.
Hosea Friday WR 6-1 180 Detroit
Bob Goltra OL 6-6 255 Fort Scott
Devin Grant LB 6-5 210 Detroit
Chad Hayes OL 6-5 250 Atwood
Chris Jones DB 6-4 195 Newton
Kwamie Lassiter DB 6-1 185 Newport News, Va.
L.T. Levine RB 6-0 195 Colonia, N.J.
Johnny Mattress QB 6-0 215 Cincinnati
Jim Moore TE 6-3 225 Garden City
Keith Rodgers DB 6-1 187 Lenexa
Mark Sanders RB 6-1 200 St. Petersburg, Fla.
Brian Schottenheimer QB 6-2 185 Leawood
Jared Smith OL 6-3 235 Pittsburg
Mike Steele DL 6-4 275 Wichita
Ronnie Ward OLB 6-2 215 St. Louis
Scott Whittaker OL 6-6 300 Alta Loma, Calif.
Derrick Williams DB 6-0 180 Detroit
Future Jayhawks
In a news conference yesterday, the athletic department announced that 23
basketball players and signed letters of intent to attend the Kansas.
Here's what they said:
Source: Sports information
The Associated Press
"Obviously, I've stood up in a lot of
As Brown begins his seventh head coaching job, his second in Los Angeles, he also becomes the Clippers' seventh coach in the past 10 1/2 years.
Brown has been a man on the move much of his career, coaching six different teams in the past two decades. He has had more than one have been a revolving door for coaches.
LOS ANGELES — It figured that Larry Brown and the Los Angeles Clippers would finally get together.
different places," Brown said at a news conference at the Sports Arena. "I have a lot of confidence in my ability to coach, and I have a lot of confidence in the people I'm going to work with here.
The Clippers, conversely, have not
Brown, 51, has a history of turning teams around and has had only one losing season as a coach in the pros and college.
"I think we have all the ingredients of a team that can win. I'm hopeful I can keep you (reporters) from coming here to conferences to announce new coaches."
Brown, fired by the San Antonio Spurs on Jan. 21, said that he did not plan to take another job so soon but that Clippers general manager Elgin Baylor and vice president Harley Frankel convinced him to sign on.
had a winning campaign since 1979,
when they were in San Diego, and have
not been in the NBA playoffs since
1976, when the franchise was called the
Braves and played in Buffalo.
"It was a big factor that many of the players here are so young and the club has some draft choices coming up," Brown said.
Brown replaces Mike Schuler, fired
by the Clippers last Sunday after the team had lost 10 of its last 15 games.
Asked why he thought he might be able to be successful when so many other coaches have failed with the Clippers, Brown said: "Everywhere I've been, we've won, and I don't see why that should change coming hereto LA."
Brown's record was 153-131 with the Spurs. He experienced his only losing season as a coach his first year with San Antonio, when the team finished 21-61 in 1988-89.
Jayhawks to tangle with Oklahoma State
Bv Codv Holt
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Marian Washington says the easy part of the season is over.
The Jayhawks will begin the second round of games in the Big Eight Conference against Oklahoma State at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Allen Field House.
"I anticipate the second round being much tough," Washington said. "We're just happy to be playing at home.
"After that last road trip I think we can handle anything."
Kansas defeated Oklahoma 75-65 Wednesday at the field house after completing a 3-0 road tour. The Jayhawk seized possession of first place in the conference on the strength of their wins at Lincoln, Stillwater and Manhattan. Nebraska and Oklahoma State both had a share of the conference lead when Kansas defeated them.
The No. 17 Jayhawks, 17-3 this year and 6-1 in conference play, won their last six games after losing the conference opener 57-56 on the road against Missouri.
During the current winning streak, the Jayhawks' nation-leading defense has limited Big Eight foes to 49.3 points a game while Kansas has averaged 71.5 points a game.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Washington said matching up with Oklahoma State's front court would once again be a key to victory.
The Jayhawks handed the Cowgirls their second consecutive conference loss 64-60, Jan. 29 in Stillwater. Oklahoma State was led by junior forward Lisa McGill with 16 points, two points below her season average. Despite the Cowgirl's three front court starters — all scoring in double figures in their last meeting with Kansas — the Jayhawks were able to counter with strong inside play of their own. Kansas' front court accounted for 34 of the Jayhawks' 64 points. Freshman forward Alana Slatter helped the Jayhawks' cause with seven points and five rebounds on the bench while defending McGill, the conference's leading rebounder and third leading scorer.
"OSU has probably the most experienced inside tandem in the league with Lisa McGill and (Shea) Jackson," she said. "We don't have that kind of size or strength anymore with our injuries. Our young players are going to have to step up once again for us."
Game time: 2 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House. The game will be broadcast on JHK UTM
Women's basketball probable starters
Kansas 17-3, (6-1) Position Year Height PPG RPG
23 Terrilyn Johnson F St. 5-11 7.5 9.2
32 Danielle Shareef F St. 5-10 8.2 5.7
30 Angela Aycock Fr. 6-2 10.4 4.6
10 Jo Jo Witherspoon G Jr. 5-7 2.7 1.3
13 Kay Kary Hart G St. 5-7 9.3 3.7
BASKETBALL
33 Shea Jackson F Jr. 6-1 6.2 6.3
55 Susane Rosson F Sr. 6-1 8.5 4.1
25 Lisa McGill F Jr. 5-11 18.4 11.7
13 Kim Mahn G Jr. 5-9 6.8 3.2
34 Paula Breeden G Sr. 5-6 11.0 3.3
Almee Brainard. Daily Kansan
SPORTS BRIEFS
Track heads to Nebraska
The Kansas men's and women's track teams will compete in the Cornusker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb., tomorrow.
Head track coach Gary Schwartz said the quality of competition at the Invitational would be strong. Teams competing include Georgetown, Brigham Young, Florida and Arkansas.
About 300 to 500 athletes will compete overall. Schwartz said.
Kansas will have 18 men and 17 women competing. Schwartz said this was a large squad for such a meet.
"I want people to be geared up for this meet," Schwartz said. "It's going to be their toughest level of competition all year, and I don't want them to be bothered by it. I want them to show prossress from last week."
Sophomore distance runner Michael Cox said that he was excited about the new season.
the meet at the Kansas-Kansas State Missouri triangular Jan. 25.
"It's usually an exciting meet," he said. "It's prestigious to do well there."
Cox said the Cornhusker Invitation- al was a good meet to run fast in because the field of runners was so quick.
Junior varsitv wins 108-81
The Kansas men's junior varsity basketball team improved its record to 14-1 Thursday night with a 108-81 victory against Benedictine College at Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks led the entire way and jumped to a 60-34 halftime lead.
Junior center Donnie Braun tossed in 21 points and pulled down 15 rebounds for the Jayhawks. Sophomore forward Blake Wiechbrott scored 18 points.
Junior guard Derek Zeck had 10 assists.
12
University Daily Kansan / Friday. February 7, 1992
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ASK, KU students will lobby Legislature for money Monday
KU students and representatives from Associated Students of Kansas plan to converge on the Statehouse on Monday to show their support for higher education.
Kansan staff writer
Plans include a news conference, a rally and meetings with legislators.
Schwartz said about 30 KU students would speak with legislators.
John Schwartz, ASK assistant director at KU, said he hoped more than 100 KU students would visit the Statehouse to address two significant student concerns — graduate teaching assistant fee waivers and Gov. Joan Finney's proposed budget.
ASK sponsored informational meetings Wednesday and last night to prepare students for the trip. The meetings provided basic information about how lobby and background about the issues ASK wants to pursue. Schwartz said.
Joe Cinnali, ASK director, said students planned to visit with the representatives from their hometowns and to target legislators from western Kansas, who were not as familiar with student concerns.
"It is not as important to hit our district representatives," Cinalli said. "They already know our concerns."
The KU students will lobby with students from the other Board of Reents schools.
"Hopefully, we will speak with all of the legislators," Cinalli said.
Students not meeting with legislators can tour the Statehouse and the Kansas Museum of History.
Students also can attend legislative committee meetings throughout the day.
He said ASK would address specific KU concerns, including financing for Hoch Auditorium, later in the legislative session.
Monday's events will begin at 8:45 a.m. at the first-floor information desk in the Statehouse. A group of 30 students will meet at 9 a.m. with legislators.
ASK will sponsor a news conference and a rally in the afternoon on the second floor of the Statehouse. Finney, Senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, and House Majority Leader Tom Sawyer, D-Wichita, will speak after the rally.
Schwartz said students who wanted to travel to Topeka should meet at 8 a.m. Monday at the fourth floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
Pee Wee produces video with anti-drug message
The Associated Press
SARASOTA, Fla. — An animated anti-drug video produced by actor Paul Reubens, better known as Pee Wey Herman, soon will be distributed to television stations across the country. Reubens' probation officer said.
Reubens produced the 30-second TV spot to fulfill a community service requirement in a plea-bargain agreement on indecent exposure charges.
The video has been viewed by Sarasota County Judge Judy Goldman, who had ordered Reubens to make the TV spot and pay a $50 fine, plus $85 in court costs, said Pat McCabe of the Salvation Army corrections office, which monitored Reubens during his four-month probation.
McCabe said Wednesday: "We reviewed it with Judge Goldman and the state attorney's office, and it met with everybody's approval. It's very enjoyable. It's extremely well-done."
McCabe declined to reveal details of the video, saying he did not want to spoil its debut, the date of which has not been set. But he said neither Reubens nor his character Pee Wee appeared in the video.
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HURRY-HURRY-HURRY!
VALENTINE
BOXER SHORTS
SILKs, PRINTS, & SOLIDS
29.95 - 34.95
COTTONS - OVER 100 STYLES
GLOW-IN-THE-DARK!
$10.00 - $13.95
♥
Call Today!
AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
AIRLINES
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
300's
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
A
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Maupintour
749-0700
400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
English tutor: to help foreign students with composition or conservation. Call Alam 483-4733
Help! need to sell Spring Break trip to Galveston University? Give me $6.00 *G a jab, can't go* Nice! Nolec 814-6867
Brooks International, Inc.
P.O. Box 680605 · Orlando, FL 32868
ENVELOPE STUFFING — $600 • $800 every week
Free Details: SASE to
NO GIMMICKS -
EXTRA INCOME NOW!
Wanted Female Running partner for 3-10mings
weekly. Preferably near 27th Street. Call Kevin
120 Announcements
$100.00/*r/ READ BOOKS and TV Scripts. Fill out
simple like "/beeke" like "form" use! Fun, relax-
ing at home, beach, vacations. Guaranteed pay
ment for bookings. Recording 801-739-2692 ©
k51BEEK
Feeling confused, anxious, blue? *Counseling* can help make sense of your world. Student rates.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2454. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly, understand-
standing voice. Free, confidential referrals (calls
returned by counselors). Headquarters 812-2454 or
KU info. 863-3006. Sponsored by GLSOK
SUEFFERINGFROMABORTION?
SUFFERING FROM ABORTION
Write
Hearts Restored
Box 94
Grimnell, Ks 67753
Confidential response will follow.
you're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, bisexual support group. You're there in the headquarters or K U residence. Youridential fee.
StiHot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
YOOH
I'VE GOT TO CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT TO BE STOCK IN LAWRENCE.
DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDALE $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND / PORT ARANSAS $128
THAT IT'S TOO LATE
11th Annual Celebration!
Sunchic & Beachy
BREWS
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 7, 1992
13
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who someone is, call 814-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
WANTED: St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen. Contact 748 6531 For More Information
Hillel
Events of the Week
Friday, Feb. 7
Shabbat Dinner 6:00 p.m, Hilley House (RSVP by Thurs. Feb. 6)
Saturday, Feb. 8
Fire and Ice Program (Havdalah and Ice Skating) 5:30 pm, Hillel House and Crown Center.
UJA Phone-a-thon
Sunday, Feb. 9 &
Monday Feb. 10
For rides and more information call 864-3948
130 Entertainment
Don't miss Nova Mb Mob featuring Gart Harf from Sunday Feb 16. Bottleneck 18 & over (Via
POP POPPINS
SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 8
AT
BENCHWARMERS
2 FOR 1
WELLS
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under across the bridge on Massachusetts. Call 842-0377. SPRING BREAK VACATIONS! Enjoy a warm and exciting vacation in Cusumon $399 or Padre $150. (Call 842-0377)
JACKOPIERCE
FRIDAY
FEBRUARY 7
BENCHWARMERS
AT
2 FOR 1 WELLS
140 Lost-Found
FOUND. Textbooks in J.School. Claim in room 103
6-19p.
WATCH found. In Burge Union parking lot before
KMATs, Callicon. 864-3847
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$6 AN HOUR can be yours. Apply for energy,
care of female. Apply at 901 Miss 1:30 - 4:30
pm. Tues-Sun.
Babytatter Needed, car and phone a requirement Preferable a male. For an ages 1 year old Call 749-2368.
Housekeeper needed. very flexible hours with
great pay* Phone and car. Must call 748-5814.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michi
gan boygets girls/summar camp. Teach, swim,
play, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers,
archery, archey, tennis, golf, sports, computers,
archery, archey, tennis, golf, sports, computers,
kitchen, office maintenance. $1,000,000 more
Counselors/support staff children's camps/north-east top salary, rm/dbJ laundry, travel allowance, art therapy, crafts, baseball, basketball, bicycling, drama, drama, drivers, fencing, field music, horseback riding-hunt seat, juggling, karate, kitchen supervisor/workers, lacaine, maintenance
erli, rollerblading, ropes, sailboarding, sailing, scuba, secretary, soccer tennis, watercats, weights, wood. Drogby for an interview on Wednesday, Feb. 19 in the Regional & Municipal
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 + monthly of travel/award in Mexico,
Guatemala, Peru, Bolivia, and Guides.
Walters/Waiter, etc., Holiday, Summer
and Career Employability await no experience.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS! National Parks,
Firewood, Fire Creeks. Over 9,000 Openings!
Stamp for Free Details. Sullivan's, 113 East
Waymond, Kailuan. MT 39001
"SUMMERJOBS"
FLOORWALKERS needed at Lawrence most progress in night spot. Apply at 1pm Wet. Sat.
Daytime working with children? Stepping Stone. is hiring late room aid room to work b 1 MWF. Substitute positions also available. Apply at 1106 Wakurana.
45 positions at the Rock Springs 41-Center near
the Mountains, KS. Keystone is a secure,
voice-controlled position placement. Room,
board, and a cash salary. Representative at K U.
summer job days F. 5, or call 911-287-3231 for an
admission fee.
Full time baby sister for one year old in our home
Phone evenings 842-4577
Job open to oversee rehab work. Hours needed 6 a.m.-8 a.m. and 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Office duties and working with patients Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Call between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. 749-0130
Needa job! We are looking for distributors. Excellent job! No experience required! Start Now! Send Long S A S EnVil Gipalze Distributors suite-7A213 Hillwood IWd. Forked River, NJ0631
Part time now Full time in summer, answering phones, showing apartments, and general office duties. Must be a recent graduate after a 9月 M-F. Possibility of 10-20 hour a week until mid May then 9% wk through mid August. Must
River City Golf, Lawrence's Unique Indoor Miniature Golf Course is interviewing for a part-time position. The position will be primarily for job applicants who should be personable, flexible and work very well with children. Ideal candidate will be able to work from home, with the necessary work over spring break, and will have some typing skills. Come by River City Golf to apply in person, Lower Level, Riverfront Plaza Outlook Mail M1-422.
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN, 4/Rm. 1/2mrs. Daya194, $149.
Panama City $139, Kitch. Wirtfr & Trans Available.
Call CMI at 804-423-5264.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (June thirteenth August) at Camp Lincoln. Camp Lake Hubber in the western part of the camp will staff men and women, expand horizons, rewarding work with children, develop leadership skills, 30. Job duties include assisting staff members are available at the Placement Office, Burger Union. Sign up, in advance, for a personal interview.
Tutors needed immediately to assist student athletics in accounting, business adm, computer science, and geography. Please contact Heather at 864-7946.
WANTED: Student daycare provider for 3-month old infant. Must have own transportation and speak English. For more information, call 842-5559 after 5:00 p.m.
Tennis jobs=summer children's camp=northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. Feb. 18th Hunt in Spam in Negotiatorial and Tread Rooms in the Kansas University.
Waterfront Jobs-WSI Children's Camp-
Northeast-Nordest and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiers, lifeguards, and other sports. Beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview with a candidate. Req. Realistism & Groomed rooms in the Kansas Union.
225 Professional Services
COYOTE BIKE SHOP
9th & Connecticut - 832-2484
Check Our Prices
Driver Education offered mid Midwest Driving School, serving K U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FAVOUR FACTORY The Ultimate in service. Let us work for you. We specialize in video and library services. Call 800-396-5271.
HOUSELEANING, conscientious person, high-
est quality work, references Perry*591-5912
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
divorce, criminal & civil matters
DONALD C STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
KU student would detail your car professionally for you.
For more information call 249-7087.
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Studentrates. 842-3244
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding & portraits. Instant ID photos student prices call.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-5878
RICK FRYDMAN
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
823 Missouri 843-4023
**PROFESSIONAL RESUMES - Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more**
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
827/12 Mass. 841-1071
DUI/TRAFFIC
World Processing Service (www.worldprocessing.com) provides three face book webpages, two hardcover books, 90 printed, laptop opened page, call 844-2634. Computer Presses (www.cpress.com)
235 Typing Services
Tried of taking them at buyback time? Get $4,
$1 more per textbook and save when buying too!
$8 per textbook and save when buying too!
Want to learn guitar, stinging blues, goodtime rock, insightful folk and theory too. Call Bentu at 212-847-6093.
- Criminal Defense * Fake ID *
* FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctulated, grammatically correct pages of letter-qual type 843-203, days or evenings.
Word Perfect HM Compatible Word Processing
Word Perfect Orchard Corner Words, no calls
per p.m. 934-868-6000
Word Perfect Word Processing Launer Printer
Near campus $150/double spaced page. Call 81828
Word processing, applications, term paper, dis-
tribution, coursework, coursework, coursework,
risk job availability, Masters Degree 8914, rush
job availability, Masters Degree 8914
286 HYUNDAI IBM, Compatible. M卡计算机-
288 HYUNDAI IBM, Competible. M软件-
310 40ppy. Moppy, Computer, Software-
$110 900
PINK ALA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Sched-
dule for improvement for success 'NOW! Call
'NOW! #4896-7300'
*Typing-WL*, letter, paper resume,
*Type-ML*, letter, paper resume,
*Quality-ML*, letter, paper resume,
*Quality-ML*, letter, paper resume.
305 For Sale
"99 mountain bike series "99 Paramount, owned by the Nissan Motor Company. 99 Cannonade racing bike Never ridden. Brandon
300s
Merchandise
AST Premium 328, 2BM RAM, 80287 Math Coprocessor, A4, 40MB HDD, EGA Card, Toll Free Support, 1-866-555-5555.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade quits, primitives, dolls, comic books, decorative items, carvings, canvas, glaxe. Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising items, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, Royal Doulton, military uniforms, insulators, wholesale imported porcelain figurines, and so much more it will blow you away *QUANTRIL'S FLEA GARDEN* (with its stunning insulators) and Sat and Sun 10.5. For booth rental info call 826-6416.
it will blow you away! *QUANTRILL S'FLAKE*
MARKET 119 New Hampshire. Open every Friday.
Sat and Sun 10.5. For booth rental info call 842-6616.
Visa and Mastercard welcome.
BARGAIN! Two brass table lamps with plated
glass base and nickel crown, with a 75"
type cast maple mails $50, 79-$89 any time.
Lot #132452.
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and sorters. $49.00 up on based use. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0292
Giant Sedona ATP 24 inch frame, 18 speeds, two sets of tires, $208.42/650.
Miracle Video- Adult movies for sale. From $9.95.
Call us: 841-740-8800.
King size waterbed for $250 or best offer. Call 865-9629
Mountain Bike, Bridgestone MB2. Lace ready
4061049087007
nuke-pro carbon fiber hib. $50, jm b3-487-499.
Mountain Bike, Bianchi, Sweet Ridge. Mint jeep.
Trophy Truck, Cobra, Targa. Very good.
Nordstrom book, $100/month
tuned last week, $250/month Call Zach 864-5773
Olympus M-PC Camera fully automatic or manual plus 35-210 zoom lens, 2x converter lens, multidedicated镜头, Tamrac bag. $90 KU medical student in KC1-384-6465.
Roland D9 professional synthesizer keyboards
$99.99, new $20.99 and 24 memory cards. 99%
new. #820-841-3033
Raleigh Bike, good shape, $50. Sears Dorm fridge
$50. Call Aaron 865-3844
Sharpai computer 640K 7013/21^2 F.D. Excellent condition 842-4021
Sony CDP 370 CD Player $130.00 and 10-band E
$100.00 LKD-7492-031
340 Auto Sales
Used Ski Boots by Ratchi & Nordica. Sizes
10A 11 *56 each* obc. Call Jennifer 843-923-03
8. Buckl Regal Limited, 71.00k actual mileage,
4.9 Engine, runs any price, $150, 86-439-8349
1980 IBM HW2 320 Sport Version 98K umkrood. 5 speed.
AC, $650 0484 0484 2940 umkrood.
87 Honda Aero 200. Excellent condition, well maintained. Red, Basket and mesh included. $425 or less.
85 Jetta 4-DR, A/C, Cruise. 5 spd. AM/FM Cas.
61,0mi; Gearhead 245, 721. 845-6890
SPECIALIZING IN VOLKSWAGEN 9494
YAAGE OF EXPERIENCE
CHEAP! FRI/U.S. SEIZED
---
Choose from thousands starting at £25. FREE 24-Hour
Recordment Reetails 801-739-2299 Copyright
CLASSIC 1966 Chevy Camaro convertible $100 or
best offer. Call Bracewell 3:00 p.m. 842-9744
CLASSIC 1966 Chevy Camero convertible $100 or
best offer. Call Bracewell 3:00 p.m. 842-9744
370 Want to Buy
xswagen Bug For Sale, fair condition, $700 cash,
780-6017
KU basketball tickets wanted! Call 829-9430. Leave a message!
WANTED: one-on-one student B-Ball ticket Col. Feb.
15. Shauna Ibma 46-478 leave message.
Wanted: Non-student basketball kickoffs for Kansas
vs. Missouri; March 8, Callen K81-480-880
Wanted 2 non student (U)
Feb. 15. Call Erick day 843-489 night 842-380
Please send resume to Xing
wanted 2.3 non- student BBall tickets, Colorado
May, 15 JFK Fidai434, 0944; 842, 740
A
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing it & bedroom apartments. From KU. On bus route. Fully furnished. Located in the heart of downtown. Pool. On-site management. Heat, AC, and pool. Cheap bachelor's! $174. W 19th. Cali Christ
405 For Rent
SHORT TERMLEASE NOWAVAILABLE on studio 2, brpt 1, app and now available on TRAILRAGE
Available Now. Pre-Private BAD Apt. Close to cam pus. $25/mo. No Pebits 966-963-1968.
1 bedroom apartment for sublease available May 20, on bus route; call 841-7988 or 843-4754
Furnished rooms on Tenn. and Kentucky Shares
share apartments on campus and downtown at $155.00
per room, 794-838-2600.
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K.U.
841-6254.
合
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, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
Large barge ltd. studio Avail. now at 1339 Ohio $230
+ $253 + utilities. 749-758.
FEB RENT FREE! FREE - non-smoking female needs to share toiletwear $6/1M, 1/5W, UD.
FEB RENT FREE! FREE - non-smoking female needs to share toiletwear $6/1M, 1/5W, UD.
Hillview Apts $15 lease sign bonus! 1 & 2 bus
beds. Apt 1 has plus 30 steps. Apt 2 has plus 60 steps.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all ads advertised on this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
sunstone Place Apt 6. Now leasing nice BRP Apt 10. Appealing Beautiful view to the city. Call DORALE 822 746-3594
New 2 BR, BH to campus. Available Now.
Applies: $390/mo. Low利息. Locuires on:
www.berkeley.edu
Sublase Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232
NOW LEASING FOR FALL Studios. 1, 2, 3 bedrooms in new locations and close to campus. call now between 9:5 for information and to reserve a room. Firm Management. 749-1566, 841-8468
One bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place. For
upon request in the campus and downtown.
Call 865-436 or leave message.
STOP PAYMENT RENT) Move into a great 218 swim just west of campus. Complete with swimmers' goggles and life jackets, an excellent time to buy. For more info on this or on our website, visit Calgary John Calgary at Eddy K藩 &mani 641-272-871
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688.
South Point
1,2,3,4 Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
- Inexpensive gas heat
* Central air
2166 W.26th 843-6446 Open 10-5,M-F
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(No. to Benchwarmer)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
---
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
Ask About Reduced Security Deposit!
Sublease Studio Apartment available for summer租金 $260 + utilities per month. Call 832-4097.
SubLEASE spacious furnished room for female, close to campus, $165/month utilities paid. March-May 15.
Models Open Daily
Mon - Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4p.m. Sun. 12-4p.m.
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Sat. Feb. 8th 11-2
Sun. Feb. 9th 1-3
Showing studio and 1&2
Bdrm. Apts.
Now Available:
Studio and 2&3 Bdrm. Apts
2 Swimming Pools
Laundry Facilities
Lighted Tennis Courts
2 Swimming Pools
Laundry Facilities in most buildings
On KU Bus Route
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat anytime you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
On KU Bus Route
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive You're About to Get an Education.
ublet 2 Brm arm, w/D, FREE storage, pks ok
400 mo plus depot 814-2640
Close to Campus (Sorry No Pets)
Ask about our "Upperclassman" special or our $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next Eoll!
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
Meadowbrook
842-4200 15th & Crestline
Call now to reserve your room.
Mon - Fri 8-5:30 Sat. 8-5 Sun. 1-4
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence,KS 66044
(913)843-8559
Summer sublease, spacious 2 rooms - 2 baths.
close campus, furnished. Cali 749-3876.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 non-smoking roommate needed for 3 bedrooms fur-
d, WD, DW, microwave & garage. Large bedroom $155 plus 1/3
upl. Please call 749-2181 after 6
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDEL
WASHER/DRYER/GARAGE/ONLINE BUS
TOWNSIDE NEEDLE NISHED! MOVE IN|IMMEDIATELY RENT IS
NECESSIBLE, CALL 848-1772(17)
FEMALE roommate will share 2BR, 2 bath
at Microsoft, pool on bus route, water
on driveway.
Female housemate wanted. House bordering campus.
Non-smoker and no nets. 749-2646.
M/F Roommate needed ASAP 3 bedroom town-
house, rented for $180, low utilities,
low taxes, $450 monthly.
One female student for a furnished 5 Dhrm. location located on this route (NYC), pool, parking lot, & laundry facilities.
Nice room in a house near campus available Feb. 15
170 utility paid, 749-7835
FURNISHED APARTMENT. Female roommate
with 30' x 15' apartment. $420 - 130/
on bus route 888-0194-0194.
Need roommate for 3 bedroom furnished apartment on bus route. $200 + 1/8 occupants 841-0125
***
Roommate Wanted 3 BR Town home, smoker pre-
fered 1/3 utilities +180, rent $95.962
Furnished master bedroom available immediately in new 3-bedroom townhouse on bus line. $249/mth plus 1/7 utilities. Fireplace, patio, and tennis. Call John Peirce 1-913-491-3491.
One remote student for a 10km walk: *bathroom* house located on bus route. W/D, pool, parking area. Evaluate and/or schedule trips to Reliable Trouble maker to share ARG 28R 168/mm/12V ULL call机 ARG 28R
KU AASP $200/mo Cat 1-449-7009
Roommate needed ASAP 3 bedroom apt $200/mo
Roommate needed. 2-bedroom Duplex. $150.00 -
1/8 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1169.
Roommate Matching. We do the work. We check references, match preferences. Low rates. Guarantee. For info, write DoubleCheck/1020 W KS 6602 or KS 6602 by Call at Daisie 1426 today!
Roommate needed - Large 2 bedroom at Park 25
Roommate needed - Roommate available, contact
E-433-844-839 or E-433-849-239
Roommates needed. 3bedroom desk behind Hill-
crest Plaza. 200 utilities and Cabbed. 842-8510
www.hillcrest.com
Roommate wanted! - Non-smoker for 3 bedrooms
microphone and garage. Rent totable. Call 811-
520-4650.
- Policy Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Classified Information Mail-in Form
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Prepaid Order Form Ads
No responsibility is assumed for success or failure in one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising.
Broadband data add 48 USD per service charge.
Tearsets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found aids are for free three days, no more than 15 words.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads made to the Uni-
verse Mail Center.
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.
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Classifications
105 personal
148 personal
148 loan & fund
148 loan & fund
120 annual membership
120 annual membership
272 professional service
360-minute clientele
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Classified Mail Order Form
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University Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 6045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Uh-oh! We're in for it now, Sid! Dad's goin' for the jawbone!
Xiao Xiao
The Samson family at home
14
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 7, 1992
STREETSIDE RECORDS
HITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
INHERIT THE LEGACY
WARNER ELEKTRA ATLANTIC SALUTES BLACK HISTORY MONTH 1992
SIR MIXaLot
Dealing with life on the streets of Sea-Town (Seattle), Sir Mix-A-Lot returns with his third album Mack Daddy. With loping beats and on-target rhymes, the Mix- master spins cuts like "One Time's Got No Case", "Baby Got Back" and "A Rapper's Reputation".
GUARANTEED HIT IF YOU DON'T LIKE THIS RECORDING WILL EXCHANGE IT FOR ANOTHER!
$699 Cassette
$1299 CD
1403 W. 23RD ST.
842-7173
Sale ends 3/4/92
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
STREETSIDE RECORDS
HITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
INHERIT THE LEGACY
WARNER ELEKTRA ATLANTIC SALUTES BLACK HISTORY MONTH 1992
SIR MIXLOT
Dealing with life on the streets of Sea-Town (Seattle), Sir Mix-A-Lot returns with his third album Mack Daddy. With loping beats and on-target rhymes, the Mix- master spins cuts like "One Time's Got No Case", "Baby Got Back" and "A Rapper's Reputation".
GUARANTEED HIT! IF YOU DON'T LIKE THIS RECORDING, WELL EXCHANGE IT FOR ANOTHER!
$699 Cassette
$1299 CD
1403 W. 23RD ST.
842-7173
SirMixaLot
Mark Daddy
Sale ends 3/4/92
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
Workshop addresses Black women
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Identification is the key to African-American women's self-esteem, said Barbara Ballard last night in a program for Black History Month.
"When there are people around you can identify with, you're more comfortable," Ballard said. "For so long, Black women couldn't feel comfortable with what was going on around them. If you're always uncomfortable, it's hard to like and accept yourself."
Ballardledactivitiesandlecturedto
about 18 people in the workshop.
"Black Women: Reflections on Self-Image."
She gave advice on how to increase self-image and take pride in oneself.
"The analogy I give to people is what if every class you took, all the professors were men," she said. "Women would still learn and do their work, but they probably wouldn't be able to identify as well as they could with a female professor. When you can identify with what's going on, you're going to feel better about yourself."
The problem with African-American women feeling uncomfortable and
unhappy with themselves is that it often results in their talent going to waste, Ballard said.
One issue that Ballard said often contributed to African-American women's negative self-image was the concept of beauty.
"Allthough self-image isn't based on beauty, it does do with how people react to you," she said. "Everything tells you that light is beautiful. The failure of having cosmetics for women of color for so many years (showed) that people took for granted that women of color had no beauty to enhance."
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VOL.101, NO.91
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1992
(USPS650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
KU seeks to recruit more minorities
By Jenny Martin Kansan staff writer
Although there has been a slight increase in the number of African-American students at the University in the past two years, there are fewer enrolled today than there were nine years ago.
But University officials say KU is making strides, despite a lack of money. University-wide and the fact that most students are only 5.8 percent African American.
No has increased minority scholarships and formed programs — from campus visits for high school students to a class for minority scholars — to try to create a more diverse University climate.
But, as one student put it, KU may still have a long way to go.
Marc Etrick, Brooklyn, N.Y., junior, and member of Black Men of Today, said he did not feel the University should continue to retain African-American students.
"The Office of Minority Affairs is doing a great job with what they have," he said. "But they are under-funded. I lot of responsibilities to take care of."
Ettrick said if the University gave the office more funding, it could expand and increase its recruitment and retention efforts through reach-out programs for high school students, learning centers and strengthened community relations.
"Many students come unprepared for college and need a place they can turn to to find minority role models," he said
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said the administration
MARCUS ROBERTS
ority on minority recruitment and retention in recent years.
scholarships for minority students," he said. He also said that efforts to raise additional funds were continuing.
Shankel said that every office in the University could use more money, but that the administration was doing the best it could with limited funds.
Pearl Rovaris, representative for the Office of Admissions, said one goal of the office was to increase the number of students from under-represented groups at the University.
"I try to design programs to bring high school minority students to KU," she said. "My best recruiting tool is KU students."
Last fall, about 300 minority high school students visited the campus and experienced firsthand what the University had to offer.
"Most want to know if they would
feel comfortable at KU as a freshman,
not as a minority," Rovaris said.
"Minority students want to be recruited
for their academics, not for their
color."
The University knows it is important to continue to increase the number of graduates.
"When I look over what's been done, we're doing the best job we could do," Rovaris said.
She said the decline in enrollment of African Americans in colleges and universities during the 1980s was because of a lack of federal funding nationwide and was not unique to KU.
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said it was difficult to attract African-American students to the University. He also spoke about African Americans living in Kansas.
He said colleges and universities must be aggressive in their plans and initiatives for retention and recruitment of minority groups.
Thompson said that during the Reagan and Bush administrations, fewer federal dollars were appropriated to higher education for minority students.
The price of a university education has skyrocketed and no additional resources or funds have been given to balance the cost, he said.
"The chancellor has generated a large sum of scholarship for minority students, which helps to attract high-graduate students. The KU faculty my tenure here, KU has articulated a
commitment to raise the number of minority students on campus."
He said the increase of African-American students during the past two years was because of several factors, including strong undergraduate programs that attract minority students and an increase in the status and prestige of the University.
"The increase is laudable, but we have a long way to go to bring the numbers up to a level that is respectable," he said. "Given the challenges that it faces, KU has done a credible job up until this point."
Bob Sanders, director of the minority graduate teaching assistant program, agreed that the main reason the numbers of African-American students dropped was because of a lack of financial aid.
"Financial aid is a key fact," r. *J* It's more significant than most people think.
Sanders said the majority of students did not know about programs available to them, such as a class for minority scholars and leadership seminars. The University has good and effective programs, but they could be strengthened, he said.
John Ramirez, head of the Student Senate Committee on Minority Affairs, said part of the problem was that no specific office for the recruitment and retention of minority students existed. When the numbers of minorities drop, there is no one office specifically responsible, he said.
Despite recent attempts to recruit African-Americans, their numbers are lower now than 1083.
Bouncing back?
800
700
600
0
'83 '85 '87 '89 '91
798
788
781 776
716
675 676
642 644
Office of Institutional Research and Planning
Ramirez said the committee would continue to remind the administration that both the students and the University need to make an effort to increase minority recruitment and retention.
"The feeling in the past has been that the University recognizes the problem, but that nothing is specifically done about it," he said.
Student volunteers help house the homeless
THE DEFENSE OF THE WAYS IN GREAT STORIES.
Jamie Rodriguez, ElPaso, Texas, freshman (left), and Joe Harder, Sterling sophomore cut boards for the ceiling of the Habitat for Humanity home at 820 Indiana St.
Hundred join in reconstructing home
By Andy Taylor Kansan staff writer
About 100 KU students and local volunteers yanked rusty nails from rotten wood and hauled chipped plaster Saturday to help rebuild a Habitat for Humanity home at 820 Indiana St.
The home construction was part of local activities for Homeless Awareness Week, which ended yesterday.
Brother Benignus Scarry, a member of the Lawrence Habitat for Humanity chapter, said that Saturday was not the only time when volunteers worked on the home.
"There is one student who works herewise a week," he said. "And there are a couple of local church groups that help periodically."
Building the home is one of three housing projects this year for the local branch of Habitat, a national organization that attempts to find decent housing for people who cannot afford it.
Katie Bosol, Mount Prospect, Ill., sophomore, spent the afternoon nailing siding to an exterior wall. She joined about 10 volunteers from her
Scarry said money for the construction of the house, which is expected to be finished in May, came from private donations.
sorority, Chi Omega, in helping with the project.
"We came up here because of Homeless Awareness Week," she said. "We do community service throughout the year, so we came down here as a group."
The volunteers were rewarded with slices of pizza and pats on the back from the future home owners, Bobby and Lucinda Helm.
"I don't know who recruited the volunteers, but they are doing a wonderful job." Lucinda Helm said.
She said Saturday's work consisted of applying siding to the exterior walls, tearing plaster from the interior, pulling deteriorating boards from the floor and putting new shingles on the roof.
Helm said that the housing payments would be interest-free and that the only labor costs would be for tasks that required contractors. Although the house is not legally owned by the Helms, they work on the house during their free time, Lucinda Helm said.
"We haven't signed any papers yet," she said. "We'll take possession at the dedication of the house. But since we will be the home owners, we have to put in 350 sweat equity hours. We spend quite a bit of weekend time here."
Harkin's grip on home state eliminates rivalry in caucuses
The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa—Democrats holding more than 2,000 precinct caucuses across this state today have only one question to answer: How big a victory will they give home-state Sen. Tom Harkin?
Republicans have even less to decide in the caucus meetings, traditionally the much ballyhooed kickoff to the presidential campaign season.
Harkin jumped into the Democratic presidential field in September, and his grip on the Iowa Democratic Party's machinery kept other candidates from challenging him in the caucuses.
The presidential campaign season Not this time.
Only Harkin has opened an office and hired a campaign staff. Former California Gov. Jerry Brown ventured into the state but complained that the caucuses were rigged in Harkin's favor.
"The caucuses are dead," Brown said.
Even Harkin focused on New Hampshire until the final weekend before the caucuses.
The Iowa campaign trail has been intense in the past. House Majority Leader Mike Huckabee,
CAMPAIGN
'92
more than two years running for the 1988 caucuses, which he won. The Republicans have campaigned equally hard in the past.
The absence of a fight this year led political leaders to predict that many lowlands would find something else
Yesterday, Harkin zipped across the state, caloling voters to top the low-turnout projections and give him a victory big enough to push him toward the top of the slate in New Hampshire and the South.
"We're going to win the caucuses, I know that. But I need to do it right," he said in Ottumwa, about 100 miles southeast of Des Moines.
to do today. They said only about 5 percent of the state's 482,880 registered Republicans and 579,875 registered Democrats would show up.
"I've never taken you for granted. I never will. I need you to get out."
Richard Schwarm, who heads the Iowa Republican Party, said the party thought that Duke was not a real Republican and that Buchanan's challenge was merely symbolic. To ensure a Bush victory, Republicans will elect local party officials, fight about platform issues and go home early.
President Bush faces a challenge from conservative commentator Pat Buchanan and former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke. But Republicans decided not to collect presidential
State campaign manager John Norris said spending on the caucuses will total about $250,000. He conceded that Harkin must do better in Iowa than any Democrat has done before or be embarrassed.
preferences of those attending GOP caucuses.
Carter piled up his total after a bitter fight, while Harkin faces only apathy and isolated activism likely to back Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton or Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey. Neither made an effort in the state.
Jimmy Carter has won the most in Iowa so far, with 59.1 percent in his 1980 fight against Sen. Edward Kennedy.
"We need to come out of Iowa smoking." Harkin warned support-
"A lot of people will just show up undecided," said Steve Lynch, who heads the Chickasaw County
Iowa: The nation's first voters in 1992
The Iowa caucuses are the first date on the 1992 presidential campaign calendar. Favorite son Sen. Tom Harkin is expected to win the most Democratic delegates. A look at the state's voters:
1988 presidential vote
1988 presidential vote Turnout rate: 59% of voting age population
Bush ___ 45%
Dukakis ___ 55%
Iowa Cedar Rapids Sioux City Ames Des Moines
Population, demographics
White 97% Hispanic* 1%
Black 2% Urban 59%
Asian 1% Rural 41%
Work, money and education
White-collar ___ 47%
Service jobs 14%
Median family income: $20,052
Spending per pupil: (23rd $4,124
in million)
SOURCE: "Politics in America 1992"
Tax burden per person: (31st $800 in nation)
*Can be of any race
Democrats "Nobody's talking."
With this year's outcome a foregone conclusion, many were thinking more about the role the caucuses would play in future campaigns.
Knight-Ridder Tribune /JUDY TREIBLE
Iowa Republican Party representa Randy Enwright said the caucuses would return to the political limelim in 1996.
Alot of Republicans who have been mentioned as successors to Bush have found their way to Iowa over the past several months, he said.
Some Democrats, assuming Harkin will neither win the White House this year nor make a second try, are also optimistic about the caucuses' future influence.
"We always have candidates out there looking for an initial bump," said Democratic Party representative Joe Shannahan. "Politics is a very competitive business and if you find yourselves slipping behind, your competitive juices will start to flow."
KU game does not attract all students
By Jay Williams Kansan staff writer
For the Wichita senior, that meant studying for a history exam.
Attipoff of Saturday's Kansas-Oklahoma State basketball game, Quinn Oppenheimer sat in a near empty Union with her medieval history notes.
While most eyes in Lawrence were glued to televisions Saturday afternoon — anywhere from sports bars to apartment living rooms — Oppenheimer and other students spent their time differently.
"I enjoy it when KU wins, but I'm here for an education," she said, sitting in a booth nowhere near a television or radio. "My boyfriend is having a party to watch the game. I was invited, but I thought I should study for my test."
He said he did not mind working during the game.
Jennings said he sold nine tickets for the 4 p.m. show. Normally, the office would sell 30 to 40 tickets.
As Kansas guard Adonis Jordan hit a three-point shot with time running out in the first half, Joe Jennings listened to the game on a radio at the Student Union Activities office. The St. Louis senior was selling tickets for the 4 p.m. movie, "Straight Out of Brooklyn."
"It doesn't matter," Jennings said. "There are other things that need to be done."
Murray did not want to know how the game was going. He said he was videotaping it and would watch it later in the afternoon.
"I thought about staying home," Murray said. "But if I tape it, I can fast forward through the commercials."
At Watson Library during game time, Greg Murray, Laguna Beach, Calif., graduate student, was reading a book about Soviet studies.
Mike French, San Diego graduate student, packed up his books in the library as the game neared its conclusion.
French said he came to the library to avoid distractions around his apartment and to avoid the game.
"There is always the chance I could get called to a party, and it's hard to remember."
And then there were those who focused their Saturday afternoon on Kansas basketball. Plenty of students in local establishments to watch the action.
Reed Brinton, owner of Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St., said a line formed outside of the bar before its doors opened at 11 a.m.
One hour before the beginning of the game, Benchwarmers was at its crest.
"The matchup between No.2 and No.
3, the main reason we 're so packed so"
*we are more likely to win.*
Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St., also planned for a large crowd, said Pam Kunkleer, host at the restaurant.
Kunkleer said the employees could watch the game despite having to wait.
"People don't want during the game, maybe a beer," she said.
Many people at the Brass Apple, 3300 W. 15th St., had to watch the game until one minute, 14 seconds remained in the game. At that point, people started heading for the door.
NCAA
BASKETBALL
'Hawks stumble at OSU
NO. 1 was not meant to be this week for the Kansas men's basketball team.
Had the Jayhawks defeated No. 2 Oklahoma State on Saturday, the Jayhawks would have taken a two-game lead in the Big Eight Conference race and most likely would have vaulted to No. 1 in The Associated Press college basketball rankings.
Instead, the Jayhawks fell into a first-pace tie in the Big Eight after the Cowboys defeated Kansas 64-56 in Stillwater, Okla.
Game coverage, p. 9
2
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10, 1992
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Postmaster: Seno's address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 60454
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SenEx rejects proposal to cut classes for parade
A proposal that would let students out of class for next fall's homecoming parade was rejected Friday by the University Senate Executive Committee.
Kansan staff report
It also proposed that the parade stay on campus and keep the Friday afternoon starting time that it had last fall. In the past, the parade was on Saturday morning in downtown Lawrence. Although the committee approved the
Dean Newton, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences student senator, submitted to SenEx a proposal that would have canceled the first 20 minutes of all 2:30 p.m. classes Oct. 23, the day of the parade.
"I strongly oppose canceling classes," said Nancy Dahl, associate professor of biological sciences. "We should not be interrupting academic processes for a rally."
part of the proposal concerning its starting time and place, it rejected the part that would have canceled classes. Faculty members said they feared that a small cut in class time would mean the loss of the entire period.
The proposal was recommended by the University homecoming committee so that more of the University community could participate.
Newton said he understood the faculty's position and did not disagree with their decision.
- The Lawrence fire department responded at 11:10 p.m. Thursday to a call about a tree fire in the backyard of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house, 1911 Stewart Ave. The fire may have been started with charcoal lighter fluid, Lawrence police reported.
CORRECTIONS
ON THE RECORD
Because of a reporter's error, the story "KU job fair offers hope against recession" on page 8 of Thursday's Kansan incorrectly called the event sponsored by the University placement center a job fair. It was a summer internship fair.
WEATHER
Today's high/tomorrow's low
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 39/23
COLORADO
Denver
49/24
KANSAS
Lawrence
51/33 •
Dodge City
48/30
Wichita
48/32
MISSOURI
Kansas City
45/32
St. Louis
44/32
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
55/38
3-day outlook
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 39/23
Today's high/tomorrow's low
COLORADO
Denver 49/24
KANSAS
Lawrence 51/33*
Dodge City Wichita 48/32
MISSOURI
Kansas City 45/32
St. Louis 44/32
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City 55/38
3-day outlook
TODAY
A storm system to the north will keep temperatures high.
Partly cloudy, winds S-SE 10-20 mph
TOMORROW
Mostly cloudy.
Winds E-NE 10-20 mph.
WEDNESDAY
Chance of light rain.
Winds E 5-15 mph.
60
51
40 39
30 43
20 26
10
0
3
Forecast by Rob Koch, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
ON CAMPUS
The Commission on the Status of Women will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Sandra Wick of the University Task Force on Sexual Harassment will speak.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today and 6 p.m. tomorrow at Alceve B in the Kansas Union.
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
The Cancer Support Group will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove C in the Kansas Union.
- The Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring an information session at 3 p.m. tomorrow at 4000 Wesco Hall about studying in countries where Spanish is spoken. The office also will sponsor an information session at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the French Department Library about studying in countries where French is spoken.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Pariors A and B in the Kansas Union.
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
■ Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a rice and beans dinner at 6 p.m. Thursday at 1204 Oread Ave.
- The Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services
of Kansas will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
GLSOK will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Daisy Hill Room in
the Burge Union.
Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. Friday at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
LSAT GMAT GRE
The KU Democrats will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
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3
Committee still reviewing Board of Regents budget
Appropriations panel considers recommendations 'fair'
By Greg Farmer
By Greg Farmer and Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writers
The fate of Hoch Auditorium, faculty salaries and state-financed scholarships rests in the hands of five members of the House Appropriations Committee.
After concluding the first week of hearings Thursday, members of the subcommittee considering Board of Regents budgets said
Kansas
1992
Legislature
ought Gov. Joan Finney's recommendations for the University of Kansas and other Regents schools were fair.
The House Appropriations Committee will consider and amend the governor's proposed budget for Regents to budget passes to the legislature for vote.
"I don't think we'll stray far from the governor's recommendations," said state Rep. Lee Hamm, D-Pratt. "We'll have to wait for the late estimates of how much money we have, and then we may have to make some changes. But as a starting point, the governor's recommendations are good."
In her State of the State address, the governor unveiled a budget package that included 2.5 percent merit salary increases for faculty and staff, 100 percent fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants and a 4 percent increase for
operating costs.
State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, said the proposed fee waiver and salary increases were positive points in the governor's proposal.
State Rep. George Teagarden, Blaise
Committee, and the subcommit-
tees.
tee would use the governor's proposal as a starting point.
"I feel the governor has treated the institutions reasonably, and I think that we can generally
support her budget," he said. "I'm sure we can provide all items we may have questions about."
KU administrators said they were disappointed that the budget did not include $1 million to begin planning Hoch's reconstruction.
Teagarden said it was the state's responsibility to replace Hoff, but the $18 million long-term commitment was more than the state could afford.
"Before we can commit, we have to make sure we can finish the project," he said. "If you put out planning money and don't go on with the project for several years, you often have to go back and re-plan."
A tight state budget has been further strained by a judge's order to equalize the state's primary and secondary school system.
The governor has proposed a 45-mill statewide property tax levy to finance the equalization. This tax rate would
decrease property taxes in 253 of 304 school districts, creating a $217 million shortfall.
"The chances for raising additional funds for other areas are slim," Tea-garden said.
One area that could be slighted is faculty salaries. Two KU professors recently announced their decision to leave the University, citing a lack of state support for universities and their faculty.
State Rep. Bill Wisdom, D-Kansas City, said the committee addressed the issue of salary increases every year.
"There is a time when you must consider the economy of the state," he said. "You must balance needs with economic resources the state has to offer.
"All our Regents institutions need more funding. In some areas, professors certainly need some salary adjustment."
Another subject subcommittee members will discuss is state-financed scholarships.
State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, said state-financed scholarships were one of the committee's biggest concerns.
"We are considering the possibility of more need-based scholarships," she said.
The subcommittee heard testimony from the Regents last week and is scheduled to hear KU budget information Feb.19.
AP executive calls for change
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
Journalists should have a passion for their work if they are to face the challenges that confront the media today, the head of the world's largest news organization said Friday.
Louis Boccardi, chief executive officer of The Associated Press, spoke to about 200 administrators, professors, students and journalists in the Kansas Union Ballroom after he was presented with the 1992 William Allen White Award for Journalistic Merit.
"We must explain the issues," said Boccardi, 54. "And we must write what grips the heart and what enlightens the mind. On a good day we should do both. For if we don't raise our voices for the common good, who will?"
Boccardi said that people today
lived in the most media-intense society the world had ever known but that the media was not explaining the news well enough.
He said the challenge to change was right in front of journalists.
"We need to look at the issues that face us today, and remember that we have a pretty good system, and it is up to us to make it work," he said. He credited the 3,200 people who work for AP for his award.
Hank Booth, president of the William Allen White Foundation, said Boccardi was an obvious choice for the organization's mission or for the world's largest news gatherer.
He said Boccardi's work in the release of employee and former hostage Terry Anderson was another reason he was selected.
"It's this kind of compassion he has
Boccardi told young journalists that he had been encouraged by journalists just entering the field.
shown for just one of the employees that makes him stand out "Boots said
Boccardi told students not to give up on the field, even though the job market was bleak. He said he knew that the climate was tough and the recession had caused a collision between reality and what editors would like to do, which was hire.
"The young people who have come into the profession are bright," he said. "They are far more well-rounded than when I entered the profession."
"It will end and all the reasons why you wanted to become journalists will remain," he said. "And if you persevere, then one day you too may stand up here and say thank you for the William Allen White Award."
Yonis Ahmed of Somalia, Khaliso Koepaletswe of Botswana and John Sosiba of South Africa (left to right) sing and dance in traditional African style.
African-American students unite for scholarship drive
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Different African-American and African student organizations put aside past divisions and worked together at a Black History Month celebration Friday night to raise money for a new scholarship fund.
The celebration, sponsored by Student Union Activities and Black Student Union, was a showcase of African-American and African culture, including dancing, singing and poetry readings.
After talking to former KU students, he said, the show could have been the first time ever that all the people he had involved in had been involved in an activity
"The student organizations have been divided for so long," said Carlos Fleming, executive board member of Black Men of Today. "It was the first time since I've been here that we've all worked together. I'm glad BSU took the initiative and brought us together."
together.
Fleming said that the $3 admission fee and donations would go to a scholarship fund for African-American students and that various fund-raising activities for the scholarship would continue throughout the year.
The event raised about $200 for the scholarship, said Kim Thomas, vice president of BSU. About 50 people attended.
Curtis Jones, president of Black Panhellenic, said it was important for Black Panhellenic to participate because of past differences between greeks and non-grecs.
"There should be no division," he
said. "And no one is higher than anyone else."
Jones said Black Panhellenic was working on a study program with Black Men of Today and also was planning to work with Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic.
"We need to break down the walls between all of us." he said.
Gloria Masinga, president of African Affairs Student Association.
said it was the first large event the group had participated in with the African-American organizations. The association performed traditional African dances at the celebration.
"We are all Black," she said. "We need to break the gap between us, and not just because it's Black History Month. We have to build up communication."
Inspirational Gospel Voices opened the program with two songs and closed with two songs.
"We thought it was important to give another look at the talent and culture on campus," said Moses Smith, director of Inspirational Voices. "Gospel is an important part of Black culture and Black history."
Marek Jacobs, who performed with the Black Poets Society, said the celebration was an exhibit of different aspects of African-American culture. He said it was a chance for each group to show what it was doing on campus.
Heart to Heart Airlifter
Sergei Nazarevsky, head of a Russian delegation, offers a Soviet Union flag to Thad Lawrence, director of operations for Price Chopper grocery stores. The delegation visited Kansas City-area businesses to promote a project designed to send medical and food supplies to Russia.
Project hopes to ease Russia's shortages
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
OVERLAND PARK — An effort to airlift medical supplies and baby food to Russia brought people from two continents together Saturday.
A delegation of Russians visited a Price Chopper grocery store to promote the Heart to Heart Airlift, a project with a goal of sending 100 tons of supplies to Russia in a cargo plane by the end of this month.
For some members of the delegation, it was their first time inside a U.S. grocery store.
Sergei Nazarevsky, head of the delegation, said the need for baby formula was desperate because the milk supply in Russia was very low.
"In Russia, there's no milk," he said.
"I have a good life because I have the opportunity to get milk from the
countryside."
Nazarevsky said that when milk was available in the stores, a gallon cost 90 rubles. Ninety rubles is equivalent to one-third of the lowest monthly salary in Russia.
Several members of a Russian delegation came to the United States 10 days ago to meet with businesses and organizations and asked them to donate money or supplies.
Wearing a sweatshirt that read "Peace on Earth" and sporting new Reeboks, Gennady Lukin, chief physician of a major children's hospital in Russia, spoke of the medical shortages there.
"My mother kept telling me, 'Do not ask for anything for yourself,' and I never did," he said. "However, our country is now facing a very critical situation, and we are here to ask for
help."
He thanked the people in the United States who had responded to the need in the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Lukin said that in parts of Russia, only 14 percent of the basic medical items required to treat patients were available.
"Thanks to the efforts of our brothers and sisters in Christ in many countries, we have seen the steady flow of medicines come that help to alleviate the shortages," Lukin said.
Heather Devocelle, Olathe senior and the Lawrence public relations representative for the Heart to Heart Airlift, also was at the grocery store Saturday.
"I want to help out these people," she said. "It's no big deal for us to put a Band-Aid on our finger, but there are
Many KU fraternities and sororites are considering making donations to the airlift, Devocelle said.
thousands of people over there who have no medicine at all."
KU students could have significant impact on the project if they would donate items such as bandages, cotton balls and Tylenol to the airlift, she said.
She said she hoped to travel to Russia with the supplies once the goal of 100 tons was reached.
Donation boxes are set up at the Dillons stores in Lawrence.
Lisa Poyas, Tulsa, Okla., junior,
said she donated a bag of cotton balls
and a box of Band-Aids to the airlift.
"It cost me two dollars," she said. "It's such an easy effort, and they need so much help."
ZOWEEE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
1992-93 SUA Officers!
President TODD HATTON
VP- Admin. Affairs ANDY ORTON
VP- University Affairs LIZ SONGER
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
1992-93 SUA Officers!
President TODD HATTON
VP- Admin. Affairs ANDY ORTON
VP- University Affairs LIZ SONGER
VP- Memship. Dvlpmnt. ANNE PAPE
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Monday, February 10, 1992 / University Daily Kansan
OPINION
LIFE IN HELL
1992 BY MATT GROENING
BINKY'S GUIDE TO LOVE OR "LOVE IS STILL HELL"
CHAPTER IV:
LOVE PSYCHOANALYZED WITHOUT ONE USING THE WORD "CODEPENDENT"
LOVE SECRET #8: MAINTAINING A HEALTHY RELATIONSHIP REQUIRES THE ABILITY TO TOLERATE ANXIETY
SOMETHINGS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE WARM I GET THE ALMOST CONTROLABLE CONTROLLABLE YOUR HEAD IN WITH A BUSTTUFF COMMITMENT
THE HELPFESSNESS AND DEPENDENCE WE EXPRESS AS BABIES INITIATES THE DESPERATE NEED TO BE LOVED THAT WE CARRY WITH US FOR THE REST OF DULVIES
HI, I NOTICE YOU ARE DRINKING DIET CARE ME TOO
BUT WHEN IT COMES RIGHT DOWN TO IT, LOVE IS THE CRARNING FOR SEXUAL HIGH JINKS.
DON'T GET ME WRONG AT WORK YOU WISH WITH ME SOME TIME!
WHEN THE CRARNING IS THOUARTY THE OBJECT CRAVED STRANGely Becomes MORE DESIRABLE.
I AM OUT OF SEEING SOMEONE RIGHT NOW.
DANG!
THE CRRAVER THEN PERCEIVES THE OBJECT OBJECT POSSESSING OUTLIES THAT THE EGO IS LAKING, AND ALARMOS GO OFF.
HOW ABOUT YOUR PHONE NUMBER AT LEAST?
CALL DIRECTLY ASSISTANCE
SEXUAL OUESTIMATION OF THE CRRAWER OBJECT INCREASE, AND THE OBJECT BECOMES A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE UNATTAINED EGOT-IDEAL
YOU HAVE VERY PRIVATE EXPRESS. CREALLY YOU THINK YOU READ? NO LIKE.
WOULD YOU CARE TO COME IN FOR A LUPPA DECAF.
SEEM OK.
WITH REGULAR FEELINGS AND USES FREET TIMES PLACE, AND THIS IS EXPERIENCED AS PLAUSURE.
A PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS?
SATISFACTION SHOULD THERE BE ANY THING LOVE BUT THIS IS OFTEN NOT THE CASE.
BREAKFAST IS FRAKT I I W hope I will like your CORPRIES SOUGY.
YUM!
THE CRRAVER ANTIGATE THAT THE CRRAving FOR FURTHER SEXUAL HIGH JINKS WILL RETURN.
YOU BUY NEXT FRIDAY!
I WAS GOING TO SHIFT MY SICK GRANDMOTHER, BUT I CANNOT!
THIS MOTIVATE A SUSTAINED CATHETIC BOUND BETWEEN THE TWO SEXUAL OBJECTS.
YOU'RE SURE YOU'RE UP FOR WARTH ALL THESE PLANETS OF THE APES WHOGET!
I JUST LIKE SUCKING WITH YOU.
ANXIETY AND MISGIVINGS LESSEN, ALONG WITH THE MORE URGENT CRRAVING FOR SEXUAL HIGH JINKS.
I THINK I'LL TURN IN EARLY!
I'LL BE IN AFTER LEARNING IS OVER NIGHT!
AND THE JOUNG CRRAVER LIVE HAPPily EVER AFTER.
HOW COME YOU KEEP SWITHING CHANNELS? IT'S DRIVING ME Crazy!
LEAVE YOUR NAME
Letters to the editor
RA association functions well
In response to Brian Doyle's letter:
As members of the Association of University Residence Halls executive board read your letter, we first hunched over in laughter, wondering if you were really serious. We hardly thought it worthy of a response. However, since you questioned the credibility of the association, we think that it is important to tell you that AURH is more than a group that throws pizza parties and rents movies (both things that this administration has never done).
AURH has accomplished much more than in your philosophy. Any involved person would be aware of our success. This year alone The Association has:
- organized a leadership conference, with still another one on the drawing board
- ■ organized the Rock-A-Hawk event last August. Unfortunately, it seemed that the Kansan completely forgot about the gathering, although it involved almost 4,000 students on campus.
- introduced low-flow shower heads in the halls as a water conservation plan
- plans to introduce an all-hall recycling program (aluminum, newspapers, glass, plastic)
produces a newsletter that proposes and publicizes concerns of residents
battled and continually fights against rate increases on behalf of students
- plans to bid for the school of the year at the nations Residence Hall Conference
- is making unprecedented strides for movie rights and cable
- emphasized communication between residents and University department, such as our food chair with food service.
If you are still not convinced, come and see yourself. You only need to attend one meeting to see that you have the wrong image of AURH. Never make the mistake of judging an organization by its administration. Elections occur once every year. Though you may have been unsatisfied with AURH in the past, this administration does not deserve your criticism, unless you know first hand how we spend our time. It is obvious that you do not.
Fear does not discriminate
Ms. Bhana, your perspective (in your letter to the editor Jan. 30) on the reasons for the recent concern over gang initiation involving rape of sorority girls is a ridiculous blend of over-generalization and Freudian po psychology
Granted, it would be better if police patrolled more often
to prevent the rapes that occur so frequently. And yes, the Panhellenic Association could always better inform sororities of safety precautions in order to avoid rape situations.
When a city becomes aware that these senseless activities may become a reality, it naturally is going to mobilize to combat the potential problem. One might compare it to a bomb threat at a university building. People are evacuated because they could die. People are not evacuated because of some prejudice against the person who made the bomb threat.
But after you make these points, you suddenly rumble into a long account of how the white man has been afraid of the African American or Hispanic raping the white woman because the white woman is the "repository of white civilization." What?
But using them as a basis for a group's fear of gang activities is very far-fetched. Gangs scare people. Gangs hurt people. Gangs conduct drive-by shootings, killing innocent portions of this has been connected to gang initiation activities.
OK, maybe you've had some sort of psychology or philosophy class that gave you this idea, and it's fun to explore these theories.
Many gang members may be African American or Hispanic, according to statistics, and media coverage may reflect this, connecting these racial groups with gangs. But I think that most know there are also plenty of white gang members.
We mobilized against threats of attacks from these gangs because of rumors that some initiation rights may entail rape, dismemberment and decapitation. When a specific group is to be targeted — sorority women in this case there may be cause to think that specific activities could be in the works for possible violence. A city would be foolish not to respond to this.
If a three-headed, green Martian and his gang of purple friends threatened to do things to me that these rumors described, yes, I would be scared and expect protection. And, trust me, it would have nothing to do with discrimination against three-headed, green Martians. I don't discriminate against different racial groups.
I never have and never will. But I do discriminate against anyone who wants to rape, dismember or decapitate me. People are going to discriminate against gangs that do this, regardless of the racial groups that make up the gang.
- Meghan Wright
- Overland Park Junior
Fans really are just hams
Overland Park junior
You know, it's kind of sad when fans cheer more for the camera than for their own team.
- Anne Weist, Omaha, Neb., Junior,
- Amy Kraybill, Overland Park Junior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
State primary lacks relevance
Candidates will be determined before Kansans vote in April; earlier election would be better
One of the lesser accomplishments of the 1991 Legislature was to pass a bill that created a presidential primary but did not set aside any money to pay for it. Now, as the April 7 date for the primary draws near, legislators realize that the state is tapped out and cannot come up with the $1.5 million needed to finance the election. There is now talk of dropping the primary because of lack of financing.
We support the idea that the primary should be canceled, not merely because the state piggy bank is out of quarters, but also because a primary held so late in the season is close to being meaningless.
That the Kansas primary lacks significance is seen in that only one prominent candidate from either party, Democrat Bob Kerrey, has sent the state the $100 filing fee. Most of the other candidates who have filed, such
as Pat Paulsen and David Duke, have little chance to win either party's nomination. They appear to be using the primary as a means of raising enough money to help them obtain federal matching funds for their campaigns. It is doubtful that the big candidates will spend much time or effort on an April primary in Kansas. Most of the sorting out of candidates will have been accomplished by then.
A primary gives voters a strong voice, and that is priceless in a democracy. But an April 7 date gives Kansas voters the voice of a church mouse rather than a Churchill.
The Kansas primary is not a good idea as it currently stands. If the primary were held earlier in the season, or if the political parties themselves would pony up the $1.5 million rather than Kansas taxpayers, the system would be more meaningful. As the primary now stands the Legislature should reject it.
Mark Coatney for the editorial board
Speech should remain free
The constitution's guarantee of freedom of speech applies to campus speech
University Council acted responsibly Thursday when it rejected a policy statement on verbal harassment.
The policy condemned speech "that is addressed directly to individuals and meant only to threaten violence, property damage or imminent lawless action and that has no essential part of any exposition of ideas and (is) of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from (it) is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality."
Faculty and student representatives at Council differed widely in their interpretations of the scope and implications of the policy. The differing views illustrate the policy's inherent weakness. Ambiguity. What does truth means? What does order and morality mean? And who would determine the meaning? When we deal with a policy in the realm
of the right to free speech such ambiguity is dangerous.
The faculty and students who drafted the policy may have had the best intentions. They addressed a problem that raises its ugly voice on campuses across the nation, including ours.
White supremacists who spray-paint racial slurs on the walls of elevators and toilet booths in residence halls, sexists who whistle at female students in the stacks of Watson Library and homophobes who yell insults from the cockpit of a bus at two men holding hands spoil the climate at the University. Their behavior is intolerable and their victims need redress.
The University needs to make it clear that it disapproves of bigotry. But a policy statement alone will not increase tolerance.
And when 50 bright and well-educated representatives disagree on whether a policy on verbal harassment provides that redress, and nothing more, that policy has the potential to be more harmful than beneficial.
Alexander Bloemhof for the editorial board
Fluffball tabloid tales seduce reader with fiction, not reality
MARIE
I don't usually read tabloids like "The National Enquirer" and "The Star", except for perusing the front pages in the racks at grocery store checkouts. These papers always have something about Roseanne Arnold, Liz Taylor, a lot of alien visitors, long lost children popping up to claim their famous parents, and my favorite kind — unusual births.
Kate Kelley Staff columnist
I read the story thinking what a fun job tabloid writers must have. They can make up anything they want and write it with absolutely no regard to truth. If they want a name or a picture, there are always those people who will save or do anything for the right price.
Once read an entire article — Iwas in a beauty shop waiting for a haircut and there was no other reading material — about a boy born half-human, half-chicken. The story included full pictures of the chickenboy who looked like a regular kid except he had a chicken beak and comb on top of his head. I think he may have had some feathers, but the picture mightn't that clear, as you can probably imagine. There was a picture of his anguished mother and her even more bewildered husband, who also was not a鸡 chicken. I
guess we can assume there was some foul plav involved.
Most people who read these rags know, deep down inside, that the storiesaren't true. I mean, if aliens really had sired so many offspring on earth, why don't we see them walking
around? Why hasn't there been a coalition to battle for the rights of fluorescent extraterrestrial beings whose fathers live on Pluto? And have you ever seen even one on Geraldo? I think not.
If we know that these papers print purely fictional garbage and pay huge sums of money to anyone who will publicly lie, why do we pay them any serious attention at all?
I think it's about time the American public shake the clutter out of their brains and realize that if you read it in "The Star" or "The National Enquirer," you can bet the farm is fiction. If we don't get a hold on reality soon, we may find ourselves supporting the likes of chickenboy for president.
Kate Kelley is a Fort Leavenworth junior majoring in English.
KANSANSTAFF
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
Editors
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olan
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Cebbie Myers
Graphics Jeff Meesey/Ameine Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr...Bill Leibengart
Regional sales mgr...Rich Hainbarbarg
National sales mgr...
Co-op sales mgr...Ame Johnson
Production mgrs...Kim Wallace
Marketing director...Lisa Keeler
Marketing director...Kim Claxion
Creative assistant...Leah Byrner
Classified mgr...Kin Chin
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name, title, and contact information, if any, with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be phragmite.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest cards and cartoons. They can also edit the resumes of all applicants.
bv David Rosenfield
Stick
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WARNING: THIS WEB SITE IS FOR ADMINISTRATION ONLY. NO AUTHORITY EXISTS.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10, 1992
5
CUPER
Mamae Dierrich/KANSAN
On the ball
After falling to the ground, Matt Rose, Shawnee senior, swipes at a ball to keep it away from Bill Seckar, Olathe senior, in a game of street hockey yesterday. Equipped with Rollerblades and hockey sticks, the two try to play a few times a week despite a city ordinance that bans rollerblading within 1,000 yards of Jayhawk Boulevard.
Media differ on reporting Dahmer details
Some news organizations edit gore of trial
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE—Like the doctors who differ on whether Jeffrey Dahmer is insane, news organizations disagree on whether all the grisly details of how he mutilated young males and had sex with corpse should be reported.
"The entire thing has been about sex and violence; it is almost impossible to edit around," said Fred D'Ambrosi, news director of WISN-TV in Milwaukee. "Sometimes you pick the least
repulsive way."
Some media reporting Dahmer's killing spree as it is retold in a Milwaukee courtroom have sanitized the shocking gore, seeking to convey the essence of Dahmer's deeds without giving each gruesome detail.
But other news organizations have held back nothing, saying the public appreciates the bizarreness of the case and needs specifics to understand Dahmer's sick mind.
"A lot of people are beyond being shocked," said Editor Keith Spore of the Milwaukee Sentinel, which devoted two pages to Dahmer's confession and has been reporting virtually all details of the crimes as they come out in court.
The Washington Post has used descriptive testimony within reason, assistant national editor Bill Elsen said.
"There have only been a couple of things we paraphrased in stories rather than quoting the testimony or
the lawvers." he said.
USA Today reporter Debbie Howlett said she and her editors agreed before the trial started that most "vile details" would not be necessary to tell the story. She has used some specifics
— including that Dahmer said he put steak sauce on the flesh he cooked and ate in her stories, but not in the first few paragraphs, she said.
The trial to determine whether Dahmer, 31, was insane when he killed 15 young males enters its third week today.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10, 1992
Morris found guilty Friday of August bludgeoning death
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Kenneth L. Morris' confession to Lawrence police was the key piece of testimony in his murder trial, said Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells.
After three days of testimony, Morris was found guilty Friday of first-degree murder and aggravated burglary in the August bludgeoning of Lawrence resident Danny Davis, 40.
A jury of four men and eight women reached the decision after four and a half hours of deliberation. Morris, 29, one-faced as the decision was read.
"What it came down to was, were they (the jury) going to believe the police officers' or the defendant's stories," Wells said.
During an interview in Phoenix with
lawrence police officials, Morris said he had killed Davis, according to testimony from the officials. Morris did not take the stand during the trial.
Morris had been arrested in Phoenix on a burglary charge.
In the trial, defense attorney James Rumseh questioned the officials' tactics used to gain Morris's confession. He said Morris was coerced and intimidated before he confessed.
Rumsey said the verdict would be appealed.
Morris will be sentenced March 6. He
will be sentenced to the Douglas County
trial until sentence is完了.
James Owen, the jury foreman, said after the verdict that he thought Morris received a fair trial.
He said jury members had some conflicting opinions initially because the defense raised questions in their minds about the acceptability of Morris' confession.
"It was kind of an emotional experience."
Owen said. "It's not an easy thing."
Lawrence police officials' testimony about the confession was the most compelling, he said.
Wells said he never had any serious disputes about whether the jury would be allowed to move forward.
He said he did not think the police officers should change their way of interrogating suspects.
Lawrence police Sgt. Carrol Crossfield and Detective Craig Shanks, the officials who interviewed Morris, did not know when they were interrogating Morris.
Wells said the officers did their job correctly.
"Each officer develops their own way of taking a confession," he said. "Suspects are inhibited by tape recorders or video recorders and you don't get a full or complete confession."
The face of the dragon is a mix of human and monster features, with a fierce expression. It has dark fur, thick lips, and sharp teeth. The dragon's eyes are large and intense, with white sclera and black irises. Its mouth is open, revealing sharp teeth and a fierce expression. The dragon's body is muscular and robust, with a broad chest and strong legs. It appears to be standing on a rocky surface, with its mouth wide open and eyes focused intently on something in front of it. The dragon's mane is long and curly, with a dark brown color. It has a fierce expression, with sharp teeth and intense eyes. The dragon's body is muscular and robust, with a broad chest and strong legs. It appears to be standing on a rocky surface, with its mouth wide open and eyes focused intently on something in front of it.
Christine McFartand / KANSAN
Eye to eye
Jason Needham, Topeka junior, looks at a painting by Peter McCarthy, visiting professor of art, titled, "The Resistable Rise of Arturo Ui: Improvisation, Masked Players Entering Left." The department of art faculty exhibit, "New Work," which opened Sunday in the Art and Design building, will continue until Feb. 21.
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FEBRUARY PERFORMANCES and GALLERY
Mon-Fri: 9-5 Sat:10-4 Kansas Union Gallery Level4
African-American Art Exhibit Mon. Feb.10-Sat. Feb.15
KU Fraternity/ Sorority Exhibit Mon. Feb.17-Sat. Feb.22
Printmaking / Ceramics / Jewelry and Textiles Student Exhibit Mon. Feb.24-Sat. Feb.29
12:30-1:00pm Kansas Union Lobby
Jazz Performance Tues. Feb. 11
Iranian Dancers and Piano Thurs.Feb.13
Chinese Classical Music Mon. Feb.17
Native-American Flutist Fri. Feb.21
SUCCESS UNION ASSOCIATION
SUA
Moses Smith
Smoove, Inc 92
NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10. 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEF'S
Moscow
Yeltsin demonstrations compete
In a raucous demonstration of the tensions brought by painful economic reforms, tens of thousands of people rallied against President Boris Yeltsin yesterday, but more than 10,000 others gathered in support.
The competing demonstrations, less than two months after the collapse of the Soviet Union, were being watched as a barometer of Yellin's popularity as prices rise dramatically and living standards fall.
The demonstrations were generally peaceful, and police kept the two camps apart. One television report suggested that if the rallies had turned violent, there was a contingency plan to impose a state of emergency.
Algiers, Algeria
Officials declare state of emergency
The government yesterday declared a 12-month state of emergency to quell spreading Muslim fundamentalist unrest and moved to ban the Islamic Salvation Front.
The moves came hours after police seized Salvation Front headquarters and after clashes between fundamentalists and security forces left about 40 dead and hundreds injured this past week.
Yesterday's decree was issued by the armybacked High State Committee and announced on national TV.
Johannesburg, S. Africa
Factional fighting leaves 14 dead
Black factional violence killed 14 people across South Africa, including a regional official of the African National Congress, police said yesterday.
The ANC official, Sikhumbuzo Ngwenya, was shot to death late Saturday as he left a restaurant in Pietermaritzburg, police and ANC representatives said. Ngwenya was an ANC leader in the black township of Imbali outside the city and was a member of the group's regional executive committee.
From The Associated Press
French plane crashes in Senegal, killing 30
The Associated Press
PARIS—A chartered airliner carrying French tourists to a Club Med resort crashed into a marsh yesterday in Senegal, killing 30 of the 56 people on board, authorities said.
The crash occurred before dawn, in good weather. Investigators were sent from the West African nation's capital, Dakar, to open an inquiry. Reports said that the pilot was American.
Survivors told Senegalese and French radio that the plane crashed landed almost immediately and that the wreck would land in five minutes.
Club Mediterranee chartered the plane for a 45-minute domestic flight from Dakar to its Atlantic Coast resort at Cap Skir
Atlantic Ocean MAURITANIA GAMBIA 300 miles Dakar SENEGAL MALI QUINEA BISSAU SIERRA LEONE Area of detail
ring, said a company representative. The representative said at least a third of the survivors were embalmed and one in seven enegileal said three were in coma.
Aviation officials in Dakar said it was possible the pilot was disoriented and thought he had
reached the Cap Skirring airfield, about 30 miles south of the crash site.
Paris-based Club Med representatives said the plane carried 50 passengers. All were French except for a Belgian couple and six crew members. The company said four of the crew members were among the 30 killed.
A U.S. Embassy representative in Dakar said the embassy was sending a representative to the scene to investigate statements by Senegalese aviation officials that the pilot and copilot were Americans.
The aviation officials said the other crew members were two Gambians and two Britons. It was not immediately disclosed which crew members survived.
Romanians begin free voting
The Associated Press
BUCHAREST, Romania — A united democratic opposition tested its strength to unseat remaining Communist officeholders yesterday when Romanians voted in local elections.
More than 140,000 candidates were competing for 2,951 mayoral posts and almost 40,000 city and county council slots in the first free local elections in more than 50 years.
Central Election Committee President Gheorghe Ugilan said about 65 percent of the 16.6 million registered voters had turned out by early evening.
Results were not expected until today.
Observers in most places said the elections appeared to be proceeding without irregularities.
President Ion Iliescu, waiting in line to vote in Bucharest, predicted that the grip of the governing National Salvation Front would be weakened.
"The political balance will surely change because we have had two years of difficult governing," he said.
For the first time in decades, Romania's politics are not dominated by one party. Communists ruled for 44 years after World War II. The Salvation Front took power in the bloody December 1898 revolution and swept elections six months later.
But the Democratic Convention, including much of the formerly fractured opposition, is expected to unseat government-appointed incumbents in many cities, including Bucharest.
Romanian nationalist and ethnic minority parties also are predicted to do well.
The Salvation Front allowed hundreds of mayors who served under Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu to stay on after the revolution, fueling suspicions that it is aligned with the former ruling elite.
The Salvation Front also has lost support because of the hardships of economic reform.
Races in which less than half of the electorate votes or in which no candidate wins more than 50 percent will go to a second round, which must be held within two weeks.
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8
University Daily Kansan / Mondav. February 10. 1992
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Navy misses targets with Tomahawks twice in a row
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. — An unarmed Navy Tomahawk cruise missile destined for Eglin Air Force Base crashed 50 miles off-target in Alabama. It was the second consecutive Tomahawk test flight that has gone awry.
The Associated Press
The missile was launched Saturday from the destroyer USS Arleigh Burke in the Gulf of Mexico. It landed about five miles east of Rome, Ala., and 50 miles north of its target at Eglin in the Florida Panhandle, a Navy representative said.
What went wrong in the 700-mile flight was not immediately determined, said Susan Boyd, a representative for the Navy's cruise missile project. The Tomahawk was one of the high-tech successes of the Persian Gulf War.
Navy officials said that crash was a freak accident because wrong screws were used in assembling the 18-foot-long missile's tail.
It was the fifth crash in 28 launches from the Gulf of Mexico since 1965. None of the crashes caused any injuries.
In the last test, on Aug. 31, a Tomahawk landed in a wooded area eight miles east of Jackson, Ala., and about 100 miles northwest of its target at Eglin.
That explanation persuaded Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles to permit the Navy to use a new test route from the Atlantic Ocean over north Florida to the target at Eglin. Boyd said the Atlantic launches were planned to start this spring.
KANSAS
Practicing for perfection
Members of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority rehearse songs on Saturday in the Kansas Ballroom for the coming Rock Chalk Revue.
Doug Hesse / Special to the KANSAN
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CONGRATULATIONS Tri Delta Initiates
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1992 BSN STUDENTS.
presented by:
Martial Arts DEMO
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club
At Oliver Hall-Monday Feb. 10
At 7:00pm - EveryoneWelcome-
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Self-Defense
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Starting Nights February 13,1992 Call Today!
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Offers Reward $200 CASH
For information leading to arrest and conviction of person(s) cutting locks to video games in following halls: Oliver Hashinger Ellsworth JRP McCollum
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Microsoft Word 5.0
Come see the latest and greatest in Macintosh word processors, Microsoft Word 5.0 demonstrated by Microsoft Corporation.
On Tuesday, February 11th, Jan Bodeux from Microsoft, in conjunction with MacSource, will demonstrate Microsoft Word 5.0 at 9:30 A.M. and again at 1:30 P.M. in the Academic Computer Center Auditorium on the University of Kansas Campus.
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10, 1992
9
Missed free throws doom Jayhawks
OKLAHOMA 50
By Lyle Niedens
Kansasass guard Greg Gurley, left, helps an official restrain Oklahoma State center Bryant Reeves as OSU Forward Bryon Houston voices his opinion.
Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla.—At his weekly news conference Wednesday, Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams was asked if he thought the Jayhawks could shoot free throws as poorly as they did in their victory against Kansas State last Monday and still beat No. 2 Oklahoma State.
Williams shook his head and said no. Unfortunately, the Jayhaws performance on Saturday proved Williams knew what he was talking about. Kansas lost to 64-56 to the Cowboys, shooting 30 percent from the foul line.
Williams said Kansas' problems stemmed from a combination of the Jayhawks' inability to execute and the Nets' man-to-man pressure defense.
Fifty-two fouls were called in the game, which at times resembled more of a barroom brawl than a basketball game. They throw shooting became a key factor.
The Cowboys made 20 more free throws than Kansas, which made only 7 of 23 from the foul line. At one point in the first half, the Jayhawks missed seven straight foul shots, and for the game, Kansas missed five front ends of one-and-one opportunities.
"You can't beat a team by shooting 30 percent from the line," Williams said, "and you can't beat a team by putting them on the line, either. We've got to stop putting people on the foul line."
It was a poor shooting day all-around
the Jayhawks, who shot a season-
on target.
"I've said many times I'm impressed by their defense," Williams said. "I think they did take us out of our game, but not happy with the way we played."
Oklahoma State All-American candidate Byron Houston played just 23 minutes because of foul trouble The Jayhawks, who held the Cowboys to 39 percent shooting, held the 6-foot-7 forward to 14 points and six rebounds.
However, senior guard Sean Sutton,
one of Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sut-
ton.
ton, picked up the slack for the Cowboys. Coach Sutton said the teams' intensity levels matched those of an NCAA Tournament game.
"I told our staff 10 minutes into the game that I had never coached in a game where the intensity level was that he said, "And it never slacked off."
The Cowboys, who led just 31-26 at halftime, pushed their lead to 17 points, 49-32, with 11 minutes and 34 seconds left in the second half. But Kansas battled back.
The Jayhawks cut the lead to six, 54-48, with 3:19 left and had an opportunity to cut the lead to four, but center Greg Ostertag missed the front end of a one-and-one.
Sixteen seconds later, Sean Suttonhit a layup on which he was hefouled by Adonis Jordan. He made the free throw, increasing the Cowbies' lead to nine. The Jayhawks never got closer than eight after that.
Kansas 56
Player | M | FG | FT | R A | F T | TP |
Jimmison | 3 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
Scott | 21 | 4/6 | 0/5 | 6 | 1 | 4 |
Paulley | 14 | 4/1 | 0/2 | 2 | 2 | 8 |
Jauley | 16 | 0/1 | 1/2 | 8 | 1 | 1 |
Jordan | 36 | 4/14 | 1/2 | 5 | 3 | 4 |
Woodberry | 30 | 5/10 | 0/2 | 5 | 1 | 2 |
Davis | 11 | 0/3 | 0/2 | 2 | 0 | 5 |
Ostratg | 17 | 1/4 | 2/3 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
Gurley | 3 | 0/0 | 0/0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Iohanning | 3 | 0/0 | 0/1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Oklahoma State 64
Percentages: FG 40% (22/55), FP 30%
Three-point goals: 5/13 (Walters 2, Jordan 2,
Woodbury 1)
rhouston 23 49 4/9 6/10 6 0/4 14 4
Reeves 27 1/3 6/10 21 2 0/4 14
Williams 31 2/9 6/7 2 2 2/4 14
Alexander 32 3/4 6/7 1/2 2 2/4 12
Sutton 36 5/9 5/8 0 1 1 16
Hatcher 23 0/4 5/8 0 1 1 32
Brown 16 1/2 2/4 0 2 0 2
Brown 16 1/2 2/4 0 2 0 2
Pell 1 0/0 1/4 0 1 0 0
Percentages: FG 40% (17/43), FT 69% (27/39)
Three-point goals: 3/10 (Williams, Alexander,
Satton)
KU
Brian T. Schoeni / Special to the KANSAN
Kansas guard Adonis Jordan applies defensive pressure to Oklahoma State guard Cornei Williams.
Brawling play scars heavyweight matchup
STILLWATER, Okla. — Driving to Stillwater for Saturday's game, I saw an Oklahoma promotional billboard in a store to "Discover the Excellence
BURGER
The challenge posed on that sign at the Kansas-Oklahoma border seemed reasonable. I expected nothing short of college basketball excellence at Gallagher-Iba Arena on Saturday between the No. 2 and No. 3 teams in the country.
Manhattan.
Like any other basketball fanatic, I eagerly awaited the Oklahoma State-Kansas game. It surely would be a classic confrontation between the strong, physical play of the Cowboys and the Jayhawks' transition game and pressing defense. With a victory, the Jayhawks could cruise towards yet another Big Eight Conference championship.
Unfortunately, I would have had a shorter drive and would have been more entertained watching Kansas State's victory against Nebraska in
At least they played basketball there instead of something resembling championship wrestling of the World Wresting Federation.
The grusome facts from the Stillwater brawl speak for themselves:
- There were 52 personal fouls called in 40 minutes of play, an average of 1.3 fouls a minute.
- Several physical exchanges ensued. Kansassenior forward Alonzo Jamison crashed into Oklahoma State's junior forward Milton Brown, who had taken a Kansas turnover and was breaking free for a layup. Unfortunately, Jamison also crashed into the goal support on the play, spraining his knee and slowing him down for the rest of the game.
Also, Oklahoma State's senior swinger Cornell Hatchert tumbled to the floor after receiving an elbow from Kansas junior guard Rex Walters.
- Both Kansas and Oklahoma State shot 40 percent from the field.
- Kansas was successful on 30 percent of its free-throw attempts, making 7 of 12. In the Jayhawks' last two games, they hit 15 of 44 free throws for 34 percent.
- There were a total of 36 turnovers, 16 by Kansas and 20 by Oklahoma State.
"It was a war out there today, like an NCAA game," Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said. "If Kansas wins today, the race is over." I'm sure everyone in the Big Eight was cheering for us today."
Oklahoma State's defense was intimidating and deserved credit for
their performance. And yes, the number of fouls called halted the flow of the Kansas running game. But the Jayhawks had their chances to escape the unfriendly confines of Gallagher-Iba with a victory by burying their free throws.
Instead, Saturday's performance at the free-throw line was once again morbid, and this time, it cost the Jayhawks a victory.
The only saving grace in the Kansas performance was its gutsy attempt to come back from 17 points down with 11 minutes and 34 seconds left to play in the game. They had a chance to trim the Oklahoma State lead to four at the 3:19 mark, but freshman center Greg Ostertag missed the front end of a one-and-one. From that point on, it was lights out.
"I'm not happy with the way we played, and we have to execute much better," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "Our guys never got into a rhythm."
Kansas women conquer Oklahoma State 73-64
Bv Codv Holt
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team completed a season sweep of the Oklahoma State Cowboys 76-34 Saturday at Allen Field House for the first time since 1986. Kansas defeated Oklahoma State 64-60. Jin in Stillwater.
No. 17 Kansas notched its seventh straight victory, Junior guard Stacy Truitt scored 20 points, tying her career high. Truitt scored 10 of her career-high 20 points in the last 5 minutes of the game to seal Kansas' victory.
Truitt credited much of her success to Coach Marian Washington, who gave Truitt a pep talk at halftime after
Truitt scored only four points in the first half.
"Coach gave me an edge in the second half because my shot was off in the first half." Truitt said. "She told me he went in the ball and after that I wanted it bad."
Senior guard Kay Kay Hart added 17 points, including three three-pointers. Junior guard Shannon Kite also hit three three-pointers as Kansas' backcourt accounted for 48 of the 73 points.
Oklahoma State relied on its inside game for 42 of its 64 points. The team was led by senior forward Susanne Rosson with 18 points. Junior center Lisa McGill, the conference's leading rebounder and third-ranking scorer
Kansas' defense held McGill below her season average of 18 points for the second time this season. McGill scored 16 points in the teams' first meeting this year.
added 14 points.
Washington credited senior forward Terrilyn Johnson with the Jayhawks' success defending McGill.
"She did great," Washington said. "Terrilyn often gets overlooked but she did a superb job and is a big reason we won this game."
Johnson led the Jayhawks with eight rebounds and five steals. She leads the Jayhawks in both categories this season, averaging 9.2 rebounds and 3.17 steals a game. Her average of 3.17
Oklahoma State, defending Big Eight regular season and tournament champions, defeated Kansas three times last year, including a 74-63 victory against the Jayhawks in the final of the Big Eight Tournament.
steals a game ranks her first in the conference.
Kansas, 18-3 overall and 7-1 in conference play, continues to lead the conference standings. Nebraska remains in second place at 16-5 and 5-2.
Kansas returns to the road this week to battle Colorado and Iowa State on Wednesday and Saturday, respectively.
Olympic Games
Olympic medals count
Country G S B T
Austria 2 1 2 5
Germany 1 1 0 2
Unified Team* 1 0 1 2
Finland 0 1 1 2
France 0 1 0 1
Italy 0 0 0 0
Netherlands 0 0 0 0
Sweden 0 0 0 0
Switzerland 0 0 0 0
U.S. 0 0 0 0
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Swedes eye hockey gold
OLYMPIC BRIEFS
Knight-Ridder Tribum
The United States hockey team finished seventh in the 1984 and 1988 Winter Games after gaining the gold in 1980. It was favored over Italy but trailed 3-2 going into the third period yesterday.
For two periods, the Americans could not shake their Olympic hockey slide. For one period, the Italians could not stop Tim Sweeney.
In that period, Sweeney, who played for the Calgary Flames this season, had one goal and two assists, and the team won 6-3 in their 1992 Olympic opener.
Earlier yesterday, top-seeded Sweden pounded Poland 7-2, and Finland, seeded fifth, knocked off ninth-seeded Germany 5-1.
Sweden won the last three Olympic bronze medals but never a gold. It lost 3-2 against the U.S. team in a pre-Olympic tour-up Wednesday night.
The United States is a long shot for a gold medal, but Sweden has a strong shot.
Sweden was not at its best yesterday, but still cruised by Poland, the best seed in the 12-team tournament.
U.S. skier finishes ninth
It did not take long for A.J. Kitt to put the high hopes of the Winter Olympics behind him.
"This is just one race," the 23-year-old American skier said after his ninth-place finish in yesterday's men's downhill. "I'm not satisfied, but not too disappointed."
Although hopes were high for the Rochester, N.Y., native, Kitt said he figured he would have a hard time finishing in the 15 of because of the difficulty "La Face de Bellevarde" course.
German sets luge record
Georg Hackl of Germany, the 1988 silver medalist, set a course record of 45.190 seconds and took the men's luge lead after two runs at the Winter Olympics yesterday.
Duncan Kennedy of Lake Placid, N.Y., who was considered a medal contender because of his second-place finish in the World Cup circuit, was sixth after his first run but had a rough second run and fell to 10th place with a combined time of 1:31.402.
KU runners dominate Husker Invitational
Kansan Sportswriter
By Jerry Schmidt Kansas State University
The junior from Lawrence won the 5000-meter race with a personal best and school record time of 16:34.32 at the Frank Sevigne Husker Invitational on Saturday in Lincoln, Neb., but she was not overly satisfied with the outcome. Saul wanted to qualify for the coming NCAA meet automatically.
Most athletes might be satisfied with a personal best time, a new school record and provisionally qualifying for the NCAA indoor meet. Not Julia Saul.
"It's kind of disappointing to run 25 laps and not get the time you wanted," she said. "It's a matter of getting into the right raco."
Athletes must break a set time or height to automatically qualify for the NCAA meet. If not enough athletes break the set time, the event is filled out with athletes on the provisional list.
Saul was competing against two All-Americans that she thought would push her to a time that would automatically qualify her for the NCAA indoor meet in Indianapolis. She was banking on Jamie Parks of Arkansas and Sandy Hamm of Colorado for that push.
"The race went out slower than I expected," she said. "They started out slow and after four laps I moved out and tried to pick up the pace a little. No one came with me."
Michael Cox, a sophomore from Hannibal, Mo., had a similar situation in the 3000-meter run. He won the race with a time of 8:14,89, a personal best, but was not challenged.
"I pretty much took it from the gun," Cox said. "I wanted to run at a 65 second-per-quarter pace and the field didn’t."
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said Cox and Saul were far better than the rest of the field.
"Both Mike and Julia dominated their races, 'Schwartz said. "I felt they would have run faster if someone was pushing them."
Kathy Palacios, a senior from Oak Brook, Illinois, also set a school record and provisionally qualified for the NCAA meet. Palacios finished fifth in the 300-meter race with a time of 9:33.24.
Also provisionally qualifying for the NCAA meet was the men's s 4 x 80 meter relay team of Cox, Jon Handy, Jason Teal and Dan Waters. With a time of 7:31.33, the team finished second but was leading until it was edged by Georgetown. Schwartz said.
Schwartz said he was pleased with the results of the meet.
"All in all it was a positive meet," he said. "We had some really good events that didn't show high places. We are heading in the right direction."
The Jayhawks will compete in their fifth indoor meet of the season on Feb. 15 at Manhattan
Chris Jenson contributed information to this story.
Magic earns All-Star MVP
The Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. -- At long last, it was Earvin "Magic" Johnson's day and the Western Conference's All-Star game.
Johnson, after an emotional pregame welcome from NBA All-Stars on both teams, showed no rustiness yesterday from the three-month layoff after his shocking announcement Nov. 7 that he contracted HIV.
Johnson led the West team to a 153-113 victory and earned the Most Valuable Player honor for the second time. It was only the fourth win in the last 13 years by the West.
Shooting 6 for 7 from the field, Johnson scored 16 of his 25 points in the first 17 minutes of the game. He hit three consecutive three-pointers in the final 2 minutes and 42 seconds to finish 9 for 12 from the field.
"Maybe you'll see me back, maybe
you won't t," Johnson told the fans after being presented with the MVP award. "But I'll remember all these good times this afternoon."
Johnson, named a starter in fan voting despite his retirement, also plans to play in next summer's Olympic Games and has left the door open to a comeback with the Los Angeles Lakers.
The Westest 79-55 at halftime, shooting 63.5 percent to 45.5 for the East.
The West went on to match the scoring record for a regulation All-Star game. The West won 153-131 in 1961 and the East scored 154 points in overtime games.
Johnson led eight players in double figures, including Clyde Drexler with 22 and David Robinson with 19. Michael Jordan scored 18 and Thomas 15 for the East.
10
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10. 1992
PARTY FAVORS
1992
CALL TODAY
PARTY FAVORS
1992
CALL TODAY
Let Creation Station show you how
FULL COLOR printing makes a BIG
DIFFERENCE in printed shirts. Give
your hair a chance to remember and a
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SHIRTS, SWEATSHirts, SHRUPS, MATS, MORE!
C.PARTY STATION
730 Mass. 841-1999
Fun! Warm! Indoor Miniature Golf!
Birthdays Benefits Tournaments Private Parties Alternative entertainment for the KU student
Lower Level Riverfront Plaza 841-3322
Spring Break Blues?
Can't decide where to go or how to get there?
Call: Laird Noller
Reserve your choice Escape, Topaz or Taurus.
Just $259 per week with 1500 miles included.
Call 843-3500 and rent a car!
RENT-A-CAR
JOHN BOSS SHOW
Chemical structure of a polycarbonate polymer.
JOHN BOSS SHOW
The Hottest College Talk Show in the Nation!
MONDAY
Easy Eats
TUESDAY
Child Abuse
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Call-in Show
FRIDAY
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8 6 4 - 4 7 4 6
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---
EATS
1138 PLAN
LAURENCE, LEVENA
TAPES & WATERFISHING
WESTERN EATING
REPLACEMENTSENATORS
Student Senate and the Elections Commission are now accepting applications for replacement senators for the following Senate seats:
2 Architecture
1 Nunemaker
1 Off-Campus
1 Law
Applications are available in the Office of Student Senate, 400 Kansas Union, or in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall. Applications are due by 5:00, February 12 in the Office of Student Life.
BIG 6 SPORTS CLUB All Draws are 20 oz. "The English Pint"
$2.25 Drams and $6.00 Pitcher(s) Anchor Steam Ain and Beut
Wheen Beer Everyday. Check out our Special Sale!
Daily Specials
Mondays Daily Specials
$1.75 Draws and $5.25 Pitchers
Anchor Steam Ale and Boulevard Wheat Beer
$1.50 Wells
Beam, Seagrass, Baccardi, Smirnoff, etc.
$1.25 Draws and $3.75 Pitchers
Bud Light and Coors Light
$1.25 Draws and $3.75 Pitchers
Bud Light and Coors Light
LOWER LEVEL - ELDRIDGE HOTEL-749-5011
Savethe Pales
Don't be caught without your tan this Spring Break!
Save $3.00 on a tanning package
(reg. 10 tans for $25)
exp. 2/22/92
THE total look!
Post office implements automation
9th & Miss.
841-5921
By Ranjit Arav
Kansan staff writer
The motto of the U.S. Postal Service claims that darkness of night, among other obstacles, will not keep carriers from their appointed rounds.
But new sorting technique might not be the efficient change it's touted to be
But because of a new routing system, several Lawrence postal workers say they fear darkness will delay deliveries.
The Corporate Delivery Plan, also referred to as the "Six and Two Plan," was initiated Saturday to prepare the postoffice for a computerized automation service that is expected to arrive in 1995.
To prepare for the change, which should speed up sorting, postal carriers now are required to spend two hours a day sorting the mail and six hours a day on the streets delivering it. In the old system, carriers spent about three to four hours sorting and four to five hours delivering.
The plan also restructures the delivery routes in Lawrence in preparation for the more efficient automation.
Sam Segraves, president of branch 104 of the National Association of Letter Carriers in Lawrence, said the "Six and Two Plan" did not make delivery easier.
Postal workers will have fewer hours to deliver mail and the new routes are longer. Because carriers are out later, it is more difficult to read addresses, Segraves said.
When addresses cannot be read in the dark, the letters are taken back to the post office and delivered the next day, he said.
"We want to continue a high level of service," Segraves said. "But this program prohibits us from doing so."
He said the postal carriers' union had filed an official grievance, but a decision would not be made by a national arbitrator for at least two months.
Segraves the Oread and East Lawrence neighborhoods would be hit.
hardest by possible delays caused by the new system.
The restructuring requires some carriers to make up to 1,300 deliveries a day in those areas, which is twice the number required by the old system, he said.
Segraves also said the restructuring in those two neighborhoods was determined on a light mail day. Therefore, the new route was deceiving.
But Reynolds said no postal workers in Lawrence would be fired. Instead, the office has started a hiring freeze.
"Those areas have a lot of students," he said. "And while they may not get the mail most families do, on certain days, many of them get J. Crew catalogs and Rolling Stone magazine. Soon a few days, the mail is incredibly heavy."
However, Bill Reynolds, Lawrence postmaster, said the problems in delivery would be cleared with time.
He said the new system was part of a national plan to prepare for computerized automation. As part of the plan, 80,000 to 100,000 postal jobs would be eliminated nationwide in favor of the
more efficient automation.
He said although it might be two to three weeks before the post office was back to full speed, the change eventually would improve efficiency.
About 40 percent of all mail is bulk rate advertising, Reynolds said.
He said the change also was necessary to accommodate Lawrence's growing population and to compete for advertising dollars.
"I am not against changes or improvements," she said. "But I am against poor management decisions that are causing inefficiencies."
The computer automation will be able to sort about 600 letters a minute. Only about 60 letters a minute can be sorted manually.
B
However, Lynette Forbes, postal carrier, said the new system was a failure because of all the confusion it brought.
Jayhawk Bookstore
at the top of Naismith Hill
JBS Briti-Bus
Call for Special Charter Rates
Mon-Thurs • 843-3826
Concerned, Confidential & Personal Health Care For Women
SAFE AND AFFORDABLE ABORTION SERVICES
GYN CARE - - FREE PREGNANCY TESTING
BIRTH CONTROL - - INCLUDING NORPLANT
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DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH FOR WOMEN
4401 West 109th (l-435 & Roe) Overland Park, Kansas
COMMUNITY SENIIVE HEALTH
FOR WOMEN
Toll Free 1-800-227-1918
Providing quality health care to women since 1974
Valentine's Day is Friday, February 14.
VISA, Mastercard and Insurance plans accepted
Make Your Valentine Fall Head Over Heels.
Give Teleflora's Tumbling Hearts Bouquet. A delightful Valentine's Day remembrance for sweethearts and friends alike. Fresh blooms in a whimsical, bright red porcelain bud vase. To send this unique bouquet anywhere, call or visit our shop today.
11
T-T902
C
Teleflora
OWENS FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana Streets Lawrence 843-6111
Attention: Juniors, First Semester Seniors MORTAR BOARD SENIOR HONOR SOCIETY
mb KU
Mortar Board is a nationally recognized senior honor society with chapters on nearly 200 college campuses. It's members exhibit excellence in scholarship, leadership, and service. KU's Mortar Board members work together on a variety of service projects annually. Students graduating in December 1992, May 1993, or August 1993 with a 3.0 GPA and above are encouraged to apply.
Applications must be returned to The Office of Academic Affairs, 132 STRONG HALL BY 5:00 pm., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1992
Applications are available at:
Organizations and Activities Center (4th floor Union)
Office of Academic Affairs (132 Strong)
Nunemaker Honors Center
Attention!! May '92 Graduates
Order your graduation announcements on the following dates:
February 17th, 18th and 19th
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Orders must be prepaid
Visa, Mastercard, Discover &
American Express Accepted
DISTRICTS
KS Union
864-4640
KU KU
DOOR STORIES
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Burge Union
864-4640
Japanese Traditional Performance
NOH and BIWA
Featuring:
8:00 pm Thursday, February 13, 1992 Swarthout Recital Hall Murphy Hall, University of Kansas
Matsui Akira: Noh Actor of Kita School Arai Shisui: Biwa Player of Satsuma Style
Performing
Kityotsume (Noh Dance) Ibaragi (Biwa Music) Aoi No Ue (Noh & Biwa)
TICKETS
General Public: $8.00 Students: $5.00 Call Murphy Hall Box Office (913)864-3982
Sponsored by:
ITSC, IPAC, EALC & CEAS of KU and Friends of
Hiratsuka
Classified Directory
100's
200's
**Announcements**
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Enrollment
Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300's
---
Announcements
100s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
105 Personal
110 Bus. Personal
Why, was David T. Fired? Does ANYBODY know?
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
图
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
400's
B. C. AUTO MOTOFTY is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and accessory equipment. VISA, MasterCard and Discover cards accepted.
**Help!** Need to sell Spring Break camp to Galveston
**help**. Sleep on 6. Get a job, can't go.
$40. Nicole Cooke
NO GIMMICKS -
EXTRA INCOME NOW
EXTRA INCOME NOW!
ENVLOYMENT SHOWS $600 - $800 every week -
Free Details. SASE TO
Brooks International, Inc.
No Pervert Please! Still lil'? Just find the cupid with the Afro in today's paper. 864-7474
Brooks International, Inc.
P.O. Box 680605 - Orlando, FL 32868
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10, 1992
11
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes sense of Western history. *The Old Town Court Book* availab
ATRIUM
Restaurant
Featureting the finest in American regional cuisine
Valentine,Special
Exquisite, romantic dinner for 2
Among your choices are: prime rib, shrimp or veal
$12.95 + tax per person
Dance the night away with Dr.
Love & drink specials in Duffy's
Lounge Special
6th & Iowa 842-7030
Quality Inn
Special Overnight Packages Available
120 Announcements
Feel confused, anxious, blue? Counseling care
students. Mary Bethet Belsel, M 84-7277
Mary Bethet Belsel, M 84-7277
For annemysss info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841:2345. Headquarters
Free Scholarship Information for students. Please
referee. Results. Resumes guaranteed. 1-800-
345-513 TOLL FREE
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly, understand-
ing voice. Free, confidential referrals (called
returned by counselors). Headquarters 812-3454 or
KU info. 863-3005. Sponsored by GLSKO
SKYDIVING FANATICS! First needs ride to
airport. Will ply. Call Hermann 842-3724
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
WANTED: St. Patrick's Day Parade Queen, Contact 748-6313 For More Information.
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support
supports you. You are a headquartered headcounter,
(for confidential details).
Clip this ad MANAGER'S SPECIAL
LUNCH BUFFET
11:30 - 1:30 Mon.-Fri.
12:00 - 2:00 Sat.
$2.99
with coupon
Add 704 for salad
Limit 4 specials/coupon
MAZZIOS PIZZA
Expiration Date 2-24-92.
2630 Iowa • 843-1474
Chicago, Ill.
--and most other matters
Still Hot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
I NE GOT TO CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT TO BE STOCK IN LAWRENCE
A
DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDale $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND PORT ARRASANS $128
DON'T WAIT 'TIL IT'S TOO LATE
11th Annual Celebration!
SKI & BEACH
SUNCHAKE
BREAKS
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
--and most other matters
130Entertainment
Don't miss Nova Mobi feature Grant Hart from Du Do Sunday 16. Bottleneck 18 & over
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under
across the bridge on Massachusetts 1497.84778
140 Lost-Found
FOUND Textbooks in J. School. Claim in room 103
6:10 p.m.
WATCH found. In Burge Union parking lot before
Xmas. Call to claim: 864-3847
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babysitter Needed. car and phone a requirement.
Babysitter a male. a year old boy. Call 749-8500.
Phone: (749) 8500-2312.
Waterfront Job-WIS-WSI Children & Camps
Northeast-Norten and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterworks,
beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room &
board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview.
Regionalist & Great Rounds in the Kansas Union.
Housekeeper need. very flexible hours with great pay! Phone and call. Must call 749-5814.
CAMP COUNSELORS want for private Michiganboys/girlsummer camps Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, climbing, scuba diving, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $1,000 or more plus kit & KM2. Sheep 1786 Maple, IL; ND6009.
Counselors/support staff—children's camps/north-east top salary, rm/bd/laundry, travel allowance, archery, basketball, basketball, bicycling, dance, drama, drums, drummins, field hockey, golf, guitar/gymnastics, bockey, kitchen supervisor/workers, lacrosse, maintenance, mature nurses, photography, piano, rock music, soccer, soccer teams, trac, waterski, secreta, soccer teams, track, waterski, weights. Droopy for an interview on Wednesday at the Regionalist Ormd rooms in the Kansas University
CRAUSE LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 / month + World Travel/Hawaii, Mexico,
Canada, New Zealand, Guides, Waiter/Waister, etc. - Holiday, Summer and Career Employment available - No Experience
Full time babyssister for one-year old in our home
Phone evenings 842-4577
**IMAGE CONSULTANT** - Set own hours. Image improvement, color analysis, make-up and skin care. Email resume to: Imaging@bloomingdale.com
Job opening to oversee rehab work. Hours needed:
a. 8 a.m. and m. 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Office duties and
working with patient Tuesdays and Thursdays
a. 12 a.m. to 12:30. Call between a
m. 12 a.m. and m. 791-030
Need job? We are looking for distributors. Excellent pay. No experience required! Start Now! Send Long S A S EnV P Galaex Distributors a-u1213 Hillwood RD Forked River JN08721
Part time now full time in summer, answering phones, showing apartments, and general office duties. Apply by 10 a.m. after9 a.m. M-F. Possibility of 10-20 hrs a week until May may be waived if sw/k through mid August. Must
River City Golf. Lawrence's Unique Indoor Miniature Golf Course is interviewing for a part-time position. The position will be primarily for weekends, but the course should be personable, flexible and work well with children. Ideal candidate will be able to work from home in a variety of work over spring break, and will have some typing skills. Come by River City Golf to apply in person, or visit Riverfront Plaza Outlet Mall 841-3322
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN 4/Rm. prices Dayna $149.
Panama City $139, Kitch. Wirtfr & Trans Available.
Call CMI at 802-423-3648
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS? National Parks. Fire, Forest Caws. Over 9,000 Openings! Stamp for Free Details. Sullivan's, 113 East Wyoming, Kalioga. MT, 59901
WANTED Student daycare providers for 3-month old infant. Must have knowledge and speak English. For more information, call 842-5599 after 5:00 p.m.
Tennis jos-summer children in camps-northeast Florida and in southern groundground who can teach children to play tennis. Game room & board, travel allowance. Drop her on a tennis court or play at the Regionalist and Dread Roads in the Kansas City area.
225 Professional Services
COVOTE BIKE SHOP
9th & Connecticut - 832-2484
Check Our Prices
DUL/TRAEFIC
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
16 East 13th 749-0087
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Driver Education offered midwife Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FAVOR FACTORY The Ultimate service. Let us work for you. We specialize in video and library services. Call 1-800-345-6722.
Government photos, passports, immigration,
blood tests, portfolio
J/BK color. Call Tom Sweed. 781-342-9560
HOUSELEANING, conscientious person, high
work quality, references. Perry 597-3921
KU student would detail your car professionally for
$60. For more information call 749-0708
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Student rates. 824-2344
Model Photography Model Portfolio Wedding & portrait,Instant ID photo student phone calls chat
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
927/12 Mass. 841-1071
16 East 13th 842-1133
Want to learn guitar, stinging blues, goodtime rock, insightful foliage and theory. Call Benito at 1-800-555-2947.
RICK FRYDMAN
Attorney at Law
235 Typing Services
Tired of taking an atbuy back time? Get $25 more pet textbook and save when buying towels!
$10 off the 3rd unit.
- after Women Ward Working. Former editor
- after Women Ward Working. Former editor
- and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of
- the book.
1-Speed check always included. 2-Same day service
3-Grad, project welcome. CalMind's y
y
1- Typing/WP: W letters, term papers, resumes,
824-4754-30 for 30 wkds anytime anywkds.
823 Missouri 843-4023.
PRI AMLA KODE Get an edge on the rest. Sched-
ing for success! Now! Call!
NOW! 749-1000
- Free Consultation
Word Perfect Word Processing Laser Printer
Near campus $1.50/double-spaced page. Call 842-695-3021
maintenance/Production, and Personalized DC
launches with Reliability to Launch at
+840-802 with your team.
WidePerfect HIM Compatible Word Processing
Word Perfect HIM Compatible Orchard Currors, no calls
after p@m. m48-8648
J.K. Professional Word Processing, accurate and
affordable, call after p. 191; m. 841-634.
Word processing, applications, term papers,
distortations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush
work. Resumes.
10% OFF
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
AST Premium 28M, 2MB RAM, 80287 Math Coprocessor
3M, 64MB RAM, 512MB Free Super-
DDR5, DDROS, Original Packaging, 849
28M, HYUNDAI IR compatible, Math Coprocessor
1.2.1.4 Mouse, Modem, Software $100
91 mountain bike series "50" Paramount, owned &
& maintained by Shop Mechanic $650,842,967.
92 Cannondale racing bike never leiden, Brand new
$500,000 offer 824-4021.
an absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine, fine art and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books. Playful artwork, tabletop decor, art supplies, Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising items, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, Royal Doulton, military collectibles, country furniture, fine art and sculpture, imported corporeal figurines, and so much more it will blow you away! QUANTRIL S'FLA MARKET [N.W. New Hampshire] Open every Fri. 9am-5pm. Call info call 482-6616 Via and Mastercard welcome.
Cars hire! Landroof towed by a car.
For more information
Car stereo 1 Denn tapecod 2 Rockford Fos Gate Punch 5 amp. Bostac Acoustic 6 x 9; call 800-743-1968.
Electronic Typwriter as new $100. Includes
600 word, spellwriting function, display,
additional control buttons. Call us 704-285-3898.
Giant Sedona ATB. 24 inch frame, 18 speeds, two sets of giants. $20982-6850
King size waterbed for $250 or best offer. Call 865-602-9800
Mac SE 20 mg HD, modem, Imagewriter II, color
Desk笔, case 20100 BOLD 594-6846
Raleigh Bike, like $50. Sears Dorm fridge
$99 Call Aaron 863-3844
Olympus M-PC Camera fully automatic or manual plus 35-2100 zoom lens, 2x converter lens, multidicaled flash. Tamrac bag. $300 KU medical student in KC1-384-6564.
Mountain Bike, Bridgestone MB-2. Race ready,
nauk-proof carbon fiber huff, hsu J84-84798
Sharp laptop computer 640K T60 31/12" F.D. Excellent condition 842-4221
1978 Buck Regal Limited, 71,000k $ actual mileage
4.9 Engine. runs very good. ks 865-4339
miles
Sony CDP 370 CD Player $130.00 and 10-band
$100.00, Call 749-0231
Island D-30 professional synthesizer/keyboard
Roland D-30 professional and 248 memory cards.
99% new. $89,443. Buy now!
Excellent condition 842-4021
340 AutoSales
1986. Ford Hanger 4-w drive, automatic, Roll carh
chrome wheels, air-conditioning. Many extras
are available.
Honda Aero 50 Excellent condition, well-maintained. All accessories included. $429 best offer. ABOVE.
Volkswagen Bag For Sale, fair condition, $400 cash,
798 6127
360 Miscellaneous
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
touch of chic jewelry, strenuous musical instrument
ments, and eccentric jaywalk jewelry & jewelry.
1849 wd. 7th; 2006 d. Jaywalk Jewelry & Jewelry.
NEEDED: 2-3 non-student tickets to MIZUZ O U basketball game! Call Gail at 865-9707
370 Want to Buy
15h, Shauna 841-6478 leave message.
Wanted 2-3 unwanted BB ball tickets. Colorado
WANTED one-on-one-student B-Ballticket Colo Feb.
150h. Noon-5pm
Wanted Non-Nationwide basketball tickets for Kansan
vs. Missouri; Mater 8; Call 611-4800
**
Wanted 2-3 non-student BBall tickets. Colorado
Bell. 15 Call 864-7349. 864-7420.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing i & 12 bedroom apartments. Accessed from KU. On bus route. Fully equipped. Free Wi-Fi, pool. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trash panache bill! **1741 W. John Callis**
1 bedroom apartment for sublease available May 20, on bus route. call 841-7983 or 843-4754
Available now 2 bedroom at 11th and Indiana. First floor has hardwood floors and blinds for 401 pts. 845-7979.
Cox Victorian one bedroom apt. near campus available in March $335, 842-6384
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 religion, sexism, handicap, familial status, homestead, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
Available Now- Private. BJR ApT. Close to campus. $225/mo. No Pebles 869-1953.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K.U.
841-6254
Hillview Apts $1e lease signage signin 1 & 2 bedroom apartments $23 & $35 plus deposit. On line: www.hillview.com
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.
SHORTTERMLEASESNOWAVAILABLE onstudie,
2br. apt. and 3br. 21/2bath townhouse.
TRAILRIDGE
Large b1dmr + studio Avail, now at 1339 Ohio. $230 +
$25 + utilities. 749-7568
Now laking for June & August. Nice 2 bedroom Apartment with large basement, all rooms, all balconies, central air, bus stop, maintenance and management. Quality at the service in town. b41-6888. Spanish Crest Apartments.
Looking for a place? Copy 2 bedroom apt. in the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July. $396/month + utilities. Negotiable security. Call 864-2689
Louisiana Place Apt 3. Now leasing nice B2R ApT.
Bordering Beautiful view of the city. Call
(866) 457-0100.
NEW 2B, Clear to campus, Available Now!
Appliances, $400, Low utilities, call 342-827-1296
One bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place. Furnished, watered pad. Walk to campus and downtown.
**Sublease Studio Apartment** available for summer rentals **$266.00** + utilities每月. Call **B2-9200**.
Spectacular 3 BDR Duplex & $75.00, fully equip
with air conditioning, near campus, bus route 842,
842-178, 842-197.
STOP PAYING RENT! Move into a great 21st condo soon to enjoy the warmer air. Low interest rates mean your investment is excellent time to buy. For more information on this or other options, visit Jim Bianzer at Calvin Eddy & Kapsallman 841-769-2722.
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232.
Boardwalk
1& 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Spring &
Fall Move-ins
apartments
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
South Point
1, 2, 3, 4
Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
· Close to bus route
· Small pets OK with deposit
· Inexpensive gas heat
· Central air
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Open 10-5, M-F
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appl. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc
MORNING
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3 & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
• Garages; $2^{1/2}$ Baths
• Microwave Ovens
• Some with Fireplaces
• On KU Bus Route
• Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
meadowbrook
---
TIRED of being crammed into small living areas? Visit Meadowbrook Apts. Wide range of GREAT studios and 2 GREAT apts
Lighted Tennis Courts Two Pools
Laundry facilities in most buildings
Water Paid/Free Basic Cable
KU Bus Stops
Carports/Garages available
Playgrounds
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat anytime you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive, You're About to Get an Education.
Ask about our "Upperclass man Special" or our $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next
Close to Campus
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
It's Time to Step up to
Meadowbrook
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
Call now to reserve your room.
Naismith Hall
Expierenced Professional Maintenance
Subspace spacious furnished for female, close
home $190 /mo utilities paid March - May 15.
843-3300
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence,KS 66044
(913)843-8559
842-4200 15th & Crestline
Sublet. 2 Brm apt. W/D, FREE storage, pets ok.
$mo plus. roembid 841-2640
Sublease now one bedroom ap4. 934 Mississippi
Nice, secure, close to campus $325.004-62490
Summer sublease, species 2 bedrooms - 2 baths.
close to campus, furnished. 749-387-6876
430 Roommate Wanted
1. non-smoking roommate needed for 3bed furniture
nished doubled bus on route with full bath, WD, DW,
microwave & garage. Large bedroom $155 plus 1/3
util. Please call 749-2181 after 6.
FMALE roommate wanted to share 2BR, 2 bath
FMALE roommate wanted to share bus route, water pd
$12.10.sv, 7.17bk, Call 812.465.7389
Furnished Campus Place Apartment needs roommate $18 mo. call 841-8505
Female, share large office close to campus.
$200.00 - 1/2 elect. 841.167 After 3 m. 842.537-843.575
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female roommate wanted for 2bedroom. Have own room and walk in closet. $240 + 1/2 util. On bus route. Call 865-0194. Available now!
Roommate wanted to share furnished 4-dr. apt, at KU ASP09, $250/mo; Cathy a-164-7099.
Reliable Trouble maker to make LRG 2BR 2BR 100/i 1/2UTL, call Mike824546
M/F Room requirement as NASP 3 bedroom townhouses, low utilities, low taxes, references required, 865-3411
Roommate needed ASAP. 3 bedroom apt $200/mo
821-1461
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nice room in a house near campus available Feb. 15.
170 tuition fees, paid, 749-7885
Roommate needed. 2-bedroom-Duplex. $150.00/
12 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1126
Roommates needed: 3 bedrooms behind卫生间. Rest Place. 200 utilities and Cable paid. 842-451-600
Prepaid Order Form Ads
Words set all AICAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 word-
Centered lines count as 7 words.
Roommate wanted! Non-smoker for 3 bedroom furnished duplex with 2 full bath, WD, DW, microwave, and garage. Rent negotiable. Call841-1698. Leave message.
with a minimum of one pre-paid classified advertising
unit and two classified advertising
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0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
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University Daily Kansas
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
224
© 1982 Universal Press Syndicate
"Same as the others, O'Neill. The flippers, the fishbowl, the frog, the lights, the arm. . . Just one question remains: Is this the work of our guy, or a copycat?"
12
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 10, 1992
No Perverts Please!
FREE DATE, JUST CALL JOHN BOSS
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of a lifetime. Call in Monday or Tuesday between 4 & 5 p.m. at 864-4747 and let the adventure begin.
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The Hottest College Talk Show In The Nation! For legal reasons and your personal safety you will be interviewed separately.
Lost cat travels country
The Associated Press
WICHTI – Michelle Marshall had almost given up finding her cat, Cruz, who had been missing from her home in Salina for more than a week.
Then she read her horoscope last Sunday: "Lost possessions turn up in the oddest places."
A driver for North American Van Lines discovered the cat while unloading furniture in Alabama. There was no one there to take care of the frightened animal, which had spent seven days in the back of the 18-wheeler, so the driver fed him, put him on the passenger's seat, traveled on to North Carolina and left him with Gray.
"Now, I don't believe in horoscopes," Marshall said, "but I turned to my husband and said, 'That means the cat.'"
Meanwhile, in Goldsboro, N.C., a woman named Treva gray was caring for a namenable gray cat in her office at Jackson Moving and Storage Co.
Last Monday, after tracking down his owner through a number on his Saline County rabies tag, Gray called Marshall at work and told her she thought she had her cat
"Oh, you're kidding!" Marshall cried. "Well, where are you? I mean, I can come get him."
"Miss Marshall, we're in Goldboro.
"We're in North Carolina," Gray answered.
Marshall's 6-year-old cat, whom she had named for his wayfaring ways, had hopped into the back of a neighbor's moving van and ended up in North Carolina. The trick now was getting him home.
"I called around to airlines to see what it would cost, and I couldn't believe it," she said. Ninety-eight dollars for the ticket, $15 for a veterinary exam, $25 for a rabies shot, $30 for an air-certified cage.
Gray collected about $96 from people around town, and on Saturday, October 14, they set up a bar.
Twodays later, a headline ran on the front page of the Goldsboro News-Argus: "Stowaway cat arrives from Kansas." The article related Cruz's unusual story and solicited donations for his plane ticket home.
Marshall waited at Wichita Mid-Continent Airport while the ticket agent retrieved Cruz from the plane.
MICHAEL M. MURRAY
Doug Hesse/Special to the KANSAN
Smart smirks
During the College Quiz Bowl, Jay Ernst, Lakewood, Colo., graduate student and member of the Friends of Bill T. team, smirks at an incorrect answer by a competing team. The team Warriors of Zeist won the event Saturday at the Kansas Union.
Ostriches take off in U.S. agriculture
The Associated Press
ALBANY, Ga. — They are cheaper to raise than cattle. Their meat has the taste of beef, but not the cholesterol. Their milk is mixed into $1.20 boots and $8.00 jackets.
Ostriches, the nation's latest alternative agricultural craze, are attracting droves of investors willing to stick their necks out on a bird that cannot fly.
"We see a very lucrative business," said Suzanne Shingler, who raises ostriches on an 800-acre farm near Albany in southwest Georgia. "I think eventually Europe and the world in general will be looking to the United States for skins, feathers and meat."
Ostriches are the biggest birds in the world. Males can reach a height of 8 feet and weigh up to 345 pounds. They are
Breeders think the United States has the potential to replace South Africa as the world's leading supplier because of technological improvements.
native to the deserts and plains of Africa. Powerful legs and a 15-foot stride give them a top speed of 40 mph.
Ostriches are valuable for their hides, feathers and meat. But the ostrich population in the United States, estimated at 10,000 to 20,000 on about 2,000 farms, is still too small to support tanneries and slaughterhouses.
And because of the bird shortage, ostriches are worth more alive than
A pair of breeding birds cost $45,000 to $60,000; 3-month-old chick sells for about $3,000. Ostrich hens lay an aver- age of 50 eggs a year, each worth about $1,000.
African-American ART EXHIBIT
in celebration
of Black History Month
Mon-Fri: 9-5 Sat: 10-4
Kansas Union Gallery Level 4
Free admission
sponsored by SUA
featuring
Gloria Graves
Samuel Smith
Ernest T. Ross
Moses Smith
Smoove, Inc 92
GETREWARDED for a job well done.
★
53
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We will be interviewing on Wed.Feb.12th.
ups
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.92
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Professor studies Blacks in juries
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
Both African-American and white prosecuting attorneys in the past have tended to exclude potential African-American jurors by using peremptory challenges, according to a study by a University of Kansas professor.
A peremptory challenge allows prosecutors and defense attorneys to dismiss potential jurors through questions without giving an explanation to the court.
Pete Rowland, associate professor of political science, went to Heinz County, Miss, four years ago to study cases that pre-dated the 1987 U.S. Supreme Court case, Batson vs. Kentucky.
Batson said prosecutors must convince the court that they are excluding an African American for non-racial reasons during the peremptory challenge questioning.
Before the decision, prosecutors were not
required to explain why they were striking someone from the jury during peremptory questioning.
Rowland studied about 380 cases in Heinz County and will compare the findings to results of post-Batson cases.
In the future, African-American representation on juries will improve, because the prosecution must qualify striking an African American from a potential jury, he said.
In the ongoing study, Rowland determined that Heinz County prosecutors, through peremptory challenges, would strike African Americans from the potential jury panel 85 percent of the time, he said.
Rowland said that one prosecutor in Mississippi described the perfect jury as white, middle-aged and unemployed.
"He said his conviction ratewould be sky high if he had 12 of those guys on the jury," Rowland said.
Many prosectors in Heinz County said they excluded African Americans in jury selection because they wanted to convict the defendant, not because they were racially biased, he said.
The study determined that there was not a higher acquittal rate when African Americans sat on juries than when they did not sit on juries, Rowland said.
For example, prosecutors may keep a retired, African-American military officer on the jury, or an African American who, during questioning, said police treated people fairly, he said.
However, prosecutors did not always attempt to strike every African-American potential juror, he said.
Although prosecutors often try to exclude African Americans from juries, the study showed defense attorneys often try to exclude whites, Rowland said.
Rowland said the research was specific to Heinz County. The findings did not give evidence
of exclusion of African Americans in Lawrence, he said.
A faculty research grant from KU financed partor Rowland's research.
He chose the South for the site of his study because of its history of racial tension, and because 25 percent of the population in Heinz County was African American.
That population percentage allowed prosecutors to exclude African Americans from juries, Rowland said. If the population were 50 percent white and 50 percent African American, it would be harder to strike African Americans from the jury, he said.
Stan Daniass, professor of evidence and trials at the KU law school, said exclusion had occurred in the past, and the Batson ruling had an effect on present-day jury selection.
Attorneys have to convince the judge they want to exclude a juror because of a reason brought out in the jury selection process, they cannot exclude them on the basis of race, Davis said.
Admissions bill debate goes on
One vote needed to send plan to full Senate
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — One of three undecid
Education Committee must vote in favor of a qualified admissions bill for the legislation to be considered by the full Senate.
The committee should
Kansas
1992
Legislature
in high school. That attitude continues into college. Coasting is very expensive for the state and the student."
discuss and vote this week on whether to pass the bill to the Senate floor, said State Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge and head of the committee.
The committee members were scheduled to vote on the bill yesterday, but they instead spent the hearing asking questions of the bill's supporters and opponents.
The bill would require that students entering a Board of Regents university have at least a 2.0 grade point average, a score of 23 on the ACT or rank in the top one-third of their high school graduating class.
Six votes in favor of the legislation will be required to pass the bill to the Senate floor for debate and a vote.
In a telephone poll conducted before the hearings on the qualified admissions proposal, five committee members said they would vote in favor of the bill, three members said they would vote against the bill and three members said they had not decided.
"I'm not sure the Legislature should decide
The three members who said they had not decided how to vote on the issue were State Sen. Don Montgomery, R-Sabetha, State Sen. Jerry Karr, D-Emporia, and State Sen. Sheila Frahm, R-Colby.
Montgomery asked Regent Rick Harman, who supports qualified admissions, whether the problem the legislation was attempting to solve was in higher education or secondary education.
All three remain undecided on the issue, they said yesterday.
Karr said he was not sure legislated admissions standards would make students prepare themselves better for college
Harman said: "If students in high schools don't have to meet some sort of standard, this leads them to coast
who goes to college, but that
"Admissions counselors seem to be
better equipped to make that decision on an individual basis."
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents, said: "Students will measure up. Tell them what you expect, and they'll do it. Motivation, preparation and commitment is what this bill demands from students."
Frahm said after the meeting that she had never voted in favor of qualified admissions but that she had not decided how she would vote this session.
"It seems that the tone in the state is changing on this issue," Frahm said. "Guidance counselors and administrators at high schools are starting to say admissions standards would help. I'm still not sure how I'll vote."
Audrey Langworthy, R-Prairie Village, is the primary legislative sponsor of the bill. As a member of the committee, she spoke in support of the bill.
"Qualified admissions will set the stage for some dramatic improvements in student outcomes," Langworthy said. "Students will perform better just knowing it matters. We all want educational reform. This proposal is a key link to reform."
"As a taxpayer, I want to know that my tax dollars are being used wisely," she said. "Remedial courses and a five-to six-year stint in college due to poor preparation are not wise expenditures."
Langworthy said students needed to be held accountable for their educations.
Roberto Bolaño
Accompanying the KU Jazz Singers in Dizzy Gillespie's "A Night in Tunisia," Lawrence senior Jay Stutter contributes a piano solo. The Ensemble 1, both directed by jazz instructor Dan Gailey, performed last night at Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Kristen Petty/KANSAN
Jazzing it up
Tyson guilty on three counts
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Boxer Mike Tyson was found guilty yesterday of raping a Miss Black America contestant who said he lured her to his hotel room and overpowered her.
Tyson faces a maximum prison sentence of 60 years when he is sentenced March 6. He was allowed to remain free on $30,000 bond.
The conviction threatens to end the rags-to-riche career of one of the most prominent athletes of his generation. Tyson, at 20, was the youngest heavyweight champion ever, and had been planning a comeback this spring.
Tyson, 25, was found guilty of all the charges he faced — one count of rape and two counts of criminal deviate conduct.
Each count carries prison sentences ranging from six to 20 years and fines up to $10,000.
Asked what his most effective evidence was, prosecutor Garrison said, "That beautiful 18-year-old kid is the young person with a lot of courage."
The jury deliberated nine hours yesterday after nine days of testimony that they found the evidence to be
Tyson, whose stormy relations with women have been the stuff of tabloid headlines for years, offered an unusual defense—that he was a crude womanizer whose accuser must have known he wanted sex.
He maintained that he was blunt about his desires from the outset and that he had not been a "hateful person."
His accuser testified that the boxer had overpowered her in his hotel room, pinned her on a bed with his forearm, stripped her, raped her and laughed while she cried in pain and begged him to stop.
The incident took place last July 19 before the Miss Black America pageant in Indianapolis.
Besides the accuser, crucial prosecution witnesses included an emergency room doctor who said the woman suffered injuries consistent with rape, and a woman appeared scared and shaken when she emerged from Tyson's hotel.
Eleven pageant contestants testified for the defense, which, ironically, sought to portray Tyson as lewd and obsessed with sex. Many described Tyson's use of crude, sexually explicit language.
Some also said they heard the accuser make comments about his body, intellect and net worth, bolstering a defense argument that she was a gold-wound who concocted a scene of rape of anger for being treated as a one-night stand.
Others told a version of events closer to that of the accuser, who said she never heard the lew remarks and made any suggestive remarks herself.
Race became an issue in the trial, with defense attorneys arguing that the jury pool failed to represent Marion County's racial make-up, which is about 22 percent black.
Three of the 12 jurors chosen were black, but one of them asked to be excused after a fire midway through the trial damaged the hotel where the panel was sequestered.
Past Iowa caucuses
In 1980, President Jimmy Carter got a record 59.1 percent of vote in the Iowa Democratic candidates. Winners and their states of the 1976
1976:
Jimmy Carter
iowa Share What
caucus of happened
winner vote later
27. 6% Won nomination, election success Gerald Ford
1980:
Jimmy Carter
59.1% Won nomination,
in election to Ronald Reagan
1984:
Walter
Mondale
1988:
Richard
Gephardt
48. 9% Won nomination, lost election to Ronald Reagan
31. 3% Lost nomination to Michael Dukakis
SOURCE: Iowa secretary of state's office KRTN
Harkin is undisputed champion in Iowa caucuses
31.3%
The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa — Sen. Tom Harkin scored an uncontested home-state victory last night in the Iowa caucasus that inaugurated the wide-open 1992 Democratic presidential race. His rivals skipped the event, pointing toward next week's primary showdown in New Hampshire.
Harkin, the most liberal Democrat in a field of five, was gaining almost 80 percent support as he bid for momentum in the tumultuous campaign week to come. He said the results were "far better than I ever imagined," and predicted steady improvement in New Hampshire, where his rivals await.
Republicans waited to test Patrick Buchanan's conservative challenge to President Bush. The Iowa GOP canceled its traditional presidential preference poll, leaving New Hampshire to go first.
Harkin's closest competitor. The other Democrats in the race, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerry, former Sen. Paul Tsongas and former California Gov. Jerry Brown, made no effort even to compete for second place.
Uncommitted delegates were
"It is a non-event," Kerrey aide Jim Priblay said of the Iowa results. "We didn't compete." Party officials predicted the turnout would be a little more than 21,000, about a fifth of the 125,000 who participated four years ago for a hotly competitive race.
The absence of candidates in Iowa means New Hampshire voters will render the first meaningful verdict on the nominating races, and on the various prescriptions for economic revival that have emerged as the dominant issue in the race.
Harkin's rivals spent caucus day in New Hampshire, where the polls indicate a tight race between Clinton and Tsongas. Kerney, Harkin and Brown looked for an opportunity to tap into
the state's large undecided vote
Clinton set the tone for the week ahead, saying he would "fight like hell" to shake off the effects of questions about womanizing and draft dodging, controversies he said were inspired by Republicans. He then flew to New York, for a lucrative evening of fund raising that netted him $725,000.
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who declined to enter the race in December, added spice to the Democratic campaign, telling the New York Post he would not "presume to interfere" with a write-in effort on his behalf.
From the start, Iowa was a one-candidate show, a rarity since Jimmy Carter used the caucuses in 1976 as a launching pad to the White House. Customarily, candidates have lavished months of campaigning, and tens of thousands of dollars in television advertising, in the state.
With 89 percent of the state's 2,186 precincts reporting, Harken had 78
percent support. Uncommitted had 12 percent, Tsongas had 4 percent, Clinton and Kerrey had 2 percent, and Brown 1 percent.
in the competition for Iowa's 49 delegates to the Democratic National Convention, Harkin led with 39, with the balance still to be allocated.
Harkin said of his favorite-son victory, "It helps me not only in New Hampshire, but all over the country."
If a caucus televised by C-SPAN from Council Bluffs was any indication, the party sessions were polite minuets of democracy in action. Kerrey supporters sought to entice defections from Harkin, but to no avail. And the politicking, such as it was, lasted less than an hour.
Harkin appealed in advance for a strong showing. "We need to come out smoking," he said in a weekend of campaigning around his state. The results were not surprising for a politician who is the only Democrat in the
state's history to win two full terms to the Senate.
Harkin, the son of a coal miner, grew up poor in a rural town, worked his way through college and law school and spent five years in the Navy in the 1960s. He got his start in politics as a congressional aide, then served 10 years in the House. He won election to the Senate in 1984 and again in 1990.
Yesterday's caucuses marked the first step toward selection of delegates to the Democratic convention, where 2,144 votes are needed to secure the nomination. But at this early stage of the campaign, it was not delegate strength the candidates were after, it was momentum and headlines.
On the Republican side, neither Buchanan nor David Duke made a move against Bush in Iowa. But neither the White House nor the state GOP was in the mood for any surprises, and the presidential preference poll was scrubbed.
2
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
LSAT GMAT GRE
LSAT GMAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW Call 843-3131
ESAT GMAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW 8
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Lawrence 843-4344
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The Athlete's Foot
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-First Hall, Lawrence Kane 66045
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not be!
GOOD GREETY
--more serious than other business-related crimes, but executives ranked price-fixing, worker health and safety violations and insider trading as the most grave.
Japanese Traditional Performance
NOH and BIWA
8:00 pm Thursday, February 13, 1992 Swarthout Recital Hall Murphy Hall, University of Kansas
Featuring:
Matsui Akira: Noh Actor of Kita School Arai Shisui: Biwa Player of Satsuma Style
Performing
Kityotsume (Noh Dance)
Ibaragi (Biwa Music)
Aoi No Ue (Noh & Biwa)
TICKETS
General Public: $8.00
Students: $5.00
Call Murphy Hall Box Office
(913)864-3982
Sponsored by:
ITSC, IPAC, EALC & CEAS of KU and Friends of Hiratsuka
U.S. execs: Environmental polluting is serious crime
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Most U.S. executives surveyed in a poll released yesterday said that damaging the environment was a serious crime, but fewer than half said officers of polluting companies should be held personally responsible.
The Associated Press
Arthur D. Little consulting company sponsored the survey.
The poll asked 500 executives nationwide to rate how seriously authorities should consider insider training, price-fixing or antitrust violations, worker health and safety infractions and environmental crimes.
In a similar poll in April, the public rated environmental offences as far
Still, 83 percent of the executives said damaging the environment was a serious crime, and 49 percent accepted the idea of personal liability.
Stewart Young, a director of Arthur D. Little, said, "The fact that nearly half of this sample believes that executives should be held personally liable for environmental offenses suggests that many business leaders understand that they work under a microscope and are increasingly accountable for their own actions, or inactions."
ONCAMPUS
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a luncheon forum at 11:40 a.m. tomorrow. Maggie Childs, head of the Human Relations Committee of Faculty Senate, and Reggie Robinson, associate professor of law and a member of the Human Relations Committee, will speak. Call 843-4933 by noon today to make lunch reservations. The cost is $3.75.
The Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring an information table from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today at the four floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information session about studying abroad in Spanish-speaking countries at 3 p.m. today at 4006 Wescoe Hall. An information session
about studying in French-speaking countries will be at 4 p.m. today at the French Department Library.
The Graduate Student Council will sponsor a reception for Gerd Rosenblatt, candidate for vice-chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, at 5 p.m. today at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union.
The Society of East Asian Studies will meet at 5 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
WEATHER
Amnex International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
Today
high:34
low:29
NEBRASKA Omaha • 31/14 Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 43/23
KANSAS Lawrence 34/29 •
Dodge City Wichita 40/30
MISSOURI Kansas City 36/29 St Louis 41/26
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 53/34
3-day outlook
Today's high/low tomorrow morning's low
NEBRASKA
Ornah 31/14
COLORADO
Denver 43/23
KANSAS
Lawrence 34/29
MISSOURI
Kansas City 36/29 St. Louis 41/26
Dodge City 40/32 Wichita 40/30
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City 53/34
3-day outlook
TODAY
Cloudy, 50 percent chance of rain or snow in the afternoon, with east winds at 10-20 mph.
TOMORROW
Mostly cloudy, Snow ending early in the morning, with southeast winds at 5-10 mph.
THURSDAY
Partly cloudy and a little warmer, with south winds.
Around the U.S.
Boston 45/20
Chicago 31/13
Dallas 61/41
Detroit 31/6
Houston 67/50
New York 41/28
Los Angeles 65/54
Philadelphia 42/23
San Francisco 60/51
Washington 49/29
Forecast by Andy Kula, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
TODAY
Cloudy, 50 percent chance of rain or snow in the afternoon, with east winds at 10-20 mph.
TOMORROW
Mostly cloudy. Snow ending early in the morning, with southeast winds at 5-10 mph.
THURSDAY
Partly cloudy and a little warmer, with south winds.
Around the U.S.
Boston 45/20
Chicago 31/13
Dallas 61/41
Detroit 31/16
Houston 67/50
New York 41/28
Los Angeles 65/54
Philadelphia 65/23
San Francisco 60/51
Washington 49/29
Forecast by Andy Kula, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's mountain bike, valued at $650, was taken, and the student's car was damaged on the hood and windshield by a pellet gun, causing $300 in damage, between Friday night and Sunday night in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence
THIS WEEK STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF AUSTRALIA
864-SHOW
De Sica's Neorealist Classic! The Bicycle Thief
Dali, Bunuel, Cocteau & Clair Surrealist Fish Night
MEN IN TRAVELS
7:00 Tuesday, Feb. 11
7:00 Thursday, Feb. 12
1:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
Films are screened in Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5. Kansas Union Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Office, Level 4, Kansas Union
P
7:00 Thursday, Feb. 13
4:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
plus
Friday, Feb. 14 at 7:30 & 10:00
at Hashinger Hall
police reported.
An employee of the Animal Care Unit in Malott Hall said a co-worker pinched her and made harassing comments between last Monday morning and Tuesday night, KU police reported.
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
BIG 6 SPORTS CLUB All Draws are 20 oz. "The English Pint"
$2.25 Draws and $6.50 Pitches at Anchor Ale and Boulevard
Wheat Beer Everyday. Check out our Specials! too!
Daily Specials
Mondays
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Anchor Steam Ale and Boulevard Wheat Beer
Tuesdays & Thursdays
$1.60 Wells
Beam, Seagrass, Bacardi, Smirnoff, etc.
$1.25 Draws and $3.75 Pitchers
$1.25 Draws and $3.75 Pitchers
Bud Light and Coors Light
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Kinko's • thecopy center • Good clean copies, Great contests • NoHotDogs • 904 VERMONT (913) 843-8019
Burge
KU Bookstore
Customer
Service Desk,
level 2,
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level 1
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"Love Me Like A Hawk"
Valentine Drawing!!!!!!!
Jaybowl, level 1, Kansas Union
Win a Spring Break Trip for two to Panama City Beach, Florida, with SUA! Also: Beach towels, squeeze bottles, case of pop, a catered dinner for two, two SUA movie passes and two Jaybowl free game passes!!!
Mt. Oread Bookshop, level 2, Kansas Union
Have your entry blank stamped at each of the locations listed, then drop it off at SUA. Be sure to include your name, phone number and KUIIO. Only completed forms will be considered. One entry per person. Union employees not eligible. Entry Deadline: 2 pm, Feb.14. One winner drawn. Need not be present to win.
NAME
Business Office, level 4. Kansas Union
Hawk's Nest Cashier, level 3. Kansas Union
Information Counter, level 4. Kansas Union
PHONE #
KUJD
SUA level4 Kansas Union
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CAMPUS / AREA
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
3
Students lobby legislators The pressures
SMOKE-FREE CLASS OF
Gov. Joan Finney addresses 120 members of the Associated Students of Kansas at the Statehouse in Topi
TOPEKA — Students from the Board of Regents schools, including about 40 University of Kansas students, traveled to the Kansas Statehouse yesterday to address higher education concerns.
Joe Cinalli, KU director of ASK, said students spoke to about 90 percent of the legislators.
"The day went well," Cinali said. "We spoke to some very supportive people and others who were not as supportive, but took time to listen."
The students lobbied for higher education on Lobby Day, sponsored by Associated Students of Kansas. They also attended a rally and heard a speech from Gov. Joan Finney that left some students disappointed.
State legislators were the main target of about 120 students from six u-niversi
Students lobbied legislators in the morning and late afternoon. Meetings were scheduled with most of the legislators, but students spoke with legislators whenever and wherever they could, including on elevators.
Alan Lowden, Senate president, and Kristin Lange, Senate vice president, spoke to State Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, in an elevator about increased services for tuition increases.
Cinalli said student lobbyists spoke to the legislators from their schools' areas and hometowns.
Shelly Witt, Chapman freshman,
said her experience with one of the
representatives was not what she expected.
"The guy threw other issues in our face," Witt said between sessions. "He didn't want to listen, and it crushed my heart and now I'd go back after this afternoon and try again."
John Schwartz, KU assistant director of ASK, said students met with the legislators in groups of five or six.
Between lobby sessions, Finney
spoke to the group on the second floor of the Statehouse.
"As governor, I must represent the entire state and look to see what is in the best interest for the entire state," she said.
Finney did not directly respond to specific higher education issues. She spoke on a variety of topics — including the proposed casinos on Native American reservations, and environmental issues — telling the assembled students that water conservation would be the largest concern for them in the 21st century.
"We have to learn to control water, share water and have an adequate
supply in the future," she said.
When she spoke about education, Finney concentrated on elementary and secondary school issues.
Schwartz said he was disappointed that the governor did not concentrate on the problem.
"She was using this arena as a politi-
sion, he said. "She was not
[assumed] to be."
John Shoemaker, Topeka junior,
agreed.
"If the Governor speaks to a student lobbying group, she should gear her speech to them," he said. "Several times I lost total attention or felt like laughing."
Cinalli said the governor's actions with her proposed budget were more important than her speech. The budget was fair considering economic conditions, he said.
Finney delivered her speech after a studentally.
At the rally, the six main goals of ASK were outlined. The goals include Youth Education Services, capital improvements, 100 percent fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants, financial aid, increased services for increased tuition and maintenance of the state's commitment to higher education.
The pressures of belonging
By Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
Students struggle with identity
Claudia Calabrese said that when she was 8 years old, she suddenly realized that she was different.
Calabrese, whose mother is African American and father is white, spent most of her childhood with her mother's family. People in her mother's community accepted people regardless of their race, she said.
"It's like Steve Martin does in 'The Jerk,' said Calabrese, Evanston, III, junior. "You know how all of a sudden he realizes he's not like the Black family he lives with, that's what happened to me."
"When I was little, I used to say that my mom and my brother, who is darker-skinned, were Black, and my dad and I were white," she said. "Even when I didn’t understand what I was, I knew I wasn’t quite like other Black people."
However, it was not until Calabrese came to the University of Kansas that she began feeling uncomfortable.
"Here, especially recently, people act like I'm a natural phenomenon," she said. "People seem to find hard to grasp that a Black person and a white person can really produce offspring."
Calabrese is one of many students of African-American mixed heritage who have dealt with the pressures of belonging. Some of the students say they are most comfortable with African Americans, but most struggle with identity and acceptance.
Like Calabrese, Andrea Gentry,
Takeda junior, did not understand her
shoe's fit.
"Kids would call me Oreo or zebra, and I would laugh," Gentry said. "I didn't understand what they meant. I
thought everyone's family was like mine."
She said her identity problems continued when she entered an African-American college.
Black History Month
"I was all into
WILLIAM H. MURPHY
"I'm Black and I'm proud," she said,
"But then I had to stop and wonder about that. I had to realize that I'm half white and half Black."
Gentry said that she had been accepted more by African Americans, but that she sometimes had to defend herself.
"They'll say things not realizing that I'm white too," she said. "Most people can't tell me mixed, but I'm always aware of both sides."
Andrew Chilson, who is also African American and white, was adopted by white parents as a child. He said it had been difficult for his white family to understand what it was like being of mixed races.
Chilson, Gibson, Okla, freshman, said he had both African-American and white friends but felt more comfortable with African Americans.
"Because there's a bit of Black in you, Black people accept you," he said. "Because there's a bit of Black in you, white people cannot accept you."
Leslie Davis, Salina sophomore said she identified with African Americans regardless of her Asian heritage.
"Irealize I'm Korean too, but I was raised predominantly Black," she said. "I has basically have the same background. I was exposed to the same culture."
By Jenny Martin Kansan staff writer
Five candidates are being interviewed on campus this month for the position of vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service.
A search committee was formed last fall to interview applicants for the position. Howard Mossberg, former pharmacy, is the interim vice chancellor.
The candidates will spend about two days in interviews with the search committee and administrators from the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Kelley Hayden, assistant to the interim executive vice chancellor, said the five candidates were chosen by the committee from a pool of 75 applicants. The position will not necessarily be filled by one of the five candidates.
Mossberg said he had been asked to serve as interim vice chancellor until the search committee could find a qualified candidate.
Howard Mossberg was appointed interim vice chancellor last summer, after Frances Horowitz accepted the position as president of the graduate school at City College of the City University of New York.
Although the committee chose to interview the five because of their qualifications, the other 70 applicants have not been eliminated, Hayden said.
The 15-member committee, responsible for selecting and interviewing the candidates, is made up of faculty, staff, students and classified and unclassified representatives.
"It was never my intention to remain in the position," he said. "When I left the School of Pharmacy I made a promise to go back."
Bidding to start in Union remodeling
Mossberg said that the candidates were from diverse backgrounds and that the
After the interview process, the committee will submit three recommendations to Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor. Shankel and Chancellor Gene Budig will appoint one person to the position.
Shankel said they would like to have the recommendation by spring and finish.
John Dobson of Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, was on campus Feb. 5 to 7. Dobson is currently the school's interim vice provost for research and advanced studies, and interim dean of the graduate college.
WEST HARVARD HOSPITAL
By Erik Bauer
Aaron Bloch, vice provost at
Bloomington University in New
York,
visited on the last week.
Kansan staff writer
As Jim Long walked through the main level of the Kansas Union, he eagerly described how it would look once major renovations were complete.
Long, director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, said the main entrance was too narrow. A new door will improve the flow of traffic, he said.
The Kansas Union will receive a face-lift that will include a plaza.
He talked about the long-awaited changes as he flipped through a few, large pieces of poster board that contained tile, carpet and wallpaper samples that could determine the new color scheme of the Union.
"We feel that the Kansas Union is as important and vital to the life of the University now as it has ever been in its 67-year history." he said.
He also said that part of the main floor, from the edge of the smoking lounge to the Student Union Activities office, would be blocked off for construction at the beginning of April until sometime in August.
After 2 p.m. today, general contractors will be allowed to bid for the job of remodeling the Union, a $4 million follow-up to the $6 million Phase One renovation.
services were consolidated on the third floor, and the bookstores were consolidated on the second floor. Also, the electrical, mechanical and air-conditioning systems were updated.
Phase One, which began in 1987 and was completed in January 1989, created office space for the Organization and Activities Center. Food
Phase Two of the Union remodeling master plan, which was conceived in 1984, will expand and improve upon some present features of the Union, including the construction of a plaza in front of the Union, a patio dining area on the third floor, an increase in the size of the main lobby, an improvement in the accommodations of the information counter, post office, and SUA box office, and a relocation of banking services to the main lobby.
Other changes include:
- Upgrading aging mechanical and electrical systems;
- Upgrading the fire alarm system:
- Improving the structural services for people with disabilities; and
- Removing asbestos.
Long said the removal of asbestos would not present a significant problem.
Both SUA and Maupintour Travel Services will move temporarily to Burge, which is now undergoing new construction in order to accommodate the two.
Dean Newton, president of SUA.
said the changes would not affect SUA adversely.
"I think our program will be about the same, if not better," Newton said. "I'd say better."
Students will have to purchase concert and movie tickets at Burge in the day and at the post office information counter at the Union at night.
The art gallery also will move to Burge and will return in Fall 1993. Maupintour, SUA and the art gallery will move out of the Union during spring break.
When the construction is completed in August, more construction will take place, closing down the smoking lounge on the north side of the
With expanded and modernized office space, SUA and Maupintur will return to the Union in the fall.
A new smoking and TV lounge will be completed by the beginning of the fall semester.
main lobby. Banking services, for example, will be moved during this stage of the construction, and the new entrance will be added.
Long said the completion of the north area of the main level was scheduled for the summer of 1993.
Don't miss your Valentine kiss
The Union was built in 1925. Different plans for renovation and 'emodelling were carried out in 1852, 1960, 1965, 1969, after the fire in 1970 and in 1989.
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University Daily Kansan/Tuesday, February 11,1992
OPINION
MARSELL Chucking Frozen
Mrs. CLINTON FOR PRESIDENT
NO, MARIO.
WE'VE MADE
OTHER PLANS.
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Advertisements glorify warfare's obvious horror
Imagine that you and your family were born in Iraq.
One night you are sitting at the kitchen table, eating dinner and talking about everyone's activities that day. Your father seems quieter than usual, then announces that he has been called into service by the Iraq government. He is to be a soldier in Sadam's latest campaign, Kuwait.
... Somewhere else, the television blares: "Hostile located, heading to pursue." There is an image of trees rushing by, and four young men wearing camouflaged uniforms sitting inside a tank. Suspenseful music plays over camera shots of the obvious sophistication of the tank.
One week later you are at the front door, watching your father walk away with his suitcase. Your mother cries as he disappears into a bus and is carried off with the mechanical roar of the engine.
An announcer says, "In the army, you not only get the skills to conquer America's highest technology, but money for college." A young, sharp-looking man stares sternly through a periscope. Inside the scope, he can see the enemy tank amid some trees. A circle with crosshairs slashing through the middle of it pans left to target the tank.
That night, your mother is hugging you close, trying to answer all your questions. "Don't worry," she says. "Papa will be home soon. He must do
David
Carusol II
Staff
columnist
this, for his people and his country." Her words have little effect, because You love your father very much.
A finger pushes down on a red button. The circle turns red, confirming the tank has been hit and destroyed. The young man smiles and cries, "Yeah!" amidst the climax of the music. He turns to see the tank commander, who is impressed and slowly nodding his head. The tank rushes on, and the television fades to black...
The preceding may be a realistic scenario, it may even have happened. It's real life versus the illusions of honor in military advertising, better yet, the military of the United States in general. These illusions are pounded into us almost every day, from "be all you can be" recruiting ads to the hightech excitement of a jet fighter plane.
Only a year ago, we ended an efficient war on the other side of Earth, and praised the "heroes" for their courageous actions. Their mission was accomplished well, but what we, in all our comfort and naivete, failed to realize is that they came back from a
gruesome, horrible accomplishment. Over there, our "heroes" killed and maimed more than 100,000 living, breathing persons; 100,000 members of thousands of individual families.
But it seems that most of us didn't give such death a second thought, because any statistic seems only a cliche, or we think somehow that the people of Iraq are evil. I don't want to preach about a theme you you've already heard many times before. But my challenge to you is: Think about it. What if it was your father or son? It definitely was someone's... more than 100,000 times over.
No one had better tell me I can "be all I can be" in the army or any military. My potential has nothing to do with being stripped of my identity and programmed like a computer. No one had better tell me to praise or respect the officers who seem worthy of our attention, for such officers are only small, expendable wheels in a giant bureaucracy designed to destroy. And no one had better tell me that casualties aren't actually many individual people, or that killing under the guise of war is more than the simple act of murder.
- David Caruso II is a Lake Waltana sophomore majoring in English and psychology.
On me, their breath would be wasted.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sexual past cannot be used
Using past alleged rapes against a defendant in a current rape trial is irrelevant
Kansas law states that a victim's sexual history may not be presented in a rape trial. This makes perfect sense considering that an act of rape is not just an act of sex, but an act of violence. Therefore, the victim's sexual past is irrelevant to the case.
Agreeing with the statute, Jean Winter, an Emporia senior said, "It just seems like it's the victim who is dragged through the mud." Without this law, many women do not press charges because they can't bear the humiliation of digging up their past sexual experiences.
But what about the sexual history of the accused? Kansas law does not even mention the use of the defendant's sexual history in a rape trial. As a result, Winter submitted a proposal requiring that the sexual past of the defendant be introduced in court.
There is a definite imbalance in this proposal. How is it fair or relevant to present the sexual history of the accused, but not that of the
accuser? This inherently assumes that the defendant is guilty.
Reflecting back to the William Kennedy Smith trial, Winter said, "When they had three other credible witnesses who came forward and said he did the same thing, I was appalled."
Winter does not realize, however, that the testimony of past alleged rape victims is irrelevant to the present trial. A lack of substantial evidence or relevancy in a rape case makes it a difficult crime to prove. If the accuser, for example, does not reveal physical signs of rape such as bruises, then it becomes the accuser's word against the defendant's, and, therefore, unsubstantial in court.
Usually, a case based on sexual history is a case based on hearsay and irrelevant evidence. It is unjustifiable to use a reputation of promiscuity to justify rape. Similarly, it is irrelevant to use the testimonies of alleged past victims to prove rape. A rape case is not unique to other violent crimes in what can or cannot be used in court.
Trading cards honor killers
Sarah Zercher for the editorial board
The cards may confuse children about violence and fame, while offending the victim's families
Commercialism has hit a new low. A Californiaca company is planning to market trading cards that feature serial killers
trading cards that reature serial killers and mass murderers. These cards will have an illustration of the killer, a 250-word description of the crime, the number of victims and the sentence imposed on the killer.
It was a bad decision to make these cards. Violence is glorified more than on television and in movies. Trading cards will only increase the glorification of violence.
The news coverage of a killer usually informs people about the killer and makes them aware of the crimes. News media do not attempt to glorify the killer.
But the cards are a glorification. Trading cards have traditionally been a place
Although a representative for the company making the cards said the cards would be no worse than the news coverage of the killers, there is a difference between the two.
reserved for heroes. Many children may not be able to differentiate between a hero card and a killer card.
The message these cards may be inadvertently sending is that a way to achieve fame is through violence. Some people dream of having their face on a trading card, but this is not the way that goal should be achieved.
And what about the families of the victims?
Is it not enough that they live with the loss of a family member who died at another person's hands? The trauma is needlessly increased when the face of the killer is on a card and the victim is reduced to a digit in the "number killed" section on a piece of cardboard.
Before such an item is marketed, the company should have thought less about profits and more about the impact of these cards. It is now up to consumers to inform the company that this sort of insensitive commercialism is unacceptable. The truly effective way to do this is to not buy the cards. The company has a right to make the cards, but consumers have the obligation not to buy them.
Amy Francis for the editorial board
If the presidential candidates of both parties want to enliven their debates, they might talk about what they'll do about Jawon.
Although pervasive, gangs defy popular solutions
Jawon, 14, lives on the West Side of Chicago. No permanent address. He and his fellow gang members pick out an abandoned building and call it home.
The cops assume that his source of income is crime. Theft, extortion, may be drug errands for older gang members. He can barely read or watch, he don't attend school, but he has street smarts.
Lately, he has been showing up around Herbert Elementary School, 2131 W. Monroe St. But not to learn. Just the opposite. He teaches young kids how to join the gang, what hand signals and gang colors to wear to avoid being shot.
Kids are valuable to gangs. Because of their age, they can shoot someone or run drugs or pull a stickup and get a lighter rap.
Jawon has already learned to handle a gun. He's currently awaiting a hearing for wounding another boy in the face during a gang dispute.
And he can drive a car. Not only drive it but bust in, hot wire the ignition, tear out the radio and go iov riding.
The police caught him for that, too, after he
Mike
Royko
Syndicated
columnist
WILLIAM J. SCHOLLER
and his伯璧 sole a car belonging to a teacher at the Herbert school. They wouldn't have been caught if they hadn't smashed into another car, injuring a couple of people.
When the parents complained to the principal, the suspects were gathered in the school office. One was Jawon's cousin, who brought Jawon along for moral support.
Recently, a boy's sport jacket was stolen at the school. Jackets are a serious matter. Kids are gunned down for not surrendering them.
All that, and he's still seven years short of being able to buy a beer legally. But there's more.
the inexperienced she and the inexperienced he
were there and then the mother of the kid whose jackets were stained, and I was questioning them. Then I left the room to call in another boy.
The principal describes the office meeting:
"Before I came back, the mother told me that
Jawon was intimidating the kids right in front of her.
"His cousin had taken the jacket. We later found out that he had stolen it for Jawon. So Jawon told them: 'You better say that he didn't do it or I'm going to get a Uzi and blow you away.'"
If a 14-year-old in a prep school says he is going to blow you away with an automatic weapon, you might chuckle. But on the West Side and other city neighborhoods like it, there are probably 100 automatic weapons for every tennis racket.
"So I went back in, and I told Jawson he had to leave," the principal said. "He wouldn't. I told him I was ordering him out. He got out of his seat and started swearing at the kids and threatening them.
"I got up and he starts throwing punches at me. I finally got him off me and out of the office, but as he left, he was swearing and he said he'd be back to blow me away."
There was a time when the principal might have called Jawon's parents in to discuss the boy's behavior. But nobody knows where Jawon's parents are. Maybe Jawon doesn't.
So the principal called the police and filed aggravated battery charges.
That made three criminal charges against
When they went to court, the judge continued the case and ordered Jawon to stay away from the school and not to bother the principal or anyone else. The probation officer (Jawon's on probation for the car theft) was told to report any bad behavior.
Jawon nodded and went back to the street, where he will roam until some time in March, when another hearing will be conducted. Unless he kills someone before then.
That thought has crossed the principal's mind, who was more than a bit upset when she received it.
"What's this telling the kid? That he can do anything he wants. It will continue until he murders someone. He's already shown that he has access to guns and that he's willing to use one."
"I have to say to you I'm a little angry," he said. "No, a lot angry. There's nothing to prevent him from getting a gun and blowing me away. The judge told Jawon that he doesn't want him near the school. What are they going to do if he doesn't obey?
*One of my jobs is protecting my students from gang activity. I can't even protect
Jawon, the earlier shooting of the other kid, which was still pending, the theft of the teachings.
Questions, questions. And who has the answers? We have a kid of 14, no parents, living the gang life. No skills or prospects other than crime. And there are thousands like him.
"If he comes around, and I call the police, what am I going to charge him with—trespassing? Hell, he shot a kid in the face, and he's on the streets. Are they going to put him away for trespassing?"
Is there anything in the president's crime package about that? Not that I’ve noticed.
An adolescent says he'll get an Uzi. He might. The ganges now consider a six-shooter antique. What will the candidates do to keep the hardware out of the hands of the Jawons?
You can rap the judge. But we have a national surplus of young criminals and a shortage of cells. Shall we build more prisons? Sure, and what will you save when the tax bill comes?
A principal fears death. And he's not the only one. What do the candidates propose to do? The president is not the only one.
Yes, you could devote a debate to Jawon. Or even a State of the Union speech. The silence would be deafening.
■ Mike Rykois a
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist for the Chicago Tribune.
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News... Mike Andrews
Editorial... Beth Randolph
Planning... Lara Gold
Campaign... Eric Gorakz/Rochelle Oleson
Sports... Eric Nelson
Photo... Julie Jacobson
Features... Debbie Myers
Graphics... Jeff Meesey/Aimee Brainard
myself. How am I supposed to protect the kids?
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr...Bilian Beebenwood
Regional sales mgr...Rich Hearburger
National sales mgr...Scott Hannah
Co-op sales mgr...Ame Johnson
Production mgrs...Kim Wallace
...Lisa Keeler
Marketing director...Kim Claxton
...Learned
Classified mgrd...Ki-Chin
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columnists should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pho-
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 Snaffer-Flint Hall.
Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 100 words. The writer will be photographed.
Loco Locals
Hi, ADAM WOLPERMOT HERE...
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IT'S VALENTINES THAT MAKES
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GONUTS AND RUNAUMUCK
WITH A SEMI-AUTOMATIC
YOUR RUGGIN ME
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
5
County probes wage claims
Employees ask for $2.3 million
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
The Douglas County counsel's staff is continuing to investigate two claims made by 24 county employees that they should be paid $2.3 million in past wages.
In a Dec. 23 letter to the Douglas County Commission, the employees said they should be compensated for the times they were called to work in emergency situations such as ice and snow removal, said Timothy Pringle, a Topeka attorney who is representing the employees.
"During various times of the year, the employees were asked to be on call, to be ready to work during snow or ice situations," Pringle said. "The employees were pretty limited as to what they could do. They couldn't go to a restaurant or to the store. So what
they are asking for is compensation for time on call."
If the county commission does not formally respond to the allegations by mid-April, a lawsuit will be filed, Pringle said.
"We are requesting that the county respond within 120 days," Pringle said. "But I imagine that we may hear from them after that time."
Pringle said mechanics, machine operators and supervisors in the public works department approached him about their situation after he participated in another case against the county.
Bob Fairchild, county counsel, said staff members were investigating the allegations even though the records search was difficult.
"I got the people in public works finding exactly who was on call during that time," Fairchild said. "The problem is
that the claims span over three years. It's difficult to find out how many were working and under what circumstances."
Fairchild, a Lawrence attorney, said a federal law was at the center of the conflict.
Chris McKenzie, Douglas County administrator, said he would not release the letter to the public until all the allegations had been investigated.
"There is some disagreement over the policies and procedures of the Fair Labor Standards Act," he said. "They are saying that the county violated the act when they were called and should be entitled to payment. We are continuing our investigation of those allegations."
"It's our position that there are a few allegations that are untrue," McKenzie said. "Once the commission discusses these matters, then we'll be in a more comfortable position to release the letter to the public and discuss it."
'Roots' author, Haley, dies of heart attack at 70
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Alex Haley, the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer whose book, "Roots," told the story of the African-American experience in America and inspired people of all races to search for their ancestors, died yesterday. He was 70.
Haley, whose other works included "The Autobiography of Malcolm X," died of a heart attack at Swedish Hospital, said hospital representative Jane Anne Wilder.
Haley had been scheduled to speak today at the Bangor Naval Submarine Base near Bremerton, Wash., said Liz
Beauton of the base's human resources department.
Survivors include Haley's third wife, My,and a son, Bill.
Haley won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for "Roots," the gripping story of his family's monumental journey from Africa to American slavery and ultimately to freedom.
The result of 12 years of research, the book blended fact and imagined detail in tracing Haley's family back six generations to Kunta Kinte, who was kidnapped from Gambia, West Africa, in 1767 and shipped to this country as a slave.
Alex Haley
Personal
Born: Aug. 11, 1921; Ithaca, N.Y.
Died: Feb. 10, 1992
Divorced; was married three times, has three children
Career highlights
1965: First book, "The Autobiography of Malcolm X," published, sells more than 6 million copies in eight languages
1976: "Roots" published
1977: Won Putzler Prize for "Roots." Spingam Award
1979: 12-hour "Roots" miniseries draws 130 million viewers, then the largest audience in TV history
Microsoft Word 5.0
Come see the latest and greatest in Macintosh word processors, Microsoft Word 5.0 demonstrated by Microsoft Corporation.
TODAY!
Special One Time Offer
9:30 A.M. and 1:30 P.M. in the Academic Computer Center Auditorium on the University of Kansas Campus.
Special One Time Offer Free competitive upgrade coupons to Word 5.0 for $99**
M
New issue with new features and updates
Microsoft WORD
Word Processing Program
MACSOURCE
The best support team for the Apple Macintosh®. Anywhere
For additional information, call 749-4554
We Must Have Something The Big Guy Doesn't "GREAT CUSTOMERS"
PIZZA SHUTTLE HOT ON THE SPOT! "NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Everyday Two-Fers
2—Pizzas
2—Toppings
2—Cokes
$9.00
Prime Time Special
3—Pizzas
1—Topping
4—Cakes
$11.50
Party "10"
10- Pizzas
1- Topping
$30.00
842-1212
YOU CAN'T BUST A SHUTTLE
图
Jayhawk Bookstore
"at the top of Nismith Hill"
Call for Special Charter Rates Mon-Thurs • 843-3826
JBS Briti-Bus
Fun!
Warm!
Indoor
Miniature
Golf!
*Birthdays
*Benefits
*Tournaments
*Private Pages
*Alternative entertainment
for the KU student
Kizer Cummings jewelers
Lower Level
Riverfront Plaza 841-3322
CHAINS FIXED FAST
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
We've Moved!
Lawrence Donor Center Help yourself by helping others
Behind Laird Noller Ford
- * * * * *
Open Mp- Thurs 8am - 6pm
Fri 8-6pm Sat 9am - 1pm
816 W.24th St.
The Flower Basket
Save lives by giving plasma! $15 dollars for first donation !
has just what you need for your Valentine!
Westridge Shopping Center 601 Kasold 842-2724
So you think you're good at
Beautiful Roses & Carnations, Stuffed Critters. Candy, Chocolates, & Stuffed Balloons of all kinds!
Call Us Now for Valentine's Day Delivery!
FLOWER
FLORAL
BASKET
Bar Games...
Shuffle Board
Well, why don't you prove it.
Sun. Feb. 16th is the first qualifying round in the following eight events:
Foosball
Pinball
the following eight events:
Pop-a-Shot
CASH PRIZES! 1st-$75, 2nd-$35, 3rd-$15
* Other Qualifying rounds to follow in March & April
NATURAL WAY
-During all Qualifying & Final Rounds, Bud Light Draft Beer on Special.
Prizes: 1st-$150, 2nd-$100, 3rd-$50.
Top 4 qualifying winners from all three months, plus all individual event winners will participate in the Championships on May 3.
Top 4 qualifying winners from all three months,
For More info call 841-BREW. Sign-Up at West Coast Saloon. 2222 Iowa
Darts
411 0190
820-822 Mass.
Natural fiber Cloth
Pool
Darts
841-0100
Ping Pong
642
Mass.
LIBERTY
HALL
749-
1912
Putting Golf
BEAU'S
IMPORT AUTO
SERVICE
**ANIMATION DEDS THURS**
MON-WED: 4: 15, 7: 15, 9: 45
THURS: 4: 45, 7: 15 ONLY
PROSPERO S BOOKS 54:30, 9: 30
STRANGERS IN GOOD COMPANY 7: 00
Complete Maintenance & Repair
On
• European and Japanese
Autos.
CALL 842-4320
Limited Rows the Cradle (R) Fee:5.00 75,000
Kugls (P-13) Eve: 5.15 7.30 9.30
Freiacki(R) Eve: 9.15
841-5191
Autos.
343 Minnesota
(Across the street from Vista on 6th.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 P.M. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
Man in the Moon(PG-13) Eve 530 730 920
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
Beauty & the Beast (G) Eve. 5/15 7:15
Hook(PG) Bike. 5/15 .800
Medicine Man(R) Eve. 500 / 715 945
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841-5191
Prince of Tides(R) Eve 5.00 7.30 9.55
Shining Through(R) Eve 5.00 7.30 9.55
SHOWTIMES FOR IODAY ONLY
Dickinson
FINAL ANALYSIS (R)
(44,45) 7.25 9.50
FRIEDGREENTOMATOES (PG-13)
FATHER OF THE BRIDE (PG)
JFK (R)
GRANDCANYON(R)
614-0207 711-0146
LAST BOY SCOUT(R)
(4-30), 7:15, 9:45
Will sell off the students the $3.50
price at all evening shows.
3 Prime-Timer.Show (c)/Senior Citizen Anytime
Roses are Red. Violet are Blue.
Our Sweetie Pie is Perfect for Two!
Don't forget your Sweetie Pie this Valentine's Day!
Making a heartfelt impression this Valentine's Day is as easy as pie! That's because we've taken our rich, creamy frozen yogurt and shaped it into a delicious Valentine treat that's just enough for you and someone special. So bring the coupon in today for special Valentine savings on our Sweette Pie, or have one custom-made and ready to go!
$1.00 OFF!
Our Sweetie Pie
$2.00 Off Our 9½ inch pies
Offer good at participating I Can't Believe it's Yogurt* stores. Coupon not valid with any other offer.
©1992 I Can't Believe it's Yogurt, Ltd.
Offer expires 2/15/92
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Louisiana Purchase Orchards Corners
23rd & Louisiana 845-550 15th & Kauai 749-040 749-
040
6
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820-822-6856 chicoutins 841-0109
PUPS
YEP,
Grille
BUD LIGHT
ON TAP
CORNER OF ELL AND INDIANA
CORNER OF 9TH AND INDIANA
Flowers
They'll get the message across.
Loud and clear. (Order early!)
THE FLOWER MARKET
826 Iowa
843-5115
Valentine's Day
sell us your clothes!
We buy recycled clothing and accessories daily and offer 40% cash/60% trade.
Calcium can lower blood pressure
BRITZ & TRENDING CO.
734 Massachusetts
499-2377
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
By Katherine Manweiler
Element may beat low-salt diet, study says
Kansan staff writer
According to a study released Feb. 1 by John Hopkins University in Baltimore, salt may not be the only culprit when it comes to high blood pressure. Eating more calcium-rich foods may control blood pressure more effectively than decreasing salt intake.
The recommended daily allowance of calcium for people between the ages of 18 and 25 is 1,200 milligrams. One cup of milk has 300 milligrams.
Ann Chapman, dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said most KU students she counseled had calcium-deficient diets. Chapman meets with as many as 10 students a day.
"Ninety-five percent of the women that I see don't get enough calcium," Chapman said. "It's a problem for men, too, but men are not as weight-conscious and they drink more milk."
Milk might be the most well-known source of calcium, but a variety of other foods also provide it.
"A lot of women say, 'I make it a point to eat cottage cheese see daily,' but cottage cheese is a lousy source of calcium." Chapman said.
One cup of yogurt contains 400 milligrams of calcium, one-half cup of cottage cheese has 75 milligrams and a medium orange has 50 milligrams.
Many non-dairy products contain calcium, such as salmon, broccoli and tofu. But it takes two cups of broccoli or eight ounces of tofu to equal the amount of calcium in one cup of milk.
Not all dairy products help lower blood pressure. Buttermilk and many types of cheese are high in sodium, Chapman said.
People who do not like dairy products can take calcium carbonate supplements, but the body does not absorb calcium as well from mills.
Even if college students get enough calcium, that does not cancel the effects of too much salt.
Chapman said research indicated that at least 90 percent of the calcium in supplemental pills passed through the body undigested.
Chapman said most people consumed two or three times the amount of salt they needed. Salt reduction is the most commonly recommended dietary treatment for high blood pressure at Watkins.
"The calcium research is pretty new," Chapman said. "I want to see more on it. I've mentioned it to the last two or three people here for high blood pressure counseling. You know it can't hurt."
Janine Demo, coordinator for health education at Watkins, said 131 students were treated for high blood pressure at Watkins in 1991.
Barbara Schnitzer, director of nursing for the Douglas County Health Department, said smoking, excess weight, little exercise and too much coffee placed people at risk for high blood pressure.
Schnitter said the health department screened 1,703 patients for high blood pressure in 1991. Thirteen percent of the adults screened had high blood pressure.
Calcium
3/4 cup yogurt
The following examples are equal to one cup or milk (300 mg calcium):
1 3/4 cups ice cream
1 cup pudding or custard
2 cups cottage cheese
1 1/2 ounces cheese
2 1/2 cups cooked soybeans
2 1/2 cups cooked soybeans
3 cup macaroni and cheese
3/4 cup macaroni and cheese
5 ounces canned salmon
1 cup greens
(collards, kale, turnip)
(collards, kale, turnip)
2 cups broccoli
6-7 medium sardines
8 ounces tofu
Source. Dairy Council of Greater Kansas City Almee Brainard, Daily Kar-
BILLIARDS AND BOWLING TOURNAMENT
Sunday, Feb. 16, 1992 at noon Kansas Union Jaybowl
Kaybowl
MARSHAL UNION
Entry Fee $6
SUDEN UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNION OF AMERICA
Register in SUA office by Thursday Feb. 13, 4:30 pm
Prizes will be awarded, and winners qualify to represent KU at
ACU-1 regional tournament in Manhattan Feb. 27 - March 1, 1992
REPLACEMENTSENATORS
Student Senate and the Elections Commission are now accepting applications for replacement senators for the following Senate seats:
2 Architecture
1 Off-Campus
1 Law
Applications are available in the Office of Student Senate, 400 Kansas Union, or in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall. Applications are due by 5:00, February 12 in the Office of Student Life.
C
KΔ
Congratulations Kappa Delta New Initiates!
Love and AOT the Actives
Camp Olympia
We're looking for Counselors
KATHY & ROBERT DAVIS
UNIVERSITY OF KANASAS - KANASAS UNION
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1992
KENNEDY BANK
ACA Camping
Archery
Crafts
Badminton
Baseball/Softball
Basketball
Blading
Blobbing
Canoeing
Cheetah
Cheerleading
Competitors
Dance
Drilling
Drama
Ecology
Camp Olympus is looking for summer counselors. You enjoy the outdoors and the rewarding experience of working with and teaching children recreational activities.
ACTIVITIES
Rappeiling
Photography Ping Pong
Fishing
Lifetime Games Photography
TOP COUNSELOR PAY
Rt. 2 Box 25-B, Trinity, TX 78682
Phone: (409) 594-2541
actions
Volleyball
Waterski
Weightlifting
Windsurfing
Wrestling
Yearbook Staff
CHRIS GILBERT
Owner
Terms: June 1-21, June 22-July 12, July 13-August 2, August 3-15
It's Valentine's Day at Ye Olde Sugarosity Shoppe
For Your Significant Other · Seeus for
♥ **Chocolate** Heart Boxes made out of chocolate which
♥ Chocolate Lip Boxes filled with more Cinnamon Lips
can be filled with more sculpted Chocolate Hearts
❤️ Chocolate Mousse Truffles with hearts
❤ Chocolate Gourmet Cocoas
Sugar-Free Valentine Chocolates
❤ **Valentine** tins of Flavored Popcorn
9
1 Riverfront Plaza Suite 106 842-9955
The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award
99
15 West 9th St. 842-9995
CHANCELLOR'S STUDENT AWARD NOMINATION FORMS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN THE ORGANIZATIONS & ACTIVITIES CENTER, 400 KANSAS UNION
COMPLETED FORMS MUST BE RETURNED TO OAC BY 5:00 P.M., FRIDAY, MARCH 6
Awards include:
The Donald K. Alderson Memorial Award
The Agnes Wright Strickland Award
The Reynolds K. Adamson Memorial Award
Description of Awards included on nomination form.
The Class of 1913 Award
Valentine Balloon Bouquet Pick-Me-Ups
Order your balloon bouquets ahead and let us deliver them or pick them up on Valentine's Day!
Palace
Castle & Gate
8 West 8th Street
8 West 8th Street
843-1099
OOPS
UNIVERSITY Optical Club!!!
Eye Glasses at Nearly Wholesale Prices.
Budget Frames...$10.95
Fashion Frames...$29.95
Polo ... $84.95
Liz Claiborne ... $59.95
DesignerFrames
Stetson... $59.95
Many Many More
Eye Care Optical
546 Westport Road
Kansas City, MO 64111
753-2020
Single Vision Lenses $29^{95}$
753-2020
EyeCareOptical 38015. Noland Road Independence, MO 64055
Independence, MO 64055
252-2020
at 2 pm Monday through Friday
EyeCareOptical
FREE POOL
FEATURING
SING-ALONG
KARAOKE
SING-ALONG
NOW ON TAP Kansas City's Own
Mon-Fri from 2-7
TONIGHT & EVERY TUESDAY KARAOKE
BOULEVARD
WINNING
Pale Ale
THE HAWK
It could only happen at..
1340 OHIO
1919
A Campus Tradition Since 1919
WESTVILLE, IL UNDERSTUDY AVAILABLE
Marketing Workshop
Marketing For The Future- What Are Your Choices?
TONIGHT
7:00 pm in the Big Eight Room Kansas Union
Everyone Welcome!
ACE
Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs
6
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. February 11, 1992
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing
820-8212 Massachusetts
641-0100
PUPS
YEP.
Grill
BUD LIGHT
ON TAP
CORNER OF 9TH AND INDIANA
Flowers
They'll get the message across.
Loud and clear.
(Order early!)
THE FLOWER MARKET
826 Iowa
843-5115
Valentine's Day
sell us your clothes!
We buy recycled clothing and accessories daily and offer 40% cash/60% trade.
Calcium can lower blood pressure
BRIZOND TRADING CO.
734 Massachusetts
749-2377
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
FORD
According to a study released Feb. 1 by John Hopkins University in Baltimore, salt may not be the only culprit when it comes to high blood pressure. Eating more calcium-rich foods may control blood pressure more effectively than decreasing salt intake.
Element may beat low-salt diet, study says
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
The recommended daily allowance of calcium for people between the ages of 18 and 25 is 1,200 milligrams. One cup of milk has 300 milligrams.
Ann Chapman, dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said most KU students she counseled had calcium-deficient diets. Chapman meets with as many as 10 students a day.
"Ninety-five percent of the women that I see don't get enough calcium," Chapman said. "It's a problem for men, too, but men are not as weight-conscious and they drink more milk."
Milk might be the most well-known source of calcium, but a variety of other foods also provide it.
"A lot of women say, 'I make it a point to eat cottage cheese every day,' but cottage cheese is a lousy source of calcium." Chapman said.
One cup of yogurt contains 400 milligrams of calcium, one-half cup of cottage cheese has 75 milligrams and a medium orange has 50 milligrams.
Many non-dairy products contain calcium, such as salmon, broccoli and tofu. It but takes two cups of broccoli or eight ounces of tofu to equal the amount of calcium in one cup of milk.
Not all dairy products help lower blood pressure. Buttermilk and many types of cheese are high in sodium, Chapman said.
People who do not like dairy products can take calcium carbonate supplements, but the body does not absorb calcium as well from pills.
Even if college students get enough calcium, that does not cancel the effects of too much salt.
Chapman said research indicated that at least 90 percent of the calcium in supplemental pills passed through the body undigested.
Chapman said most people consumed two or three times the amount of salt they needed. Salt reduction is the most commonly recommended dietary treatment for high blood pressure at Watkins.
"The calcium research is pretty new," Chapman said. "I want to see more on it. I've mentioned it to the last two or three people here for high blood pressure counseling. You know it can't hurt."
Janine Demo, coordinator for health education at Watkins', said 131 students were treated for high blood pressure at Watkins in 1991.
Barbara Schnitter, director of nursing for the Douglas County Health Department, said smoking, excess weight, little exercise and too much coffee placed people a risk for high blood pressure.
Schnitker said the health department screened 1,703 people for high blood pressure in 1991. Thirteen percent of the adults screened had high blood pressure.
Calcium
The following examples are equal to one cup of milk (300 mg calcium).
3/4 cup yogurt
1 cup pudding or custard
1 3/4 cups ice cream
1 1/2 ounces cheese
2 1/2 cups cooked soybeans
2 cups cottage cheese
3/4 cup macaroni and cheese
5 ounces canned salmon
5 ounces canned salmon
1 cup greens
1 cup greens (collards, kale, turnip)
(collards, kale, turnip)
2 cups broccoli
6-7 medium sardines
8 ounces tofu
Almee Brainard, Daily Kansar
8 ounces tofu
BILLIARDS AND BOWLING TOURNAMENT
Sunday, Feb. 16, 1992 at noon Kansas Union Jaybowl
Jaybowl KARMA BURN
FEDERAL UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAR
MAIN LINE 31 ARROW
Entry Fee $6
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS
Register in SUA office by Thursday Feb. 13, 4:30 pm
Prizes will be awarded, and winners qualify to represent XU at
ACU-1 regional tournament in Manhattan Feb. 27 - March 1, 1992
REPLACEMENTSENATORS
Student Senate and the Elections Commission are now accepting applications for replacement senators for the following Senate seats:
2 Architecture
1 NuMeInaker
1 Off Companion
1 Off-Campus
1 Law
Applications are available in the Office of Student Senate, 400 Kansas Union, or in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall. Applications are due by 5:00, February 12 in the Office of Student Life.
KΔ
C
Congratulations Kappa Delta New Initiates!
Love and AOT the Actives
Camp Olympia
We're looking for Counselors
KATHY & ROBERT DAVIS
UNIVERSITY OF KANASAS - KANASAS UNIMON
TUETEEN
WEEKLY
Camp Olympia is looking for summer counselors. If you enjoy the outdoors and the rewarding experience of working with and teaching children recreational activities,
Baseball/Softball
Basketball
Arts & Crans
Bedminton
Basketball(Basketball)
ACA Camping
Ping Pong Rappelling
Lifetime Games Photography
Fishing Football
Gymnastics Horseback
ACTIVITIES
Hopes Course
Sailing
Zannie Program
Lifesaving Lifetime Game
CHRIS GILBERT
Owner
Terms: June 1-21, June 22-July 12, July 13-August 2, August 3-15
TOP COUNSELOR PAY
Rt. 2 Box 25-B, Trinity, TX 75862
Phone: (409) 954-2541
Weetran
Weightlifting
Windsurfing
Wrestling
Yearbook Staff
❤ **Chocolate** Heart Boxes made out of chocolate which
For Your Significant Other - See us for
can be filled with more sculpted Chocolate Hearts
Chocolate Lip Boxes filled with more Cinnamon Lips
♥ Chocolate Mousse Truffles with hearts
❤ Chocolate Gourmet Cocoas
/ ♥ Sugar - Free Valentine Chocolates
9
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NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFSL
Government censors newspaper
Caracas, Venezuela
Federal police prevented El Nacional, a leading Venezuelan newspaper, from publishing yesterday after it persisted in printing accounts that accused the government of corruption, the newspaper's publisher said.
Later yesterday, President Carlos Andres Perez promised to lift the rigid press restrictions imposed Thursday, and police withdrew from the *EI Nacional* newspaper, which had been surrounded for about 12 hours.
All Venezuelan papers were censored yesterday. No action has been taken against foreign correspondents.
The government of Perez has been sensitive to what it perceives as anti-government remarks in the aftermath of an attempted military coup Feb. 4.
Iraq blasts U.N. sanctions, Bush
Manama, Bahrain
The official Iraqi News Agency accused U.N. weapons inspectors of trying to provoke a conspiracy against the group.
Iraq stepped up its campaign against U.N. trade sanctions and took an angry swipe at President Bush, telling him to concentrate on "his new job as a car salesman" instead of interfering in Iraqi affairs.
The series of statements late Saturday and Sunday reflected mounting hostility in President Saddam Hussein's government about the trade sanctions and Western calls for his ouster.
The trade embargo, imposed after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, has been causing increasing hardship for Iraq's 17 million people.
Kafountine, Senegal
Lack of phone added to tragedy
Rescuers, who helped victims from a chartered Club Med plane crash that killed 31 people, said yesterday that the crash's survival rate would have been higher if they had been able to telephone for help faster.
The U.S. pilot and co-pilot, and 26 French vacationers were among those who died when the twin-engine plane crashed into a mangrove swamp early Sunday at this West African seaside resort. Senegalese officials said. Twenty-four people survived.
"It was complete human error," said Olivier Perret, one surviving passenger. "He (the pilot) said we were going to land at Cap Skirring, and then we landed in the brush."
From The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Pakistan, India prepare to stop Muslims' march
Militants support Kashmiris who want to secede
MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan — Pakistani soldiers set off landslides yesterday to block mountain roads and stop Muslim militants from marching into Indian-held Kashmir. Both countries feared the march could touch off a military confrontation.
The Pakistani army also said it would use force if necessary to stop the march, which was called for today to support Kashmiris fighting to secede from predominantly Hindu India. Troops set off landslides, put up barricades and dismantled bridges trying to close routes to the frontier.
India's army said it would shoot any marcher crossing the U.N.-monitored cease-fire line between the Pakistani- and Indian-controlled halves of Kashmir. It said land mines were planted along the frontier during the weekend.
The situation strained what already are normally tense relations between India and Pakistan. The two nations fought wars in 1948 and 1965 over Kashmir.
which was divided by departing British rulers in the 1947 partition of the subcontinent.
Troops periodically clash along the frontier, and political parties across the spectrum in Pakistan urged that the march be canceled, calling it a publicity stunt that might trigger war.
At least eight people were hurt and 40 arrested in scuffles yesterday when Pakistani police stopped caravans of buses and cars heading to the frontier area. Signs on the vehicles proclaimed, "We will spill our blood for freedom."
The Jammu-Kashmir Liberation Front, the leading Kashmirri rebel group, called the march to commemorate the Feb. 11, 1980, hanging of its founder, Makkbool Butt, by India for a hacking.
The front said thousands of unarmed supporters planned to cross into Kashmir. Its chief, Amanullah Khan, threatened to launch a secessionist movement in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir if his supporters were stopped.
Algerian diehards kill police
Six officers gunned down during ambush in Casbah
The Associated Press
ALGIERS, Algeria — Islamic fundamentalists killed eight police officers yesterday, six of them in an ambush in the Casbah, the ancient quarter of the capital that was a haven for Algerian revolutionaries in past decades.
The assaults on police were the most deadly since the military took power a month ago, and indicated a hardening of the fundamentalists' response to an escalating government crackdown.
Sunday, the government banned the Islamic Salvation Front, the nation's largest political party, and declared a state of emergency giving authorities broad powers to make arrests, ban demonstrations and dissolve local councils.
The actions came after a week of unrest that left more than 40 people dead and 300 injured.
The capital was calm yesterday, state radio reported, and schools, businesses and government offices operated normally. Security forces withdrew from many strategic sites during the day, but witnesses said soldiers were moving into the fundamentalist slum of Bab el-Oued at nightfall.
The Salvation Front was on the verge of winning control of parliament last month in the second round of Algeria's first free elections since gaining independence from France in 1962.
But the military forced President Chadli Bendjid to resign after it became apparent he was planning to share power with the fundamentalists, and the new military-backed government called off the elections.
Two other officers were slain yesterday by companions of a fundamentalist who they were trying to arrest in Bordj Menaiel, 40 miles east of the capital, police said. One attacker was shot and killed by police; the others escaped.
In yesterday's violence, police said six officers died when their cars were riddled with gunfire. The attackers reportedly took refuge in the Casbah after the predawn shootings.
A police officer also was killed Saturday in the Cas bah.
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Navy officer studies harassment
Thesis says problem is widespread
SAN DIEGO — A retired Navy officer asserts in her doctoral thesis that sexual harassment is widespread in the Navy but that many women are fearful of reporting it.
The Associated Press
suburban San Diego.
Retired Cmdr. Kray Krohn's study included a detailed review of eight sexual harassment cases that resulted in formal complaints, hearings and punishment, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.
"The harassment suffered by the eight women in this report is the tip of a very large iceberg a dangerous threat to the U.S. armed forces," wrote Krohne, who tiredened in 1893 and lived
The 250-page dissertation is thought to be the first in-depth study of the effects of sexual harassment on female naval officers. It earned Krohn a doctorate in December from the University of San Diego's College of Education.
Navy officials said they were not surprised by Krohn's findings, which parallel a 1990 Defense Department report that found that 64 percent of women in the U.S. military had been sexually harassed.
"One of our recent Navy surveys showed that 75 percent of the women and 50 percent of the men said sexual
harassment was a problem," said Capt. Martha Whitehead, special assistant for women's policy to the chief of naval personnel in Washington, D.C. "It's a very high-level concern in the Navy."
Krohn said that she was subjected to harassment early in her 21-year Navy career but that she transferred away from the captain who pressured her for sex.
Forty of the 61 female officers Krohne interviewed between 1988 and 1990 said they had been sexually harassed. Most of the incidents involved off-color jokes, sexual remarks and unsolicited physical contact.
Krohn also found that reprisals of various forms are commonly taken
against women who report sexual harassment. More than half the women who told her they had been harassed said they did not report the incident for reasons including fear of reprisal and lack of confidence in the system.
*Male naval officers do not view sexual harassment and discrimination as seriously as they do racism, "Krohne said.
Some victims went to great lengths to stop or discourage the harassment. One of them told Krohn that she intentionally gained weight to look less attractive, while another said she stopped wearing make-up and began wearing uniforms that were two sizes too big to discourage unwanted sexual advances.
Jury chosen for sperm fraud trial
Prosecutors accuse Virginia doctor of using own sperm for inseminations
The Associated Press
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — A jury was chosen today in the trial of an infertility doctor accused of artificially inseminating dozens of women with his own sperm without their knowledge.
Dr. Cecil Jacobson, 55, is charged with 47 counts of fraud and six counts of perjury. The charges carry a maximum of 285 years in prison and a
$500,000 fine. Potential jurors were given a questionnaire asking, among other things, if they had ever had any problems with infertility or miscarriage, ever filed a lawsuit against a doctor or been a victim of fraud. It took about $2/2 hours to choose a jury of eight women and four men.
Prosecutors allege Jacobsonlied to childless couples about using a sperm
bank with anonymous donors to impregnate the women when he instead used his own sperm to father up to 7% of his patients' babies.
James Tate, Jacobson's lawyer, argues that the doctor donated his sperm to increase patients' chances of becoming pregnant or to protect them from potential exposure to AIDS but that he only did so after receiving his patients' consent.
Jacobson also is accused of falsely telling some women they were pregnant, giving them hormones to simulate pregnancy and claiming to locate
the fetuses in sonograms.
The women eventually were told they had miscarried or that the fetuses had been "reabsorbed" into their bodies, the indictment alleges.
Jacobson has denied the charges
Jacobson has denied the charges.
Jacobson said he mixed his sperm with water because fresh sperm was more effervescent than the sperm and because the frozen samples might not have been tested for the AIDS virus.
Inanycase, Tatesaid, itisnotillegal for a doctor to donate sperm for a patient.
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan/Tuesday, February 11, 1992
9
'92 football recruits excel academically
New Jayhawks hit the gridiron and the books
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
When Kansas football coach Glen Mason announced his 1992 recruiting class last week, he talked highly of the academic and extracurricular activities of the future Jayhawks.
Not only did the recruits tackle their opponents, they also tackled the books.
The list includes class presidents, National Honor Society members, honor roll students and even one player who has a 4.0 grade point average.
"We've got some outstanding individuals," Mason said. "Some of those things go unnoticed in recruiting and aren't talked about by the recruiting experts."
The list is led by Garden City's Jim Moore, a Parade Magazine All-American at tight end, who is a National Honor Society member and has compiled a 4.0 GPA.
Garden City coach Dave Meadows
said Moore got to where he was academically through hard work.
"He's got some really good study habits," Meadows said. "He doesn't struggle even in the tough courses. Every class he has is reserved for the top couple percent of the senior class."
Jason Brown, a defensive lineman from Blue Valley High School, serves as student body president, is a member of the National Honor Society and is also co-sports editor of the school newspaper.
The third National Honor Society member is Keith Rodgers, a defensive back from Shawnee Mission Northwest. Rodgers also has been on the honor roll every semester in high school.
Another National Honor Society member is Kiley Brown, a wide receiver from Carter High School in Dallas. Brown was a first-team academic All-City selection.
Carter coach Freddie James said academics always came first for Brown.
"The Kansas coaches stressed they had a great academic school," James said. "Kiley has been good academically all the way through and has good study habits."
Kansas' football recruiting coordinator R.D. Helt said high school players were taking academics more seriously now than in the past.
Helt said not all the Kansas recruits were academically qualified yet, but he said he would not be surprised if all the recruits qualify before next fall.
James said Brown scored an 860 on the SAT standardized test and had a 3.8 GPA.
He said that if a prospective high school player was not concentrating on his grades, Kansas would not pursue him.
"We keep going after a kid if he's close enough to qualifying." Helt said. "If the kid is not even close we'll back off completely."
Courier is No.1 in tennis
21-year-old on top after San Francisco tournament
The Associated Press
Jim Courier, who vaulted to the top of the tennis world with his victory at the Australian Open, officially became No. 1 yesterday, the first American in $6/2$ years to achieve that distinction.
The 21-year-old from Dade City, Fla., moved ahead of Sweden's Stefan Edberg in the ATP rankings with 3,721 points. Edberg, who Courier beat in the Australian Open final, ended up
with 3,671 points. Courier is the first American at the top of the rankings since John McEnroe, who was last No. 1 on Aug. 26, 1985.
Edberg was idle this week as Courier reached the finals of the Volvo-San Francisco tournament, where he lost to Michael Chang 6.3-6.3.
But the loss hardly mattered to Courier, who moved toward the top by winning the French Open last June and then losing to Edberg in the finals
of the U.S. Open in September. Courier was almost as happy Sunday as he would have been had he beaten Chang, who is ranked 12th in the world.
"The key for a champion is to win when he is not playing his best tennis," Courier said. "This week I could have played better, but I managed to scrape through until the final."
Courier celebrated his new status Sunday night by dining with friends after losing to Chang.
2
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Intramural plav
Evan Franseen, assistant scientist for the Kansas geological survey, attempts to drive past Kris Thomas. Plains sophomore. The two were playing intramural basketball last night at Robinson Center.
Kansas falls to No.4 after falling to OSU
Sutton: Kansas should hold the No.3 spot
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Remaining No. 2 does not bother Oklahoma State's Eddie Sutton. But seeing Kansas drop to fourth does.
Sutton's Cowboys, whose perfect
in the countrv."
season disappeared with a loss Wednesday at Nebraska, whipped then-No. 3 Kansas on Saturday at home in a game Big Eight fans hoped might elevate one of their teams to No. 1.
But, Duke,
which, like Oklahoma State, has
remained atop
It seems Oklahoma State's 64-56 victory against the Jayhawks produced a display of sportsmanship as well as athletic skills. In the bruising, intensely fought game, Cornell Hatcher was
"I thought it was very classy on Roy's part to come down and visit with me." Eddie Sutton Oklahoma State basketball coach
the latest Associated Press poll, and
applied to mapped to a fourth-
place tie with Iran.
"I'm pleased we stayed in second," Sutton said yesterday. "The ratings are for the fans and the student body. For the players and coaching staff, believe me, we look at them, but that's the least thing on our minds.
"Ifigured we'd stay second or third, but I thought Kansas would remain right behind us. Duke's the best team
knocked to the floor in what Cowboy coaches protested was a deliberate act of malice by a Jayhawk.
As Oklahoma State coaches argued with officials, demanding a penalty, Kansas coach Roy Williams approached Sutton and asked him to identify
"I thought it was very classy on Roy's part to come down and visit with
But Sutton, invited to remove one of Kansas' starters in one of the most important games of the year, chose to be honest.
the offending player
"Eddie said his staff had seen it.
himself did not see it. "Williams said
"I said, 'If you yourself actually saw it, I will take the kid out.' Williams said.
Top 25 AP Polls
Here are the top 25 teams in The Associated Press 1991-92 college basketball poll (records through Feb. 9 in parentheses), and last week's rankings:
Previous Women
Previous
| | Previous | Women | Previous |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Duke (18-1) | 1 | 1. Maryland (20-1) | 1 |
| 2. Oklahoma St. (21-1) | 1 | 2. Virginia (20-1) | 2 |
| 3. UCLA (17-1) | 4 | 3. Tennessee (17-2) | 4 |
| 4. Indiana (17-3) | 6 | 4. Stephen F. Austin (19-1) | 6 |
| 5. *Kansas* (17-2) | 3 | 5. Mississippi (20-1) | 7 |
| 6. North Carolina (17-3) | 9 | 6. Stanford (17-2) | 3 |
| 7. Arizona (17-3) | 7 | 7. Iowa (17-2) | 5 |
| 8. Ohio St. (16-3) | 8 | 8. Miami (20-1) | 9 |
| 9. Missouri (16-3) | 12 | 9. Vanderbilt (15-5) | 10 |
| 10. Syracuse (16-3) | 13 | 10. Vanderbilt (15-5) | 13 |
| 11. Arkansas (17-5) | 15 | 11. Penn St. (15-6) | 11 |
| 12. Michigan St. (15-4) | 11 | 12. SW Missouri St. (18-2) | 16 |
| 13. Southern Cal. (16-3) | 16 | 13. Hawaii (17-2) | 15 |
| 14. Tulane (18-2) | 14 | 14. George Washington (15-4) | 8 |
| 15. UNLV (20-2) | 17 | 15. W. Kentucky (15-5) | 12 |
| 16. Alabama (18-4) | 18 | **16. Kansas** (18-5) | 17 |
| 17. Michigan (14-5) | 18 | 17. Texas Tech (17-3) | 20 |
| 18. Connecticut (16-4) | 10 | 18. New York (15-6) | 19 |
| 19. Kentucky (16-5) | 19 | 19. West Virginia (17-2) | 23 |
| 20. LSU ('4-5) | 22 | 20. Houston (16-5) | 14 |
| 21. Texas-Eso Pasio (18-3) | 25 | 21. Alabama (17-4) | 22 |
| 22. N.C. Charlotte (16-4) | 20 | 22. California (15-4) | 24 |
| 23. Florida St. (15-6) | 23 | 23. Clemson (13-7) | 18 |
| 24. Cincinnati (17-3) | — | 24. North Carolina (16-5) | 21 |
| 25. Seton Hall (13-6) | — | 25. Wisconsin (14-5) | — |
me," Sutton said. "I couldn't identify the player. We just let it go at that. I thought that was a good example of sportsmanship, where two coaches can get together in the middle of a war ... and talk things over."
Williams said, "I have talked to the young man, and I'll let it go at that. I thought I was doing the right thing ... because of the respect I have for Eddie Sutton."
The Cowboys and Jayhawks are tied for the Big Eight lead with 5-1 records. But No. 9 Missouri, fresh off a road victory against the struggling Oklahoma Sooners, is right behind at 4-2.
"This is what happens in a league where everybody is a very good basketball team," Missouri coach Norm Stewart said. "In this league, you've got to prepare yourself for every game."
Two from tennis team lose at Rolex tourney
BvLvlle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Last week's Rolex Championships in Minneapolis were a case of deja vu for Kansas women's tennis player Eveline Hamers and Indiana's Debbie Edelman.
Edelman, ranked No. 26 in the nation, beat Hamers in three sets at the National Clay Court championships last fall, eliminating her from the tournament.
After beating No.11 Danielle Scott of Arizona and No. 5 Heather Willems of Stanford in the first two rounds of the Rolex tournament, Hamers had a chance Friday in the quarterfinals to redeem the earlier loss to Edelman.
But Edelman defeated Hamers again 7-5, 6-3, knocking her out of the tournament.
Kansas coach Michael Center said Hamers, who is ranked No. 32, was disappointed because she beat two players who she thought were better than Edelman.
"She had two really nice wins," Center said. "She really controlled both matches. She just didn't play with the same aggressiveness in the last match."
Hamers said she did not feel comfortable playing Edelman.
"I was too influenced by the way she played," Hamers said. "It was not a very fun match.
"I learned a lot from the matches I played. I had two great wins, but a bad loss. If I'm going to win these tournaments, I need to be more consistent."
Kansas' other representative at the tournament, freshman Rebecca Jensen, went 1-2.
Jensen, ranked No. 21 in the country but battling a flu bug, lost her first round match against No. 12 Vickie Paynter of Texas 6-3, 7-5.
Jensen rebounded for a consolation round 7-6 (7-4), 6-1 victory against No. 41 Christine Neuman of Duke but was eliminated from the consolation round Friday by No. 28 Kylie Johnson of Stanford 6-4, 6-2.
Center said, "Rebecca didn't play as well as she could have, but give Johnson credit. She took Rebecca out of her game."
Hamers and Jensen were the first alternate doubles team at the tournament but did not get a chance to play.
Center said that the tournament left him with one last impression.
"The thing that really stood out in my mind is how good the competition was," he said, "and how much more we need to improve to compete with the top teams in the country."
Hamers and Jensen will return to the court with their teammates Saturday when the Jayhawks will play Iowa at Wood Valley Racquet Club in Topeka.
Speedskater earns 1st U.S. gold
The Associated Press
ALBERTVILLE, France — The Bonnie Blair 500, a speedskating spectacular by the world's fastest woman on blades, gave the bedeviled U.S. team its first gold medal of the Winter Games.
Blair, a red, white and blue blur, crouched lower than all her rivals and rocketed into Olympic history yesterday with the first back-to-back golds in the 500-meter.
Fueled by an all-American peanut butter and jelly sandwich just as she was in the Calgary Olympics, and cheered by the Blair Bunch of 50 flagwaving friends and relatives from Champaign, III, she overcame a hour delay in the race and the burden of breaking the U.S. medal jinx.
The U.S. team, which had not won a Winter gold since Blair's last one in Calgary, desperately needed the
boost.
Blair's time, 40.33 seconds on the slow outdoor oval, didn't come close to her world record 39.10 on the indoor track at Calgary, but her flash start gave her the momentum she needed to win the first of the three golds she is seeking. Blair will skate tomorrow in the 1,500 and Friday in the 1,000.
"I'm just shaking all over," Blair's mother, Eleanor, said when the winning time was posted. "I held my breath too long, I think. She should have skated faster."
Her gray eyes brimming with tears under a gold cap that read "G Bonnie Gold," Eleanor Blair hugged four of her other children who made the trip, then was besieged by all their friends
Blair yanked off her hood as she passed by them, pumped her fist in the air, then slapped a high-five with coach Muelter, a 1976 gold medalist in speedskating.
OLYMPICS BRIEFES
Canadians win in hockey
Eric Lindros, a star without a stage, finally grabbed the spotlight yesterday before an international audience.
Joe Joneau got two goals and two assists as Canada, 2-0, stayed in a three-way tie with the Unified Team and Czechoslovakia for first place in their six-tem group. Switzerland, France and Norway are 0-2.
The Canadian sensation who withheld his superior skills from the National Hockey League flashed them at the Winter Olympics with two goals and an assist, sparking Canada to a 6-1 victory against Switzerland.
Four teams from each of the two groups will make the medal round.
The Unified Team, formerly the Soviet Union, notched its second straight 8-1 rout, beating Norway. France, seeded 11th, mounted another spirited showing before its home crowd, threw a scare into another favorite — and lost again, to sixth-
Skaters stymied by stunt
seeded Czechoslovakia, two days after a 3-2 loss to second-seeded Canada.
The side-by-side double axel, that intricate 2*1/2*spin leap launched from a single skate blade, often separates the skaters as the medalists in pairs figure skating.
The pairs will return today for the
programmer to use.
The double玻片 will be waiting.
Half of the 18 couples entered in the Olympic pairs competition were sabotaged Sunday by the complicated, gravity-defying jump, with skaters landing awkwardly all over the ice during the short program.
"The jump is very difficult and produces extra pressure because the skaters know how important it is," said Ron Ludington, coach of U.S. national champions Calla Urbanski and Rocky Marval.
CBS receives high ratings
Marval's bad landing on the double axel cost the Americans points and left Ludington's skaters seventh after the pairs short program, which comprises one-third of the total score.
That $243 million roll of the dice on the Winter Olympics by CBS looks good—so far.
World champions Natasha Mishkutienko and Artur Dmitriev and their Unified Team comrades, Elena Beckhe and Denis Petrov, were 1-2 in the standings following the first phase of their competition.
Network officials said CBS was off to a strong start in the first two prime-time telecasts of the 16-day spectacle. CBS reported a 14.5 preliminary rating and a 24 share for Saturday's opening ceremonies, close to the 14.8-35 ratings ABC posted in the 18.4 Calgary Games.
Olympic medals count
Olympic Games
Country G S B T
Austria 2 2 3 7
Germany 2 1 1 4
Norway 1 1 1 3
Unified Team * 1 0 1 2
Finland 0 1 1 2
U.S. **1 0 0 1**
China 0 1 0 1
France 0 1 0 1
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
10
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11. 1992
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Pravda: Yeltsin angry at protests
Tens of thousands rally against reform
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The former Communist Party daily *Pravda* today accused Boris Yeltsin's government of trying to intimidate tens of thousands of protesters who rallied against the government in cities across Russia.
"The deeper our economy falls into chaos, the louder becomes the voice of protest of workers, and the anger of the Russian leadership (at the demonstrators) is rising," the paper said in a commentary.
The Russian government, it said, "is looking for enemies of perestroika, the plurality of views, the free market and now 'radical economic reforms.'"
The commentary by *Pravda*, which still reflects the views of many hard-
liners and has been critical of Yeltsin's reforms, came after anti-government rallies in Moscow and other cities Sunday. Counterdemonstrations by Yeltsin partisans drew much smaller crowds.
Police estimated that 120,000 anti-Yeltsin demonstrators protested in Moscow, but The Associated Press estimate was about half that. The pro-Yeltsin rally in the Russian capital drew about 10,000 people, according to the AP estimate.
Pravda said, "There was a campaign of intimidation, with warnings to stay at home on Sunday, ... unequivocal hints at possible provocations, and nice shots on TV of special police ready to stop unrest. But people were not afraid."
The hard-liners' rally in Moscow — where many waved the red flag of the old Soviet Union — was one of the biggest of its kind since the failed August coup.
(2)
Lending support
Daron Bennett/KANSAN
Putting the finishing touches on a backdrop for a coming production of "Romeo and Juliet," Eric Bruce, Lindsborg senior, fits a fabric support into place. The play will open Feb. 27 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Brain power. Now available on the installment plan.
Here's a way to learn faster and work smarter without putting a lot of cash down. It's called the Apple Computer Loan.
Right now, qualifying students, parents borrowing on behalf of students, and faculty and staff members with an annual income of at least $15,000, can purchase an Apple Macintosh computer system using a special financing plan set up just for you.
Apply to borrow from $1,500 to $10,000 for a Macintosh computer or other Apple products.
If you're a student, you'll be able to defer principal payments for up to 48 months while in school, making interest-only payments until 30 days after you graduate or leave school. Interest rates are surprisingly low, and you can take up to eight years to repay.*
So stop by today and fill out a loan application.
Because this is one way to afford a Macintosh, even if you can't afford a Macintosh.
MICROCOM
Stop by your campus computer store for details. KU Bookstore Burge Union·Level2 864-5697
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Macintosh. The power to be your best at KU.
Apple
- The interest rate is the average of the higher of the 30-day or 90-day commercial paper rates as reported in the Wall Street journal, plus a spread of 4.35%. After June 30, 1992, the spread may increase if program cost increases, but will not exceed 5.0% excluding borrowers would be invited at least 30 days in advance. The loan may be prepaid at any time without penalty. For the month of June, the total loan charge for each $1,000 borrowed will be $44.87; for the month of July, it will be $44.87; for the month of August, it will be $44.87; for the month of September, it will be $44.87; for the month of October, it will be $44.87; for the month of November, it will be $44.87; for the month of December, it will be $44.87; for the month of January, it will be $44.87; for the month of February, it will be $44.87; for the month of March, it will be $44.87; for the month of April, it will be $44.87; for the month of May, it will be $44.87; for the month of June, it will be $44.87; for the month of July, it will be $44.87; for the month of August, it will be $44.87; for the month of September, it will be $44.87; for the month of October, it will be $44.87; for the month of Nov
APPLE
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1105 Mass. 749-9756
II
Classified Directory
100's
**Announcements**
105 Personal
130 Professional
Personal
140 Personal
Announcements
130 Entertainment
130 Announcements
200's
Employment
105 Help Wanted
125 Professional services
135 Typing Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
300's
Why, was David T. Fired* Does ANYBODY
TWIG: Happy 21st birthday. Wait a week and we'll celebrate together. Love, Spike & Me
110 Bus. Personal
710-468-2222
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
The Etc: Shop
928 Mass, 843-0611
ENVELOPE STUFFING — $600 · $800 every week
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Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-
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B.C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop availa-
ness. 30 hours. 8th nbm #414-6955. M-F bsp VISA, Mastercard & Discover cards accepted
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes use of both the Lydia and Landry maps, a Downtown Bookstore system.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
400's
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
AIRCRAFT
120 Announcements
FREEDATE!
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
FREE DATE:
Get set up by
John Boss from KJIK. Call the show
864-7477
864-7477
Gaye Lesbian Peer Counseling. Affriendly understand-
ance voice. Free, confidential referrals (calls
returned by counselors). Headquarters 841-2345 or
KU info. 864-3000. Sponsored by GLSOK.
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ASK ME HOW
Call.Lynn
800-232-0281
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RESULTS GUARANTEED!
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SKYDIVING FANATICS First trainer needs ride to airport. Will fly. Call Herman 842 3724
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
Feeling confused, anxious, blue? Counseling can
student rates. Mary Bethel Medal, M 843-7572.
FREE!
Take Note
Listening & Notetaking Workshop Learn the Cornell Method
Thursday, February 13, 7-9 p.m.
4025 Wacoce
Lectures byProfessor Robert Harsh
Hillel
Saturday Feb. 15
Sephardic Jewish
Musician
Classical Guitar and Ladino Singer 7:30 pm, Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland and more
Gerard Edery
For ride and more information call 864-3948
StiHot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
I'VE GOT TO
CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT
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DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDALE $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND /
NORCAS $128
MUSTANG ISLAND /
PORT ARANSAS $128
DON'T WAIT 'TIL IT'S TOO LATE
11th Annual Celebration!
SKI & BEACH
Sunchairs
BREAKS
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
---
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is one, call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support groups are available at headquarters or KU or confidential headquarters.
130 Entertainment
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under
Across the bridge on Massachusetts. Call 827-0377
University Daiyi Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
11
*Don’t miss Nova Mob mob featuring Grant Hart from Du Day Sunday 16. Bottleneck 16 & over only $5.*
ATRIUM
Featuring the first in American regional cuisine.
Valentine.Special
Exquisite, romantic dinner for 2
Among your choices are, prime
rib, shrimp or veal.
$12.95 + tax per person
6th & Iowa 842-7030
Dance the night away with Dr. Love & drink specials in Duffy's
Quality Inn
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$6 AN HOUR can be yours. Apply for energy for 100 mils. Apply at 901 Miss. 100 mil. p: Mtu. 5:30 a.m.
Babysitter Needed car and phone a requirement
Babysitter a male for an age year old Call 749-528-1000
Housekeeper needed .very high hours with great pay! Phone and car a must. Call 794-8814
BabySister needed. First Methodist Church. First &
third Monday each month. 9:15 a.m to 12:00, Mm.
call. Wc65 1854 Leave or after 6:00
p.m. need now!
BE ONY T, many need for commercials. Now hire all ages. For casting into Call: 435-719-8211
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michiganoga boys'girlsummer camps Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen office, maintenance, Salary $1,098 or more, Hire Seaweed 1763 Maple, NL, 6100-744-2444
CLO
JORCOACHES
Employment training specialists need to work with adults with developmental disabilities. Applicants must be able to work flexible part-time hours. Send resume to CLO1, 2314 Bellville, Lawrence, KS 64066. EOE Job Number Explore the possibilities of home care clients without interruption. Flexible scheduling, uniform allowance, and training provided. Call Pat for Visiting Nurses 843-7258. Ask for Pat EOE
CRUISE LINES WOW HIRING · Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 + monthly or world travel (Hawaii, Mexc-
gan, New York, London, Spain, France,
Guides, Water/Wafer, etc. · Holiday, Summer
necessary) · Call 306-545-4644 ext. C729
Counselors/support staff children's camps north-to-salary top, *mb* /bnd laundry, travel allowance Must have skill in one of the following activities dance, drama, drivers, drums, fencing, field hockey, football golf, gymnasiums, backyard kitchen supervisor/workers, lace maintenance, nature studies, photography, piano rock, kitchen supervisor/workers, scuba, secretary, soccer tennis, track, waterskies, weights Drog for an interview on Wednesday, *mb* /bnd laundry, travel allowance Regionalist & Greatreads in the Kansas Union
Daycare needs a responsible assistant for Tues. to 10 a.m. and a responsible assistant for Weds. to 4 p.m.
FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM
FLOORWALKLERS needed at Lawrence most
weeks. Apply at 919 Max. Wed-Sat.
1:30-4:30
Prattestras, sororites, student clubs. Earn up to 600 or more credits.
AND FREE WATCH for calling for college
full time babyssitter for one year old in our home
phone evenings 842-4577
Needs job? We are looking for distributors. Excellent job! No experience required! Start Now! Send Long S A S EnVIP: Gialaxe Distributors suite a7-8211 Hillwood IRD] Forked River JN07831
**IMAGE CONSULTANT - Set own hours. Image improvement, color analysis, make-up and skin care.**
Job opening to oversee rehab work. Hours needed:
a. 8 a.m. - 8 m. 45 p.m. - 10 p.m. Office duties and
working with patients Fundrais and Thursdays
a. 9 a.m. - 11 a.m. 10 a.m. - 12.30. Call between
a. 12 a.m. and 12 p.m. 749-9130
Part time now Full time in summer, answering
updating apartments, and general office work.
Must be 18-34 years old. Must be 90 M-F. Possibility to 10-20 hrs a week until
after 90 M-F. Possibility to wk/through mid August. Must be
carry her 841-759.
Earn $5,000 $10,000 this summer painting houses in town. Final hire for these positions are being hold now! 1) Strictly Management 2) Professional Artist 3) All-Pre Student Painting Inc 1:800-master
Part-time work-study position available in our Medical Records dept. The schedule for either 4 hours Saturday and Sunday or 8 hours on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Financial Aid office at 33 Strong Hall. To apply for employment please come to the Personnel Dept. at the Personnel Hospital. 32 Main Avenue, KS 60543. KS 60543
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN, 4/Rm. prices, Daya194, $194.
Pamana City $139, Kitch, Wriftf & Trans Available
CALL CM! at 860-423-5264
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS! National Parks,
Fireworks, Forest Creeks. Over 9,000 Openings!
Stamp for Free Details. Sulivan's, 113 East
Wynn, Kalinga. MT, 19900
WANTED: Student daycare providers for 3-month old infant. Must have transportation and speak English. For more information, call 842-5599 after 5:00 p.m.
Wanted. You are personable, energetic and enjoy being around people, come join our summer waitstaff team at Lake Quivera County Club in Kansas or visit us online 3-5 for an appointment. Ask for Troy, 631-4821
Tennis jobs=summer children's camps=northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an appointment on Wednesday. Feb. 16th 10am-1pm the Regional Center and Cradle Rooms in the Kansas Union.
Waterfront Jobs-WSI Summer Children & Camps-Northeast Men and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiers, lifeguards, beach staff, a beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board; travel allowance. Drop by for an interview with the Resort & Guest Spaces in the Regionalist & Groom Rounds in the Minefield.
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
Driver Education offered midwest MIDwr Driving School, serving KU. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841,779.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
FAVOR FACTORY The Ultimate in service. Let us
show you how to build your library and video library
returns. Call NO. 789-704-8123.
Government photos, passports, immigration,
videos, portrait models, modeling 4.3 portfolios
HOUSECLEANING, conscientious person, high-
est quality work, references Perry 597-5912
K1 student would detail your car professionally for $600. No information needed! 911-278-5000
$60] For more information call 749-0708
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding &
portraits. Introduce ID photos, student phone calls;
print copies of resumes.
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law DWI/Traffic and most other legal matters
823 Missouri 843-4023
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations formatting, typing and design. Graphic Ideas, Inc. 9271 2/Mass. 843-1071
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
DUI/TRAFFIC
• Criminal Defense • Fake DL
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
Former Prosecutor
Recycle your laser printer toner cartridges for only $9. Call RLC 865-266-888. We also buy emplies
Former Prosecutor
16 East 13th 749.0087
Tired of taking beating at buyback time? Get $5.5 more per booklet and save when buying them now.
Copying hardwinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street 843
749-7265
Word Processing Service: Term papers, thesis,
References
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2063, days or evenings.
1. Spell check always included. 2. Same day service available. 3. Grad, projects welcome. Call Mindy's
1: Typing-WP. Letters, term papers, resumes.
824-472-5449 wkdays anywkends.wkdc
From Quality Taping to Mailing Entry Maintenance
from Experience and Reliability Call Louse at
Experience or Reliability Call Louse at
K'S Professional Word Processing, accurate and
accurate call, after call 19 m. 841-6345
PINK A LA MODE GO on an edge on the rest. Schedule appointment for success! Now 'Call' Pink A La Mode
Word Perfect Word Processing. Laser Printer
Near campus $ 160/double-spaced space. Call 824-
Word Perfect HIM Compatible Word Processing
Word Perfect or Other Orchard Corners. No calls
after 5pm.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertation resumes. Editing, composition, rush writing.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
18' Schumacher Letour Laureat 18-1seed touring bike
Canadian bike, bookkurt, very good condition
Bike rack, canopy
AST Premium 200,2M RAM,80287 Math Copro-
Assistant, 1,40M RAM, EGA Card, Tail Free Sup-
port, 1,40M RAM, SuperSpeed
266 HYUNDAL IBM compat Matic Coprocessor
1.2:4.1 140ppi Mouse, Mouse, Software $100
1.5:4.1 180ppi Mouse, Mouse, Software $100
92 Cannondale racing bike Never ridden, Brand new $500+00 offer 842-401
91" mountain bike series "50" Paramount, owned
91"tainted by Shon Mergekane #8246267
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and
sorters. $499 90 and up on usage. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0295
State of Kansas Trade-in. Excellent condition.
Handcrafted in the USA. 100% cotton.
sockets . $9.00 and up based on usage. Call Syllabus
Car store1 Dienn tapeeked 2 Rockford FF69
Store7 7mm axm. Bottacus 8x 9s, call 79-480
Store9 5mm axm. Bottacus 8x 9s, call 79-480
an absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade or vintage items, boys Penthouse, vintage clothing, books, carnival glass. Maxfield Parrish, art deco advertising company, retail merchandise, Duolon, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale memorabilia, knives, stuff it will blow you away! QUANTILLAR S FLEA MARKET 811 New York. Open every Fri, Sat and Sun 13-9. For booth rental info 482-6461
Electronic Typewriter as new $100. Includes
600 word spelling, typing, addi-
ply, answering and calling. Call 800-574-2391.
Mac SE 20 mg HD, modem, imagewriter II
Dekanker writer, $210.00 HD LID 104.68-646
Help! Need to sell Spring Break trip to Galveston Island, TX. COZ - sleep 6. Get a job, can't go to school.
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.95.
Call 641-7044. 841-8033
Mountain Bike, Bridgestone MB-2, Race ready,
mukel-proof carbon fiber hub, fusb $184, i84-8279.
Raleigh Bike, good shape, $50. Sears Dorm fridge
$50. Call Aaron 865-3844
Genuine rollerblade brand skates of the GUARANTEED LEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the most stable. All models available. Many colors. 843-2214
Roland D-90 professional synthesizer/keyboard with 2 sound library and J38 memory cards. 99%
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Sharp laptop computer 64Kk 71/32' F. D. Excellent condition 82-401.
THULE ROOF rack w locks and 4 bike holders
$65 Holder Roller 2 extra 30s 10 size used twice $65
$50 Holder Roller 2 extra 30s 10 size used twice $55
340 Auto Sales
85 Vetta 4D, AC Cruise, $pdd, AM MF, Cas. 61, 600
garrys 4D 860 +324 834 (or dial or 834-325)
1979 Buck Regal Limited, 7,000K annual mileage,
4 K engine, runs very good, $1500, 863-4539
and $200.
1986 Ford Ranger 4 drive, automatic, Roll bar, chrome wheels, air-conditioning. Many extras
87 Honda Aero 100. Excellent condition - well-maintained. Red, Basket and zidhmed elements #425 or
426. Free shipping within the U.S.
1980 Dodge Diplomate, looks, runs great was $1500
now $1300 *MUST Sell NOW* 864-765 sesques
360 Miscellaneous
Volkswagen Bug For Sale, Jair condition, $600 cash,
799.493
On TWs, VCR, JVR camera, stetoser, musical instrument
MCs, MVC/MSC) DISC. Jay Hawkwaj & Jewelry,
MVC/MSC) DISC. Jay Hawkwaj & Jewelry,
370 Want to Buy
BASEBALL CARDSP/SPORTS MEMORARLIA
CARDSP/SPORTS MEMORARLIA
Bring
where
Topple
NEE
asketb
WANTEB.
eb
15th, Shauna 841-
Wanted:
9.2 a non-student BBall tickets, Colorado
Feb. 15, Call Erik day 644-340, night 682-430
Wanted: Non-student basketball tickets for Kansas
vs. Missouri, March 8. Call Ken 841-4800
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 bedroom apartment for sublease available May 20, on bus route; call 841-7983 or 84-4754
1. 32BRaps, near campus, nopeats, available June 1st, Aug. 1st, 842-8971.
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Accessed from KU. On bus route. Fully furnished. Phone number: (617) 543-9080. On site management. Heat, AC, water and trash pad (Chepbliss phone) *1241* 791* Call Chris
合
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertisin 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, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination'.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Hillview Apts $5免签 signing bonus! 1 & 2 bedroom apartments KI$ & KI$ plus deposit! on bus lines. Call for details.
looking for a place. "Caye 2 hour below, apt in the
first floor, room in the second through
third floor, month - allifies. Negotiable.
Delivery fee."
Louisiana Place Apt. 9. Now leasing nice BRAP. Borders Camping Beautiful view of the city. Call 314-625-7010.
New 2BR BLE to campus. Available Now. All
Appliances, $40/mo Low utilities. Call troy 822
SHORTTERMLEASES NO AVAILABLE on studi-
2 br. apt, and 3 br. 21/2 at townhouse
Now leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bedrooms for Fife per month, low utility, all appliances in kitchen, large storage room, good maintenance and management. Quality at the best价房 in 841-6868. Spanish Crest Apartments.
Spacious 3 BDR DUPLEX $750.00, Fully equip kitchen, back desk, near campus and bus route 874
One bedroom for walk-in at Hanover Place. Furnished, water paid. Walk to campus and downstairs. 1250 sq ft.
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $75 per month.
Call 842-7688
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
No Appt. Necessary
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Boardwalk
Hurry in Today some short term leases available
- VOLLEYBALL COURT
• BASKETBALL COURT
• INDOOR/ OUTDOOR
1& 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Spring &
Fall Move-ins.
3 HOT TUBS
EXERCISE ROOM
524 Frontier 842-4444
ON BUS ROUTE
ASK ABOUT THE REDUCED
SECURITY DEPOSIT
SECURITY DEPOSIT!
$355-$425
Models Open Daily
Mon.-Fri. 10-6p.m.
Sat. 10-4p.m. Sun. 12-4p.m.
Call842-5111
1301 W 24th
Available Now. Private > BDR Apt. Close to campus. $225/ml No Pueblo 869-193-193
Available now 2 bedrooms at 11th and Indiana. First floor with hardwood floors and blinds $400 each. 841-759-6171
Cozy Victorian one bedroom apt. near campus in March $335, 842-6384
Parker knocked for response remote. Near K. U.
841-6254
Sunrise over mountains.
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
SUNRISE VILLAGE
- Builtinroub.2,5.&4 Bedroom TownHomes
· Garages; 2/2 Baths
· Microwave Ovens
· Some with Fireplaces
· On KU Bus Route
· Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
--studios and 2 Bdrm. apt
Lighted Tennis Courts
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms
You'll Be Surprised!
- Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
- New kitchens
- Carpet colors:
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
- 2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
- Large bedrooms & closets
- Pool & volleyball
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
STOP PAYING RENT! Move into a great 2BR swimming pool of week camp. Complete with swim馆 and playground. Excellent excellent time to buy. For more info on this or on our website, call Jim Rega at Calvin Eddy & Kipman k441-272-8630
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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University Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 60405
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Let's see...You make fire--good...
You make tools--good.. You hunt
mammoth ...okaaaaay.. Uh-oh! Your
references are all baboons... not good.
Primitive resumes
12
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 11, 1992
Regents Center drops social welfare degree
By Janet Rorholm
Vongeordnungter
Kansan staff writer
The bachelor's degree program in social welfare at the Regents Center in Kansas City, Kan, will be phased out at the end of this semester, said Ann Weick, KU professor and dean of social welfare administration.
"In spite of our intense recruiting efforts, enrollment never increased the way we had anticipated it would," she said.
The University of Kansas started the bachelor's degree program in Kansas City about 10 years ago, anticipating interest in the program in the middle of Kansas City, a city where the need for social services was great, Weick said.
Twenty students are enrolled in the program now, she said. Weick said the program was smaller than usual because the school already had stopped its recruiting efforts when it decided to phase out the program.
Weick said the decision to phase out the program was made three years ago after an extensive reassessment of the social welfare school. After the assessment, the school began limiting the number of students admitted to the
social welfare program, both at the Regents Center and on the Lawrence campus.
Last year was the final year the school offered any junior classes, and this is the final year any senior classes will be offered.
The school will continue its master's degree program at the center, Weick said. KU is the only school in Kansas that offers a master's degree in social welfare.
Weck said she was disappointed at having to turn away KU students because enrollment in the school on the Lawrence campus had increased.
"Our program grew with the number of students enrolled during a period when there was a lack of funding," she said.
She said the limited enrollment had cut the number of undergraduate and graduate students from about 650 to 565.
"We don't have the money to hire more faculty, so we thought it would be unfair to admit that many students," Weick said.
She said classroom space would be cramped and that faculty would not have as much interaction with students.
33
Paul Kotz/Special to the KANSAN
Demolition man
John Baker of W.A. Dunbar & Sons Construction demolishes a house at 1119 Louisiana St. The demolition began yesterday morning.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.93
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Second glances: Dating across racial lines
WANSAS
By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
Maria Tifford, Wichita sophomore, and her boyfriend Jason Graff, Lenexa sophomore, talk to their friends Bryan Rusch, Liberty, Mo., sophomore (far left), and Todd Moore, Junction City junior (far right), at Ellisworth Hall.
Although no one actually has said anything insulting to him or his girl-
Jason Graff and his girlfriend often are stared at when they walk hand in hand on campus
Iriend, Gratir,
Lenexa sophomore,
said, he
disminized
because he
white and he is
dating
an African-American woman.
THE MARTIN LUCKY TAPE
Paul Kotz/ Special to the KANSAN
Graff said he thought the second glances were not malicious.
"It takes them time to accept what they see," he said.
Maria Tilford, Graff's girlfriend, said, "When we walk on campus, people will look. But they're not mean looks."
Tilford, Wichita sophomore, said that she would not let what other people did.
Graff said residents at Ellsworth Hall, where they both live, seemed to accept their relationship.
Bryan Rusch, a friend of the couple, said he thought that caring for one another was the only thing that mattered in a relationship.
"I don't think race has anything to do with it," said Rush, Kansas City. "Mitt."
But he said he thought the couple's situation was uncommon.
"It seemed weird at first, because I don't see too many interracial relations."
Yet, Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African and African-American studies, said that in the last three years, interracial dating had become more common nationwide, especially among African Americans and Hispanic Americans.
When Gordon first arrived at the University of Kansas 21 years ago, he was a freshman.
ples.
"That figure is changing drastically," he said.
The current trends toward increased interracial dating indicate that race relations are improving in the United States, Gordon said.
Barbara Ballard, acting dean of student life, said, "I think you see more interracial couples, and that involves all races. I think basically our campus is accepting of students' choices.
"There's always someone who is going to criticize and find fault," Ballard said.
"But you cannot control that."
Those who oppose interracial dating are entitled to their opinions, but it is really no one's business, she said.
A 1989 survey of the Southern California population done by two professors from the University of California-Los Angeles indicated that interracial dating was becoming more accepted.
Caverly Smith, former president of the Native American Student Association, said interracial dating also was becoming more common at Haskell Indian Junior College.
He said there also was a lot of dating among students from different Native American tribes.
Smith said that interracial dating had always been around, but that it was only recently being dealt with.
He said television, cinema and other media had brought the situation to a new level.
"I think people have just gotten used to it," Smith said.
But problems are still there, wit both friends and family.
Darrel Brannock, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, said a main problem with his former relationship had been his girlfriend's parents.
"Theyhatedit." he said.
wasaskingfortrouble.
Brannock, who is African American, said that his parents had accepted that he was dating a white woman, but that they had warned him that he
He said the race issue had become magnified when other problems arose.
Suzanne Racine, president of the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization, said her peers in HALO
usually did not date one another because they were so close.
She said they often dated students from other racial and ethnic backgrounds.
Racine, who is dating an African-American student, said she thought parents usually wanted their children to date within their own race
ters. It feels kind of awkward to be dating one another."
"We've developed such a rapport, she said. "We're like brothers and sis-
offen got stares when they went to the movies, but that she did not let it both her and me.
She said that she and her boyfriend
"At the University, there's pretty good acceptance," Racine said. "It's not as bad as some places, but you do get a lot of look."
N.Y.C. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Troy Alldaffer, co-director of GLSOK (left), and Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student (middle), urge Dante Pestano, Overland Park sophomore, to sign a ballot that will be presented to President Bush.
Group lobbies against policy
Some members of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas are joining a nationwide effort to change the Department of Defense's discriminatory policy against gays, lesbians and bisexuals.
By Shelly Solon
Kansas staff writer
The members say that a change in ROTC policy at the University of Kansas hinges on a change at the national level.
Rob Taylor, member of GLSKO, said he doubted that the University administration would take a leadership position and change its policy before changes took place at the national level.
GLSOR began a campaign last week and has a table in the Kansas Union this week where students can fill out information about a change in the national ROQT policy.
"The KU administration would join a lobbying effort with other universities," he said. "I doubt they have any responsibility being national leaders in the effort."
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said he did not think one university could act alone.
Glen Magpantay, co-chairperson of the National Gray, Lesbian and Bisexual Student Caucus of the association, said delivering the ballots to Bush would not singlehandedly change the Defense Department's policy.
"KU has been a leader among the universities trying to make a change," he said. "But I don't believe change by a single university would be effective if it was not accompanied by other changes."
"With other groups working for change and lobbying, eventually the policy should be changed," Magpantay said. "But this action should have a profound effect. It's just one way in which we can do our part in changing national policy."
The United States Students Association sent mock ballots to KU and 400 other schools nationwide. The association will deliver completed ballots to President Bush March 9 in Washington, D.C.
pating in the ballot campaign,but that he expected about 25 more to conduct campus campaigns.
Stacey Leyton, vice president of the association, said the organization sought to promote access to higher education through activities such as lobbying for increased financial aid.
He said that 91 schools were partici-
Half the states are represented in the campaign, Magantay said.
"The military is one way many use to get that access, therefore it should be"
Wait, let me look at the word "may". It's a capital 'M'.
Let's re-read the whole sentence.
"The military is one way many use to get that access, therefore it should be"
Yes, it's "may".
Final check:
"The military is one way many use to get that access, therefore it should be"
The word "may" is correct.
The other words are also in context.
The University Council took a step toward increasing sensitivity in the KU ROTC program by approving a resolution last Thursday recommending educational training in the program.
The resolution will be sent to ROTC directors who can accept or reject it.
Troy Aldaaffer, GLSOK co-director,
said that GLSOK was not interested in
removing the ROTC program from
campus.
"We just want to fight for our country and be gay and lesbian, too," he said.
Cleanup to start on Hoch
Kansanstaff report
Minor cleanup work will begin today on the rubble that was once Hoch Auditorium.
It is the first such work begun since the building was gutted by a lightning-sparked fire June 15.
Tiliaferro Construction Inc. of Topeka was contracted by the University of Kansas to stabilize floors and other collapsing structures in the remains of the building, said Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations.
The crew will try to salvage materials covered by the rubble, including construction materials, furniture and University property in the basement, he said. Today, the contractor will make the area safe for work to begin.
That could take up to two weeks, Richardson said
He said the project would be financed with money that was collected to pay for roofing plans made before the fire.
Don Taliaferro, president of the construction company,
said the work today would concentrate on the stage area.
The workers will use more than 28 wood and metal supports to prop up the stage and ensure worker safety, he said.
The shoveling of debris will be the only sound heard, Tali-
fero said.
"This project I'm doing is a very small piece of the pie," he said.
Bomb disrupts Quayle trip
Associated Press
LONDON — Authorities found a bomb in a phone booth near the heart of London's government district, where Vice President Dan Quayle was scheduled to meet yesterday with British officials.
Police suspect the bomb was planted by the IRA, making it the second time in a month that the outlawed Irish Republican Army apparently has placed an explosive near government buildings. The earlier device blew up, but nobodv was inured.
Home Secretary Kenneth Baker said that quick action by the police averted any damage that might have
occurred.
There was no claim of responsibility, but the head of the anti-terrorist squad, Commander George Churchill-Coleman, said that the bomb bore all the earmarks of the IRA.
Yesterday's bomb, which Independent Television News said contained five pounds of the plastic explosive Semtex, was found after telephoned warnings prompted the evacuation of Parliament Square and nearby government buildings.
Churchill-Coleman said a man with an Irish accent called a television station in the morning, gave a code word and said a bomb would go off within a
half-hour in Whitehall, a government building situated between Parliament and the House.
"The warning given this morning was deliberately vague and lacking in detail," he said. "The likelihood of causing death and injury to the public was high, and to give so little warning was utterly cynical."
The U.S. Embassy said Quayle, who ended a six-day European tour yesterday, had not changed his schedule, which included stops at the Foreign Office and at the nearby residence of Prime Minister John Major. The bomb was found five hours before Quayle was due at the Foreign Office.
'Creep defense' hurt Tyson, lawyers say
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — In the end, the Mike Tyson jurors thought the victim's story that she was raped and the defense's story that the boxer was a foul-mouthed womanizer who could not keep his hands to himself.
Perhaps the defense strategy back-fired, or perhaps his attorneys simply made too convincing a case, lawyers who followed the trial said yesterday.
Or perhaps, as the jury said after the verdict, the state just had a better case.
"The creep defense" usually only makes sense if you're pleading insanity," said Dan Capila, a trial attorney and legal analyst for KCNC and KOA radio in Denver.
added weight other charges and made it that much easier for the jury to convict him, Caplis said.
The portrait of the former heavyweight boxing champion — as so consistently crude that his victim must have known he wanted sex — merely
Courtroom observers were struck by the fact that Tyson's attorneys appeared to distance themselves from him, rarely touching or talking to him. Immediately after the verdict
"The jury heard over and over through the defense that he was such a vulgar, obscene individual that any woman with him should have been placed on notice to what he wanted and who he was," said Linda Pence, a defense attorney who attended the two-week trial.
"You portray your client as a very unattractive individual, predatory in nature, disrespectful of women and thus prone to do an offense like this, and it makes it easier to return the verdict of guilty," she added. "If the defense counsel doesn't like him, why should the jury?"
late Monday, Tyson sat stock-still,
emotionless. His attorneys, appearing
utterly dejected, rested their
elbows on the defense table. None of
them looked at him, and he stared
straight ahead.
Lead defense attorney Vincent Fuller rose and polled the eight-man, four-woman jury, and each replied, "Gullity," in a firm voice. Several nodded their heads as they said the word.
Tyson was convicted of one count of rape and two counts of criminal conduct. Each count carries a maximum prison term of 20 years. Similar convictions usually result in sentences ranging from seven to 11 years, prosecutors said yesterday. Sentencing is scheduled for March 6.
"After all the evidence was weighed, the state had a stronger case," the jury foreman said later. "The accusing witness made a very convincing case."
2
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
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816 Massachusetts
Dear Kristen.
Unbelievable visiting Amnesty International in Caracas with a Poli Sci prof here on Semester at Sea.
Our first port and already the world has changed.
Tomorrow ecology class goes to Angel Falls 15x Niagara's height!
Love, Brian
P. S. Don't be jealous. Just call 800-854-0195 to get an application for the Fall92 voyage. You've got to do it!
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VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
This program will focus on a variety of issues of importance to women.
women.
*Sexual assault including date and acquaintance rape
*Relationships that involve verbal, physical, and sexual
*Special concerns international women may have with records to safety.
Tuesday, February 18, 1992
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 19 at 10:32 p.m.
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
Facilitators: Rape Victim Support Service
Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc.
Office of International Student Services
personized by the Klinky Taylor Women's Resource Center, Commissio
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information contact Sheryl Robinson at 864.3532
OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
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Officer testifies Dahmer appeared to be 'normal'
MILWAUKEE — An officer who was fired for taking a 14-year-old boy back to Jeffrey Dahmer's apartment, where the youth later was killed and dismembered, testified yesterday that Dahmer appeared to be a normal person.
The Associated Press
Defense attorney Gerald Boyle contends Dahmer had an uncontrollable sexual attraction to corpses, driving him to kill. But prosecutor E. Michael McCann says Dahmer could have controlled himself.
The encounter was the last of several times Dahmer evaded police detection during a 13-year period in which he killed and mutilated 17 young men, according to testimony during Dahmer's insanity trial.
Dahmer several times about a strong odor coming from Dahmer's apartment. The smell later was identified as that of body parts.
In other testimony yesterday, Dahmer's former apartment manager, Sopa Princewell, said he confronted
Dahmer told him the smell was caused by a broken freezer and a fish tank. Princewell said.
Former officer John Balcerak and his former partner Joseph Gabrish encountered Dahmer on May 27 while responding to a call about a naked, dazed boy on the street. Dahmer told them the boy, later identified as 14-year-old Konerak Sinthasomphone, was his adult, homosexual lover.
The officers left Dahmer's apartment after they saw pictures of the boy posing in black, blinkin underwear, and she was telling the baller, Balcerezak said.
The Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring an information table from 10 a. to 3 p.m. today on the fourth floor lobby of the Kansas Union.
ON CAMPUS
"He remained calm and forligh throughout the entire interview," Balezerak said of Dahmer. "He appeared to be a normal person."
The Atmospheric Science Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 6072 Malott Hall.
The Juggling Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in the lower locker of Lewis
Hall.
KU Gamers and Role-Players will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Kansas Union.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union.
The Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30 tonight at the conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
WEATHER
Today high:39 low:25
NEBRASKA Omaha 29/21
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 49/28
KANSAS Lawrence 39/25
Dodge City Wichita 43/26
MISSOURI Kansas City 37/25 St. Louis 35/29
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 56/35
3-day outlook
TODAY Slight chance of rain this morning. It will remain cloudy and cool throughout the day.
TOMORROW Partly cloudy and warmer. Beid chance for a nice day this week.
FRIDAY Partly cloudy with a chance of rain in the afternoon and evening.
Around the U.S.
Boston 25/11
Chicago 28/19
Dallas 64/46
Detroit 26/14
Houston 71/57
New York 25/21
Los Angeles 66/55
Philadelphia 27/15
San Francisco 62/51
Washington 29/23
60
50
50
40
30
20
20
10
0
Forecast by Brian Loving, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, dailly during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
ON THE RECORD
REPLACEMENTSENATORS
Thursday night and Friday afternoon from her unlocked room in McCollum Hall, KU police reported.
Student Senate and the Elections Commission are now accepting applications for replacement senators for the following Senate seats:
2 Architecture
1 Nunemaker
1 Off-Campus
A KU student's art supply box and its contents, valued at $80 and a check, valued at $278, was taken between
1Law
Applications are available in the Office of Student Senate, 400 Kansas Union, or in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall. Applications are due by 5:00, February 12 in the Office of Student Life.
De Sica's Neorealist Classic! The Bicycle Thief
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Dali, Bunuel, Cocteau & Clair Surrealist Fish Night
7:00 Thursday, Feb. 13
4:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
Friday, Feb. 14 at 7:30 & 10:00
at Hastings Hall
UNION PRESIDENTS
7:00 Tuesday, Feb. 11
7:00 Thursday, Feb. 12
1:00 Saturday, Feb. 13
Films are screened in Woodfird Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Office Level, 4, Kansas Union
Call 843-3131
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
LSAT GMAT GRE
THE PRINCETON REVIEW
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SUMMER RESEARCH AWARDS FOR WOMEN AND MINORITY MEN IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Monetary awards to undergraduate Juniors for participation in research programs with Biology faculty at The University of Kansas.
Eligibility: Women and minority men with interests in the biomedical sciences.
Amount of award: $2,000.
Application deadline: March 16, 1992
Application forms are available from Sylvia Suarez, Administrative Assistant, Howard Hughes Program, 6007 Haworth Hall (864-3933)
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
CAMPUS/AREA
3
Skunk boom leading to outbreak of rabies
Warm winter has assisted rise in cases
By Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
Odor aside, there could be something else to add to skunks' offensive rants.
Deborah Briggs, assistant professor of veterinary diagnosis at Kansas State University, said yesterday that an increase in the skunk population in the state had led to more reported cases of rabies in animals.
She said 31 confirmed cases of rabies in animals already had been reported in Kansas since the first of the year while the number of reported cases from all of last year only totaled 63.
Skunks have accounted for 26 of this
winter cases. Three dogs, one cow and
one raccoon were the other cases, she said.
Such high numbers of rabies cases are not common in the winter months. However, unusually warm weather and readily available food have made it easier for skunks to spread the disease, Briggs said.
She said data compiled since 1964 showed that there was a boom in the skunk population about every 10 years, starting in 1971.
Briggs said that even more reported cases could be expected as temperatures increased.
"If the trend continues as it has since 1964, we should expect to see the highest numbers in May and June," she said.
John Ollson, a Lawrence veterinarian, said the large number of skunks with rabies was a result of their high susceptibility to the disease.
However, he said that no animals in Douglas County this year had passed the drug test.
year three animals had been confirmed with rabies, and only one was a skunk.
Olson said that in the county this
If an animal thought to be rabid bites a human, the animal must be confined for 10 days to determine whether the disease is active in the animal, he said. After the 10 days, if the animal does not show signs of rabies, the person is safe.
However, rabies can be in an incubation period in the animal, Olson said. Even though rabies is not passed to the person in this stage, the disease can still develop in the animal within more than a year.
"Once an animal has rabies, it is going to die," he said. "That is why it is important not to mess around with it."
Olson said symptoms of rabies included unusual aggressiveness, strained or paralyzed vocal chords and difficulty in swallowing.
Because there is no cure for rabies, vaccination is the only form of prevention, he said.
Group pledges $23,000 to publish White papers
Project preserves correspondence
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
A group committed to promoting the understanding and exercise of the First Amendment gave $23,000 last week to the School of Journalism. The money is to finance the editing and publication of William Allen White's personal papers.
This is the second grant that the group, Freedom Forum, has given to Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, who has been working on editing and publishing the project for three years. Brinkman also received $26,780 to begin the project in 1990.
Brickman said he has been considering going on a sabbatical to finish the project of publishing the papers in volume sets, which are similar to those made from presidential papers.
He said the most recent grant would be used to pay for copying costs and for some assistance with the project.
Brinkman said the bulk of material was at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. More material is in Spencer Research Library and with White's granddaughter in Emoria.
White's personal papers include letters he wrote and received from presidents, newspaper people, prominent politicians and government officials, Brinkman said.
("White) was very influential on the national scene, writing from his pulpit, as people called it, with the Emporia Gazette. "Brinkman said. "People listened to what he had to say."
He said that White had been good friends with a number of presidents, but especially with Theodore Roosevelt. The two exchanged letters
commenting on and analyzing major issues of the time.
"They were playing off each other getting ideas about things." Brinkman said. "He was a confidant and adviser for the president."
White also was a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and author of well-known editorials such as: "To An Anxious Friend," "Mary White" and "What's the Matter with Kansas?"
Brinkman said he had been interested in working on the project because he had worked for the Emporia Gazette as a reporter while in high school and for a year and a half after graduation. Brinkman also was dean of the School of Journalism, named in honor of White, for 11 years.
Calder Pickett, professor emeritus of journalism, called White the greatest journalist Kansas ever had.
He said that White was a man of such honor, integrity and decency that he ranked as one of the top 10 editors of all time.
J. S. G.
Julie Denesha / KANSAN
D'em bones
Having classified a fossilized bone as that of a small Miocene horse, John Chorn, who has a doctorate in vertebrate paleontology, places it in a box with other horse bones. Chorn was sorting a new collection of bones from the Miocene epoch yesterday at the Natural History Museum. The bones were donated by an amateur collector in Florida.
City approves ammo bid
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission approved a $12,786 bid at last night's meeting to buy practice ammunition for the Lawrence police.
The commission approved the ammunition bid during the consent agenda of the meeting, when all bids, bills and payments are passed together in one vote and without discussion from the commission.
Mike Wilden, city manager, said the purchase was necessary for officer training even though Lawrence police discharged their weapons on duty.
"The officers have to be certified marksmans every year," he said. "They practice periodically at the Fraternal Order of Police Training Center. Even though we had one shooting last year, we fired their fire weapons very much on duty."
Wildgen said the city usually spent about $12,000 for the ammunition each
year.
Commissioner Shirley Martin-Smith said the approval came from the recommendation of the city staff.
"We base our acceptance of those bids on what the estimates from the staff are," she said. "They know typically, over a period of years, what to expect."
Martin-Smith said she was surprised when she first became a commissioner at the amount of money the city spent on bullets.
"The amount might sound exorbitant," she said. "I recall when I first sat here, I was thinking, 'My goodness, what a lot of money.' And it is. But what we are talking about is public safety. We are talking about a lot of people in this community who support the police in their training tests."
"Practice ammunition is a less expensive ammunition," he said.
Sgt. Mark Warren, a representative for the Lawrence police, said the practice bullets were designed differently from the duty ammunition.
Biting the bullet
A look at ammunition that Lawrence police uses
Each Lawrence police officer is allotted 50 rounds of duty ammunition a year.
Each round costs between $.40 and $50.
The city will spend about $25 on each officer for duty ammunition.
The city will spend $12,700 for practice ammunition, which will be used for training procedures.
Lawrence police used 107,000 rounds of practice ammunition last year.
SOURCE: Sat. Mark Warren, Lawrence notice.
Jeff Meesey, Daily Kannan
Warren estimated that Lawrence police used 107,000 rounds of practice ammunition and had about 8,000 rounds of duty ammunition available for use last year.
"Practice ammunition and duty ammunition are live. But what we use for training and practice is not built to manufacturer's specifications."
Each commission officer for the Lawrence police carries a 9 mm semi-automatic, Sig-Saur P226 pistol and 5 rounds of duty ammunition. Warren estimated that the duty ammunition carried by each officer cost about $25.
Warren said the police would request bids in the coming months for duty ammunition.
Committee selects interim director
English Department head to fill position
Kansan staff report
Michael Johnson, head of the department of English, also will act as interim director of freshman-sophomore English.
The decision was made yesterday by an advisory committee in the English Department.
Beginning Aug. 1, Johnson will direct freshman-sophomore English for one year, while a formal search for the right candidate will be conducted. Stephen Goldman can be conducted.
Goldman died of colon cancer in December.
Johnson said he thought he would be able to perform both jobs for a year.
He had been director of freshman-
sophomore English from 1981 to 1984,
he said.
Bernard Hirsch, acting director of freshman-sophomore English, said Johnson was chosen as interim directive and coordinator in language and composition theory.
Johnson also was asked to fill the position because of a shortage of faculty, Hirsch said.
The director is responsible for training graduate teaching assistants for freshman and sophomore level courses and for participating in text selection. Directors also oversee the grading of common final exams, Hirsch said.
The committee also named Jack Orruch, associate English professor, as associate director of freshman-sophomore English effective Aug. 15.
TONIGHT
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Kick Off Party
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University Daily Kansan/ Wednesday, February 12, 1992
OPINION
Believe It or Not!
JOLLYBUG IT CAN LEAP 22 FEET AND RIP OUT YOUR BRAIN -- IN SEVEN SECONDS!
THE WALKING STICK OF CALCUTTA DOESN'T WALK-IT SAUNTERS!
GUY LOMBARDO BIG ROCK PARK, ILL. NATURAL ROCK FORMATION
VILLAGE CHIEF IN THE YELLOW ISLANDS—HE IS MADE ENTIRELY OF BUBBLE GUM AND HAS RULED FOR EIGHTY-SEVEN CONSECUTIVE YEARS!
JAX SILVER HEELS WHO PLAYED "TONTO" ON "THE LONE RANGER" TV SHOW HAD ONLY ONE SILVER HEEL--THE OTHER WAS TIN!
RODNEY GREY OF BLOOMINGDAY, ID. WORKED ON THE SAME CROSSWORD PUZZLE FOR 73 YEARS - AND NEVER FINISHED IT!
MAN IN WASHINGTON D.C. SAID "THERE IS NO RECESSION" SO MANY TIMES THAT HE BELIEVED IT!
UDK. AAD
Womyn push interests too far at Multiversity
Hello! This is William F. Muckrake, your host for Firing Whine - a soapbox discussion show promoting the political intimidation of the oppressive white male hegemony.
Today I'll be talking with Jane Butkus, one of the February Fillies. The February Fillies, you remember, were the group of womyn who occupied the East Asian Studies building 20 years ago here at the Multiversity of Kansas.
Jane: Thank you.
Welcome, Jane.
William: What's this you've brought with you today. Jane?
W: I see. You seem to have quite a chip on your shoulder.
J. This is my very own custom-made man-axe, William. I made it myself. I carry it always.
W: And what a muscular shoulder it is, too.
Why don't you tell the audience how you made your man-axe. Jane?
J: Well, first I came to the realization that a woman could make an axe as well as a man. Then I went into my dad's attic and found his old Mickey Mantle signature Louisville Slugger and ...
W: No! You didn't...
J: Yup! I honored that sucker right down and forged the axhead out of carbon steel.
Carbon steel will stay sharper longer than stainless steel, but it has a tendency to rust and stain if you don't wipe it off when you're done.
W: Ohno! You don't really ...
J: Well, not yet anyway. We use it for therapeutic purposes at our meetings of the Coalition of Paranoid Womyn.
W: Therapeutic purposes?
J: Yeah, we take a few caualties and put Halloween masks on them of
ALEXANDER PAYNE
Eric Fiolkoski guest columnist
Ronnie Reagan, G. Gordon Liddy,
Clint Eastwood, Axl Rose and the like.
Then we chon away.
It relaxes the girls. Afterwards, we go over to my place for espresso and tofu burgers.
W: Wow! Sounds like a really liberating experience. Does your dad know you ruined his wonderful bat?
J: Well, not yet. Dad, if you're listening... I'm sorry, but you drove me to it. I just felt I should have been more important to you than Sandv Koufax.
He doesn't need a place like that. Besides, the cost of the commune would be covered by Mr. Budig's present home maintenance funding. He can be such a baby!
W: Some administrators believe that many of the February Fillies' demands are outside the scope of a university or that they would be fiscally unfeasible and...
J. Fiscally unfeasible?! By asking
Mr. Budig to move out of his campus
abode behind Blake Hall and allow us
to art a February Fill commune
here?
J: Not really. First, I don't like the name "Womyn's Studies." The first four letters in the word *Studies* "sends out the wrong message. It should be
W: Hmmm, interesting. Since 1972, the Multiversity has responded to the February Fillies' demands by creating a Womyn's Studies program. You should be pleased.
called "The Instytute for Intellectual and Political Inquiry of Womyn's Concerns".
Secondly, you can't even get a Ph.D in that area here.
W. Couldn't you work on a Ph.D. in, say, ... sociology, taking special classes and writing a dissertation that would be concerned with womyn's issues?
J: Sure, ... but that would defeat the whole purpose. There would be just one more dissertation gathering dust in Watson Library, and I'd be just another face in the crowd at faculty meetings.
W. But as long as you're pursuing truth ...
J: What does the truth have to do with anything? How is a woman supposed to finishher Ph.D. when the Mul-tion won't even provide day care for her?
J. That 's because you're an apathetic male.
W. Uh huh. Didn't you have some children with you when you occupied the East Asian Studies building in 1972?
W: Ireallywouldn'tknow.
J: Yes. You're referring to the February Foals, one of whom is my son, Ragweed.
J: Yeah. He's a Womyn's Issues major at Duke. He's pretty decent for a man, even though I didn't want him to begin with.
J: Yeah, if the Multiversity would have had a Womyn's Clinic way back when, I would have been able to have a safe abortion, free of charge.
W:Oh?
W; Ragweed?
Eric Flokolski is a Topea senior,
majoring in Philosophy.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Costs of bus system too high
Expansion of KU on Wheels would provide alternative plan that is more financially feasible
The city of Lawrence is growing every day. Look around. It is easy to see. In most big cities, public transportation is a necessity of life. Now, a new group called the Citizens Public Transportation Blueprint Committee wants to bring a citywide bus system to Lawrence.
Although the bus service may be a nice idea, the city is not ready for it.
In large cities around the country, busing systems are losing business. Case in point, Lawrence's neighbor to the east, Kansas City. The Metro busing service in Kansas City, Mo., launched an advertising campaign last year to bolster public use for many reasons. Even with the number of people in the area, the service still is floundering.
Why does this new group think it can generate the money it would take to subsidize a busing service in a town this size? It is highly unlikely that the same people who are continually asked to give more and more tax dollars would open their pocketbooks to a tax increase for public transportation.
The costs in running the service would be astronomical. Not only would Lawrence have to buy new buses, the city would have to service them, fill them with gas, insure them, train drivers and develop a dispatch network. The burden to maintain half-empty buses would be too large on the people of Lawrence.
The committee cites accessibility and traffic congestion as reasons for developing the system. However, compared to other cities, the traffic in Lawrence is not unbearable. Besides, who is to say that large buses placed on streets not built for that type of traffic would not cause more trouble.
The only feasible plan would be to expand KU on Wheels. Although Student Senate is against it, the idea could work with proper financial and guiding cooperation between the University and the city. By working together, Lawrence could have expanded routes, increased operating times and added convenience at lower costs for all involved.
A new bus system may be necessary in the future. Right now, however, it would be a waste of taxpayer money and would confuse the very problem it is trying to solve.
Jim Brown for the editorial board
Olympic etiquette is flagging
U. S. team's refusal to dip flag as gesture of respect to France disregards common courtesy
The 1992 Winter Olympics opened in Albertville, France, on Saturday with a question of ethics on the United States' part. Since the first modern Olympics in 1896, a ceremonial march of nations has opened the Olympic Games which included dipping the flag before the president of the host nation.
However, since the 1908 Olympics in London, the United States has not dipped its flag in the ceremony because the United States thinks it should not bow to anyone.
The United States should get off its high horse and determine whether its tradition of not dipping the flag is really necessary.
This year, at Saturday's opening ceremony, the United States continued its tradition of not dipping its flag.
France was offended because it thought the United States should dip its flag like everyone else. With the end of the Cold War, the United States should follow suit and dip its flag as a recognition of the new world order.
The United States might have gained a lot of respect from the other nations if it had dipped its flag.
Maybe the United States should realize that dipping the flag is not a matter of bowing down to anyone but of courtesy. Dipping the flag not only would have shown the United States' recognition for a new world order, it also would have shown respect for France and the other nations as they traditionally dipped their flags.
Dipping the flag appears to be etiquette. What would Ann Landers say about the United States' manners in this situation?
Tiffany LAssa Haur for the ediitional board
Tiffany LAssa Haur for the ediitional board
Age depends on location in time; you can be young your entire life
Age is a relative thing. It is all where you are at the time. I remember being 5 years old and thinking that was as old as I ever wanted to be. I went to school half a day where I played with children.
DONNA RICHERMAN
The toughest challenge was learning to tie a sheoilace. I could eat anything I wanted and not worry about body-fat percentage, cholesterol, blood pressure or gas. My hair was long and straight. My mom braided it forming and not gave it a thought. And everyone older than 5 was old.
Kate
Kelley
staff
columnist
In grade school, high school students were old. Teen-age boys had sideburns. Girls had breasts. After that was marriage, family and death. They could have it.
By the time I had reached high school, the guys had become jerks, not at all sophisticated like the way I had remembered. Real breasts were not as common as we had been led to
believe. In fact, with Twiggy as our standard, we did not really want them anyway. Old had become college students.
Then I went to college (the first time). Kids away from home for the first time, eating and drinking to excess, dating anything that looked their way, blowing money in one weekend that was supposed to last an entire semester ... these were not grown-ups. We were still children. Old was married people.
But I got married, had children still felt like a 5-year-old inside sometimes.
I did not have all the answers, still did not like peas, hated cooking and housework, still ate to excess. Old looked ruge like 40.
Now, in my 30-to-40 decade, this seems very young, not even the prime of our lives.
My parents are approaching 60, but they still seem very young. They have more fun now than I remember them ever having. I read obituaries, and anyone dying younger than 80 I think must have been in a tragic accident to be taken so young.
I know that if I ever reach 80, I will realize Methuseah was really the only old person. Because deep inside, I will probably always be 5 years old. It is the best year, after all.
Kate Kelley is a Fort Leavenworth junior majoring in English.
KANSAN STAFF
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
TIFFANYHARNESS
Editor
Editors
News ... Mike Andrews
Editorial ... Beth Randolph
Planning ... Lara Gold
Planning ... Eric Gorski/Rochlin
Sports ... Nelson
Photo ... Julie Jacobson
Features ... Debbie Myers
Graphics .. Jeff Meesey/Aimee Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Kim Leibengood
Regional sales mgr ... Rich Hahnbarger
Co-op sales mgr ... Ame Johnson
Production mgrs ... Kim Wallace
... Lisa Keeler
Marketing director ... Kim Clxton
Creative director ... Bevany Benty
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pho-
thes. 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 Stuart-FintH Mall.
Stick
WHY ARE YOU ALL WEARING
SUNGLASSES IN FEBRUARY?
BECAUSE THE HOLE IN
THE OZONE COULD OPEN
ANY DAY NOW...
WHY ARE YOU ALL WEARING SUNGLASSES IN FEBRUARY?
BECAUSE THE HOLE IN THE OZONE COULD OPEN ANY DAY NOW...
SUNGLASSES WILL PROTECT OUR EYES FROM HARMFUL ULTRAVIOLET RAYS...
...AND BESIDES, IF WE'RE GOING TO BURN TO A CRISP, WE WANT TO LOOK GOOD DOING IT.
!
by David Rosenfield
... AND BESIDES, IF WE'RE GOING TO BURN TO A CRISP, WE WANT TO LOOK GOOD DOING IT.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
5
JustinKnupp/KANSAN
10
Tobin Jennings, 5, takes advantage of a cold but clear afternoon to play on a slide in Brook Creek Park, Brook and 13th streets. A more than 30 percent chance of snow threatened Lawrence yesterday.
Sliding without ice
Police shoot gunman who may be killer
The Associated Press
KENT, Ohio — A man killed by police near Kent State University was identified as the gunman in one campus shooting and may be linked to another shooting in which a university employee was killed, investigators said yesterday.
Mark K. Cunningham, 35, a 1965 Kent State graduate in fine arts, was shot by police Monday night, after he was spotted shooting out windows at an apartment complex near campus, police said.
The shooting was the third at the northeastern Ohio school since Dec. 12. In addition, three other people have been shot to death on other Ohio campuses in the past five months. Police did not release any other information on Cunningham.
But University Police Chief John Peach told reporters yesterday that Cunningham closely matched the police officer caught in the two other gammon shootings.
Peachand City Police Chief William Lillich said Cunningham fired at pursuing campus officers late Monday after he shot at the apartment building. The officers fired back, but missed.
Peach said ballistics tests would be conducted to determine if Cunningham's gun was the same one used to wound Sarah Smith, 25, on Jan. 29, and kill university janitor John Frazier, 51, on Dec. 12 in the student union building.
Smith yesterday identified Cunningham as her attacker.
St. John's student admits guilt in sexual assault case
NEW YORK — The last of six St. John's University students accused of forcing alcohol on a fellow student and sexually assaulting her pleaded guilty yesterday, touching off a courtroom burst by his mother.
The Associated Press
"I don't want anyone calling my son arapit!" shouted Carol Caldriallaroni her 22-year-old son, Michael, ran to hug her. He pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct and unlawful imprisonment in exchange for a sentence of three years' probation, 500 hours of community service and counseling.
Prosecutors say six men took advantage of the woman, then age 21, after she was rendered helpless by a vodka-and-orange soda concoction at an off-campus house near the school on March 1, 1990. The woman, who had
been set to take the stand, wess as the plea agreement was entered.
Three of the students were acquitted of all charges last summer while two pleaded guilty to lesser charges before Calandrillo's trial began Feb. 3. One withdrew from the school. The others were expelled. Calandrillo had been suspended pending the outcome of his case.
In his plea agreement, Calandrillo admitted giving the woman the vodka drinks and forcing her to perform oral sex on him.
He had been charged with sodomy, sexual abuse and unlawful imprisonment. The sodomy count carried a maximum sentence of 25 years in jail.
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As he admitted his participation, his mother stared at the victim, banged on the courtroom bench and loudly said,
A supporter of the victim, one of many who had demonstrated on her behalf since the trial began, shouted "Ranist!" as Calandarli left the room.
"What rights? He's not guilty." The judge did nothing to stop her outburst.
Name-calling between Calandrillo's parents and supporters of the victim ensued, and one demonstrator got into a scuffle with a court officer.
Mrs. Candarlore rushed at the victim but was blocked by a court officer. As she was dragged away, she repeat- asked her to want anyone calling my son a rapist!"
Prosecutor Peter Reese said he offered the pearl bargain to Calandrillo because the woman felt that watching his admission of the crimes would help her recover from the trauma she had suffered.
A Summer Program on Europe West and East June 10-July 29,1992
Enhance Your Future This Summer
- Taught in English -
DiS Denmark's International Study Program
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
...
EUROPE IN TRANSITION
SUMMER COURSE OFFERINGS FOR KU CREDIT:
*The European Community *Modern Scandinavian Art and Architecture
*European Security Issues *Nordic Mythology
*East-West Business Relations *Danish Language
DIS also offers fall and spring semesters in Humanities and Social Sciences, International Business, and Architecture and Design. Come by the KU Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, for more information.
NATURAL WAY
Come to an information meeting Thursday, February 13 at 3:00 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
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DONT JUST WORRY ABOUT HIV. DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT.
If you think you are at risk for HIV infection, now's the time to consider counseling and testing. If your test positive, work with a doctor to make decisions that are right for you. The earlier this happens, the more medical care can help.
Talk to a doctor, your health department, or other local AIDS resources. Call the National AIDS Hotline at 1-800-342-AIDS or the Student Senate AIDS Task Force at 864-3710.
HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
Paid for by: Call for Student Senate Peer AIDS Task Force Education 864-3710
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WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
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Protect a Sweetheart: Use Your Condom Sense! National Condom Week is February 14-21.
Valentine's Day marks the beginning of National Condom Week—a good time to remember to show concern for your sweetheart and for yourself. Sexual abstinence is the surest way to prevent STDs (including HIV) and pregnancy, but if you decide to have intercourse—use a latex barrier and nonoxynol-9 spermicide every time. Condoms are available at Watkins pharmacy (3 for 50 cents).
Communication and caring in relationships can help to reduce the incidence of STDs and unplanned pregnancy. And remember that the use of alcohol and other drugs is strongly associated with failure to use preventive measures. Use your Condom Sense!
For information on special Protect-A-Sweetheart events call 864-9570.
AIDS Info On-Line
Build Your AIDS Knowledge
increase your awareness and get answers to your questions about HIV/AIDS at the nearest campus computer lab or at home via modem. Access AIDS Info On-Line through the VAX computer with user name "WIN." For modern details call Health Education at 864-9570.
Health Center 864-9500 Health Education 864-9570 We Care for KU
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6
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
LIFE
Meditate...Now and Zen
*Sho jjo-mu hen-sei gan-dan*
*Bon-sho mju-min-jse gan-dan*
*Hon-mou mru-yo sei-gaku*
*Butsu-do mju-gan-jao*
Rhythmic chanting broke the early Saturday morning silence in a temple on a quiet residential street in Lawrence.
The Zen meditation retreat at the Kansas Zen Center ended a week-long series of activities in Lawrence with Keido Fukushima, master of the Tofukiju Monastery in Kyoto, Japan.
The Zen master has visited the University of Kansas every year since 1899, when faculty at the Spencer Museum of Art invited him to come.
His gentle brown eyes intent on his interpreter, Fukushima spoke fluently in Japanese of his reasons for coming to KU each year.
"Upon my return here, I came to feel that there are serious problems with Zen in the United States," Fukushima said. "Americans seem to have a tendency to take things very free. In America, many forms of meditation have been mixed together. One of my missions is to present genuine Japanese Zen to laypeople in America."
ple to come to a better understanding of each other."
Fukushima said Zen Buddhism could be a unifying factor between Japanese and American cultures.
"I hope to help to form a bridge in some small way between common cultures in Japan and America and doing this through Zen," he said. "Personally, I have a great liking for America and American people, but I do feel it is necessary for peo-
Japanese custom usually does not allow women to practice Zen in the Japanese monasteries, but Fukushima said he made special exceptions for American women to practice with the monks in his monastery.
Patricia Fister, former curator of oriental art at the Spencer Museum of Art, moved to Japan one year ago and regularly visits Fukushima's monastery to practice Zen. Fukushima said
The Zen master said Zen Buddhism appealed to many Americans because it was a practical, concrete religion.
"When you die, that the end," Fukushima said in broken English.
The Zen master continued his explanation in Japanese. "While we're alive and take on a particular form here, we must do what we can to function with that form. In the case of Zen Buddhism, the point is to be a living buddha while one is alive."
Great dangers exist when science and government are divorced from a religious basis, he said.
"Speaking from my own convictions. I would like to see politicians and economists take a deeper interest in religion, "Fukushima said. "I think that is the best way to achieve what everyone talks about as world peace."
Sarah Nockleton, Lawrence sophomore, was one of five KU students who came to the retreat Saturday. She said she went because of her interest in Eastern philosophies and religions.
The retreat was Nockonick's first exposure to Zen Buddhism.
"I'm not joining anything, but I've enjoyed practicing it today," she said. "I don't identify with any particular doctrine."
Stan Lombardo, head of the classics department, said he thought college students were somewhat more open to Zen Buddhism than the general population, but not as much as people might have assumed.
"It tends to appeal deeply to people who have had a lot of experience in life - people who have suffered," Lombardo said.
大正時 妙音宗
Lombardo has been involved with Zen Buddhism for 15 years, he said. About 25 people are involved with the Zen Center in Lawrence.
A Zen student organization is being formed at KU. Lombardo said 10 students had indicated interest.
Gary Baura, graduate student, said he had been involved with Zen Buddhism for four years. The retreat was the first time he had practiced Zen meditation since his study abroad experience in Japan two years ago.
"As for me, I'm not going in to this in terms of any self-discovery," he said. "In a sense, it's relaxing, but I couldn't say that it's any integral part of my life."
Story by Katherine Manweter
Photo by Derek Nolen
Keido Fukushima is the Zen master of the Tofukuji Monastery in Japan.
Wichita author chronicles father's Alzheimer's battle
The Associated Press
In her book "Daddyboy: A Memoir," Carol Wolfe Konek, associate dean of liberal arts at Wichita State University, takes readers inside complex family relationships that once revolved around her father.
WICHTA - As Leonard Wolfe slowly went from a rational, self-reliant intellectual man to a bewailed, dependent Alzheimer's disease victim, his daughter chronicled the descent.
"Daddyboy" may be too frank for recently diagnosed Alzheimer's victims and their families, said Konek, a 57-year-old women's studies professor and researcher.
"You wonder if it's best that some see what's going to happen in two weeks, or two months or two years," she said. "Maybe some people are better off if they don't know that."
Although the book left her feeling exposed, she said it allowed her to deal with her conflicting feelings toward her father, a businessman with strong socialist and feminist political beliefs.
Konek took extensive notes each time her father and family members met with doctors. The notes served as a reference for later discussions and provided material that went into the book. But the note-taking also functioned as a defense or coping, mechanism that distanced her from what was happening, much like her father at family gatherings and celebrations, preoccupied with his still and camera-cameras, she says.
Observations and anecdotes about her father and contemporary conversations are interwoven with detailed flashbacks used to tell the story of Konek's growing up in western Kansas.
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University of Kansas
May '92 Graduates
Attention!!
Order Graduation Announcements on:
February 17th-19th
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Orders will be taken at either the Kansas Union or Burge Union store
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NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12. 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFSE
Washington
Court allows refugees to return
The Supreme Court refused to block the force returned of Haitian refugees to their homeland yesterday, but left open the possibility it could take such action later this week.
Only Justice Harry Blackmun voted yesterday to block the forced returns to Haiti pending the administration's response and further court action.
The court gave the Bush administration until Friday to respond to an emergency request, filed Monday by lawyers for the refugees and aimed at halting all reparations.
The request said that returned Haitians faced political persecution at home and alleged that S. officials knew that some already-repatriated Haitians had been tortured, killed or persecuted.
Arthur Helton, director of the Refugee Project of the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, said State Department investigations into reports of abuses of returned Haitians were dismissive.
Tokyo
Gunman storms party offices
A right-wing activist armed with a samurai sword and a gun stormed Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa's party office today, firing at least one shot during a seven-hour standoff with police.
There were no injuries. Miyazawa was at home during the incident, and no other officials from his Liberal Democratic Party were in the building because of a national holiday.
The man demanded that the Cabinet resign, that Russia return territories seized at the end of World War II and that Japan's prewar system of emperor worship be revived, the Kyodo News Service and television reports said.
Police identified the intruder as Osamu Aihara, 21, a former member of Aikokuto, or the Patriotic Party, a right-wing fringe group.
Aihara pushed aside police guards and leaped over a steel fence surrounding party headquarters, said a Tokyo Metropolitan Police official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Publication censorship lifted
Caracas, Venezuela
Journalists marched through downtown Caracas yesterday and shouted, "Democracy with censorship is dictatorship!" and demanded immediate reinstatement of constitutional freedoms.
A failed coup attempt last week prompted government censorship of publications. The censorship has been lifted, but a suspension of constitutional guarantees remains in effect
The government reserved the right to censor publications, search private homes and make discretionary arrests.
Newspapers circulated freely yesterday, and returned to newstands with articles criticizing the
Shortly after the failed coup, intelligence police raided most major newspapers and magazines, censoring criticism of the government and banning circulation of several publications.
Editors said Monday that the government agreed to withdraw the censors when news media leaders promised not to contribute to public unrest.
From The Associated Press
Muslim militants storm Indian-held Kashmir
The Associated Press
GHARIDUPATTA, Pakistan—Five bands of Muslim militants tried to storm into the Indian-controlled area of Kashmir yesterday, but Pakistani troops fired tear gas to push them back, government officials said.
No injuries were reported in the militant groups, which ranged in number from 100 to 1,500. And Indian and Pakistani troops held their gunfire on both sides of the 175-mile-long cease-fire line that divides the areas of Kashmir that each nation controls, the officials said.
At the same time, thousands of other Muslim militants began marching toward the cease-fire line. The marchers braved near-freezing temperatures, trudged
through ankle-deep mud across the rugged Himalayan mountains and broke past barricades of rocks and boulders before halting their procession for the night.
"We're flying high today. Nothing can stop us," said militant leader Amanullah Khan. He and 7,000 supporters shouted "Death to India!" during their 35-mile march along a winding road from Muzafarabad, capital of Pakistani-controlled part of Kashmir, to the cease-fire line.
"I'm ready to die," declared Amanullah, who said the marchers were unarmed.
The group he heads, the militant Jammu-Kashmir Liberation Front, has vowed to cross the cease-fire line, monitored by U.N. peacekeeping forces, to
Tajikistan China
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Islamabad Jammu
India
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show solidarity with people in Indian-held Kashmir who want to secede from India.
Pakistan, which is mostly Muslim, and India, which is predominantly Hindu, fought wars in 1948 and 1965 over Kashmir.
Iranians renew allegiance
Two million gather to pay homage to former Avatollah
The Associated Press
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Proclaiming "death to America," hundreds of thousands of Iranians demonstrated in their capital yesterday on the 13th anniversary of the Islamic revolution's triumph over Iran's pro-Western monarchy.
President Hashemi Rafsanjani told demonstrators the sight of such large crowds, some of whom walked for hours to get to the rally, brought tears to his eyes.
Iran's official media, monitored in Nicosia, said 2 million people, or the equivalent of one-fifth of Tehran's population, gathered to renew allegiance
Tehran television showed Freedom Square and the surrounding streets packed with crowds that looked to be in the hundreds of thousands. It also showed rows of buses, suggesting many people were brought from outlying areas.
to their revolutionary patriarch, Ayatollah Ruholah Khomeini.
Although the chants and demonstrations were familiar, Iran has changed considerably since Khomeini died of cancer on June 3, 1989.
Rafsanjani has sought to end the Islamic republic's isolation and shed its pariah image by building bridges with the West and Iran's Arab neighbors. He also has called for an end to empty slogans.
However, he has not gone so far as to oppose anti-Western rallies or threats against the United States and Israel. Doing so would play into the hands of his radical opponents, who already accuse Rafsanjiani of betraying Khomeini's legacy.
An Iranian resistance leader yesterday condemned Iran's leadership in a statement sent by facsimile from Paris to The Associated Press in Nicosia.
Red Cross searches Nazi camp records
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Archivists are poring over Nazi death camp records in a new American Red Cross effort to catalog thousands of names and help families of Holocaust victims learn the fate of their loved ones.
The original records — including transport lists, death books and lists of victims of medical experiments — have been accessible to the public through the National Archives for 20 years. But because they are difficult to wade through, they have been of value mostly to historians and scholars.
These documents will now be used for a humanitarian purpose said Elizabeth Dole, president of the Alliance.
"Yellow with age, these documents will bring light to the final days of hundreds of thousands who suffered," she said. "They provide vital information on at least 300,000 individuals, and possibly as many as half a million, who disappeared at the hands of the Nazis."
Yesterday, Dole presented microfilm of the first 7.000 names to the International Committee of the Red Cross to be cross-referenced and integrated into the files of its International Tracing Service in Aroles, Germany.
The documents researched so far include transport lists, death lists, lists of victims of medical experiments and forced labor and concentration camp records mainly from Auschwitz, Buchenwald and many smaller satellite camps, Red Cross officials said.
The international service, which was launched after World War II, has 46 million records on 13 million people, but most of the names from the death camp records the National Archives holds are new, Red Cross officials said.
Thousands of boxes holding the records are stored in a National Archives warehouse in Suitland, Md.
The documents were confiscated by U.S. forces following the collapse of Nazi Germany as evidence in war crimes trials. They were declassified about 20 years ago, National Archive officials said.
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And indeed there will be time. To wonder what to do and how?
Time is a wonderful thing, but it's also a difficult one. It's a challenge that can be overcome with patience and perseverance. The clock in the image shows 10:25, so it might be time for an important event or meeting.
The new Apple* Macintosh* Classic* II computer makes it easier for you to juggle classes, activities, projects, and term papers—and still find time for what makes college life real life.
It can't do laundry or find you a date, but it can help you find more time for both.
It's a complete and affordable Macintosh Classic system that's ready to help you get your work finished fast. It's a snap to set up and use. It has a powerful 68030 microprocessor, which means you can run even the most sophisticated applications with ease. And its internal Apple SuperDrive™ disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks—allowing you to exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer
T. B.A.
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In addition to its built-in capabilities, the Macintosh Classic II can be equipped with up to 10 megabytes of RAM, so you'll be able to run several applications at once and work with large amounts of data.
Macintosh Classic II
To put more time on your side, consider putting a Macintosh Classic II on your desk. See us for a demonstration today, and while you're in, be sure to ask us for details about the Apple Computer Loan. It'll be time well spent.
Introducing the Macintosh Classic II.
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THE PRINCETON REVIEW
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8
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
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DON'T MISS:
Latin American Solidarity's
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Wallyball Tournament 2 or 3
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Woman says her other self is adulteress
The Associate Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - A woman's multiple personalities might give her a legitimate excuse for adultery, but the state Supreme Court said it needed more evidence.
Carol Rutherford had asked for alimony from Bobby Rutherford, saying she did not commit adultery — a separate personality named "Rose" did and she was unable to stop her.
The court on Monday ordered a new trial to determine whether Carol Rutherford could claim she did not commit adultery because of diminished mental capacity. Adultery is against the law in South Carolina and is grounds for barring alimony payments.
Carol Rutherford will have to prove she lacked the ability to realize she was committing adultery and that her actions were wrong.
Carol Rutherford's psychiatrist, Larry Nelson, testified at trial that she had 21 separate personalities. Four or five are childlike personalities that were created when she was sexually abused, he testified, while some were teen-ager personalities.
Nelson also testified that Mrs. Rutherford could not bring out the personalities on her own, and that when they did appear, they lasted for a few seconds to several months.
Carol Rutherford, of the Columbia area, testified she could not talk to "Rose" without hearing a buzzing in her head.
Family Court Judge Alvin Bigs refused to grant Rutherford a divorce on the grounds of adultery, saying he had asked the capacity to commit adultery.
Biggs also awarded Carol Rutherford separate maintenance and support and divided the couple's property.
Rutherford appealed, asking that Carol Rutherford be barred from farming.
The state Court of Appeals reversed Biggs' decision, saying Carol Rutherford failed to prove she could not con- form information into her other personalities.
The state Supreme Court agreed Monday that Carol Rutherford committed adultery, but said it was perplexed on how to deal with her excuse.
STOCKPOTS FOR THE FAMILY
1001 green thumbs
In preparation for the spring growing season, Bart Ward, an employee of The Garden Center, 15th and New York streets, carries hundreds of young geraniums to the shelves in the main greenhouse. Ward and other employees potted several hundred young geraniums yesterday afternoon.
located just one block north of the Union • above Yello Sub
Glass
Orion
50¢ Off Any
50¢ OFF
Triple Thick & Creamy Shake open 10 am M F
16 Flavors to choose from
12th ♥ Indiana 841-2310 Not valid w/other offers Coupon expires 2/26/92
Are You Already Writing Home For Cash?
Turn your used Compact Discs into CASH!!
WAIT!!
There's a better idea.
The Love Garden buys used CD's!!
Buy-Sell Trade
Love Garden Sounds
936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs)
843-1551
"in the heart of downtown*
Cash?
MONEY MAN
B
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Kansas Union 864-4644
Burge Union 864-5697
15% Off
Plush Jayhawks
KU
KU
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions
Valid from 2-10 to 2-14
KU KU
Photographers Needed! Call Leanne at 864-4358
Pizza Hut
DELIVER!
Come on,let Pizza Hut deliver what nobody else can!
MISS SAMANTHA
ARETHA FRANKLIN
NOW
HRING
In Lawrence
Call: 843-9341
FOE M/HIN
DINE-IN OR CARRYOUT
1606 W. 23rd St. 842-3516
804 Iowa 842-1667
934 Massachusetts 843.7*
Buy a Large or Medium Specialty Pizza
and get a Medium Single-Topping Pizza for $2.99!
FAST FREE DELIVERY
Pizza Hut.
Delivery Hours North of 15th Street
Sunday-Thursday
11:00 a.m. to 12:00 midnight
843-2211
Friday-Saturday
**C02**
Plastic medical device prior to opening may have a certain risk of damage during use. Plastic Medical Pad HALF maintenance in MILWAUKEE, KS - 731-895-2600. PLASTIC MEDICAL PAD HALF maintenance with plastic medical device prior to opening may have a certain risk of damage during use. Plastic Medical Pad HALF maintenance in MILWAUKEE, KS - 731-895-2600.
Case 31
Single Pizza Orders Only Offer expires March 14, 1992
IN LAWRENCE CALL:
$3.00 OFF any Large Pizza!
South of 15th Street Downtown
843-3000 843-7044
Crane operator cannot contact this company. Contact the person per pay rate you wish to work with, or call 800-425-7123 or visit www.craneoperator.com or www.matthews.com.
Code 49
Pizza Hut.
99¢
or Large Pairs $ ^{ \circ} $ Pizza purchase
6-Pack of Pepsi-Cola* with any Medium Pairs* or large Pairs* Pizza purchase
Offer expires March 14, 1992.
Pizza Hut.
This document contains information about the Company's position and role at the time of publication. The Company has a Vice President/Fire Maintenance position with a salary of $42,000 per year and is based in New Hampshire. NHP will provide training and other professional development opportunities to employees in this role. Code 78
8
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
Recycle
PUPS Grill
YEP,
BUD LIGHT
ON TAP
CORNER OF 9TH AND INDIANA
$50 $50
MONO
Have you had mononucleosis within the last month? If so, your plasma could make a valuable contribution to research and earn you $50 at the same time.
For additional details call
Lawrence Donor Center
at 749-5750
DON'T MISS:
Latin American Solidarity's
Rice and Beans Dinner
6:00 p.m., Thursday, 2-13-92
at ECM, 1204 Oread.
Topic:
Free Trade with Mexico,
What's the Hurry?
Speaker: Jack Hedrick
Sponsored by
Latin American Solidarity
Press through Solidarity
THE OCEAN IS ALWAYS A CHANGE.
Wallyball Tournament
2-on-2
Feb. 23,1992,2:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m.
EntryFee: $5.00 perteam.
Entry Deadline: Feb. 19 (sign up in 208 Robinson)
Divisions: Men's, Women's, & Co-Rec
Sponsored by KU Recreational Services 208 Robinson 864-3546
A-1 Automotive for Complete Car Care
- Transmission
- Specialists
- Brakes
- Alternators
- Exhaust Systems
- Foreign & Domestic
E
-18 Years Experience-
842-0865 1501W 6th St.
Woman says her other self is adulteress
The Associate Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A woman's multiple personalities might give her a legitimate excuse for adultery, but the state Supreme Court said it needed more evidence.
Carol Rutherford had asked for alimony from Bobby Rutherford, saying she did not commit adultery — a separate personality named "Rose" did and she was unable to stop her.
The court on Monday ordered a new trial to determine whether Carol Rutherford could claim she did not commit adultery because of diminished mental capacity. Adultery is against the law in South Carolina and is grounds for the baring alimony payments.
Carol Rutherford will have to prove she lacked the ability to realize she was committing adultery and that her actions were wrong.
Carol Rutherford's psychiatrist, Larry Nelson, testified at trial that she had 21 separate personalities. Four or five are childlike personalities that were created when she was sexually abused, he testified, while some were teen-ager personalities.
Nelson also testified that Mrs. Rutherford could not bring out the personalities on her own, and that when she met the children, she had for a few seconds to several months.
Carol Rutherford, of the Columbia area, testified she could not talk to "Rose" without hearing a buzzing in her head.
Family Court Judge Alvin Biggs refused to grant Rutherford a divorce on the grounds of adultery, saying it was not made the capacity to commit adultery.
Biggs also awarded Carol Rutherford separate maintenance and support and divided the couple's property.
Rutherford appealed, asking that Rutherford be barred from calling police.
The state Court of Appeals reversed Biggs' decision, saying Carol Rutherford failed to prove she could not contend with information into her other personalities.
The state Supreme Court agreed Monday that Carol Rutherford committed adultery, but said it was perplexed on how to deal with her excuse.
THE FARMER'S CHOICE
ustin Knupo/KANSAN
1001 greenthumbs
In preparation for the spring growing season, Bart Ward, an employee of The Garden Center, 15th and New York streets, carries hundreds of young geraniums to the shelves in the main greenhouse. Ward and other employees potted several hundred young geraniums yesterday afternoon.
located just one block north of the Union · above Yello Sub
Glass
Orion
50¢ OFF
50¢ Off Any
Triple Thick & Creamy Shake
open
10 am-M-F
11 am Sat-Sun
16 Flavors to choose from
a841-2310Not valid w/ other offers Coupon expires 2/26/92
12th Indiana841-2310Not valid w/other offers Coupon expires 2/26/92
Are You Already Writing Home For Cash?
WAIT!!
There's a better idea.
The Love Garden buys used C D's!!
Turn your used Compact Discs into CASH!!!
Buy-Sell Trade
Love Garden Sounds
936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs)
843-1551
"in the heart of downtown"
$
15% Off
Plush Jayhawks
KU
KU
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions
Valid from 2-10 to 2-14
B
KU
KU
BUOKSTORES
Kansas Union 864-464
Burge Union 864-5697
Photographers Needed! Call Leanne at 864-4358
Pizza Hut
Pizza Hut. DELIVER!
Come on, let Pizza Hut deliver what nobody else can!
ARETHA FRANKLIN
SHEPHERD ROBERTSON
NOW
HIRING
In Lawnery
Call: 843-8341
EOE M/F/H/N
DINE-IN OR CARRYOUT
1606 W. 23rd St. 843,3516
804 Iowa Street 842,1667
924 Massachusetts 843,7044
Buy a Large or Medium Specialty Pizza at regular price and get a Medium Single-Topping Pizza for $2.99!
Offer expires March 6, 1992.
FAST FREE DELIVERY
Delivery Hours
Sunday-Thursday
11:00 a.m. to 12:00 midnight
North of Edith Street
843-2211
Friday-Saturday
SG 887
Pizza Hut
Delivery & Carryout!
Single Pizza Orders Only Offer expires March 14, 1992.
Please indicate upper left address where one company or parts are located and/or the location of the other company or parts.
Phone number: 801-532-9476 Address: M. Diaz, M. Zhu, M. Deh, H. Li, N. Sue, M. Ma, L. Qin, N. Xin, W. Wu
This information is required in Lawsuits, NOT in contracts with either of these parties.
Code 13
any Large Pizza!
Large Pizza.
IN LAWRENCE CALL
Please contact us regarding a hire-up. The fee per person per day is payable by deposit from PHM BANK or in writing to 1026 W. 34th St and 84th Ave, and deposits are made to Kauai, Hawaii 96745 in combination with any other payment.
Code 40
South of 15th Street Downtown
843-3000 843-7044
Pizza Hut.
87
Limited Delivery Area
99¢
two 1-month periods
winter, March 14, 1982
6-Pack of Pepsi-Cola $ ^{®}$ with any Medium Pairs $ ^{®}$ or Large Pairs $ ^{®}$ Pizza purchase!
Pizza Hut.
Pricing information is provided after booking. The current price for each unit of equipment is $650 per month. Pricing for PLCAMs must be at a minimum of $199.00 and Maximum of $289.00 per month. Pricing for PLCAMs must be at a minimum of $199.00 and Maximum of $289.00 per month. Please contact PLCAM City at (718) 324-8148 or www.plcamcity.com for details.
Code 76
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
9
New nicotine patch makes kicking the habit easier for some students
Skin device releases substance decreases withdrawal symptoms
By Katherine Manweiler Kansan staff writer
Juan Turbay started smoking when he was 14 years old, beginning a habit that resulted in repeated attempts to quit.
Turbay chews nicotine gum to counteract his withdrawal symptoms, which include edginess and hunger.
Kansan staff writer
He said that nicotine gum was helpful but that quitting smoking was incredibly difficult.
He used to smoke as much as one pack a day, but now he smokes less than five cigarettes a day, he said.
A new nicotine skin patch available at Watkins Memorial Health Center could make kicking the habit easier for some people, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
A report in the Journal of the American Medical Association in December stated that the patches had a 26 percent rate of effectiveness.
"I smoked for three years, and then quit for about four years," he said. "A year ago, I started again."
"When I smell cigarette smoke, I really feel like smoking," he said.
The self-adhesive patches are worn on the shoulder or upper chest. Yockey said the skin patch decreased nicotine
Turbay said he only smoked when he was around other people who were smoking.
Turbay, Bogota, Colombia, senior,
said he had tried to quit smoking per-
manently several times in the past year
and was trying to quit again.
withdrawal symptoms because it released a steady stream of nicotine into the bloodstream.
"It gives us an aid," Yockey said. "It is not a willpower pill. The bottom line is anybody who becomes a nonsmoker mentally has a 100 percent success rate."
He said people needed to stop smoking at a time of low stress.
The patches are available in three strengths. Every two weeks, the strength of the daily patches is reduced. Patients should stop using the patches after eight weeks of treatment.
"Six weeks after a college student stops smoking, their lungs look like a nonsmoker's lungs," Yockey said. "It is never too late for a college student to stop smoking."
John Baughman, chief pharmacist at Watkins, said he had filled nine prescriptions for the nicotine patches since early January, when the patches came onto the market.
It is important that people stop smoking completely once they start using the patches, Yockey said. Otherwise, they could overdose on nicotine.
Turbay said he was considering using the nicotine skin patches.
"I want to see if I can quit like this first," he said. "Since I can quit for four years before, I think I can quit for good now."
The patches range in cost between $2.15 and $2.65 a day, depending on the strength of the patch.
XXX
VIDEO
Must be 18. I.D. Required
1420 W. 23rd St. • 843-9200
DETROIT — The outcome of Dow Corning Corp.'s debacle with its silicone gel breast implants depends on whether it can regain the trust of women who have the implants, analysts said yesterday.
Implant company worried about future
The nicotine patch is available at Watkins Memorial Health Center
1
Derek Nolen/KANSAN
The Associated Press
One expert compared the challenge to those faced by two other companies whose products were tainted by health concerns: A. H. Robbins Co., maker of the Dalton Shield, and Procter & Gamble Co., which made Relyt tampons.
Company documents released Monday showed it has known for two decades about potential health problems from leaking and rupture of its implants.
The company voluntarily pulled the implants from the market last month after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a voluntary moratorium. Doctors said that rupture of the implants could cause a range of medical problems, including cancer and damage to the immune system.
At stake for Midland-based Dow Corning is its ability to remain viable whether or not it ever makes another breast implant.
Dow Corning took the first step in salvaging its image Monday by replacing its top executives with Keith McKen-
The relationship is exactly the same with a baseball team," said Mel Heltizer, a professor at the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University and a former Madison Avenue advertising and public relations executive." They fire the manager when they have a bad year."
non, an expert in corporate crisis management, analysts said.
"Yesterday's action is a turning
An estimated 1 million U.S. women have breast implants, mostly silicone gel implants, and twice as many have them worldwide. Dow Corning, a joint venture of Dow Chemical and Corning Inc., is the world's leading maker of silicone gel implants.
Some lawyers have estimated Dow Corning's potential liability in the breast implant case at $2 billion.
But more dangerous than any legal liability is the damage that could result from a frightened public left to wonder whether a product will cause them harm, said Gerald C. Meyers, a business consultant who wrote "When It Hits the Fan," a guide to managing corporate crises.
In New York Stock Exchange trading yesterday, Dow Chemical stock finished down $1 at $56.25. Cornring Inc. stock closed down $1.37 1/2 at $29.87 1/2
But Meyers said McKenna already had made a mistake by saying the company would be willing to offer financial assistance, and afford to have the implants removed.
point in my view," said Meyers, a former chairman and chief executive of American Motors Corp. "They've now made a move which shows they are trying to manage the situation rather than being controlled by it."
Dow Corning representative Scott Subburger defended McKennon's son.
"He was asked off the top of his head what kinds of things he was thinking about and that was one of the things he said he was a consideration. It was nothing he is implementing as a policy." Seeburger said.
"What the hell is wrong with him?" Meyers asked. "What are they going to do, establish a means test for deciding who gets financial help?"
"He helped turn that whole corporation around and the company re-established itself," he said.
McKennon, a Dow Chemical Co. executive vice president, performed well in helping steer that company out of potential public relations disasters concerning its Agent Orange defoliant and dioxin, Meyers said.
Meyers said Robbins mishandled
the crisis over the Dalkon Shield, and intrauterine birth control device that was blamed for thousands of spontaneous abortions, hysterectomies, infections and at least 18 deaths. The company eventually was forced into bankruptcy court.
"Dalton Shield went right over the cliff with the lawyers. The caseaule became so heavy there was no way the accountants would allow them to show anything other than a potential bankruptcy." Mevers said.
He praised Procter & Gamble's handling of reports linking Rely tampons to toxic shock syndrome. The company knew there was no way a definite link could be proved, but pulled the product anyway at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars.
Dow Corning's problem is potentially more serious and ultimately harmful to Dow Chemical and Corning, who are desperately trying to avoid being tainted by their joint venture's problems, he said.
"The P&G guys said there is something at stake involved here," Meyers said.
"This one is all wrapped up in people's emotions," Meyers said. "We've got so many people involved. There's something inside of the exposure, and sex is involved."
The Air Pegasus.
NIKE AIR ROAD WORK AHEAD.
Available in men's and women's
Store Hours
9:30 - 8 Mon, Tues, Wed
9:30 - 8:30 Thurs
9:30 - 6 Fri, Sat
12 - 5 Sun
KENNEDY GLASS
Available at
LOCK'S
JN
WATERCOAST
SPORTING CLUB
840 Mass.
842-2442
KENNEDY GLASS For all your glass needs 730 New Jersey 843-4416
The Etc. Shop
928 Massachusetts
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
for Driving
BY BAUSCH & LOMB
Give
Balloons from the heart.
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• Red Hot Lover Gift Baskets
• Balloon Deliveries
• LUV-A-Grams
(Singing Telegrams)
it's your PARTY
1001 W. 23rd (Behind Arby's)
749-3455
JOIN YOUR FRIEND
LOVE ME
I DARE YOU TO BE LOVED BY ME
XO
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DY
JOIN LOVE BOUTIQUE
NOW OPEN!
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FAMILY DINING
OPEN 24 HOURS
Lounge hours: 9a.m., 2a.m.
2907 W 6th
Isn't love GRAND?
Show how much you care...
Order early!
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Flowers!
THE FLOWER MARKET
826 Iowa
843-5115
Valentine's Day
Isn't love GRAND?
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Order early!
...with, what else?
Flowers!
THE FLOWER MARKET
826 Iowa
843-5115
Valentine's Day
Isn't
GRAND?
Valentine's Day
THE FLOWER MARKET
I'm hoping all my Valentines
I'm hoping all my Valentines are from Undercover!
Undercover
21 West 9th Street
Lawrence, Ks 66044
LET MUNCHERS BAKE A SWEET HEART FOR YOUR SWEETHEART
T
Munchers Bakery
Hillcrest Shopping Center—Near Hillcrest Theatres
Open Tues…Sun. 24 Hours
SAC'S SPECIALS & CLOSEOUTS
Video Department
99¢VIDEOS
- Every Tape - Every Day
- Latest New Releases
- Over 2400 Tapes in Stock
COUPON - CLIP - N - SAVE
SAC'S SPECIALS & CLOSEOUTS
Video Department EXPIRES3-12-92
25th and Iowa 842-7810
Rent 2
Tapes, Get
1 FREE!
25th & Iowa
Lawrence. Ks.
(Next to Food 4-Less)
Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
10-6 p.m. Sun.
10
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
CHARGING FAILURE
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
We've Moved!
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
Paradise Café & Bakery
Treat Yourself
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
728 Massachusetts * 842.5199
SQUIRREL
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS
Now Leasing
Summer & Fall
Newly Redecorated Units
Air conditioning & Pool
Close to Mall
1 Block from KU Bus route
Studios
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
call Pat today 843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
AUTOWORKS has everything for your car from Alternators to Zip Wax
MAX
MILK
10% DISCOUNT ON
Your Total Purchases With This Coupon
Special Orders Available! Call for prices.
AUTOWORKS
Automotive Parts and Supplies
1441. W. 23rd Street
842-8868
expires 5-31-92
@
+
...
YOU'VE GOT MY HEART ON A STRING...
LUV-A-Grams ★ Cupid Deliariares ★ Balloon in A Box
Three foot Metallic Heart Balloons ★ Stuffed Animals
Candy ★ Harshey Kisses ★ Cuddles-N-Kisses Boquets
Balloons'n More
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609 Vermont 749-0148
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However you want to define it,
we do it with style.
Headmasters.
809 Vermont 843-8808
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1
Bicycles bring KU police closer to campus
Even on cold January and February days and nights, KU police bicycle officers look for people violating traffic laws.
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
By Michelle Betts
Since the University of Kansas began using bicycle officers in August, officers riding the department's two Trek 930 mountain bikes have garnered attention on campus.
"Feedback has been very positive," said Lt. Vie Straad, KU police representative. "In part because people have better contact with the officers, they seem more human, not isolated."
Bicycles fit into a community like KU, which is very bicycle-oriented, he said.
POLICE STOP
The bicycles were purchased for $350 each last year, and KU police have spent only $14 on maintenance costs.
Bicycles were a worthwhile investment for KU police, he said.
An officer can travel an average of 39 miles a day in a patrol car, but a bicycle officer can travel an average of 29 miles a day, with no fuel costs, Strnad said.
The number of citations given on campus has gone up since August, and the bicycle officers have contributed 60 traffic citations to that total. Strnad said
The majority of those citations were given to other cyclists for violations such as not having a headlight on, speeding or running on the road.
Last semester, there were two KU police officers who participated in bicycle patrol. Sgt. Mark Witt began riding a bike on patrol in January.
Officer Mike Hough said that yesterday's fog kept in from riding that day, but that colder temperatures were.
"I have studded snow tires for my own bicycle," he said.
Hough said cycling on patrol gave him a chance to interact with people on campus.
"Driving a car is kind of like being in a cage," he said.
The spring semester did not start on a positive note for Jeffrey Joyce, Lawrence senior, when Officer Mike Hough issued him a ticket for failing to stop at the stop sign on campus.
"When I'm riding, people ride by and sav 'hi."
Strad said officers on bicycles could respond much faster to emergencies than officers in patrol cars, especially if there is heavy traffic.
Cycling gives Hough more access to campus because he can move between buildings and down stairs, Hough said.
"We used two bikes during football season, and we kept them running ragged, up the hill, down the hill, and back again," he said.
Bicycle patrollers have to take a physical at their own expense to prove they are capable of riding a bicycle with a certain amount of extra weight added to it, as well as carry the bicycle.
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Massachusetts
821-9107
FEBRUARY SPECIAL!
FULL COLOR LASER COPIES
$8 \frac{1}{2} \times 11--$5 NOW $1.00
Colorize Visual Aids!
- Special Editing Service
- 44" x 34" Color Posters (In Panels of 16)
- Special Editing Service
- ReverseTransparencies
- Mirror Images
HOTZ
OFFICE SYSTEMS
745 New Hampshire 841-2679
MONDAY--FRIDAY 8:00--5:00
0
Including dental optometry and veterinary students
Students!
ATTENTION Pre-Med
Informational meeting February 17,7 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union
Representatives from the KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
- Application Procedures
- Admission Requirements
- Answer questions concerning application information
For more information call 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall
Extra LOW PRICES!... HOW SWEET IT IS! YOU SAVE 68'LB.
SAVE MORE "SMACKERS"
ON THESE SWEET Specials!
Extra LOW PRICES!
HOW SWEET IT IS!
YOU SAVE 51" LB.
ASSORTED VARIETIES
BRACH'S CANDY
118 LB.
YOU SAVE 11" EA.
FROM OUR BAKERY
VALENTINE CAKES
2'98 EACH
YOU SAVE 13" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
FAMILY PAK. TENDER & JUICY
RUMP ROAST OR ROUND ROAST
1'68 LB.
FAM. PAK. BOTTOM ROUND STEAK
1'88 LB.
YOU SAVE 50" BAG
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET
POTATOES
78¢
10 LB. BAG
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 15" EA.
VALENTINE HEART WARMER
VALENTINE BOUQUET
3'66 (CARNATION BASED)
EACH
YOU SAVE 25¢
CRISP CARROTS
58¢
2 LB. BAG
Checkers
LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
WE SELL GREENS FOR LESS!!
❤
YOU SAVE 50" BAG
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
11
I'll just put the text as it is. If you want me to include any additional information or graphics, please let me know.
Peggy Woods/KANSAN
Delicious hearts
Doug Denney, professor of psychology, ordered a customized Valentine's cookie at Union Square yesterday for his son. The cookies, provided by Union catering, will be on sale for $5 at the food service areas in the Kansas and Burge Unions.
Atari, Nintendo begin court battle
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Nintendo, ruler of the video game world, and once-dominant Atari Corp. faced off in federal court yesterday over Atari's claim that Nintendo has frozen competitors out of the $4 billion market.
"There was no fair competition," Atari Corp. lawyer William Jaeger said in his opening statement to the U.S. District court jury. "We did not have access to the hit games that we needed to compete."
Atari Corp., based in Sunnyvale, Calif., is seeking damages for lost profits it blames on Nintendo's alleged anti-competitive actions. Lawyers predict the trial will last nine weeks.
Jaeger said Nintendo's monoply cost consumers hundreds of millions of dollars, deprived the United States of a competitive video games market and cost Atari $160 million over five years.
Nintendoloawyer John Kirby said the Japanese company gained dominance in the market by taking a chance and investing in the nearly dormant home video game market in the mid-1980s while Atari squandered its advantage.
"Atiari tried half-heartedly to compete on the cheap," Kirby told the jury, arguing that Atiari underestimated the potential of home video games.
He said Aiati waited two years to market its own advanced computer
A key issue in the lawsuit is Nintendo's former requirement that private developers of video games agree not to make the games available to other computer console systems for two years in exchange for a license to use the Nintendo system.
system, and then filed suit in 1989 when it was denied a "free ride" on the Nintendo system.
Kirby said the contracts, which Nintendo dropped in 1990, were needed to give game-developers and customers alike a guarantee of quality in an industry that had suffered from unrestricted access by mediocre games.
Jaeger said Nintendo used the exclusive-rights arrangement, in combination with its power in the market, to lock up lucrative games in violation of antitrust law.
Nintendo, which controls 80 percent of the U.S. home video game market, has been enmeshed in lawsuits for the last several years involving abuses of its market power.
The Federal Trade Commission and several states last year resolved a price-fixing claim against Nintendo with a settlement that gave buyers of game cartridges a $5 rebate.
KU graduate named one 'point of light'
Atari Games Corp., which is unrelated to Atari Corp., is suing Nintendo over a security code that locks Atari Games cartridges out of Ata systems.
By Jenny Martin Kansan staff writer
KU graduate Patrick Hughes was recognized last week by President Bush as one of 1,000 "Daily Points of Light."
Carvel Lewis, college youth coordinator for the Office of National Service in Washington, D.C., said that the "Points of Light" program was part of an effort by the president to get Americans involved in helping those who are in need.
Lewis said that from 100 to 200 nominations were received by the office each week, but that only six people were chosen each week to be honored by the president as a "Daily Point of Light."
Bush is honoring those who have shown dedication to solving social problems through community service, he said.
Hughes, a May 1991 graduate, was recognized as the 678th "Daily Point of Light" on Thursday.
"It's pretty incredible," Hughess said. "I never thought I'd be getting calls from the White House."
He was honored for a program he began at the University of Kansas in 1990 called Natural Ties. The program integrates people with disabilities into social organizations with people their ownage.
Hughes was nominated for the honor by Mark Paoletta, assistant counsel to the president. In December, Paoletta met Hughes in Chicago and asked him for information about the program. Hughes sent the information, but said he was unaware of Paoletta's intent.
Hughes continues to oversee the expansion and organization of the Natural Ties program from his hometown of Evanston, Ill. Other universities across the country, such as Northwestern University, Florida State University and South Dakota State University, have adopted the Natural Ties program.
Hughes, who volunteers as the executive director of the program, said he had no idea that the program was going to be such a success.
Heplans to remain in Illinois and help the Natural Tie programs within the state schools become well-established.
"I don't want it to be a franchise; we're dealing with people here," Hughes said. "The program is only going to good as the time and effort put into it."
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WeaverS 9th and Massachusetts VITA Writers' Guild DISCUSSION
Kansas and Burge Unions
"Love Me
Valentine's Day Open House 1992
Like A Hawk"
Lu
Feb. 10-14
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Feb. 13
Register in the Union departments for Dream Datedrawing. Entry boxes located throughout Unions
❤️
A baker will be available to decorate giant heart-shaped cookies, 11-1, Union Square
Feb.14 - DAY
Fresh Flower Sale in both Union lobbies and Wescoe Terrace, 11-2
Create Your Own Valentines in the Kansas Union lobby
1-2
Register for Carriage Rides, SUA office, 8:30-4:30
Jayhawk Mascots roving, passing out chocolate kisses
A baker will be available to decorate giant heart-shaped cookies, 11-1 Kansas Union lobby
Two for one bowling in the Jaybowl
Candy "Conversation Hearts," $1.50/lb.Information Counter Kansas Union lobby
Piano music, Kansas Union, 11-1
Fortune teller, Kansas Union lobby 11-2
Free Red Passion Punch, 11am Kansas Union lobby
Register at the Bookstores to win free tickets to the OU Basketball Game Feb.24
❤️
Bookstore discounts on specially marked items
Half-price discounts on specially marked sandwiches and strawberry sodas at Wescoe Terrace, while supplies last
♥ Candy count at Wescoe Terrace
Feb.14 - EVENING
Carriage Rides, 5:30-7:30 pm (Advance tickets should be purchased at the SUA Box Office)
Two for one bowling continues until 1 am in the Jaybowl
♥ SUA movie:"101 Dalmatians," 7 & 9:30 pm
SUA movie:"Tie Me Up,Tie Me Down."midnight
Drawing for winner of Dream Date contest (Need not be present to win)
12
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday February 12, 1992
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Prospective voters register for New Hampshire primary
No cover for members!
The Associated Press
CONCORD, N.H. — Prospective voters flocked to get registered Friday and the New Hampshire secretary of state's office said turnout for the first-in-the-nation presidential primary could set a record.
Town and city clerks said they expected to be flooded Saturday, the last day to register for the Feb. 18 primary.
Benson said many more people had registered this year than did for the 1988 primary, and increases were reported from one end of the state to the
"Oh God, it's been out of sight," said Nashua Clerk Eleanor Benson, after 350 people registered Thursday. "It hasn't let up at all today."
other.
"I've had five or six people at the counter since I opened the door this morning," said Concord Clerk Elizabeth Campbell. "The lady taking registrations hasn't been able to sit down."
New Hampshire's ailing economy, unusually high interest in this year's campaigns and a purge of voter lists that removed 147,000 names statewide last summer were cited by clerks as reasons for the surge in registrations. Anyone who did not vote in the last three general elections was removed from the list.
by the deadline.
Deputy Secretary of State Bob Ambrose said some of those registering had been registered before but most are new voters. Statewide, clerks expect to add 50,000 names to the lists
He said his office also has had an unusually high number of requests for absentee ballots and ballots for polling places. That leads him to believe there will be a heavy turnout.
Ivestiva, one of the country's leading dailies, reported Monday that the airlift would not make any noticeable improvement in the situation with food or medicine, because the volume of supplies is very small.
"We always get a lot of requests at this time, but this year there's been an unusually high number, so we might have a record," he said. "We'll certainly have a higher percentage of people vote."
In 1988, 284,734 people voted, a record to the primary. That was 48.5 percent of the vote.
The record for turnout percentage of registered voters, 51.2, was set in 1980. Ambrose expects that to be broken, but he declined to predict whether total ballots cast also would be a record.
MOSCOW — Though grateful for the U.S. humanitarian aid that they began receiving yesterday, Russians are not hiding their disappointment at its size, nor their humiliation over a superpower accepting handouts.
Russians grateful for foreign help but humiliated to accept handouts
The Associated Press
Theformer Communist Party newspaper *Pravda* carried a front-page commentary, titled "Spoon Feeding of Future Allies," that reflected the nation's bruised ego.
It complained that U.S. planes were delivering the aid to cities across the new Commonwealth of Independent States, instead of letting the former Soviets do it themselves.
"I'm more than certain that our military transport planes would not be allowed to penetrate the airspace of any state with self-respect. But thanks for the help," wrote the newspaper's political commentator, Anatoly Karpichev.
Russian citizens expressed a mixture of gratitude and wounded pride.
"In principle, our country is like America. Look how low the government has brought us!"
Vladimir Boiko Russian citizen
"Honestly, I think it's shameful. In principle, our country is like America. Look how low the government has brought us!" said Vladimir Boiko, a 20-year-old forklift operator.
Vladimir Lotov, a Moscow businessman, said his 17-year-old son refused to accept milk from abroad at his high school.
"Do you realize how hard it is to find milk in the stores?" Lotov asked, shaking his head. "Still, I was proud of the boy."
He said he did not know whether the
milk came from the U.S. shipment, or from far larger European Community shipments. Either way, he said, it did not feel right to hold out an empty palm.
The U.S. airlift, valued at $78 million, consists mainly of medicine and food left over from the Persian Gulf War.
The first of 100,000 meals flown to Moscow were served yesterday in a soup kitchen in the Russian capital to a few dozen elderly women who expressed profuse thanks — despite puzzlement over such American foods as vanilla pudding.
Ivestia pointedly compared the U.S. aid, which it estimated at between 5,000 and 5,500 tons, with the amount of humanitarian assistance the paper said was sent since December by the EC: 114,000 tons of meat, 77,000 tons of dried milk, 10,000 tons of baby food, 22,000 tons of butter, 10,000 tons of vegetable oil, 2,500 tons of macaroni, and 3,000 tons of tomato concentrate.
So far, the United States has pledged about $5 billion in aid to the former Soviet Union, mostly credits to buy American grain. The EC has offered roughly 800 billion, the largest share of which is from Germany.
Help!
Save Our Team Spirit!
Remember the last two men's basketball games, the one's played at Allen Fieldhouse? Yea, you know the ones-the games that had the all-inspiring posters, that read: Rock Chalk Jayhawk and Whoosh? Well, we have caught a little hot air from the top of the balloon. It seems that a few grungy scoundrels decided to turn their posters into B-10 Bombers, and flew them onto the floor of Allen Fieldhouse. Anyway, you know the 'rest of the story': We will no longer be allowed to publish any of the all-inspiring, Poster Series Collection with the rally-potent blurbs on the front, and the all-encompassing player and team profiles on the back. In other words, we will lose a vital edge in our battle for the best; part of our pompous, rompus, go-out-and-accomplish team spirit.
HOWEVER, there is a solution. All you have to do to prevent this loss of team spirit (not to mention priceless collectors' items) is to jeer, hiss, scowl or blind-side (No! Cross
out the part about blindsiding) the scalawags who show that, while attempting to become Top Guns with poster airplanes, they are merely taking away the rights of Jayhawk fans
But, more appropriately, keep the posters, like they were meant to be kept. Take them home and hang them up as mementos to be remembered when you become KU alumni. And please, have some respect for the best team in the country, not to mention the greatest fans!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SPORTS
Wednesday, January 15,1992 / University Daily Kansan
13
Cyclones' newcomers fortify defense
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Victor Alexander averaged 23.4 points and nine rebounds a game last season for Iowa State. He was named to the All-Big Eight Conference team and was first round NBA draft choice of the Golden State Warriors.
Despite the 6-foot-9 center's senior leadership, the Cyclones finished with an overall 12-19 record, fifth in the Big Eight.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said at his weekly news conference yesterday that the Cyclones might be better off only without Alexander in the middle.
This season, without Alexander, the Cyclones are 17-5 and 3-3 in the Big Eight, and they are coming off a 96-82 overtime victory against Colorado on Monday.
"I think they're light years better defensively than they have been," Williams said. "I didn't mind playing against Big Victor."
"Big Victor was the kind of guy that Johnny loved, and he should, but he's also the kind of guy ... It's easy to see why Johnny doesn't have any hair." Williams said. "These guys may make him grow hair if they keep playing this well."
The 6-11 Michalik, who is from Czechoslovakia and played on the international level before coming to Iowa State, leads the crew of newcomers with 13.9 points and a team-leading 6.2bounds a game. Hioberg, a home-town boy from Ames, Iowa, is averaging 13.4 points a game and tops the Cyclones with a 58-percent field goal percentage.
The guys Williams is referring to include junior newcomers Howard Eaton and Ron Bayless and freshmen Julius Michalik and Fred Hiberg. All four are starting with the lone returning starter from last season, junior guard Justus Thigpen, who leads the Cyclones with 16.5 points a game.
"Michalik adds a new dimension to their team," Williams said. "It also gives them a five-men offense with guys who can do different things, as opposed to last year when Victor was there, when four guys were doing one thing and Victor was doing his own
thing."
The Jayhawks, who fell from No. 3 to No. 4 after Saturday's 64-56 loss at No. 2 Oklahoma State, needed a few days off to recuperate from the physical contest with the Cowboys, Williams said.
"Playing that game Saturday was like playing two or three games," he said. "It was a laar war."
"We were horrendous," he said.
"Our free-throw shooting killed us."
Kansas freshman center Greg Ostertag said the Jayhawks, who shot just 30 percent from the free-throw line against Oklahoma State, would try to put their free-three shooting problems behind them.
Senior forward Alonzo Jamison, who sprained his left knee in the first half of the Oklahoma State game, will play against Iowa State, Kansas trainer Mark Cairns said. The injury does not involve any ligament or cartilage damage.
"I don't know what happened. We just have to practice more and on it."
Injury update-
Kansas Basketball Game 20
HATCHER
24
KANSAS
24
(4) KANSAS JAYHAWKS Coach: Roy Williams Record: 17-2, (5-1)
VS.
IOWA STATE
CYCLONE
Coach: Johnny Orr
Record: 17-5, (3-3)
Game time: 7 p.m. at Allen Field House
Probable Starters
Player/Position Ht. PPG RPG
24-F Alonzo Jamison 6-6 10.7 4.4
34-F Richard Scott 6-7 10.6 4.4
51-C Eric Pauley 6-10 8.1 2.9
23-G Rex Walters 6-4 16.1 3.1
30-G Adonis Jordan 5-11 13.3 3.6
Player/Position Ht. PPG RPG
24-F Justus Thigpen 6-2 17.0 4.0
4-F Ron Bayless 6-1 8.8 1.6
42-C Julius Michalik 6-11 15.8 7.2
43-G Howard Eaton 6-6 6.6 4.0
32-G Fred Hoiberg 6-4 11.6 4.6
Game notes: ■ Kansas has beaten Iowa State in the last three meetings at Allen Field House by an average of 36 points. ■ The Jayhawks' 40-percent field goal percentage was the team's lowest since they shot 38.6 percent against Oklahoma on Feb. 3, 1990. ■ Freshman Greg Ostertag already has more blocked shots (22) than any Kansas player had last season. ■ KU leads the series 138-46, including a 20-12 mark in Lawrence. ■ Kansas has a five-game winning streak against the Cyclones dating to 1989. ■ Tonight's game will be televised on channels 3 and 14 in Lawrence, and it will be broadcast on KLZR 105.9 and JKHK 90.7.
Jeff Meesev. Daily Kansas
Kansas forward Alonzo Jamison defends Oklahoma State's Cornell Hatcher
Source: Kansas Sports Network
Brian T. Schoeni / Special to the KANSAN
Kansas dives into Big 8 meet
Both teams favored in Lincoln championship
By Chris Jenson
Kansan sportswriter
The diving competition beginstoday and the swimming competition begins tomorrow. The meet ends Saturday.
Pressure is on the Kansas men's and women's swimming and diving teams as they go to the Big Eight Conference Championships this week at the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Neb.
The KU women's team was picked by Big Eight coaches in a poll to win the competition. The Kansas men and the Nebraska men are co-favored.
Junior Zhawn Stevens said the poll's results would not effect the team's success.
"There's not really added pressure," Stevens said. "We have known all year that we had a good chance to win, so it wasn't a big surprise."
Stevens said the team would be counting on strong performances from the whole lineup, not just its fastest swimmers.
"All we have to do is swim how we
know we are capable of swimming," he said. "That will be the difference in whether we win or lose."
Stevens was named outstanding swimmer at last year's championships after winning three individual events. He said he hoped to have similar results this year.
"I want to get my best times, and if I do that, the rest, the winning, will be it."
Cary Gagli Kempf said he expected a strong influence by the team at the program.
"I feel very confident in our program," Kempf said. "We have an opportunity to do well, and in athletics, that is all you can ask for. We need to take one event at a time and do the best we can in every event. We need an equal distribution of power."
He said the team was confident but that they needed to avoid issues of conflation.
"If we start looking too far ahead, we will get on that roller coaster where we win an event, lose an event." Kemnf
"I feel very confident in our program. We have an opportunity to do well."
Gary Kempf
The Jayhawks, returning with two individual conference champions from last year's squad, seek their first
The Kansas men are ranked 25th, with a 2-1 conference record. The Jayhawks' only conference loss was to Big Eight champion Nebraska, 120-123.
said. "We can't do that and win."
Kansas swimming and diving coach
The women, ranked 18th, will be led by sophomore Krista Cordsen, three-time Big Eight champion, and senior captain, three-time All-American selection.
Joining Stevens as a returning champion is junior Troy Reynolds, who won the men's 500-yard freestyle last year.
conferencetitlesince1979.
The women's team is 3-0 in Big Eight competition this season.
Also sparking the women will be junior Suzanne Ryan, who won the women's 200 breaststroke at last year's meet. She is the only other returning champion for the women besides Cordisen.
Cordsen has the Big Eight's fastest times this season in the women's 100 freestyle, 100-meter breaststroke, individual medley and the 200 freestyle.
Kempaf said he was anticipating the meet and said the completion would be straightforward.
Olympic medals count
"I think it will be a good meet with a lot of surprises," he said. "I hope that it is the best of the year for all four schools."
Olympic Games
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Country G S B T
Austria 2 2 3 7
Unified Team* 3 1 2 6
Germany 2 2 1 5
Norway 1 1 1 3
Italy 1 1 0 2
Finland 0 1 1 2
U.S. **1** **0** **1**
China 0 1 0 1
France 0 1 0 1
Canada 0 0 1 1
Switzerland 0 0 1 1
U.S.triumphs2-0
Knight-Ridder Tribune
OLYMPIC BRIEFS
Not even Craig, the gold-medal goalie in 1980, had a game in Lake Placid in which he stopped every shot. And not even the United States"Miracle on Ice" team won its first two games.
LeBlanc made 46 saves yesterday, posting the first U.S. shutout since 1964, as the United States beat Germany, 2-0, and got off to its best start since the unbeaten, gold-medal team of 1960.
MERIBEL, France — Ray LeBlanc did something that even the flags draped Jim Craig couldn't manage.
"You always want to do like Jim Craig did in 1880 and be a hero," LeBlanc said. "I just wanted to make people believe that these people had never heard of me."
Mantha helped preserve LeBlanc's shutout by sweeping away Gerd Truntschka's first-period shot after the goalie got trapped behind the net.
"I saved him that time, but he saved us a lot of times," said Mahta, who also assisted on Marty McIlnias' tiebreaking goal in the second period. "You can't ask for more. What Ray did was awesome."
"We're riding high, we're riding the tide right now," defenseman Moe Mantha said. "We've got a lot of young guys, and we're riding the emotion."
What Ray did was historic. Patrick Rupp, in 1964, was the last American goaile to record a shutout, also against two United States players and two U.S. sutours since World War II.
LeBlanc's was also the first shutout of these Winter Games.
Today's events
Alpine Skiing
Biathlon
Men's 10km.3 a.m.
Ice Hockey
Canada vs. Norway, 6 a.m.
Unified Team vs. Czechoslovakia,
2:15 p.m.
Freestyle Skiing
Nordic Combined
Men's and Women's moguls, prelims, 4a.m.
Women's single, third and fourth runs, 3.a.m.
From The Associated Press
5km cross country,7:30 a.m.
Winning streaks to clash at Boulder
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team takes on the Colorado Lady Buffs at 6.45 p.m. today at Boulder High School, which is Light Conference's hottest team.
Kansas, No. 16 in this week's AP Top 25, began its current seven-game winning streak, the longest in the conference, with a 66-48 victory over Colorado on Jan. 18 at Allen Field House.
Since the loss at Kansas, Colorado has winnereight out of six, including victories in its last five games. Their streak gives them the second longest winning streak in the conference.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said beating Colorado at this point in the season would be difficult.
"They have the momentum going for them, and they have us on their court," Washington said. "It's going to be very tough to beat them, but I don't expect anything less from a conference game."
Washington said the outside shooting of Colorado's freshman guard Shelley Sheetz was a major concern for Kansas' defense.
Sheetz leads the Lady Buffs with an average 13.3 points and 4.4
assists a game. She also has attempted 10 of Colorado's 137 three-point shots. In the teams' first meeting, the Kansas defense had her to her three-point basket on her to one three-point basket on four attempts and only four points.
Freshman forward Angela Aycock and junior center Martha McCloud led the Jayhawks with 12 points each in the first meeting. McCloud is out for the remainder of the season with a knee injury after averaging 7.1 points and 5.6 rebounds through the first 17 games of the season. Senior forcemen replaced her in the Jayhawks' starting lineup and is averaging 8.1 points and 5.7 rebounds a game.
"It seems like after we talk about one important game the next one comes up, and it's just as important." Washington said. "I think that's just a reflection of the strength of the conference."
The Jayhawks have beaten the Lady Buffs in their last four meetings including three times last year. Kansas beat Colorado 75-66 in the second round of last year's Big Eight Tournament.
Washington said that Colorado was a big game for the Jayhawks, but that she was getting used to big games.
Women's basketball probable starters
Game time: 6:45 tonight in Boulder, Colo., and will be broadcast on KJKH 90.7 FM.
2.
Kansas 18-3 (7-1) Position Year Height PPG RPG
24 Danielle Shareef F Sr. 5-10 3.7
10 Jo Jo Witherspoon G Jr. 5-7 2.7 1.3
13 Kay Kay Hart G Sr. 5-7 9.7 3.7
23 Terrilyn Johnson F Sr. 5-11 7.5 9.2
23 Angela Avcock F Fr. 6-2 10.2 4.5
Colorado 13-8, (5-3)
20 Shelley Sheez G Fr 5-6 13.3 4.0
40 Amy Mathern Jr. 5-10 9.0 3.7
40 Abby Wirfs C Jr. 6-2 7.7 6.0
25 Mindy Henry F Jr. 6-2 9.9 2.0
44 Sherrice King F Jr. 6-2 9.6 6.1
Source: Kansas Sports Network
14
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF VENICE
CHICAGO — Sex testing of the type used at the Olympics is unreliable, unnecessary and unfair to women who may be wrongly disqualified and ridiculed because of the results, says the International Amateur Athletic Federation.
The world governing body for amateur track and field added its voice to those of French physicians who raised ethical objections to the test late last month just before the 1992 Winter Games began.
The Associated Press
Since 1968, the International Olympic Committee has analyzed
Athletic group blasts Olympic sex testing
chromosomes from saliva samples to confirm the gender of female competitors and prevent men from masquerading as women.
But such testing as used for gender analysis has not been fully
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reliable and, in fact, has long been abandoned by the genetic community, the IAAF said in the Feb. 5 Journal of the American Medical Association.
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Alexandre de Merode, president of the IOC Medical Commission, was unavailable to respond to the new criticism yesterday because he was traveling, his secretary said at the Winter Olympics in Courchevel, France. Edward Hay, who conducts Olympic tests, was doing drug screenings and also could not be reached, she said.
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POWERSTORES
Jaybowl level 1 Kansas Union
Jean Wilson, an authority on sexual differentiation and a professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, commended the federation's stand, but said he opposed even physical-exam sex screening.
See the ArtCarved Representative at Kansas Union Feb. 12-14 Burge Union Feb. 12 & 13 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
Wescoe Terrace Cashier, level 1, Wescoe Hal
Burge
KU Bookstore
Customer
Service Desk,
level 2,
Burge Union
Have your entry blank stamped at each of the locations listed, then drop it off at SUA. Be sure to include your name, phone number and KUID. Only completed forms will be considered. One entry per person. Union employees not eligible. Entry Deadline: 2 pm, Feb. 14. One winner drawn. Need not be present to win.
Kansas & Burge Unions
Valentine Drawing!!!!!!
"Love Me Like A Hawk"
Jaybowl free game passes!!!
Hawk's
Nest
Cashier,
level 3,
Kansas
Union
Win a Spring Break Trip for two to Panama City Beach, Florida with SUA! Also: Beach towels, squeeze bottles, case of pop, a catered dinner for two, two SUA movie passes and two Jaybowl free game passes!!!
KUID
Business Office, level 4 Kansas Union
PHONE #
NAME
Business
The IOC last week strongly defended its use of chromosome sex testing, emphasizing that if the initial screening reveals abnormalities, it is followed by a further test and a physical
But since it is unlikely sports federations would be willing to abandon testing, a simple physician's exam — which all athletes have any way — would be much better than chromosome testing, the IAAF said.
The need for any sex testing is doubtful, since athletes are required to be watched while giving urine samples for drug tests and any impostor would presumably be identified immediately, the federation said.
Information Counter,
level 4,
Kansas
Union
SUA level 4 Kansas Union
Classified Directory
100's
200's
235 Typing Services
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Tying Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Why, was David T. Fired? Does ANYBODY
110 Bus. Personal
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass, 843-0611
B. C. AUTOUTMISION is your full service auto修店. Class to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and access equipment. Vehicle & MasterCard & discover cards accepted.
LONELY? FIND A VALENTINE! Established.
1837. VALENTINE Sings only. Confiden-
tion 95%.
NO GIMMICKS -
EXTRA INCOME NOW!
Brooks International, Inc.
ENVELOPE STIFFING — $600 - $800 every week
Free Outside GAFE Inc.
--with coupon
P. O. Box 680625 • Ortlando, FL 32868
SPRING BREAK
7 tans $20 10 tans $
10
Sweet Valentine...
Sweet Valentine 1971
HOT
TUB $15 per hour
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Quedahl
EUROPEAN
TAN, NEALY & HAIR Salon
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl
(between Parks)
841-6232
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes use of data from the Messe sense tool to avail deeper information about Japan's civilization.
120 Announcements
Adult Children of Alcoholics Group Wed 4-5-30
10am - 2pm
Café at the Cairns Centre and addite relationships CaFaCS 894-768-5300
Feeling confused, anxious, blue" Counseling can
student rates.
Mary Beth Borsel. M.S 845-0772
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mm>
300's
We're always open.
Take Note
Thursday, February 13. 7-9 p.m.
4025 Wescoe
Listening & Notetaking Workshop Learn the Cornell Method FREE!
Lectures by Professor Robert Harsh
MANAGER'S SPECIAL
Clip this
LUNCH
BUFFET
11:30 - 1:30 Mon. Fri.
12:00 - 2:00 Sat.
THE BEST ANY WAY YOU LIKE IT
ExpirationDate2-26-92
$2.99
X
welcome
MAZZIOS PIZZA
Expiration Date 2-26-92.
2630Iowa *843-1474*
Add .70¢ for salad Limit 4 specials/coupon
400's
O
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
For anonymously info and support (or AIDS concerns) call 841-2345. Headquarters
SKYDIVING FANATICS! Firstmer needs ride to
Airport. Will vap. Call: Michael 842-3724
Gag & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly, understand-
standing voice. Free, confidential referrals (calles
returned by counselors). Headquarters 841-2345 or
KuInfo 843-6056. Sponsored by GLOSK.
***LOSE WEIGHTNOW*
***LOSE WEIGHTNOW*
Call Llynn
(800) 223 0281
(800) 223 0282
RESULTS GUARANTEED!
*LOSE WEIGHTNOW*
***LOSE WEIGHTNOW**
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
Women's a Personal Growth Group Tues 12.2 p.m.
Concerns may include relationships, self-esteem,
stress, victimization experiences and depression.
Call CAPS 860-9590 for information.
You're not alone. Gay, Lesbian, bisexual support
workers are available in headquarters or KU
networks.
Hillel-
Saturday Feb. 15
Classical Guitar and Ladino Singer
7:30 pm, Lawrence
Jewish Community Center
917 Highland
Sephardic Jewish Musician
Gerard Edery
Classical Guitar and Ladino Singer
For ride and more information call 864-3948
Still Hot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
YOU ARE THE MASTER
STEAMBOAT $122
POUR
I'VE GOT TO CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT TO BE STICK IN LAWRENCE.
DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH DARRE ISLAND $128
PANAMA CITY BEACH from $122
FORT LAUDERDALE $176
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND /
PORT ARANSAS $128
DON'T WAIT TIL IT'S TOO LATE
SKI AND BEACH
SUNCHAIR
BREAKS
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
--region cuisine
Valentine Special
130Entertainment
Don't miss New Meb Fab mab Featured Grant Hart (n
u) Du Sunday F. 16 Bottleneck 18 over
only $5.
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under
Across the bridge on Massachusetts. 842-783-0771
ATRIUM
Featuring the finest in American
Exquisite romantic dinner for 2
Exquisite, romantic dinner for 2
Among your choices are: prime
rib, shrimp or veal.
$12.95+ tax per person
lounge.ith & Iow
Dance the night away with Dr.
Love & drink specials in Duffy'
6th & Iowa 842-7030
Quality Inn
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
15
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
WYM Cambalborne Corpse and Georgia Friday, Feburlary 14th at 2 p.m.
All ages 6 to 15. Showtime: Get there early.
140 Lost-Found
LOST. Preservation eyeglasses. Gold and tortoise shell, Berdell Sterofex. Hair brownens. 842-9378
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
$6 AN HOUR can be yours. Look for energetic, hardworking female. Apply at 901 Mim. **10:30 - 11:40**
BabySitter needed. car and phone a requirement.
Preferably a male. For an 8 year old call 749-830-5722.
Babyssitter needed: First Methodist Church. First &
third Monday each week. 9:15 am - 12:00 pm.
wage. Call 865-1544 Leave message or after 6:00
p.m. need now!
JOB COACHES
Employment training specialists need to work with adults with developmental disabilities. Applicants must be able to work flexibly part-time hours. Seniors to CLO, 1215 Dalewa, Lawrence, KS 60460. EOE
CNA's. Explain the possibilities of home care where you can give one-to-one attention to your child, assist with daily activities, uniform allowance, and training provided. Call Douglas County Visiting Nurses 843-7387. Ask for a phone number.
Counselors/support staff children's camps/north east salamander, t/bnd/laudry, travel allowance Must have skill in one of the following activities: dance, drama, drivers, drums, fencing, field hockey, golf, guitar, gymnasium, hockey, football, golf, kitchen supervision, kitchen supervisor/workers, lacrosse, nature, nurses, photography, piano, rocker, rollboarding, rope, boatboarding, sailing, diving, weight training, weights, droopy for an interview on Wednesday-Feb. 19 from 11am to 1pm in the Regionalist &
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Dryland Tours, Caribbean, Caribbean, Cruise Staff, Gift Shop, Tour Guides, Waiter/Waffler, etc. Holiday, Summer and Career Employment available. No Experience Needed.
Daycare needs responsible assistance for Tues.
& thurs. 10 a.m. to 3 a.m. as well as helper
at work.
FLOORWALKERS needed at Lawrence must
give night spot. Apply at Miss 105; Wed Sat
10:30am.
Entry level Earn $10/hr. 1922 Expansion International firm; Full Part-time positions, very flexible schedule Great for students Exceptional advancement potential, 842-6499
**IMAGE CONSULTANT - Set own hours. Image improvement, color analysis, makeup and skin care.**
Helped Wanted. Full, part time help for midnight to 6AM and 6AM-mon shifts. Please apply in person to Phillips at 6a9 and 10a9. Must be neat, clean, and enjoy working with the public.
Need a job? We are looking for distributors. Excellent pay. No experience required! Start Now Send Long S.A. S A.Enf. Galaxie Distributors suite a-7211 HIllwood HR] ForkedRiver JN08731
NSAP needs poster rep. 4 hours per week. Great pay
No selling. 1-800-238-6900
Earn $5,000-$10,000 this summer painting houses in your town. Final hire for these positions are u.c. held now! 1) Strictly Management 2) Strictly Art Management only. All Pnst Student Painting (Uc.) 1,400-792-3360
OVERSEAS JOURNS $1000-2000 sum. Summer, rye
round. ALL JOBS. All fields. Write. Info
about yourself. Send resume to:
OWENE SCHNEIDER
345 WEST 2ND ST.
BROOKLYN, NY 10289
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN. 4/Rm. prices. Daya149. Panama City $139, Kitch. Wurft & Trans Available.
CALL CMiat at 400-423-5648
Spring Break to Florida Beaches - Energetic Promotion needed. Earn FREE trips and CASH! Call (855) 321-4000.
Part-time work-study position available in our Medical Records dept. The schedule is for either hours Saturday and Sunday or on hourly Sunda-
tion. The first day of employment must be a Medical Aid Finance at 33 Strong Hall. To apply for employment please come to the Personnel Dept.
at the Hospital, 325 Maine. Lawrence, KS6044
Part time now Full time in summer, answering phones, showing apartments, and general office duties. Available to 9:00 AM to 9:00 PM to 9:00 M-F. Possibility of 10-20 hours a week until May mid may 2015/wk through mid August. Must
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS! National Parks,
Forests; FireCorns, Forest; 9.000 Openings! Send
Stamp for Free Details. Sullivan's, 113 East
Wowns, Kalispell, MT 59901
Positions available in food service, laundry, maintenance, light hskgp. Children's summer camps in NY, PA, Mass, Maine. Free Room & Board salary & use of facilities: Call 1-800-433-8432
Wanted: If you are permanent, energetic and enjoy being around people, come join our summer wait-staff team at Lake Quivera County Club in Kansas City. Ask for Trov. 613-4821 for an appointment. Ask for Trov. 613-4821
Tennis jobs summer is a camp-northeast and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. Feb. 14th from 1-ampm in Regionalist and Orduros room in the Kansai
Waterfront Job-WSI-Summer Children in the Camps Northeast-Men and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiers, dive in the pool. Experience a beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. Feb 19 from 1am-5pm in the
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 drivers, driver license obtainable, transportation provided. 8417749
Driver Education offered mid Mideast Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
FAVOR FACTORY The Ultimate service. Let us work for you. We specialize in video and library services. Call (800) 254-7111.
Government photo, passports, immigration,
portfolios, portraits
/B&W. call: Coral Tsem Swella 746-161
HOUSECLENING, conscientious person, high-
quality work, references Perry's 597-5012
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Students rate 824-2344
KC student would detail your car professionally for $60. For more information call 749-7087
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding & portrait. Introduce ID photos student phone calls to your clients.
DUI/TRAFFIC
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 691-6878
DUI/TRAFFIC
• Criminal Defense • Fake IDs
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
Former Prosecutor
Firm Id 18783 - 749.00
Former Prosecutor
16 East 13th 749-0087
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations
formatting, typewriting, and more.
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
921/2 Mass. 841-1071
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
divorce, criminal & civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
Recycle your laser printer toner cartridges for only
$0.99 a month. Washington, D.C.
Call LT185 285-288 We also buy empires.
Tired of taking a bathtub at buytime? Get $6.5
$1 more textbook and buy when sale too.
Free details mailed ! 1-800-285-TEXT (8398)
Copying, hardbinding and gild stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street 843
307-644-6944
Want to learn guitar, singing birds, goodtime
in insightful folk and theory too. Call Benato at
617-290-8345.
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
823 Missouri 843-4023
235 Typing Services
Word Processing Service: Term papers, thesis,
reports, etc. Fast, accurate service. $2.00 printed,
double spaced page. calls 812-3643. Computer Processing Services, Lawrence KS
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of personality type 845-2063 days or evenings
1. Spell check always included 2. Same day service 3. Customers welcome Call Mindy's T speaking Services
1 + Typing/WP: Letters, term papers, resumes,
824-4754-4930 w 3 days anytime wkends
From Quality To Selling To Maintain Last Entry Management
From Experience And Reliability Call Location At
www.harvey.com
K+ Professional Word Processing, accurate and
affordable. call after j.p m: 841-6345
Laser Type Word processing, typing, editing,
resume and employment services 843-7063
PINK A LA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Sched-
ed to enhance support for success! Now 'call'
Mona 799-1400 799-1400
Word Perfect Word Processing Laser Printer
Near camp $130/double spaced page Call 842
Wide format Word Processing
Word Perfect HM Compatible Word Processing
Inkjet Printer, near Orrand Corners, no calls
to the printer.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, research, Editing, composition, rush
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
18. Schwimm Letetur Lairex 18× speed touring bike.
Cannibalmate pack, bookrack, very good condition.
Nikon D700 with AF-S DX 18-55mm f/2.8G VR.
"91" mountain bike "60" Paramount, owned &
& maintained by Shop Mechanic "65" 842-9617
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture curtain supplies, washcloths made quilts, primitives, comics books, Playbies, Penthouses, vintage clothing, books, carnival games, toys, docks, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, Royal Doulton, military collectibles, country furniture, consoles, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale baskets, gift boxes, stuff it will you how away! QUANTRILLE'S FLARE MARKET 811 New Hampshire Open every Friday, 10am-6pm. Visit http://www.library.upenn.edu/it/info/basic/482-6612 Visa and Mastercard welcome
Attention Bands and LM: Worked equipment for Attention Bands and LM. Worked equipment for Wet Lab catches, Technique Titrationers M-7000 Wet Lab catches, Technique Titrationers M-7000
IBM compatible, a color monitor, dual disk drive mat printer, all software, manuals and desk supplies.
State of Kansas Trade-in. Excellent condition.
Insurance. Free shipping.
scripps. $295 and up based on usage. Call Scripps
State of Kansas Trade-in. excellent condition
seller's certificate. $40.00 up and based on usage. Call Sylvia
@ 516-728-2390.
Help! Need to sell Spring Break trip to Galveston
Need to Corda - sleepes. Get a job, can't go
away. Need to buy clothes.
Electronic Typewriter as new. $100. Includes
display, dual speed paper, display, call to
phone, data files. Call 656-482-1300.
HOMEWORK HOMEWORK MAC1/150 MG 15^7
Color monitor on mouse $3,000.00 Call MG 15^7
Color monitor on mouse $3,000.00 Call MG 15^7
FOR SALE! ELECTRIC GUT-KARA. Immerse your hand in the strength of this electric red, semismall, hard shell device, pearl earrings, a small metallic bracelet and more.
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.95.
Bell 81-7644 81-8933
Mac SE, 20 mg HD, modem. imagewriter II, color
Mac SE, 20 mg HD, $400.00 A61D4406H8.
THRU ROOF rack w locks & four bike holders
$65. Roller bars 2 etra 30 mm 19 size used twice
$65. Roller bars 2 etra 30 mm 19 size used twice
340 AutoSales
Genuine rollerblade brand skates at the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the most cost-effective. All models available many colors. 843-2214
1979 Buckley Negeal Limited, 71.00k $ actual mileage,
4 k Engines, runs very good, $1500, 865-4330
www.buckleynegeal.com
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
199C Corona 2Dr 45p. AM/FM, Cass low miles/reliable 600s (offer 800s must sell)
Roland D-10 professional synthesizer/keyboard
with 2 sound library and JAM memory cards. 99%
NEW WEST W1500
now $1300 Must sell NOW 864-7085 resellers
79 Nissan 200 xx, 5 pcd. AM/FM, Good condition,
80 B.O. B. 84124) leave messages
8Vetta D+ ADR, AC cruise, 5.pdp, AM.FM, Cas.610
gard+42 D+ 4654-3214 mm^2 / 843-3125
mm^2
1986. Ford Ranger 4+; drive, automatic, roll bar,
air-conditioning. Many extras. 931-842-7000
1986 MAZDA RX-7 Red. Automatic, Loaded with Power Mooncrest $4,000 784-5714.
87 Honda Aero 50. Excellent condition, well-maintained. Red, Basket and垫片 included. $425 or less.
On TV, VCS, VCR, jewelry, stereo, musical instrument,
MC/AMC /MCM/IA, Jay Hawkwax Jewelry & Jewellery
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
BASEBALL CARDS/SPORTS MEMORABILIA
Needlework for SPONNYS/JIMMY 3
Need money for SPRING BREAK?
Bring your old cards and collectibles. Buy any where from a few cards to complete collections Top dollar paid. 823-187-1 Leave message
NEEDED: 2-3 non-school tickets to MIZUZO Basketball game! Call Ericza at 865-9709
Wanted: 2-3 non-student BBall tickets, Colorado Feb. 15 Call Ericza day 864-3499 night 842-3400
Wanted: Non-student basketball ticket for Kansas vs. Missouri Call Ericza day 864-3499 night 842-3400
Wanted: one-non-student BBall ticket to Colorado Oklahoma, or OK State. Call Elizabeth 865-3906 leave message
BUY SELL LOAN CASH
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1.2.38Bapts, nearcamp nepets available June
14, Amr. 1048-8971
1 bedroom apartment for sublease available May 20, on bus route. call 841-7884 or 843-4754
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, gender, age, status, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
合
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments and 3 & 4 bedroom apartments equipped kitchen. Laundry facilities. Swimming pool. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trash/passive cabinets! 7141 W. Galli, Knoxville
Available Now - Private iBDR Apt. Close to campus.
$225;no.Po Nets 086-966-1933
Cory Victorian one bedroom api. near campus in March $335, 842-6384
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K.U.
841-6254
G got a group! *Restored 8bed 4bath fireplace* floor,
walls W/D, w.r. near riverfront B14-STAR (7827)
Boardwalk
apartments
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
524 Frontier 842-4444
1 & 2 Bedroom adapts.
Now Leasing for Spring &
Fall Move-ins
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
·Spacious 2 bedroom
·Laundry facility
·Swimming Pool
·Waterbed allowed
South Pointe APARTMENTS
---
9th & Avalon 842-3040
1,2,3,&4Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
- Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
- New kitchens
- Carpet colors:
- Mauve, Beige, and Gray
- 2 Full baths available in 2,3; & 4 bedrooms
- Large bedrooms & closets
- Pool & volleyball
meadowbrook
2166W. 26th. 843-6446
TIRED of being crammed
Small living areas?
Visit Meadowbrook Apts.
Wide range of GREAT
studios and 2 Bdrm. apts
Lighted Tennis Courts Two Pools
Laundry facilities in most buildings
Carports/Garages available
Playgrounds
Playgrounds
Water Paid/Free Basic Cable
KU Bus Stops
KU Bus Stops
Expierenced Professional
Close to Campus
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
It's Time to Step up to
Meadowbrook
842-4200 15th & Crestline
Hillview Apfs $15 lease signing signup;
1 & 2床 room apart rentals $22 & $30 plus deposit. On bus
travel for up to two nights.
Looking for a place? Coby 2 room bd apt, in Brownsville. Rent through July 15 $30/month + utilities. Negotiable
Louisiana Plaza Apts. 1 Now leasing nice BRI APt
Computers Beautiful view of the city, Call Doraly 802-763-5900
NEW 2HR, BCL to campus. Available Now; All Appliances, $400 MO. Low utilities. Ctor 892-437-1000.
SHORT TEMPLE LEASENES NO AVAILABLE on studio,
2 br. apt, and 3 br. 2/1/2 bath townhouse.
843-7333
MORNING COAST
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3,& 4 Bedroom TownHomes
* Garages; $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ Baths
* Microwave Ovens
* Some with Fireplaces
* On KU Bus Route
* Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
--proofs based on certification of pre-paid classified advertising
bills. Tearstakes are NOT provided for classified advertisement
titles.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc
841-5444
No Appt. Necessary
COLONYWOODS
APARTMENTS
Hurry in Today
some short term
leases available
• VOLLEYBALL COURT
• BASKETBALL COURT
• INDOOR/ OUTDOOR
POOL
• EXERCISE ROOM
• 3 HOT TUBS
• ON BUS ROUTE
ASK ABOUT THE REDUCED SECURITY DEPOSIT!
$355-$425
Models Open Daily
Mon.-Fri. 10-6p.m.
Sat. 10-4p.m. Sun. 12-4p.m.
Call842-5111
1301 W 24th
Now leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bedroom suite with a private bath, appliances, car bus on ride. Pool. Excellent maintenance and management. Quality at the best价店 in b141. 841-6686. Spanish Cream Apart
One bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place. Furnished with a king bed, desk and downstairs. All 863-486 or leave message
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive, You're About to Get an Education.
Spacious 3 BDR DUPLEX $755.00, Fully equip
with large living room, near campus, bus route 743
Michigan 8642, Michigan 8617
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat anytime you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
Ask about our "Upperclassman special" or our $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688.
Call now to reserve your room.
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence,KS 66044
(913)843-8559
Sublease now one room apartment 43 Mississippi
Nice, secure, close to campus. $25 808-0447-840
Sublease, house, available immediately. February
16th. Please call 212-499-7042 for quiet
Great House, $252 + util. call 749-772-0491
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232
Sublet 2 prm肥, W/D, FREE storage, pets ok,
$400 mo. plus deposit 814-2640
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths.
close to campus, furnished. 749-787-3672
430 Roommate Wanted
1 non-smoking roommate needed for 3bedroom furnished duplex on bus route with 2 built-in baths, DW, WD, microwave & garage. Large bedroom $155 plus 1/3 tilt. Please call 749-2181 after 6.
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
WASHER/DRYER/GARAGE/ON BUS
INHITED! MOVE INI MEDIATED! RENT IS
NEGOTABLE. CALL 842-1772!
Female wanted to share 3 bedroom furn. apartment / 1/unitities $87.00/month; Call 8213 1179 am/pm
Female housemate wanted. House bordering campus.
Non-smoker and no pets. 749-2564
Female, share large old house close to campus,
$230.00 + 1 eczel 84167:4Af 1937 Up 845-8357
www.nursery.edu/education
FEMALE MOLE room wanted to share 2BR, 2Bath,
$12.50 per room. This room has bus. water pd.
$12.50, 1title, Call 841-327-4699
Looking for roommates to share a bedroom furnished up to $150 monthly starting at Cal Kinkai for $250 monthly.
M/F Roommates need ASAP 3 bedroom townhouse close to campus. $150/month, low utilities.
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female roommate wanted for 2bedroom. Have own room and walk in closet. $240 + 1/2 util. On bus route. Call 865-0194. Available now!
Furnished Campus Place Apartment needs roommate $1860 mrc call 841-8505
One female student for a furnished 5 Dkram. Townhouse with enclosed patio, 170% $170/month + 1/7 utilities. Anyone #482-7678
Roommate wanted! Non-smoker for 3 bedroom furnished duplex with 2 full bath, WD, DW, microwave, and garage. Rent negotiable. Call841-1689. Leave message.
Roommate needed ASAP. 3 bedroom apt. $200/mo.
832-1461
Roommate needed by March 3. 3 BR house in E.
Lawrence, 810/mth + 1/7 utilities. Call Mindy at
516-295-4262.
Roommate wanted to share nice 2 B pt ab1 Bk
from campus $200 a month + 1/2 utilities
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Lucky skunks.
I hate this desk job.
16
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 12, 1992
Jayhawk Bookstore
at the top of Nassimth Hill
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Ban on runny eggs eased after excessive yolk jokes
The Associated Press
TREENTON, N.J. — New Jersey's runny egg ban, ridiculed by everyone from the governor to Johnny Carson, is headed for the compost pile of state culinary history.
The state Public Health Council voted Monday to relax the infamous ban on undercooked eggs in restaurants that was imposed Jan. 1 because of concerns about salmonella poisoning.
Louise Chut, who heads the council, voted for the change after lambasting politicians and the media for making light of those concerns.
"I was very dismayed to see it was made a koe of, " Chut said.
of 140 degrees Fahrenheit. The use of raw eggs in sauces, salads and other foods was banned. Violators faced fines of $25 to $100.
The original rule required that eggs be cooked to a minimum temperature
The amendment, which takes effect in May, will allow restaurants and retail food establishments to prepare and serve raw or undercooked egg dishes. But thorough cooking still will be required when large portions of an egg-based dish are served, such as at banquets.
Chut said 10 other states had either adopted a similar regulation or were considering one.
News accounts of New Jersey's ban prompted a torrent of jokes, such as Carson's quip on "The Tonight Show" that New Jersey required a 10-day waiting period to get a Caesar salad.
New York's state health department said Monday it would impose a similar rule requiring eggs or food containing eggs to be cooked to at least 145 degrees Fahrenheit. But restaurant customers would be exempted,
Gov. Jim Florio, unpopular because of his tax increases, recovered some support by attacking the regulation in his State of the State address as a silly example of government intrusion into people's lives.
and could order an egg as runny as they want if they were willing to take the risk of disease, said Peter Slocum, representative for the department.
The other states that have or are considering similar restrictions on serving undercooked eggs are Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, North and Carolina, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Virginia.
Student arrested, expelled after police learn of scholarship scam
Man lies, swindles Princeton
The Associated Press
Prosecutors dropped charges of forgery and falsifying records against James Hogue, 32, under a plea agreement
TRENTON, N.J. — A man who fabricated his academic record and swindled Princeton University out of $22,000 in scholarship money pleaded guilty to theft by deception and faces up to nine months in prison.
Hogue enrolled in the Ivy League school in 1989 under the name Alexi Indris-Santana. He was arrested last February on a Utah warrant for jumping parole after serving six
months for stealing racing bicycles.
He claimed to have been self-educated and employed on a ranch in Utah. University officials said interviews, documents and his youthful appearance seemed to support his story.
He was arrested in class after police were tipped off and later was expelled from the university.
A sentencing date was not set. Prosecutor Dennis Slaboda said the state would recommend five years' probation, no more than 270 days in prison, 100 hours of community service and restitution.
Elementary school suspends puppet
The Associated Press
The complaint comes from Candy Johnson, who has a second-grade at Doctors Inlet Elementary School in northeastern Florida.
DOCTORS INLET, FLA. — An elementary school has suspended use of a puppet named Pumisy the Dragon as a teaching tool because one parent claims that it is hypnotic and might harm children.
"There's a psychiatrist who says this program is very threatening to a child's welfare. It becomes a hypnosis session after a while." she said.
George Twente of General Hospital in Decatur, Ala. says Pumsy teaches children they can change the way they feel.
"You're almost convincing the child he has magical powers," he said.
with self-healing and reincarnation.
Twente and Johnson said Pumsy was part of the New Age movement, a collection of philosophies often associated
Ben Wortham, assistant superintendent for instruction in Clay County, said Pumsy had nothing to do with New Age or the occult.
Pumys is used in about six of the district's 15 elementary schools to help build self-esteem and decision-making skills among first to third-grade pupils, Wortham said Tuesday. The district has used the material for four years.
The dragon is used only as an attention-getting device. Wortham said.
Principal Fred Fedorowich said the school's curriculum committee, which previously had approved Pumsy lessons, had suspended the program pending a review Friday.
The 843-0611
Etc. 928 Mass
Shop
Marilyn Kerns, representative for Timberline Press in Eugene, Ore, which publishes the Pumsy books, says most of the calls received about the program are positive. Some parents, however, voice concerns about the program's use of guided imagery.
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YOU MUST BEPRESENT TOWIN!
JOHNNY'S
LAVERN
Johnny's CLASSIC BURGERS
P. S. Don't forget that you can get Johnny's classic burgers in the bar as well as in your car at our 9th and Illinois location.
DOGS CARRYING A BOAT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.94
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1992
Rubble-rouser
An employee of Taliaferro Construction Inc. of Topeka removes rubble from Hoch Auditorium.
Clean-up of the June 15 fire began this week after delays due to lack of funds and disagreements about whether to restore or destroy the landmark. The worker was tossing debris yesterday.
Student survey gauges beliefs on sexual violence
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
The results of a University of Kansas student survey on sexual violence were announced yesterday by a student affairs research committee
Survey results indicate that although sexual violence has concerned KU and the community for years, continued efforts should be made to educate and provide effective support programs, research committee members said.
"We're working together so that our students are protected," said Barbara Ballard, who heads the committee. "No one deserves to be sexually assaulted."
Last spring, 1,500 surveys were sent out to randomly selected KU students in order to measure the extent and impact of sexual violence. Students returned 540 of the surveys.
The survey, which cost $2,300, was developed by the research committee to address concerns of growing sexual violence on college campuses nationwide.
Themes analyzed by the committee were factors contributing to rape, gender attitudes, dating expectations and forced sex.
Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, said that gender differences and com-
munities are important factors.
"How the word 'no' is understood differently by people is disturbing," he said.
Charlene Muehlenhard, director of women's studies, said the results of the survey indicated that rape was as large a problem at the University of Kansas as it was on other campuses.
Sexual violence and students
A Spring 1991 survey of KU students revealed these statistics concerning sexual violence. Of 1,500 surveys sent out, 540 were returned.
Women Men
Students who said they were sexually molested or assaulted before age 18
22.8%
8.4%
Students who said they were physically abused before age 18
12%
5.8%
Students who said they were emotionally abused before age 18
26.1%
17.3%
Students who "strongly disagreed" that a man deserves sex if he buys the woman an expensive meal
94%
71%
Students who said that they believe that when a woman says no the first time, she means it
71%
30%
Students who said they were acquainted with the person who forced them into sexual intercourse
95.6%
100%
Greg Hughes, vice-chair of the University Senate Executive Committee, said he was shocked by the results and hoped they would help change attitudes toward sexual behavior.
Citing a response to a question on the survey, Hughes said, "The fact that close to 5 percent of men think they are entitled to have sex with someone they have taken to dinner seems really barbaric."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he thought that the survey results would better prepare University programs to meet student needs.
"But most importantly, they will further an awareness across the University of the depth of this problem." he said
Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said the results of the survey would benefit programs that help student cope with sexual violence.
"If you know your population better,you can serve them better,"she said.
Ballard said the different groups that offered assistance would
"Now we can work even closer to identify student needs and try to cover as many areas as we can," she said.
A variety of student leaders will talk about the survey results at 10 a.m. today at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
Group supports sexually-abused men
By Katherine Manweiler
Kennon staff winters
A survey released yesterday by the University of Kansas stated that 8 percent of male KU students said they were sexually abused before reaching age 18.
Male victims of sexual molestation or assault face problems that can be different from those that female victims experience, some local experts said.
"There's enough need out there for a group. It's just a question of how many
Men are often reluctant to admit that they were sexually abused, but it is important for them to come to grips with it, said Jim Kreider, clinical social worker at the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center.
"They wonder, 'Am I gay? Why did they pick me?"
Kreider is starting a support group for male victims of sexual abuse. Four men, including two KU students, have expressed interest in joining, he said. The group will have its first meeting at 5 p.m. Feb. 24 at the Bert Nash Center and will meet weekly until the end of May, Kreider said.
Jim Kreider Clinical social worker
men are willing to come forward and get help."
Kreider said that men who were abused as children often had a need to be in control of all areas of their lives, and that they were more likely to abuse someone else.
"It is not because they want to," Kreider
says, "but because they are repaying what
hands they take."
Men also tend to question their sexuality. Kreider said.
"They often ask the question, 'Why me?' They wonder, 'Am I gay?' Why did they
pick me?"
Kreider said society sent messages to men that made their victimization unique.
"In our culture, sex tends to be romanticized between adult women and boys," Kreider said. "Men are supposed to like any form of sexual contact. Women are supposed to be the nurturers and the caretakers. When the roles are turned around and exploited, that's confusing."
Kreider said that help was available "to not only recover from the trauma of sexual abuse, but also to be able to move ahead toward a rich and rewarded life," he said.
Frank DeSalvo, director of counseling and psychological services for KU, said being a victim of sexual abuse was particularly difficult for men because men often were seen as the perpetrators, not the victims. of sexual abuse.
"We're exploring a number of ways to make an impact on this problem," he said. "We are working with other offices on campus to be able to deal with this problem effectively on campus."
Schools are sex biased, study says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—A report suggesting unequal education for girls and boys presents a problem for the nation's more than 2.4 million school teachers that is difficult to measure and even tougher to fix, educators said yesterday.
Although women hold 72 percent of the teaching positions, girls have been made second-class students in U.S. schools, said Alice McKee, president of the AAUW Educational Foundation, which commissioned the study.
The American Association of University Women released a report Tuesday that found bias against girls in public classrooms, textbooks, tests and teachers.
Mckee said that girls and boys entered school roughly equal in ability. But in twelve years, girls fall behind in key areas, particularly math and science, she said.
Keith Geiger, president of the National Education Association, said that teachers might unconsciously have catered more to boys in school. He said that the teachers' actions
Career plans
High school girls choose math and science careers in low numbers compared to their male counterparts. Career plans of students taking the SAT:
Female Male
Social sciences 14.4% 8.7%
Math .06% .07%
Computer science 2.3% 4.3%
Agriculture 1% 1.7%
Physical sciences 9% 2.1%
Biology 3.6% 3.4%
Engineering 3.4% 17.8%
SOURCE: American Association of University Women
KU student's bill would allow sexual history use in rape trials
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
A Senate committee yesterday voted to introduce a bill written by Jean Winter, Emporia senior, which would make an accused rapist's sexual history admissible as evidence during a rape trial. The sexual history must first be proven relevant, according to the bill.
A University of Kansas student is one step closer to getting her bill passed in Topeka.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who heads the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the bill would be introduced by the committee next week. Wint Winter Jr. is not related to Jean Winter.
Winter spent the past two months researching and writing the bill and recently solicited legislative sponsorship.
"The primary benefit of this bill is that it would say to judges, 'Think of both sides,'" Wint Winter Jr. said.
Kansas law allows a victim's past sexual history to be admitted during a trial when it is proven relevant. There is no mention of the defendant.
"This would basically apply the same rules to both sides and set a procedural framework for both." Winter
This would basically apply the same rules to both
sides."
Jean Winter
KUstudent lobbying for bill
said.
The bill will be introduced as part of a six-bill package designed to encourage victims of sexual assault to come forward, rather than fear the legal process, he said.
Jean Winter said she was pleased with the committee's decision to move forward.
"I owe this basically to Wint Winter," she said. "He's been very supportive of the whole idea from the start."
"Surprisingly, I've had a couple phone calls from individuals saying 'I'm glad you did this.'" she said.
Jean Winter said she had received calls from individuals and groups who were anxious to support her endeavors.
Winter, who said she was raped when she was in high school, decided to write the legislation after testimony from three witnesses in the William Kennedy Smith rape trial was deemed inadmissible, she said.
Winter said she was appalled that the testimony of the women, who said they had been abused by Smith, was not allowed. She decided to try to prevent a similar situation from happening in Kansas.
She looked up relevant statutes, wrote the bill and spent an afternoon at the Statehouse explaining her idea to interested legislators.
Winter said she thought rape was a problem that should be addressed on campus.
See related story, p.12
"I'm trying to empower the victim," she said.
Winter said she hoped her bill would enable prosecutors to raise the rate of rape convictions and encourage more women to come forward.
KANSAS BASKETBALL
The No. 4 Jay- hawks men's basketball team routed Iowa
State 91-
60last
night at
Allen Field
House.
Guard
Adonis
Jordan led
Kansas
with a
career-
high 25
points, hitting 10-of-14 field goals.
PETER CURRY
of 14 field goals.
The No. 17 Jayawacks
women's basketball team
lost to Colorado's Larry
Danielle Shareef
PENNY SMITH
Buffs 685-
54, snapping
a seven-
game win-
ning
streak.
Forward
Danielle
Shareef
led
Kansas
with 12
points and
11 rebounds.
Game stories, **p.11**
2
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
YOU DON'T NEED A COUPON!
Legal Services for Students
Legal Services Available Free With Valid KU ID
Appointment Needsary
148 Brunswick Union (913) 864-5665
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Finn Hall, Lawrence, K6045
ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING
Learn ways to express your thoughts and feelings clearly and directly
learn about your rights as an individual
through examples and role play, participants will learn how to more effectively interact with peers and issues; these include authority, peers, romantic relationships, and parents. This workshop is open to both women and men. Join us!
Thursday, February 20, 1992
7:00:9:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Facilitator: Lorna Zimmer
Director Student Assistant Center
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. 115 Strong Hall
For more information, contact Sheril Robinson at 864-3552.
We are the Manufacturer's outlet store!
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It's a Bed
It's $109
Futon & Frame
It's a Futon! (twin size)
Bring in this ad to get this special and to get additional discounts on other models.
343 - 8222
DEDICATED TO THE ENHANCEMENT OF WOMEN 1st Annual Women's Week Feb. 17-Feb.20
SPEAKER * FUN * COMMUNITY SERVICE * WOMEN'S FAIR *
INFORMATIONAL * INSPIRING * WOMEN'S BASKETBALL GAME
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME!
For more information, call:
864-4643
Margaret
BIG 6 SPORTS CLUB All Draws are 20 oz. "The English Pint"
$2.25 Drains and $5.50 Pitches of Anchor Ale Ale and Boulevard
Wheat Beer Everyday. Check out our Specials, too!
Daily Specials
$1.75 Drawers & $2.5 Pitchers
Nichitam Alae and Boulevard Wheat Beer
$1,50 Wells
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Beam, Seagrass, Bacardi, Smirnoff, etc.
$1.25 Draws and $3.75 Pitchers
Bad Light and Coors Light
$1.25 Draws and $3.75 Pitchers
Bud Light and Coors Light
LOWER LEVEL - ELDRIDGE HOTEL -749-5011
Classic tradition on the go.
★ Thursday
★ Thursday
Daily special
Chef Salad $2.29
Dinner salad $1.29
Get 'em in your car and
Get 'em in your car and Eat 'em hot
99¢ 1/4 lb.
Hamburger
no limit coupon required
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
expires 2-29-92
You've got 'em in the bar, now available in your car!
ON CAMPUS
OAKS Non-Traditional Students Organization will sponsor a luncheon meeting at11:30a.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union.
- The Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at the Danforth Chapel.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information meeting about studying in Denmark at 3 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
The KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. today in the Kansas Union.
- The Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a rice and beans dinner at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
The Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
The InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
GLSOK will meet at 7:30tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
- Poets Alive will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union.
The KU Democrats will meet at 8 tonight at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
The KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
The KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
The Men's Lacrosse Club will have a conditioning practice at 8:30 tonight at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center.
WEATHER
er at $166, were taken between Saturday morning and Sunday evening from Comic Corner, 1000 Massachusetts St. Two of the books were 1966 Amazing Spiderman comic books worth $65 and $75 respectively, Lawrence police reported.
ON THE RECORD
Today
high:45
low:30
3-day outlook
TODAY
Partly cloudy, winds SE 5-10 mph
TOMORROW
Mild, southerly winds and a chance of rain
FRIDAY
Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of rain
Across the U.S.
Boston 37/26
Chicago 37/25
Dallas 66/47
Detroit 35/27
Houston 72/54
New York 38/34
Los Angeles 62/51
Philadelphia 38/32
San Francisco 60/50
Washington 48/37
NEBRASKA
Omaha •
43/28
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO
Denver
62/31
KANSAS
Lawrence
45/30
Dodge City
52/31
Wichita
48/31
MISSOURI
Kansas City
46/31
St. Louis
51/36
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
61/40
3-day outlook
Jewelry, clothes, shoes, checks, cash, a camera and a stereo, valued together at $3.105, were taken between 6:15 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. Tuesday from a locked room in McCollum Hall, KU police reported.
- Four comic books, valued together
Forecast by Bruce Pistone, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
February 14,15,16
WALK DISNEY'S CLASSIC
101
DALMATIANS
Tickets $2.50 available at the SUA Box Office 864-SHOW
G
TECHNICOLOR
Industrial Products Co.
212 West 45th Street, Langham
JUNET UNION ACTIVITY
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday: 7:00 & 9:30
Saturday: 7:00 & 9:30
Sunday matinee: 2:00
Midnight Movies
Friday & Saturday $3.00
TiE ME UPY TiE ME DOWN! THE NEW FILM BY ALMODOVAR
No one under 18 will be admitted
49
KTKA-TV abc 49 WANTS TO KNOW HOW DO YOU SEE US?
KTKA-TV is the ABC-TV network affiliate for Northeast Kansas broadcasting on UHF Channel 49 from Topeka. Its signal is also available on various cable services and secondary stations in the region.
Please take a minute to help us serve you better by answering the following questions. (Please check the response that fits best.)
1. On the primary set in my house/apartment/dorm we receive KTKA-TV;
___ Directly on Channel 49 over the air.
On Channel 58 (rebroadcasts Channel 49 in the Lawrence area).
On Lawrence Sunflower Cable Channel 6 (rebroadcasts Channel 45)
___ We don't receive KTKA-TV on this set.
2. On the primary set, the KTKA-TV signal we see is:
2. On the primary screen, I will see 1 signal we see is:
☐ Above average ☐ Average ☐ Poor
3. On any second or third sets in my household, we receive KTKA-TV:
___ On Channel 58 (rebroadcasts Channel 49 in theLawrence area)
___ Directly on Channel 49 over the air.
___ On Lawrence Sunflower Cable Channel 6 (rebroadcasts Channel 49)
___ Other (please describe).
___ We don't receive KTKA-TV on this set.
4. On the second or third sets, the KTKA-TV signal we see is:
Above average Average Poor
5. When our household watches KTKA-TV, we are most likely to be viewing for:
___ Kid's programs/cartoons.
___ Area news/information/weather.
___ ABC network entertainment and informational programs.
6. Your comments/suggestions for KTKA-TV:
___ Other entertainment programs and movies.
___ Sports
THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST IN
KTKA-TV 49 ABC
913/234-4949 U.D.K
Please clip and return this questionnaire to: KTKA-TV, Channel 49
P.O. Box 2219 Topeka, KS 6601
Your name, address, and telephone number. (appreciated, but not required.)
SUMMER RESEARCH AWARDS FOR WOMEN AND MINORITY MEN IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Monetary awards to undergraduate Juniors for participation in research programs with Biology faculty at The University of Kansas.
Eligibility: Women and minority men with interests in the biomedical sciences.
Amount of award: $2,000.
Application deadline: March 16, 1992
Application forms are available from Sylvia Suarez, Administrative Assistant, Howard Hughes Program, 6007 Haworth Hall (864-3933)
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CAMPUS / AREA
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
3
Gallery celebrates Black History Month
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Samuel Smith's decision to portray African-American life in his art began in a KU art class.
"Everyone's heroes were
One day in class, he was disturbed as everyone named their artistic heroes.
Heres what
Europeans," said Smith, a KU graduate who lives in Topeka. "I had to ask myself, 'Where are the Black artists?'
Black
History
Month
"I found that African-American artists have an obligation to portray Black
Smith's instructor challenged him to research and find out.
life," he said. "I could have painted
but I wouldn't be acting true to my
self."
ican life.
THE LINCOLN MUSEUM
Smith is one of four artists whose works are featured in the African-American Art Exhibit, which will run through Saturday at the Kansas Union Gallery in honor of Black History Month. Representatives from Student Union Activities, Black Student Union, Black Men of Today and UJIMA welcomed the artists yesterday afternoon at an informal opening. The artists donated their works to SUA.
Smith, who works with children with behavioral disorders and learning disabilities at Capitol City School in Topeka, said his art reflected the negative and positive aspects of African-Amer-
"Black people need to have a visual form of their culture that they can connect with," he said.
Gloria Graves of Topeka said she had recognized the scarcity of African-American art when she wanted to buy works of art for her home and
could not find any.
"If there was any, I
Because of the lack of art, Graves, also a KU graduate, said she wanted to portray everyday happenings in the African-American community in her work.
Graves, who has no formal art training, uses profits from her drawings and
paintings to finance an after-school program at Evansdale East Elementary School in Topeka. "Basketball boys," a portrait of the children she works with, is one of the pieces on display in the Union gallery.
April Edwards, SUA exhibit coordinator, said she thought displaying African-American art was important because she thought there were few pictures of African-American people in the media or in art.
"Art is a reflection of people," she said. "If there is an outward display of African-American art, people can get a glimpse of the feelings and ideas of our people."
Works by Albert Woods of Lawrence and Ernest Ross of Kansas City, Kan., are also on display.
A
Rico Madlock, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, is intrigued by "Heritage," an ash wood sculpture by Ernest Ross.
Project will help trace fate of Holocaust victims
By Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
location of their deaths.
When Louis Frydman was a 12-year-old boy,
he claimed to be an experienced metal worker.
It was the only way he could be transferred out of the Majdanek concentration camp outside of Lublin, Poland, where he and his mother were confined.
Although he left the camp, his mother stayed. Frydman never saw her again.
That was April 30.1943.
Frydman, associate professor of social welfare, said he was sure both his mother and father died in concentration camps, but he would like to know both the official cause and
Frydman said he had tried to find out the fate of his parents and other relatives, but was unsuccessful.
He once submitted his own name to the International Tracing Service in Arolsen, Germany, to test the system's validity. He said he never received a response.
"I still do not know what happened to me," he said, jokingly.
But Frydman does not joke when it comes to finding out what happened to his parents.
"You want to know as much as you can," he said. "But I doubt I will get much information." He is one of the Holocaust survivors living in Lawrence.
The American Red Cross announced Tuesday that it was launching a joint project with the U.S. Archives to help relatives learn the fate of Holocaust victims,
Ann Stingle, Red Cross representative, said that a day after the announcement was made, the Red Cross headquarters in Baltimore received 400 requests for tracings. Stingle said the project would include the use of Nazi death books, transport lists, records of medical experiments and other materials that contained 300,000 to 500,000 names.
She said that many of the victims' names had been known for years, but that the death books provided new and specific information concerning their deaths.
Archivists for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council suggested that the materials be used [2014]
brother escaped the camps when their parents put them on a boat to England.
The materials were confiscated by U.S. forces during the end of World War II. They were inaccessible to the public because they were evidence in Nazi war crimes trials.
Although the documents have been available to the public for 20 years, their bulk made it difficult to access information. The Red Cross is making a croftfilm to make it easier to trace, Single said.
People interested in tracing relatives should contact their local Red Cross chapter, she said.
But he said that he intended to trace the fate of his parents, who were taken to the camps.
Eva Edmands, Lawrence resident, said that she survived the Holocaust because a Catholic priest hid her family in a boiler room in Annecy, France.
"I certainly want to know what happened," she said, important that the history is recorded accurately.
Siegfried Lindenbaum, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, said that he and his
Edmands said that her grandmother died in a concentration camp in Czechoslovakia.
But the tracing project is important for other Holocaust victims and survivors, she said.
City responds to accident
Crosswalk proposed for 17th and Massachusetts streets
By Andy Taylor Kansan staff writer
Theresa Knight was 86 years old, but her friends said she could walk like a teen-ager.
A resident of Babcock Place, a retirement complex at 1700 Massachusetts St., Knight was a familiar site walking to the post office or shopping in downtown Lawrence.
"She could walk circles around anybody in town," said her friend, Ruth Morris, president of the Babcock Tenants Association.
On Jan. 29, Knight was struck by a motorist at 17th and Massachusetts streets — the same intersection that was rejected for a pedestrian crosswalk by the Lawrence City Commission in November. Knight later died of injuries from the accident.
Tomorrow, city officials will meet with Babcock residents to discuss opinions about the intersection.
Morris said Babcock residents had to either walk to 14th and Massachusetts streets or 19th and Mas-
sachusctts streets in order to cross the street.
"Nineteenth Street is the most screwed-up intersection in town," she said. "And 14th Street is too wide to walk for these elderly residents."
She said that if the city had taken action in November, Knight's death could have been avoided.
"Only the good Lord knows what would have happened, but I feel that a pedestrian signal would have given her a heck of a good chance to cross the safely," she said.
Mayor Bob Walters said at Tuesday night's city commission meeting that the situation was under review by engineers hired by the Kansas Department of Transportation.
The city's traffic safety commission recommended last year that no crosswalk be added at 17th and Massachusetts streets because it would have disrupted the large volume of traffic between 14th and 19th streets.
He said that the engineers were giving the study top priority and that the department should release its findings before April 1.
George Williams, city director of public works, said the costs of installing pedestrian-operated signals would be about $15,000.
"Depending on what the commission does, we will be looking at pedestrian signals that hang over the street," he said.
Although department of transportation engineers are studying the situation, Lance Rake of the Oread Neighborhood Association said the city should consider pedestrian safety first.
He said that not only Babcock residents were threatened, but also students from Cordley Elementary School, 1837 Vermont St., students from Central Junior High, 1400 Massachusetts St., and many KU students who walk to and from east
"The real tragedy is that the city could have done something before the accident." Rake told the city commission. "When push comes to shove, we tend to give way to motorists. What we are talking about is priorities."
Intersection under review for crosswalk 17th Street
Kentucky Street Vermont Street 18th Street Massachusetts Street
Cordley Elementary School
Source: Kansas research Michael Grace Delilah Furst
To downtown
Babcock Place
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N
19th Street
Lawrence.
Jennifer Brown, coordinator for the Oread Neighborhood Association, told the commission that Massachusetts Street should not be considered an avenue only for motorists.
"Massachusetts Street is a place to drive," she said. "But it is also a place to eat, shop, attend school and live."
Graduate assistants in midst of forming grassroots union
By Jay Williams Kansan staff writer
Graduate teaching and research assistants might form a union soon.
A committee formed in September has been attempting to band together GTAs and GRAs in order to gain bargaining power within the University.
"It is really a grassroots effort," said Dave Reidy, a GTA in philosophy and a member of the committee behind the move to organize.
More than 200 of the University's 2,400 GTAs and GRAs have filled out cards saying they support the idea, he said. The committee said it would hand out the cards about two weeks ago.
"It is a vote to have a vote." Reidy said.
He said that if 30 percent of the graduate students signed a show-of-interest card, the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board would conduct a vote to determine whether a collective bargaining group could represent the GTAs and GRAs.
Reidy said the average salary for a GTA in the philosophy department at the University of Kansas was $7,900, compared with $10,000 at KU's peer institutions.
He said the University had lost quality teaching assistants because other universities offered better pay and amenities.
"KU is putting itself at risk by underpaying GTAs, Reidy said.
Howard Mossberg, dean of the graduate school, said that the salary discrepancies between KU GTAs and GTAs at peer institutions were similar to salary differences between KU faculty and faculty at peer institutions.
"It is true across the board," he said. "We have constantly been careful that increases given to all GTAs are in line with what we have given to faculty."
Mossberg said he hoped that graduate students would continue to work with the University.
"We hope to continue to talk with the graduate students about the issues that have made them feel they need to take this action," he said.
Reidy said that the group had worked only locally so far but that it had received help from the American Federation of Teachers.
"We have received some legal advisement from them," he said.
Dan Murtaugh, another member of the steering committee, said the response to the firing was positive.
Although 30 percent support from GTAs and GRAs is needed to take the issue to a vote, Murtaugh said he hoped for more.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13. 1992
OPINION
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Political talk tires voters, makes citizens indifferent
Nausea. An unpleasant sensation to be sure, but at least it is definitive. A quesay, sickening feeling that can come from ingesting something disagreeable. Or from ingesting something downright foul. I miss that feeling. Watching TV this morning, I did not feel revulsion at the idea that Bush already had won the Iowa caucus for the Republican party, but I had more of a vaguely dissatisfied feeling, like I'd forgotten to eat something. That the U.S. political process is merely a collection of dim-witted, burned-out hacks so incompetent that they could not tie their shoes without an assortment of handlers to instruct them, seems axiomatic. Where, though, are the villains? Formerly, we had Reagan, Nixon and Spiro Agnew. Real scum. Today we have Tom Harkin, Bill Clinton and George Herbert Walker Bush. The race for president of one of the most powerful nations on earth sounds like a Rotary Club meeting in Indianapolis.
How can the U.S. voter be expected to roll himself or herself out of bed, or take time after work to vote for such people? Today's politics lack drama, any sense of excitement. Partly it has to do with the media and poll-happy reporters who reduce every race to a series of apparently random numbers and percentages. Mostly though, it has to do with candidates seeking to be all things to all people. Yes politicians
A. M. B. A. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. S. R. P. R. R.
Kevin Bartels staff columnist
always have sought to be Everyman, but with the eight-second sound bite and the commercials on TV and radio, the average voter is immersed in wave after wave of insane gibberish and pointless squabbling.
Politicians have caught on to the fact that what they say is no longer important. They merely repeat platitudes mantra-like to attract voters. All this was ushered in by Ronald Reagan, among others. But unlike Reagan, who openly acknowledged a belief in a biblical apocalypse and initially called the Soviet Union an "evil empire", Bush and his Democratic rivals have no such position to take. They are sympathetic to the common working person and that is all.
In a word, they are boring. At least after one and a half terms of Nixon, he was run out of town like a whining curator and replaced with Jimmy Curner, then with Reagan. Things began to decline at that point. Who would have thought that milquetto George would become the Big Kahuna? And don't try
to proffer David Duke and Pat Buchanan assubstitutevillains. Aredneck, neo-Nazi and a neo-isolationist are noreal threat.
We need somebody positively out there. We need some fire-breathing maniac who will threaten to drive the moneychangers out of the temple and smite the wicked. Where did these people go? Have we no life left in us? Have we all simply become degenerate, yuppie suburbanites who are endlessly sympathetic but also completely impotent? How long, O Lord, how long?
What has become the most frightening aspect of this presidential race is that it is tiresome. Dull. George Bush and his cohorts do not want you to feel nauseated, but anesthetized. The Democrats think that they can beat Bush by using the same strategy of unending, meaningless babble. Bore the masses into submission. A few candidates, however, have that old-time religion. You don't see them too often, but they're around. Take Lenora Fulani of the New Alliance Party. Now there's somebody with some style. She's angry. She's filled with righteous indignation. But she doesn't stand a chance. Her audience is already asleep.
Kevin Bartels is a Louisville, Ky.,
graduate student in English.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Deny Washburn's admittance
If university were allowed to join Regents system it would drain money from other schools
abill proposing that Washburn university of Topeka should become a state educational institution and come under control of the Board of Regents had its annual introduction into the state Senate. The bill, proposed by the Senate education committee, states that Washburn would become a separate Regents school in 1995.
Although the bill currently has not been scheduled for discussion, its very presence should make the Regents shudder. Washburn, currently a municipally supported institution, would be the only one benefiting from such a move.
Monetary support is the main reason Washburn wants to become part of the Regents system. The bill states that all property, money, rights and liabilities would become the property of the state — except for endowment property. It seems that Washburn wants the Regents to take care of its business and maintain its property, but the Regents get nothing in return.
If Washburn were to become part of the Regents system, it would be another drain on an already financially strained system. The Regents right now have six hungry educational mouths to feed, they don't need another competing for part of the shrinking state fund pie.
The very minute Washburn would became a state school, it would defeat one of the Regents main objectives: to eliminate redundant programs at Regents schools. There would be two law schools within 30 miles of each other. Which one would the Regents want to eliminate? We could only hope that the Regents would be loyal to its first law school.
The Regents need to take care of the its schools that it currently is responsible for before it takes on another.
Haitians unjustly condemned
Beth Randolph for the editorial board
The Bush administration unfairly stamps refugees as economic instead of political
With one word, the Bush administration and Supreme Court have condemned thousands of Haitian refugees to return to their embattled homeland where they face certain persecution for fleeing and criticizing their provisional government.
That word is "economic."
Unjustly, the Bush administration classifies most of the Haitians refugees as economic rather than political refugees. The difference is great.
By law, economic refugees are deported but political refugees are granted asylum. What makes a refugee political is a well-founded fear of persecution should he or she be sent back.
In the case of the Haitians, the persecution is well-documented. Though the State Department obfuscates the evidence, charges are widespread that returnees are beaten and imprisoned. The harsh tales of death and intimidation told by those who have daringly fled Haiti twice in recent months belie the administration's insistence
that economic instability prompts the migration.
Denying asylum to these people, who brave the sea in rickety, overcrowded vessels, reveals, perhaps, what the president means when he talks New World Order. After all the ballyhoo, it's still the same.
He plays deaf to the plight of the Haitians, and many wonder why.
Would he be more sympathetic if the Haitians were fleeing from a communist instead of a non-communist totalitarian regime? Or if Haiti wasn't the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere?
He is tightening the borders so as not to exacerbate our own economic woes? Or, is it that he finds the Haitians' skin color too dark?
Maybe it's just that he dislikes boat people, at least the unkempt kind. There are certainly some boat people he does like: He seeks to repeal a luxury tax on yachts costing more than $100,000.
With the $10 to $15 that the Red Cross gives each refugee, the Haitians may soon be able to take advantage of this great bargain, and then they could all sail safely to a country that cared.
Martin Scherstuhl for the editorial board
University too tough
The University of Kansas is a much tougher school than I thought!
Last semester, my first semester after leaving the Navy, was not an easy one, however. Difficulties included: 1) a calculus teacher who knew the subject very well but was not an effective teacher, 2) getting used to the idea of homework again, and 3) working weekends to pay my way through college, since I'm not receiving any educational benefits from the Navy, and my application for financial aid was turned down.
After I spent six years in the Navy Nuclear Engineering Program, which the Navy boasts as one of the most difficult schools in the country, and went on to become a knowledgeable and well-respected member of the nuclear engineering department aboard a fast attack submarine. I thought I could handle it.
After a lot of diligence, though, I was extremely pleased with my 4.0 grade point average last semester.
You can imagine my surprise today when I got a letter which reads in part: "You must be making Satisfactory Academic Performance to receive financial aid. This is required by law. Our records show that you do not currently meet required minimum standards. ... You
Perhaps things have changed more than I thought - a perfect report card places me on financial academic probation for which I was denied!
have been placed on financial aid academic probation this semester because you are not meeting these standards."
Has the reader ever seen a picture of the pale bodies of third-trimester babies being tossed in a trash can? I have. In another hospital, where the mother's love their children and the physicians save lives, these premature infants would receive specialized treatment. Why should they in their second trimester or even early first trimester be treated as less than
DavidSmart St. Louis
Lettersto the editor
Fetal discrimination
I am astonished when anyone, let alone the KU student body vice president, uses her position to attack those who are weaker and more vulnerable than he is, simply because these individuals are worthless and inconvenient in his eyes. Unborn children are human. They should be treated as such and not merely as a piece of tissue which could just as easily be discarded.
Is it too much to ask the Legislature to protect the lives of those who are unable to speak for themselves?
human and discriminated against unto death? Pro-lifers fight for the day when all people are treated as human, and each of us ends his or her self-conceived prejudice against those we somehow deem unworthy. When the public understands this, it will understand why prolifers strive against the abortion industry – even if they do not agree.
Gregory A. Glesser
Prospect Heights, Ill., graduate student
Legalizing abortions of babies unable to survive outside of the womb is just too ambiguous. There has been debate going on since the birth of the abortion issue about at what age a baby can live without the protection of the womb. Indeed, this is the focal point of the life vs. choice issue. There have been babies born extremely early in a pregnancy and yet have lived; and one of every 100 babies born in the United States after the normal nine months
Abortion bill useless
It won't work. The new abortion bill under debate in the Kansas Statehouse is useless and contradictory. Let me explain.
The second part of this bill creates stiffer penalties for those who practice their First Amendment right to free speech by picketing abortion clinics. This is quite hypocritical coming from a pro-choice member of the House who claims to be fighting for the "right" to have an abortion. I don't agree with many of the ways that pro-lifes exhibit their right. Nevertheless, they have that right to express their opinion.
don't live past the first month. Therefore, who is to say at what age babies can live outside the womb?
With all of my grips against this bill, I do agree with one clause: Women under 16 should receive counseling. I would prefer if this mandate would be extended to "unmarried women under 18," but the idea expressed by this portion is a very good idea. This counseling should be absolutely unbiased (neither affirming nor opposing abortion) and would definitely help these young women through what could be the most difficult time in their lives.
David Zimmerman
- Wichita freshman
Scripty check unfair
On July 17, 1990, my 46-year-old father was
killed in an automobile accident involving a semi-trailer truck. The truck driver walked away without a scratch. My family's lawyer told us that the highway patrolman could not give the truck driver a sobriety test because he did not see any evidence that the truck driver had been drinking.
Every day, my mom, my two younger sisters and I have to deal with the fact that my dad is never coming home. We will never know exactly what made the truck driver lose control of his truck, cross the center line and hit my dad's car. Maybe if they would be given that truck driver a sobriety test, he would be in jail today.
Now you're telling me that a Lawrence police officer can make me take a sobriety test just because I happen to come across one of the random checkpoints. Why is it that I would have to take a sobriety test, even if I wasn't doing anything wrong, and the truck driver who killed my dad was not required to take one?
I would like to know when Attorney General Bob Stephan and others like him are going to wake up and figure out that there's something wrong with this picture.
KANSANSTAFF
Jodi A. Habluetzel Manhattan senior
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
Editors
News ... Mike Andrews
Editorial ... Beth Randolph
Planning ... Lara Gold
Campus ... Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olson
Sports ... Eileen Nelson
Photo ... Jill Jacqueline
Features ... Debbie Meyers
Graphics ... Jeff Meesley/Aimee Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr . Bill Belilegood
Regional sales mgr . Rich Hanbarhanger
National sales mgr .
Go-op sales mgr . Anne Johnson
Production mgrs . Kim Wallace
Marketing director . Lee Keeler
Marketing leader . Kim Claxton
Creative advisor . Leahen Clarke
Classified mgr . Kim Chin
Business Staff
Letters should be double, double spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name, student ID number, and affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuart Flint Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13. 1992
5
Local artist designs statue for world exhibit
By Chris Jenson Kansan staff writer
A portion of Kansas City's exhibit at Expo '92 in Seville, Spain, is being created in Lawrence.
A Lawrence artist, Jim Brothers, will produce a scaled reproduction of the statue "The Scout."
Carolyn Stockwell, exhibit chief design for Expo '92, said Brothers was chosen to reproduce the statue because of his work with the Parks and Recreation Department of Kansas City Mo., and the reputation of Heartland Art Bronze of Lawrence. The statue is being cast at Heartland by a team of artists including Frank Shonen.
Expo '92 will be the next world's fair, which occur every 10 years. The expo will run from April 20 to Oct. 12.
Stockwell said "The Scout" statue was chosen because it was distinctive.
The statue of a Sioux scout on horseback returning from a hunting trip sits in Penn Valley Park at Karson and Pennsylvania streets in Kansas City, M. Cyrus Dallin
The statue came to Kansas City temporarily. But residents became attached to it and the city purchased it.
designed the statue for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco.
"The Scout' has been a hallmark statue in Kansas City for a long time," Stockwell said.
She said the Expo'92 committee also was pleased that the statue had a connection to local American Indian tribes.
Brothers said the reproduction would be half the size of the original, which stands 10 feet 3 inches.
When he first was approached about creating the statue in December, Brothers said he declined because it was a reproduction.
"I would prefer to do my own work," Brothers said. "But they decided to give me some freedom with it and they are allowing me to take my own work to the Expo, so it worked out."
Brothers said he changed the statue, mostly by adding details and texture to enhance the beauty of the bronze. He also
altered the American Indian's face to make it less stoic.
Brothers, who was a teaching assistant in sculpture at the University of Kansas in 1969, said four of his original pieces had been chosen for the Kansas City display at the expand and another was being considered. The pieces depict the American West.
"I was pleased that they picked me for the project," he said. "It's also nice to have something of my own in the show at the same time."
Creating bronze statues is an involved process, Brothers said.
"There are five phases of production starting with a clay model and ending with the bronze," he said.
Brothers said he worked 16 to 20 hours a day for six weeks to prepare the statue for bronze casting. The statue will be completed by March 1 and will be in Seville on March 15.
Now that the first phase of the project is complete, Brothers has begun creating a statue of Mark Twain for Hannibal, Mo.
JEFFREY FENDER
Lawrence artist Frank Shopen aligns a piece of the half-sized replica of "The Scout" statue.
Philip Meining / KANSAN
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Nominations are now being accepted for the Graduate Student Teacher Award.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13. 1992
Slick wheels
A scooter left in front of the Kansas Union Tuesday night fell victim to the ice storm which left most of Lawrence frozen yesterday. Though the ice is expected to melt today, the forecast through the end of the week calls for high temperatures of 40-45 degrees today and Friday, with lows in the mid 30's, and highs in the low to mid-50' during the weekend. No more freezing rain is expected.
Daron J. Bennett/KANSAN
MILK BASE
R-rated sex tour at zoo gives peep at animals' birth control
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Violet the orangutan is on the pill. King Lear the bison was rendered harmless with a bovine vasectomy. And Maxine the cougar is pushing high-tech boundaries with a Norplant-style implant.
Birds do it. Bees do it. But at the San Francisco Zoo, some of the romantically inclined are taking precautions.
Responsible zoo sex has been promoted at U.S. zoos for more than a decade. Zoos that are pressed for space want better breeding management to prevent unwanted offspring ending up in dismal wayside attractions or being used as quarry at private big-game ranches.
It 's nice to have little bodies, it 's a
crowd pleaser and things like that, but
we've got an overall responsibility," said zoo veterinarian Freeland Dunker.
In honor of Valentine's Day, the zoo is running a special R-rated sex tour jam-packed with fascinating facts. Foreplay can last from more than a month for rhinos to hours for the slow loris, a tree-dwelling primate.
Orangutans can do it upside down, while rhinos carry on for an up hour. Lions take pride in engaging up to 50 times in a 24-hour span, koalas exercise restraint with 40 seconds three times a year.
KENNEDY GLASS
For all your glass needs 730 New Jersey 843-4416
Also on tour are the zoo's two female Canada Geese, who have laid more than 40 unfertilized eggs for each other and are inseparable. The pair are favorites of animal keeper Jane Tollini.
PARKER
Dresses,
Gloves,
Rhinestone
Jewelry forth
DEB BALL!
come to
Barb's Vintage Rose
Mon-Sat 10:5:30
927 Massachusetts
841-2451
Budget Travel Experts
- Budget airfares anywhere.
* International student airfares.
* Railpasses issued here.
* International identity cards.
* Worldwide adventure tours.
* Travel gear and guidebooks.
* Expert travel advice.
Council Travel
10344Omington Ave
Fawnsburg IL 60001
1-800-475-5070
Lawrence Donor Center Help yourself by helping others
816 W.24th St.
Behind Laird Noller Ford
- * * * * *
Open Mon - Thurs 8am - 6pm
Fri 8-16 Sat 9am - 1pm
舒适睡眠
Save lives by giving plasma!
$15 dollars for first donation!
Monday- Tuesday
Lunch Special!
1/2 Sandwich
& Soup
$4.25
Quinton's
BAR & DELI
23oz.
Draft
Beer
$1.75
Everyday!
Thursday
Ladies Night
Big Girl Draws
$1.00
812-6560
615 Mass.
Lawrence, KS
Parking in rear
Godfather's Pizza
BIG VALUE MENU
2 LARGE
$9.99
BIG
VALUE
MENU
Godfather's Pizza™
2 LARGE
$9.99
BIG VALUE MENU
711 W. 23rd • 843-6282
$5.99
DELIVERY
OF $9.99 each
LARGE BIG VALUE PIZZA
CHOOSE FROM
TWO TOPPER
Cheese plus
2 Toppings of your choice
TRIPLE MEAT FLAST
Sausage + Pepperoni
and Dorito
Godfather's
Pizza
Valid only at
711 W. 23rd
EXPIRES
3/15/92
2 FOR
LUNCH
BUFFET
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Pizza + Breadsticks
Pasta + Dessert
Godfather's
Pizza
Valid only at
711 W. 23rd
EXPIRES
3/15/92
$9.99
FOR HEALTH
BURGER
BIG VALUE PIZZAS
2 LARGE
CHOOSE FROM
SUPER PEPPERONI
Loaded with Pepperoni
OF CLASSIC
Sausage + Pepperoni
Onion + Green Pepper
Godfather's
Pizza
Valid only at
711 W. 23rd
EXPIRES
3/15/92
FOR SALE! ADD $1 PER BUFFER. Valid
on Friday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday, 11:00 a.m. to 12:30
pm. Original Gate Price. Limited delivery
with $1
$999
Godfather's
Pizza
营业时间
09:30-21:00
EXPIRY
3/15/2024
THE PRINCETON REVIEW
LSAT GMAT GRE
Arrow
Call 843-3131
UNIVERSITY Optical Club!!!
Eye Glasses at Nearly Wholesale Prices.
Budget Frames $10.95
Fashion Frames $29.95
Designer Frames
Polo $84.95
LizClaiborne $59.95
Stetson $59.95
Single Vision Lenses
Many, Many More
EyeCare Optical
548 Westport Road Kansas City, MO 64111
EyeCare Optical
3801S. Noland Road
Independence, MO 64055
922-8200
252-2020
Last Chance at '91 Prices!!
Killer Savings.
Save up $100
Now's the time to jump for an ArtCarved graduation ring — and save up to $100!
Our wide selection of rings are so finely crafted they come with a lifetime guarantee.
ARTCARVED
ARTCARVED
SU KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores
See the ArtCarved Representative a
Kansas Union Feb. 12-14
Burge Union Feb. 12 & 13
BOOKSTORES
Kansas and Burge Unions
J
fc
Roses
foryourValentine!
Prices start at $19.95 per dozen
FLOWERS 4 LESS
M-F9 to 7 We're also open on Sundays 1 to 5 Sat. 9 to 5 All major credit cards accepted New location at 9th and Indiana Suite 701D 842-0700
0
ATTENTION Pre-Med
Students!
Including dental optometry and veterinary students
Informational meeting February 17, 7 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union
Representatives from the KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
- Application Procedures
- Admission Requirements
- Answer questions concerning application information
For more information call 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall
LONG JOHN SILVER'S.
2-Piece Chicken and Fries $1.99
Two pieces of batter-dipped chicken & fries.
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Good at:
1503 W.23rd St.
LONG JOHN SILVERS.
SLAFFORD NEPPI
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
---
Fish, Chicken
Fish, Chicken and Fries $1.99
One piece of batter-dipped fish, chicken, & fries.
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Good at:
Good at:
1503 W. 23rd St.
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
LONG JOHN
SILVERS.
SEAL DATE 1940/11/27
Fish, Shrimp and Fries $1.99 One piece of batter-dipped fish three pieces of batter-diped shrimp & fries.
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
Good at:
1503 W. 23rd St
LONG JOHN
SILVERS.
INVALID FOR EXPIRY
6-Piece Shrimp
Piece Shirt
and Fries
$1.99
Six pieces of batter-dipped shrimp and fries.
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Good at:
1503 W.23rd St.
LONG JOHN
SILVERS.
STAFFORD SHOP
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
Try our fast drive-thru service for lunch and dinner. On Tuesday students receive a 20% discount on regular price entrees.
---
NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFSE
Purported slander angers Jews
Paris
Israeli and French Jews denounced Yasser Arafat yesterday after the broadcast of a tape-recorded conversation in which the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization supposedly called Jews "dirt."
The PLO envoy in Paris, Ibrahim Souss, who purportedly talked to Arafat during the phone call, denied the conversation ever took place.
Yitzhak Eldan, an Israeli official in Paris, said the comments broadcast Tuesday by Cable News Network illustrated the "double language" of the PLO.
Israelis contend that PLO leaders are conciliatory in public but anti-Jewish in private. PLO officials have been barred from the U.S.-sponsored Middle East peace talks at the insistence of Israel, which contends that Arafat is not sincere about dropping the PLO's goal of destroying the Jewish state.
Car bomb damages embassies
Lima, Peru
Police set up checkpoints and deployed bomb squads throughout the Peruvian capital of Lima yesterday after a car bomb exploded Tuesday night outside the U.S. ambassador's home, killing three police guards.
U. S. officials condemned the attack, which they said destroyed a 30-foot section of the wall outside Ambassador Anthony Quainton's residence and shattered windows at the nearby British and Israeli embassies. Another police guard was seriously injured.
The bombing was one of seven in the capital Tuesday night.
Police said several people were slightly injured in the other attacks—at five banks and a movie theater.
From The Associated Press
Relentless rainfall covers California in muddy mess
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — A storm smashed ashore yesterday, causing flash floods that washed motor homes out to sea and mud slides that buried a couple in their bed, killing them.
Freeways and vital canyon roads throughout Southern California were closed by mud slides, flooding and accidents, including Pacific Coast Highway and the Ventura Freeway, one of the main north-south state highways.
"It's an unbelievable mess," said Officer Scott Ellis of the California Highway Patrol.
Rain had been falling since Sunday. The National Weather Service said that before dawn yesterday, a rain cell poured out water at a rate of an inch an hour. More Pacific storms were poised to move ashore in coming days, the weather service said.
into the sea, closing 70 miles of Los Angeles beaches. Northwest of Los Angeles in Ventura County, the Ventura River surged out of its banks and washed through a recreational vehicle park.
an overloaded treatment plant spewed raw sewage into the ocean.
Dozens of people fled the Ventura Beach RV Resort, but the water rose so fast that occupants of some motor homes, trailers and campers had to take refuge auf their vehicles, awaiting rescue by helicopters and boats.
Susie Riggs Orm fled the RV park for higher ground. "The trailers just started tipping and turning and everything was just a mess." she said. "It was devastating."
Up to 10 inches of rain had fallen in some areas and
At least one motor home was washed out of the park, scraped under a highway bridge and then plunged beneath a coastal railroad bridge as the water forced it out to sea. Another was seen smashed up against the railroad bridge.
NATURAL WAY
Natural Glow Clothing &
Natural Body Care
820-822 Moss
841-0100
H
Police tried to convince the remaining band and march leader Amanullah Khan to call off an attempt to storm the frontier and enter Indian-controlled Kashmir on Thursday morning, government officials and the militants said.
Afg.
Muzaffarabad
Kashmir
Troops fire on extremists
Islamabad
China
0 200
Miles
Pakistan India
New Delhi
Nepal
Knight-Ridder Tribune
The Jammu-Kashmir Libera
CHANERI, Pakistan — Pakistani troops fired toward a group of Muslim militants yesterday to halt their march on Indian-controlled Kashmir, killing at least 12. Another 150 were injured in the clash.
150 marchers abandoned the march and returned home.
About 1,000 marchers pushed through rock barricades and past hundreds of police firing tear gas. They used their trekk to the disrupted border.
When they refused, soldiers moved in and surrounded the group. They surrendered without resistance but were later released, the government said.
841-0100
They got within five miles of the frontier before heavy rain forced them to stop. There, all but about
12 killed near Pakistan-Indian border as Muslims struggle to enter Kashmir
The Associated Press
tion Fronl called the march to mark the second anniversary of the execution of its founder on Feb. 11, 1990, in India.
Jayhawk Bookstore
in the city of Knoxville, TN
JBS
Briti-Bus
Call for Special Charter Rates
Mon-Thurs · 843-3826
Cornucopia
A Restaurant & Bar
1801 Massachusetts 842-9637
LEVI
LEVI'S 501
S KING of Jeans
740 MASS. • 843-3933
The Jazzhaus
♩ ♫
Thursday, February 13 From Minneapolis the Picadors
Friday & Saturday, February 14 & February 15 Chili Funk with guerilla theater
Mondays & Wednesdays
$2.50 Pitchers & 50¢ Draws
Open 7 days a week--4:00 p.m. to 2:00a.m.
Open 7 days a week--4:00 p.m. to 2:00a.m Fridays afternoons--chow line starts at 5:30! All KU Basketball Games Will Be Shown On Our Lovely Big Screen T.V.
PIZZA SHUTTLE HOT ON THE SPOT!
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Everyday Two-Pers
2—Pizzas
2—Toppings
2—Cakes
$9.00
Prime Time Special
3—Pizzas
1—Topping
4—Cakes
$11.50
Party "10"
10 Pizzes
1—Topping
$30.00
YOU HAVE TO SEE
THIS JEWELRY
ASSORTMENT TO
BELIEVE IT!!!
Krazy Ray's
811 East 23rd
842-7621
842-1212
Mass Sarker Lawrence
23rd Lumber
Haskell Indian X Crazy
Junior/College Ray's
Over 500 pairs!
Men's, women,
children's, all
leather Hi-tops &
Lo-tops. Buy at
wholesale value.
WAREHOUSE SURPLUS & CLOSEOUT SALES HOURS: EVERYTHURS., FRI. & SAT., 10AM-5PM
Sale is open to swap-meeters, door-to door sales persons, retailers, gift shop owners, discount stores and any of our competitors!
Dress/Fancy Jewelry--
Nike Reebok L.A.Gear ATHLETIC SHOES
Values Up To $85 Suggested Retail!
Over 500 Different Women's or Men's Jewelry Items
General Merchandise--Socks, Batteries, Colognes, Perfumes, Hats, Bags, Toys, Books and many other specials. Buy at wholesale value.
YOUR CHOICE OF $189 each ANY ITEM
EUROPE IN TRANSITION
A Summer Program on Europe West and East June 10-July 29,1992
Enhance Your Future This Summer
- Taught in English -
DiS
Denmark's International Study Program
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
SUMMER COURSE OFFERINGS FOR KU CREDIT:
SUMMER COURSE OFFERINGS FOR KU CREDIT:
*The European Community
*European Security Issues
*East-West Business Relations
Modern Scandinavian Art and Architecture
Nordic Mythology
Danish Language
DIS also offers fall and spring seminars in Humanities and Social Sciences, International Business, and Architecture and Design. Come by the KU Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, for more information.
Come to an information meeting Thursday, February 13 at 3:00 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
8
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
1
RUDY'S 749 0055
PIZZERIA
Now Delivering 11-2 pm!! M-S
Almost the Weekend (Thursday) Special!
Get a Large 2 Topping Pizza and 2 drinks
all for only $7.99!!
Concerned, Confidential & Personal Health Care For Women
DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES
SAFE AND AFFORDABLE ABORTION SERVICES
GYN CARE. -- FREE PREGNANCY TESTING
BIRTH CONTROL. -- INCLUDING NORPLANT
IMPLANTS
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH FOR WOMEN
4401 West 109th (1-435 & Roe)
Overland Park, Kansas
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH
FOR WOMEN
Toll Free 1-800-227-1918
Providing quality health care to women since 1974
VISA, Mastercard and Insurance plans accepted
THIS WEEK STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA 864-SHOW
De Sica's Neorealist Classic! The Bicycle Thief
Dali, Bunuel, Cocteau & Clair Surrealist Fish Night
I
7:00 Tuesday, Feb. 11
7:00 Thursday, Feb. 12
1:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
7:00 Thursday, Feb. 13
4:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
plus
Friday, Feb. 17-30 & 10:00
at Haskingham Hall
Films are screened in Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Box Office, Level 4, Kansas Union
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
Marie's Bouquet of Flowers
Mylar Valentine Balloons only $1^{25} each with the purchase of one dozen roses!
- balloon bouquets * delivery service * corsages *
* wedding service * boutonnières *
* funeral service *
ALL MAYOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED
1822 W. 23rd (Next to Yellow Sub)
HOURS: M-F 9-7, SAT. 9-5
749-2212
Sweetheart Celebration.
Join us during Valentine's weekend
February 14, 15, 16
for a special
Filet Mignon for Two
$19.95
or
Steak and Lobster Tail
$12.95
Make this weekend the
perfect celebration.
Mr. Steak
920 W. 23rd 841-3454
WORLD AT RISK
Report assesses AIDS epidemic
The Associated Press
GENEVA — More than 1 million people contracted the virus that causes AIDS in recent months, 90 percent of them through heterosexual intercourse, the World Health Organization said yesterday.
In a chilling assessment of the spread of the AIDS epidemic, the U.N. health agency predicted that the disease would soon become the main cause of premature death in many Western cities and would leave up to 10 million African children orphaned by the end of the decade.
A WHO report, "Current and Future Dimensions of the HIV-AIDS Pandemic," said that by early January, 10 million to 12 million people had caught the human immunodeficiency virus. This was 1 million higher than the previous assessment in April. The new figure included 1 million children.
It can take 10 years or longer for a person infected with HIV to develop AIDS symptoms. Most people diagnosed with AIDS die within a few years.
The agency estimated that about 1 million people in the United States had been infected with HIV as of this year.
"By 1992, an estimated 1.6 million HIV infections may have occurred in Australasia, North America and Western Europe, about two-thirds of these in the United States," the report said.
The report reiterated projections that by the year 2000,30 million to 40 million people would have contracted HIV.
"In other words, WHO estimates that infections will at best triple and at worst quadruple in just eight years time," the report said.
Michael Merson, head of WHO's AIDS division, said that an aggressive prevention campaign would save millions of lives. In particular, WHO wants to drive home the message that condoms must be used in all casual sexual relationships.
BOSTON - People with HIV who receive the drug AZT early in their infections postpone the development of AIDS, but once the disease develops their health declines more rapidly than those who start the medicine later, a study concludes.
Underlining its fears that heterosexual adults are at growing risk of AIDS, WHO said that 90 percent of all new adult HIV infections since April were the result of heterosexual intercourse.
WHO said that even in industrialized countries, where the virus used to be concentrated in the homosexual and drug-using population, there was a growing trend toward heterosexual transmission.
For instance, in the United States heterosexual intercourse accounted for 3 percent of all reported AIDS cases in 1985. By 1991 this had doubled to 6 percent.
The study was intended to settle the question of when people infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, should start taking AZT, also known as zidovudine. However, the study failed to provide a clear answer.
Study questions when to begin AZT treatment
The Associated Press
The study, directed by John Hamilton, was conducted at Veterans Affairs medical centers in eight cities. It was published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Feb. 6.
In an editorial, Lawrence Corey and Thomas Fleming of the University of Washington speculated that AZT's benefits decreased with time, speeding up the fatal effects of AIDS when it arrived.
Researchers are now testing new combinations of drugs to see if switching to other medicines will improve the survival of longtime users of AZT.
Hey Students!!!
THAILAND
If you liked Luke Skywalker and Indiana Jones, you'll love Young Jim Hawkins as he's pitted against the most remarkable pirates in fiction.
You asked for it back, now the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents A Special Event
The National Theatre of the Deaf in Treasure Island
JACKPOT
Treasure island rekindles the spirit of fun and adventure we all love...full of laughter and suspense. buried treasure and romance.
Don't miss this heroic stage by the Tony Award-winning company!
You'll See and Hear Every Word!!!
KU student tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved; KU student tickets are only $8 & $6.50; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913-864-3982.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activate Fee, Sugarbout Society, and the Kansas University Endowment Association
1/2 Price for KU Students!!!
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, February 18, 1992
Haskell Indian Junior College Auditorium
PASTA SPECIAL
$2.95
ALL DAY EVERY DAY IN FEBRUARY
SPECIAL INCLUDESFRESH PASTA WITH MEAT OR TOMATO SAUCE, SALAD AND ITALIAN BREAD
Mario's
ITALIAN CAFFE
7041/2MASS.
842-2555
Burge
KU Bookstore
Customer
Service Desk,
level 2,
Burge Union
Kansas & Burge Unions
Wescoe Terrace Cashier, level 1 Wescoe Hall
Jaybowl, level 1 Kansas Union
Mt. Oread Bookshop, level 2, Kansas Union
"Love Me Like A Hawk"
Valentine Drawing!!!!!!
Win a Spring Break Trip for two to Panama City Beach, Florida with SUA! Also: Beach towels, squeeze bottles, case of pop, a catered dinner for two, two SUA movie passes and two Jaybowl free game passes!!!
Have your entry blank stamped at each of the locations listed, then drop it off at SUA. Be sure to include your name, phone number and KUID. Only completed forms will be considered. One entry per person. Union employees not eligible. Entry Deadline: 2 pm, Feb. 14. One winner drawn. Need not be present to win.
Business Office, level 4 Kansas Union
Hawk's Nest Cashier, level 3, Kansas Union
Information Counter, level 4 Kansas Union
NAME
KUID
SUA level 4 Kansas Union
PHONE #
---
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
9
KU team builds space-station robot
Atthe Kansas Augmented Telerobotic Laboratory in Nichols Hall, on West Campus, Ray Dick, Mount Hope graduate student, guides one arm of the Dual-Aarm Kraft Bilateral Feedback Telerobotic System.
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas Augmented Telerobotics Laboratory is working on the technology for a robot that could be used to help build a planned NASA space station.
Researchers at the lab, situated at the Space Technology Center on West Campus, have been working on the robot since 1989.
The arms of the robot are important to the space-station project because they could cut down on the time an astronaut spends in space, said Terry Faddis, associate professor of mechanical engineering.
Faddis and 11 people have been working on adding senses to the robot, such as sight, touch and sound, to help the astronaut.
The original version of the robot was used underwater from oil rigs and was not made to perform delicate space-assembly tasks. Faddis said.
It will take about 3,000 hours of
outer space to build the station, Fadda
and its crew.
Bryan Greenway, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, has been working on adding the sense of touch to the robot. He has added a lever to the hand grip so the astronauts can gauge the amount of pressure they are applying.
"At first, it doesn't seem like you can make the connection, but after you've used something like that for awhile it very quickly becomes second nature," Faddis said.
The team also is working on both a voice-activated system and a way to give the robot more control of its operations.
People working on the project compared the prototype to the robot arms used in the movie "Aliens." Astronauts would control the robot — also called a telerobotic — from inside the space capsule with their hands.
"The whole concept of this system is making the astronaut feel like he is out at the site, where those telerobotics are," Faddis said. "So we're trying to develop something called better telepresence."
Telepresence is trying to feed more information back to the operator of the robot while they are running it, he said.
One of the team's goals is to achieve autonomous control, which means that the computer would be intelligent enough to do certain tasks without a human operator. Faddiss said.
The team is testing how effective its work is by using volunteers who know nothing about teierobotics, Greenway said. The team will tape and time the volunteer doing tasks with and without the additions of the senses to see how helpful they really are and where they need to be improved.
The KU telerobotics team works in cooperation with NASA, Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp. of Topeka,
ADVERTISING WORKS!
and Kraft Telerobotics of Lenexa
Kraft supplied the arms and the basic computer system, which has been rebuilt and improved by the team. Faddis said.
Kraft also donated much of the $400,000 it took to start the project, he said. More than $1 million has been invested in the project.
The project could be profitable for the University and its sponsors
through the sale of any marketable patents that are developed, he said.
The project has garnered interest from outside the University.
McDonnell Douglas Space Systems of Huntington Beach, Calif., is working on a contract with KU to develop the technology for a robot, not only for the space station, but also for other tasks such as working with hazardous waste materials, said Steve
He said KU had one of the most advanced programs in telerobotics in the nation.
Fleichaker, engineer research scientist and developer for McDonnell Douglas.
Fleichhaker said KU has already spent a lot of time on the project and made a lot of progress.
"We see a lot of potential there," he said.
BUY SELL TRADE recycled clothing
ARiz@NQ
TRADING CO.
734 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 913-749-2377 Open 7 days a week
Valentine's Day Gift List
For Her:
For Her:
❄️ Jewelry
Heart Lockets
Sterling Silver
Marcasite & Onyx
1928 Jewelry
❄️ Ray Ban*Sunglasses
Lingerie
For Him:
♥ Valentine Boxers
♥ Silk Boxers
♥ Leather Gloves
♥ Leather Bomber Jackets
♥ Formal Wear
♥ Rav Ban*Sunsplasses
For That Very Special Someone (Upstairs)
▶ Novetly Lingere
Garter Belts
Stockings
Novetly Briefs
▶ Body Paints
ETC, ETC, ETC.
Clothing & Accessories for Men & Wome
928 Mass. 843-0611
Hours: 10-5:30 M.Sat.
til 8 on Thurs.
MICROSOFT PRODUCTS
www.microsoft.com
Macintosh PowerBook
Macintosh
Welcome to the Macintosh World.
This is your first macintosh computer.
Your Macintosh will be a digital home.
It's ready for you.
PowerBook
Jazz is a global music genre. Jazz music originated in New York City in the early 20th century.
It was created by African-American jazz musicians and composers, and it has influenced many other musical traditions worldwide. Jazz can be heard on radio, television, film, and even on music websites like YouTube and Spotify.
Sometimes to do your best work all you need is a change of scenery.
The new Apple* Macintosh* PowerBook* computers give you the freedom to work anywhere you want, any time you want.
They're small enough to fit in a book bag. Powerful enough for your toughest class assignments. And they're affordable, too.
The Apple SuperDrive* disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks—
They can be expanded to up to 8MB of memory and come standard with plenty of hard disk storage.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
They run virtually all Macintosh software. And can run for up to three hours on a single battery charge.
With built-in AppleTalk* Remote Access software and a modem, you can use a PowerBook to retrieve files from your project partner's Macintosh without leaving the library. Or log on to the library computer without leaving your room.
allowing you to exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer. Add SoftPC and you can run MS-DOS programs, too.
There are three models from which to choose: the PowerBook 100 is the lightest, most affordable PowerBook, the PowerBook 140 offers higher
It's the next thing.
performance and a built-in Apple SuperDrive disk drive and the PowerBook 170 is the highest-performance PowerBook. All three offer bright, adjustable backlit screens and the simplicity of Apple's latest system software innovation—System 7. And their ergonomic, all-in-one design makes them comfortable to use—no matter where you do your best work.
See the PowerBook computers at our place today,
and while you're in, be sure to ask us for details about
the Apple Computer Loan.
There's no telling where a PowerBook could take you.
KU Bookstore Burge Union - Level 2
864-5697
苹果
Macintosh. he power to be your best at KU.
The Athlete's Foot.
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
PUPS Grill YEP, BUD LIGHT ON TAP
PUPS
CORNER OF 9TH AND INDIANA
Dickinson
831-8000
Dickinson
2339 5116 831
FINAL ANALYSIS(R)
(44.5) / 72.5 / 9.50
FRIEDGREENTOMATOES (FJ-13)
JFK (R)
FATHER OF THE BRIDE (PG)
GRANDCANYON(R)
(*4* 50, 7:15 9:45)
LASTBCOUTS(R)
(*4* 30, 7:15 9:45)
Will still offer students the $3.50
price at evening shows.
$3 Prime-Timer Show (+)/Senior Citizen Anytime
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00:
Man in the Moon(PG-13) Eye 530 730 930
841-5191
HILLCREST
925 IOWA -
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841-5191
Hard touch card the Capitl Bove07.500-790
Krups(KF) Eve. 5.15 7.100 9.30
Freefeek(R) Eve. 9.15
Beauty & the Beacq) Eve. 5.15 7.15
Hook(PG) Eve. 6.15 8.00
Medicine Man) Eve. 500 7.195 945
Prince of Tides(R) Eve 500 730 956
Shining
Through(R) Eve 500 730 956
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
642
Mass.
LIBERTY HALL
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NEW YORK — Researchers have found what they call the best evidence yet for the existence of a black hole. They found it by studying an unseen object orbited by a star in our Milky Way galaxy.
The Associated Press
The researchers calculated that the mass of the unseen object was large enough that it must be a black hole.
Other scientists said that the evidence was intriguing but that they did not yet consider it the strongest case for a black hole.
In theory, a black hole is an extremely dense object with a gravitational pull that is so strong that not even light can escape.
The latest work is reported in today's issue of the journal Nature.
"I think it's almost certainly a black hole," said study co-author Phil Charles, head of the astronomy group at the Royal Greenwich Observatory in the Canary Islands.
The researchers analyzed light from the orbiting star, which with the unseen object makes up a feature called V404 Cygni, at least 5,000 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Cygnus. A light-year is the distance light travels in one year, about 5.9 trillion miles.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—Richard Truly, a space shuttle pioneer who supervised NASA's return to flight after the Challenger disaster, resigned under White House pressure yesterday as head of the space agency.
NASA supervisor resigns under pressure
"Frankly, it wasn't what I had planned, but it's American history for you," Truly said. "It's a situation where the president decided ... to make a change. I've always said I served at the pleasure of the president."
Truly, a former astronaut, has been administrator of the agency since 1989
President Bush said in a written statement that Truly would remain on the job until April 1.
A National Aeronautics and Space Administration source said Truly was puzzled by the pressure to resign, which came from the new White House chief of staff, Samuel Skinner.
Sen. Almond Gore, D-Tenn., said the council may have forced Truly to leave by its insistence "on running NASA from the vice president's office even when the professionals at NASA advised strongly against the vice president's constant overruling of policy decisions at the agency."
By determining characteristics of the star's orbit, researchers calculated that the central object's mass must be at least six times that of the sun.
black holes, but Charles said that they had no physical justification for believing such objects existed
That is too massive for a compact object to be anything other than a black hole, according to standard theory.
Some theoretical work suggests that other hypothetical objects might have masses like those of
Yet, astrophysicist Joseph Dolan of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said that such weird, exotic species of a beast could not be ruled out.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
SPORTS
11
Jayhawks blow away Cyclones
CITY OF NEW YORK
Coach Roy Williams turns to calm down a fired-up Kansas crowd.
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
After sputtering in Saturday's loss at Oklahoma State, the Kansas Jayhawks' offense was at full throttle again last night against Iowa State.
Kansas set the defensive tone early and controlled the backboards. The Jayhawks held Iowa State to 36 percent goal-goal shooting and outbounded the Cyclones 42-27, the largest margin for Kansas in any game this season.
Behind a career-high 25 points from point guard Adonian Jordan, the No. 4 Jayhawks shot 62 percent from the floor and dismantled the Cyclones 91-60, improving their record to 18-2 and 6-1 in the Big Eight Conference.
"We played exceptionally well, Kansas coach Roy Williams said. I really thought we were outstanding defensively.
The Jayhawks broke the game open late in the first half. Leading 23-18, Kansas went on a 10-9rnd and took a 33-18 lead with 4:52 left in the half. By halftime, the Jayhawks had increased that lead to 42-26.
"We talked about being determined. I didn't think we were as determined as we wanted to be on Saturday. I think we bounced back from that loss Saturday pretty well."
IOWA State cut the lead to 54-37 with 14:51 left, but the Jayhawks went on another 10-0 run to take a 64-37 lead with 10:43 left, and the Cyclones, 17-6 and 3-4, never got closer than 27 after that.
Jordan and junior guard Rex Walters, who had 19 points, scored the Jayahawks' first seven points of the second half, giving Kansas a 51-30 lead.
Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said that Kansas deserved credit for taking the Cyclones out of their game.
"Kansas moved the ball super," he said. "We broke away from a lot of the things we've been doing well. I credit that to Kansas."
Williams said, "I told our kids they ought to feel very good about this because we beat a heckuva basketball team. I really believe Iowa State is an NCAA Team tournament."
Jordan was the catalyst for Kansas throughout the game. The 6-foot guard shot 10-of-14 from the field, including 4-of-6 from three-point range. He also had three assists and two steals.
"Adonis was just fantastic," Williams said. "He's been really discouraged about his game. I really think Adonis is back."
Jordan said he was glad to get back on track.
"Ireallywasn'tlooking to score," he said. "I just wanted to come out and play well.
"I had been taking a casual approach to our offense. From now on I'm going to be aggressive."
Walters, who had struggled somewhat in the last two games against Oklahoma State and Kansas State, said he felt more at ease during last night's game.
"I think that happens when you have fun," Walters said. "We decided we're not going to worry about things as much and just go out and have fun."
Junior Varsity Notes
Kansas 91
The Kansas junior varsity team improved its record to 15-1 after routing Allen County Community College 77-48 at Allen Field House prior to the men's game against Iowa State last night.
Brent Johnson led Kansas with 16 points and Donnie Braun and Blake Wiechbrodt each added 10.
| Player | M | FG | GF | T1 | R A | F | T2 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 25 | 6 | 3 | 1/1 | 1 | 2 | 7 |
| Poetty | 13 | 5 | 7 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 10 |
| Walters | 23 | 5 | 6 | 0 | 5 | 2 | 10 |
| Walters | 23 | 5 | 9 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 19 |
| Jordan | 29 | 10 | 14 | 1/2 | 4 | 3 | 3 |
| Jordan | 29 | 10 | 14 | 1/2 | 4 | 3 | 3 |
| Woodyberry | 28 | 3 | 6 | 0 | 3 | 4 | 4 |
| Oesttagt | 14 | 3 | 6 | 1/2 | 5 | 0 | 7 |
| Nash | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Garey | 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Grigsniak | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2/2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Johanning | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0/2 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
KANSAS
1
Iowa State 60
Percentage: FG 62% (13) / MG 38% FT 62% (13)
Three-point game: 7/13 (Jondland 4
Walters) 5 blocked shots: 6 (Ostargate 3, Pauley
2, Seeds) 5 (Walters 5, Jondland 4)
Pauley 5 (Walters 5, Jondland 4)
Disignon 31 5/15 01 2 2 1 14
Bayless 29 3/11 7/7 2 6 1 14
Michalik 30 6/10 0 3 0 3 13
Eaton 23 1/6 0 1 1 1 12
Hoiberg 31 3/6 0 5 1 1 6
McCoy 11 0/3 0 0 1 1 2
Pippet 8 0/1 0 0 1 0 1
Peirson 12 1/2 0 0 1 0 1
Earles 12 3/5 3/5 7 0 3
Bergman 9 1/2 2/2 0 0 1 4
Bivens 5 0/1 1/2 1 0 0 1
Percentages: FG 36.1% (22%), FT 76.5%
(13.3%) Three-point goals: 3/11 (Thugen,
Michalik) Blocked shots: 0 Steals (McCoy,
Michalik, Hosberg)
Techniques, non-
Kansas center Eric Paulews slams two of his 10 points in the Jayhawks' 91-60 victory against Iowa State in Allen Field House.
Cowboys, Hoosiers upset by underdogs
The Associated Press
Colorado used a zone defense to hold Bryon Houston to seven points and the Buffalo beat No. 2 Oklahoma State 57-53 last night, their second straight home upset of a ranked team.
Donnie Boyce's free throw with 3 seconds remaining sealed the victory, which came on the heels of an overtime victory against Oklahoma last week.
The Cowboys were not the only top five team to fall as No. 4. Indiana suffered a 71-67 loss to Minnesota.
The Buffs (11-9, 2-5) trailed Oklahoma State 30-22 at halftime, but rallied behind the zone defense, which helped hold Houston well under his 20.9 scoring average.
The Cowboys (21-2, 5-2) had 20 turnovers and shot just 39 percent, while Colorado finished at 47 percent.
Colorado took the lead for good at 47-45 with 5:54 remaining on a basket by Poncho Hodges.
Randy Robinson extended the lead to 56-51 with 1:08 left, but the Cowboys had one last chance. Bryant Reeves scored to cut the margin to 56-53 and Sean Sutton then stole the inbounds pass and set up a possible game-tying three-pointer by Darwyn Alexander.
Boyce rebounded the miss with 3 seconds left and was fouled by Sutton. He made the first of two free throws.
Boyce led Colorado with 15 points, while Hodges had 12.
Indiana's loss dropped the Hoosiers, 17-4 and 8-2, out of a first place tie with Ohio State in the Big Ten. Indiana's only other conference loss was to Michigan State on Feb. 2.
Syracuse admits NCAA violations
The Associated Press
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Boosters gave Syracuse basketball players cash, free meals, free legal advice and other benefits in violation of NCAA rules, university officials admitted yesterday as they released the findings of an internal investigation.
incidents," Shaws said.
But Syracuse chancellor Kenneth Shaw stressed that coach Jim Boeheim and his assistants were not responsible for the violations, and that the university had not lost control of its perennially ranked men's program.
"The violations we found were unacceptable, but they were isolated
The school admitted 13 rules violations and probable wrongdoing in two other instances. One of the violations, which involved players receiving free haircuts, occurred before 1985 and is not punishable under the NCAA's general four-year statute of limitations. Shaw said.
Shaw declined to speculate on what penalties Syracuse might face as a result of the 500-page report. But he said there certainly would be sanctions from the NCAA.
Until the current investigation,
Syracuse's basketball team had
never been accused of violating
NCAA rules. No team in the powerhouse Big East Conference has faced NCAA sanctions before.
"I'm pleased that they came to the conclusion there's no systematic intent to violate NCAA rules," said Boeheim, whose team is 16-4 this season and ranked 10th in the nation.
"That's something we've maintained from the very beginning, and I think that the violations that were discovered were isolated incidents."
Among the violations committed by the men's basketball program, according to the university's investigation:
Bill Rapp Jr., a car dealer who once worked as the team's scorekeeper at away games, sent players
$50 in cash inside Christmas cards every year between 1983 and 1990.
Players received free or reduced-priced meals and drinks at Grimaldi's, a popular local restaurant.
Rochester lawyer Loren Kroll gave free legal service to former Orangeman Tony Scott.
Boeheim declined to discuss the possible penalties that the NCAA could impose, but he said he thought his program had stood up well after nearly two years of scrutiny.
"There's no program that can withstand 22 months of investigation and not find a violation," said Boeheim.
Missouri Tigers triumph over K-State in catfight
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Anthony Peeler and Jamal Coleman each scored 19 points, and No. 9 Missouri fought off a second-half challenge from Kansas State for a 67-59 Big Eight Conference victory last night.
Missouri led 44-35 early in the second half before Kansas State went on a 15-4 run to take a 50-48 lead on Vincent Jackson's three-pointer with 9:33 to play. But Missouri scored nine straight points, the last six on three-pointers by Melvin Booker and Peeler.
Jevon Crudup added 14 points for Missouri (17,3,5-2), which won its third straight game. The Tigers have beaten Kansas State four straight times and eight straight at home.
Coleman, who entered the game averaging 9.2 points, has scored 56 points in the last three games. Booker, who had a career-high 24 points in Sunday's victory at Oklahoma, was held to seven points.
Jackson had 15 points for Kansas State (12-8, 2-5), which had lost its previous three road games by an average of 29 points. Wylie Howard added 13 and Gaylon Nickerson 12.
Kansas State's Askia Jones, who hit seven three-pointers and had 25 points in an upset of Nebraska on Saturday, opened the game with a three-pointer but missed his next six shots before hitting two straight three-pointers midway through the second half to cut the Missouri lead to 44-41. He finished with nine points.
Coleman had 12 points and seven rebounds and Crudrup added 10 points in the first half as Missouri took a 35-27 lead. Coleman scored the last four points of the half, following a miss by Jeff Warren and hitting a jumper in the lane.
Jayhawks crushed by Lady Buff rush
Kansan sportswriter
By Cody Holt
The No. 16 Kansas women's basketball team lost to Colorado 65-54 last night at Boulder in a key Big Eight Conference match-up.
The loss drops the Jayhawks, 18-4 and 7-2 in conference play, into a first place tie with Nebraska. Nebraska, 17-5 and 7, beat Missouri 69-65 in overtime last night in Lincoln.
Colorado's defense turned the table on Kansas' nation-leading defense.
The Lady Buffs held the Jayhawks to only 37.5 percent from the field, nearly 10 percent below their season average. Kansas' 54 points was the second lowest total for the Jayhawks this season.
The Jayhawks beat Colorado 66-48
Jan.18 at Allen Field House.
One difference in last night's outcome was the resurgence of Colorado's freshman guard Shelley Sheetz. Sheetz, Colorado's leading scorer averaging 13.3 points a game, exploded for 15 points lastnightincluding an extra two-throw stripe. She scored only four points in the teams' first meeting.
Colorado's junior forward Sherrie King was the game's second-leading scorer with 16 points.
Kansas was led by seniors Kay Kay
Kansas 54
| Player | M | FG | FFT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Johnson | 25 | 1 | 4/2 | 20 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Ayckow | 26 | 1 | 4/4 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Caycock | 26 | 9 | 1/2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Wendell | 23 | 4/11 | 0/1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| Hart | 40 | 5/16 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 4 | 12 |
| Truitt | 40 | 1/6 | 3/2 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 18 |
| Trout | 22 | 1 | 2/4 | 14 | 2 | 1 | 8 |
| Muncey | 22 | 0 | 1/1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
| Kite | 3 | 1 / 1 | 0 / 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Percentages: FG 37.5% (21/56), FT 58.8%
(10/13, point 7) Wheel-spiners: 27 (Wheeepers,
Blocked) shots no. Steals: 9 (Acecve 12)
Technicals: 2, Johnson, Shariff, Hart)
Technicals: Shariff
Colorado 65
Mattern 37 3/4 3/4 0 0 8 8 3 6
King 37 7/11 2/11 0 8 8 3 16
Wirks 19 0/6 11/11 0 5 8 3 16
Wirk 19 0/6 11/11 0 5 5 3 17
McKinney 20 3/4 1/11 0 5 3 1 2
Mack 25 3/5 3/5 5 5 2 1
Jacobson 25 4/13 1/13 0 5 1 1
Jacobson 1 1/13 0/13 0 9 0
Percentages: FG 42.6% (23/54), FT 18% (75/80)
Three-point goals: 4 (2, Shaeffel, McKinney)
Blocked shots: 2 (Wifry) Steals: 10 (Stezzle, Wifry, 2 McKinney) Launch: None.
Techniques: none.
Halftime: Kansas 26, Colorado 27.
Officials: Strong, Benson. A: 1,810.
Hart and Danielle Shareef, each with 12 points. Shareef also led the Jayahawks with 11 rebounds and four assists in 33 minutes of play.
Kansas will play Iowa State at 2p.m. Sunday in Ames.
Unified hockey team fails
He did not realize how historic last night's victory was until he was told that the Soviets, now playing as the Unified Team, had lost just five games in its nine Winter Olympics.
Ecstatic goalie Petr Briza thrust both arms skyward as the final horn sounded on Czechoslovakia's 4-3 victory and, perhaps, the Olympic hockey dynasty of the Soviet Union.
Czech coach Ivan Hinka agreed, but said that one victory would neither get his squad a gold medal nor put the Unified Team out of contention.
"Ever in the Olympics? Oh, we go for beer," Briza said. "Yeah, it's pretty big."
Czechoslovakia and Canada, a 10-0 conqueror of Norway, became the first two teams to clinch medal-round berths. Botha 3-0. The Unified Team (2-1) still has an excellent chance to advance.
OLYMPIC BRIEFS
"Our team gets a great feeling every time we beat the Russian team," he said, "but it's only one game."
Four teams from each six-team pool make the medal round. In that single-elimination phase, the first-place team in each pool faces the fourth-place team in the other and the second plays the third.
Canada has beaten the three weakest teams in its pool, France (1-2), Switzerland (0-3) and Norway (0-3). It plays Czechoslovakia and the Unified Team before medal play begins.
France won last night's other game against Switzerland, 4-3.
while outscoring opponents 411-111 in past Olympic Games. And the Unified Team picked that dominance right up, routing its first two opponents, Switzerland and Norway, B-1.
The Soviet Union had won seven gold medals and compiled a record of 53-8-2.
But the Unified Team has been weakened by the loss of young stars such as Sergel Fedorov, Alexander Mogilny and Pavel Bure to the NHL.
U.S. still with one medal
Bonnie Blair, who won United State's sole gold medal in 500-meters speed skating Monday, reluctantly raced the 1,500 to satisfy her coach and boost flagging U.S. spirits. She finished 21st out of 32 skaters. Teammate Mary Dofer completed 15th.
Germany's Jacqueline Boerner
edged teammate Gunda Niemann by
five-hundredths of a second and won the gold. Japan's Seiko Hashimoto took the bronze.
Germany also won gold and silver in the 10-kilometer biathlon with Mark Kirchner and Ricco Gross.
U. S. skier Krista Schmidtinger finished second in day one of the combined slalom behind World Cup over all champion Petra Kronberger.
French teammates, Fabric Guy and Sylvan Gallium, won the gold and silver medals, respectively, in the Nordic combined event.
Cammy Myler, a U.S. medal favorite in the luge, finished fifth in the two-day women's singles competition, the best ever finish for a U.S. slider. Austrian sisters "oris and Angelika Neuner swept the gold and silver medals.
Today's Olympic Schedule
Alpine Skiing
Women's combined slalom, first run, 4 a.m.
Women's combined slalom, second run, 8 a.m.
Men's 10km,4 a.m. Women's 5km,7a m
Cross Country Skiing
Italy vs. Poland, 7a.m
United States vs. Finland, 10:30 a.m.
Sweden vs. Germany, 2:15 p.m.
Figure Skating
Men'soriginal program,1:30p.m. Freestyle Skiing
Men's 5,000-meter,8:45 a.m.
Men's and Women's moguls, finals,
5-30 a.m.
Speed Skating
Olympic medals count
MOSCOW 2014
Country G S B T
Germany 4 4 2 10
Austria 3 3 4 10
Unified Team* 3 1 2 6
France 1 2 0 3
Norway 1 1 1 3
Finland 0 1 2 3
Italy 1 1 0 2
U.S. ** 1 0 0 1
China 0 1 0 1
Canada 0 0 1 1
Switzerland 0 0 1 1
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus;
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
12
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
KU groups back bills against sex crimes
By Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writer
Two KU student groups are planning to support a package of six bills dealing with sex crimes.
The bills are in various stages of consideration at the Statehouse.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, heads the Senate Judiciary Committee, which drew up most of the bills. He said the package was designed to encourage victims of sex crimes to come forward.
"I think it is
something we have to do. It isn't fun work. We are asking tough questions."
"I think it is something we have to do," he said. "It isn't easy to do. It isn't fun work. We are asking tough questions."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr.
Kristin Lange, student body vice president and president of the Women's Student Union, said the
Winter Jr.
R-Lawrence
women's organization would sponsor a table in the Kansas Union where students could sign letters and petitions supporting the legislation.
Lange said the table would be set up during a Feb. 28 event celebrating the 20th anniversary of the formation of the department of women's studies.
Connie Burk, president of Students Against Violence Against Womyn, said her organization would be joining the Women's Student Union's effort.
"These bills are certainly something we will discuss with different legislators," she said.
A special committee within the judiciary committee will conduct hearings on the bills Feb. 20 and 21.
The package includes a proposal written by Jean Winter, Emporia senior, that would allow an accused rapist's sexual history to be admissible in
Another bill would allow an examination of sex offenders up for parole if the attorney general, district attorney or county attorney in the case filed a petition alleging the prisoner was a potential repeat offender.
court.
"Right now, we are letting people out of prison who will rape again."
Winter said the other bills would :
"I think we are trying to take advantage of improvement in mental health technology," Winter said. "Many believe diagnostic procedure is such that they now can identify people who will commit sexual offences again if they are released.
- Makerape of a spouse illegal. Current law states that being married to someone is defense for rape.
Create a statute of limitations on child abuse of three years past the discovery of the crime.
"The common thread is sexual offense," Winter said. "We are giving people more tools in the battle against sexual offenses and giving them tools to use in the recovery process."
LOOKING
for something to do tonight?
Come to our Rice & Beans Dinner 6:00 p.m., Thurs., Feb.13.
Program:"Free Trade with Mexico: What's the Hurry?"
Speaker: Jack Hedrick, Vice-Pres., UAW Local #249, Kansas City, and member, Greater Kansas City Maquiladora Task Force.
Reminder: Central America Week 1992: Lives in the balance. March 22-28, Something Scheduled for every day of the week, so if you're interested, keep your calendar free!
Sponsored by
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Kansas Union Jaybowl
Entry fee $6
Register in SUA Office today by 4:30 pm
prizes will be awarded, and winners qualify
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tournament in Manhattan Feb. 29 -
March 1, 1992
H
KU★KSU★US
ESU★WS
SPRING BREAK '92
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For More Information:
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or by stop at the USA Office, fourth floor Kansas Union,
8:30 - 4:30 pm Monday thru Friday
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University Daily Kansas
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
1982 Universal Press Syndicate
THE NATIONAL TRI
KENNEDY DOG CAUGHT IN NEIGHBOR'S GARBAGE
OTHER NEIGHBORS COMING FORWARD
FAMILY: "WE'RE BEHIND HUM ALL THE WAY"
TOGRAM TAKEN LAST NIGHT
COLUMN AHEAD 3:30 AM
DOGATCHER: "I KNEW HE WAS BAD NEIGHBOR"
14
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 13, 1992
Directory spreads culture in county
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
A local organization is putting together its second annual cultural resource directory for Douglas County.
Lawrence public schools use last year's directory, which includes KU faculty and international students, to plan speeches and programs.
Celebration of Cultures Inc. organizes the Cultural Resources Directory, which was first published last spring. Douglas County residents of different cultures can offer their services, such as speech giving and storytelling, in the directory. The deadline to be included in the directory is Saturday.
Mary Beth Bialeck, secretary at Pinkney Elementary School, 810 W. Sixth St., said Pinckney sometimes used the directory.
"But we have so many people who contact us already doing about speaking, plays and everything
else," she said. "We don't even have to use it all the time, but we have used it and will use it if it is necessary."
Dan Jaimes, principal of Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St., said the directory was just one of the school's resources for cultural programs.
"We get several items of this sort, but we undoubtedly have used the directory in our planning at some point," he said. "It's good for the community to have so many resources open to it."
Gloria Throne, second-grade teacher at Woodland Elementary School, 608 Elm St., said she had storytellers who were listed in the directory come to her class. She said another teacher asked a listed speaker to talk to sixth graders about the Holocaust.
Throne, who was co-chair of the committee that put together last year's directory, said that schools had other sources but that the direc-
Nancy Marshall, who co-chaired the Celebration of Cultures Educational Committee, said the committee wanted to help schools learn about the cultural diversity in Dougall County. She said last year's directory had been sent to all the Douglas County schools.
"Eventually, we will hit a plateau when tons of people will participate, and we can reach out everywhere," Marshall said.
Nancy Bjorge, president of Celebration of Cultures Inc., said that American Indian culture would be a major theme in the directory and at the Celebration of Cultures Festival on April 18 at the Douglas County Fairgrounds.
The 1991 directory featured four American Indian speakers, including three Haskell Indian Junior College instructors.
Portions of genes identified; patent creates a controversy
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Scientists say they have identified portions of 2,375 previously unknown human genes, using a technique that has led to a highly publicized dispute over gene patenting.
He is co-author of the report in the Feb. 6 issue of the journal *Nature*.
Combined with more than 300 gene portions previously found by a research project and reported last summer, the work may represent as much as percent of the entire completeness of human genes, researchers said.
The approach should help researchers find genes that cause disease as well as other genes, said J. Craig Venter of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Md.
Last year, the National Institutes of Health filed patent applications on the gene portions reported last summer, even though no one knew what the full
The report should help researchers isolate disease-causing genes.
genes did. Some prominent gene researchers criticized that move as premature.
NIH director Dr. Bernadine Healy announced yesterday that more patent applications would be filed on the newfound gene portions.
The research project focuses on the brain, where 30 percent to 50 percent of human genes are thought to be active, Venter said.
Genes are composed of building
blocks called bases, and the new research is aimed at identifying a portion of the bases for each of many genes. These portions can then be used to find the corresponding full genes, or they can be used to show where the full genes lie on the string-like structures called chromosomes, Venter said.
In addition, once the portions have been mapped onto the chromosomes, they will provide new markers that can help locate other genetic traits, he said.
Researchers found that 217 gene portions resembled parts of known genes, giving a clue about what the full genes may do. One portion apparently comes from an unknown gene involved in transporting a chemical that nerve cells use to communicate, and another apparently comes from a gene family that makes pump-like proteins linked to cystic fibrosis and some resistance to cancer drugs, Venter said.
The Etc. Shop
The Etc. Shop 843-0611 928 Mass REY-BAN BADUCH & LUME A PRODUCTION BY BAJUCH & LUME
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Call us if you want to talk sports!!
"Love Me Like A Hawk'
Kansas and Burge Unions Valentine Open House February 14,1992 11 am - 2 pm
KJHX
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
hawk"
Feb.13
Feb.14 DAY
B
Feb.14 EVENING
A baker will be available to decorate giant heart-shaped cookies, 11-1, Union Square
Fresh Flower Sale in both Union lobbies and Wescoe Terrace, 11-2
Fresh Power Sale in both Union lobbies and Wescoe Terrace, 11-2
Create Your Own Valentines in the Kansas Union lobby
Register for Carriage Rides, SUA office, 8:30-4:30
Register for Spring Break Trip to Florida in the Union departments. Entry forms located throughout Unions Jayhawk Mascots roving, passing out chocolate kisses
A baker will be available to decorate giant heart-shaped cookies, 11-1, Kansas Union lobby
Two for one bowling in the Jaybowl
Candy "Conversation Hearts," $1.50/lb.
Information Counter, Kansas Union lobby
Piano music, Kansas Union lobby, 11-1
Fortune teller, Kansas Union lobby, 11-2
Free Red Passion Punch, 11am, Kansas Union lobby
Register at the Bookstores to win free tickets to the KU-OU Basketball Game Feb. 24
Bookstore discounts, specially marked items
Half-price discounts on specially marked sandwiches and strawberry sodas at Wescoe Terrace, while supplies last
Candy count at Wescoe Terrace
Carriage Rides, 5:30-7:30 pm (Advance tickets should be purchased at the SUA Box Office)
Two for one bowling continues until 1 am in the Jaybowl
SUA movie: "101 Dalmatians," 7 & 9:30 pm
SUA movie: "Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down," midnight
Drawing for winner of Dream Date contest (Need not be present to win)
B
FRENCH
CHEESE
MAKING
Molly McGees
BETTY BROWN'S FOOD CO.
Treat your Valentine to a ton of sweets at Molly McGees.
Enjoy the Sweet Molly McGee - a Chocolate Lover's Dream
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(Grill closes at 12:00 a.m.)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.95
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY,FEBRUARY14,1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Senate vote favors bill that will slice election financing
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - Kansanslikelywillcast votes April 7 in a presidential primary despite Senate's previous attempts at cancelling it. Lawmakers, however, still have not appropriated money to pay for a primary.
The Senate voted 25-15 yesterday in agreement with a House of Representatives decision to curb financing of the schools. Mr. Gov. Joan Finney, who will go to Gov. Joan Finney, who is
expected to sign the measure
CAMPAIGN '92
The House voted unanimously Wednesday to amend a bill that was passed by the Senate last session but never acted upon.
The amendment extracted all Senate provisions, including a section that would have postponed the primary until the 1996 election.
In place of the provisions, the House inserted the contents of another bill, requiring Secretary of State Bill Graves to conduct the election for $1.5 million. Graves originally had requested $1.8 million.
In order to trim $300,000 off Graves' proposed figure, the bill requires that the state print the ballots, that names not be rotated on the ballots, and that volunteers monitor election sites.
If Finney sends the bill, lawmakers have to find the money to cover the $1.5 billion.
The House Appropriations Commit-
teercommended a bill yesterday that includes the $1.5 million appropriation.
The House is expected to pass the bill, but the Senate already voted down three appropriations bills aimed at financing the primary.
Sen. Lana Oleen, R-Manhattan, lead the charge to cancel the primary. She continued to voice her opposition yesterday.
"This bill is on a fast track destined to the pockets of the Kansas taxpayer."
Senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, said that although he opposed the primary, he supported the bill because it would reduce the cost.
"It looks more and more like we're going to have a primary," he said. "This bill would save a portion of that money."
Sen. Don Sallee, R-Troy, said the House had sent a strong message by unanimously voting to cut the cost of the 1992 primary.
"It itch they are saying we are going to have a primary," he said. "We need to pass this bill so preparations for that triary can begin."
House Majority Leader Tom Sawyer, D-Wichita, has been a strong supporter of the primary. He said yesterday that he had no intention of scheduling House debate on bills aimed at canceling the primary.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
See related story, p.9
NISSAN
Derek Nolen/KANSAN
Spill Delay
Northbound traffic is slowed after a truck, belonging to W.A. Dunbar and Son Trucking and Excavating, Inc., spilled hydraulic fluid along an eight-block stretch of Iowa Street. No one was injured yesterday in the two-vehicle accident that resulted from the spill.
A
John Boss, left, checks up on Tisha Stone, Olathe sophomore, and Bob Wiltfong, Omaha, Neb., senior, at the couple's date.
Volunteers brave peril of blind dating
KJHK's John Boss plays matchmaker for students who called radio talk show
By Paul Mikelson
Special to the Kansan
The Dating Game came to Lawrence last night, courtesy of the John Boss Show on KJHK-FM. Three women and three men were paired for a date after interviews earlier this week.
"We were thinking of what kind of fun stuff we could do to involve the students of KU," said Boss, a first-year law student, host of the show. Boss is not his real name. "I was watching the Love Connection, and thought, why can't we do it on the radio?"
More than 39 people called the station, many of them on a dare. The show's producers matched the couples after interviewing them. They asked about their activities, hometowns and what they tried to give them.
Bob Wiltfong, Neb, senior, was one of the people who did show up for his date.
Two couples went to Quinton's Bar and Deli, 615 Massachussetts St., for dinner. They planned to see a movie at Dickinson Theaters, 2394 Iowa St. The John Boss Show paid for their evening, but one couple had yet to arrive for dinner at 8:45 last
"I got persuaded to do it, but I got to meet someone new," he said.
Wiltfong originally was paired with another woman, but she canceled because of a work conflict. The radio station set Wiltfong up with the woman's roommate, Tisha Stone.
"It's been a joke all night," Stone said. "We're having fun."
Stone, Olathe sophomore, said she heard about the blind date when she was setting stations on her room-mate's new stereo.
"Even if there are no romantic sparks, it's fun," Stone said.
Pete Felder, Wichita senior, called in for the date because he wanted to talk to John Boss. Felder was paired with Kris Conn, Huntington Beach, Calif., junior.
Felder said Conn thought the date might be a conspiracy.
Connsaid, "Ithought it was going to be on America's Funniest Videos. I thought they were going to make a really good date and a really bad date.
She said that she questioned several times whether the date was a good idea.
"I really didn't think they were going to pick me," Conn said. "I called my Dad right before the date and told him the date was going to be hell."
Feldar said he feared Conn would go on the John Boss show today and say, "Well Chuck, he drove up in a Plymouth Satellite, 1969."
"I felt like everyone was staring at me." Conn said. "Everyone was listening to our conversation. My friends even followed me here."
Felder said, "They were really leery of what I was going to look like when I showed up. They thought I was an 18-year-old." Felder is a fifth-year senior.
The date winners will tell their stories separate
ly at 4 p.m. today on JKJK, 9.07 FM.
Med Center reaches out to Kansas
Kansan staff writer
By Katherine Manweiler
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — An interactive video system demonstrated yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center could bridge the gap between specialists at the Med Center and patients in rural Kansas communities.
Video monitors and cutting-edge medical equipment set up in Hays and the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan., allowed two pediatricians to perform follow-up examinations on infants with heart abnormalities yesterday.
Nicholas Miller is four months old. He has a narrow aortic valve in his heart which causes his blood to flow at a faster rate than normal.
Mattioli instructed Robert Cox, Miller's doctor, and the other medical staff in Hays in how to examine Miller and relate the information needed for the diagnosis.
Miller seemed content and happy as his mother, Joanna Miller, helped him wave at Leone Mattioli, pediatric cardiologist at the Med Center.
Atwo-dimensional echocardiogram was a key element in Mattioli's evaluation. Echocardiograms use ultrasonic rays to reflect the motions of the heart. The television screen showed the activity of Miller's heart as the sound equipment transmitted his fussing.
X-rays, stethoscope sounds and electrocardiograms also can be transmitted through the video system. Electrodes detect abnormalities in the heart.
The video system is an extension of a program that sends several Med Center specialists to Hays four times each year. Patients are charged for a regular consultation when they use the video system.
The Med Center began experimenting with the interactive system for diagnoses in mid-November, said Bill Mahler, executive director of the department of information technology at the Med Center.
Forty patients have been diagnosed since January using the video system; M
Mahler said the Med Center staff hoped to be able to network this interactive video system throughout the state, but the timing of that process depended on financing from the Kansas Legislature and participating hospitals.
Mattioli said the system demonstrated that the Center cared for the most vulnerable communities.
"The most important benefit is that access to specialists will be widely enhanced in rural areas," Mattioli said. "The only drawback is the lack of direct personal contact with patients.
That may be felt as a void."
A bill being debated in the Kansas Legislature would force the Med Center to graduate more primary-care physicians starting in 1996 or lose 10 percent of its financing. Part of the purpose of the bill is to encourage more KU Medical schools to practice in rural areas of Kansas.
John Moran, head of the department of cardiothoracic surgery at the Med Center, said he thought the interactive video system would encourage more KU Medical school graduates to practice in rural communities.
"This system makes sophisticated technology more available to rural areas," Moran said. "It may make more medical students more comfortable to go to rural communities because the sophisticated support would be there for them. I think it will only help the situation."
Flooded California could get more rain
The Associated Press
The storms that have hit Southern California this week have dumped more than a foot of rain in some areas, have killed at least seven people and have swamped homes, businesses and streets and highways.
LOS ANGELES — Homeowners and emergency crews battered by this week's killer floods beefed up their defenses yesterday to prepare for a new Pacific storm.
The region got a chance to catch up a little yesterday during spells of sunshine as remnants of the latest storm front rolled through the Los Angeles area.
"We're getting ready for the next big push," said Bob Collis, representative for the Los Angeles Fire Department.
Four people were listed as missing.
Malibu fire Capt. Virgil Lockhart said, "We've just ordered another 10,000 sandbags."
Meteorologists predict the storm, expected to hit today, could bring an additional 3 to 5 inches of rain.
Meteorologists said the storms' strength and heavy rain resulted from El Niño, the sporadic warming of surface water in the eastern Pacific that generates strong thunderstorms over the equator.
Meteorologists predict the storm, expected to hit today, could bring an extra 30 percent of tornadoes.
and reinforced sandbag canals and barriers to protect property from more high water and mudslides.
The Malibu coastal resort was awash in water, mud and debris. Beaches were littered with uprooted trees, timbers and trash as filthy, sewage-contaminated waves crashed to shore.
Raw sewage, flushed out of overloaded treatment plants, contaminated a 70-mile stretch of Los Angeles County beaches.
Residents constructed, rebuilt
Northwest of Los Angeles in Ventura County, where a flash flood turned the normally dry Ventura River into a muddy torrent, authorities searched the muck for bodies. One had been found in the area.
The flood washed through an area where homeless people camped, carried dozens of motor homes and trailers homes out to sea from a recreational vehicle park and swept over a freeway.
Since the storms started, three people have died in storm-related
traffic accidents, two have drowned and a couple have suffocated in a mudslide that poured into their bedroom.
Still missing were two skiers thought to have been buried by an avalanche at the Mount Baldy ski area in the San Gabriel Mountains, 40 miles northeast of Los Angeles.
Mud and water invaded hundreds of homes during the storms, including five multimillion-dollar residences in a Malibu canyon and about 100 homes and 25 businesses in the Antelope Valley community of Quartz Hill.
In Orange County,16 homes in the coastal community of Huntington Beach were flooded and 47 homes in Riverside County had severe water damage.
More snow added to the 30 inches already on the ground in the Sierra Nevada, but the state drought center said that the snowpack was still only about half of normal.
California flooding
Southern California has been hit by storms that have poured more than a foot of rain on some areas and killed at least seven people. Homes, businesses, streets and highways have been flooded. Damage in Los Angeles County alone is estimated at $7.6 million.
Bv county
iNtity
Kern: One dead
Los Angeles: Two
dead; at least 100
houses and 25
homes and 25
**Orange:** One missing;
16 homes damaged in
Huntington Beach
6 San Luis Obispo: One dead
7 Ventura: Three dead; one
4 Riverside: 47 homes
damaged
San Bernadino: Two missing; at least 15 buildings flooded
Ventura: Three dead; one missing; about 100 evacuated; 40 mobile homes flooded
California
1 Bakersfield
5
Santa Barbara
7
2 San Bernadino
101
Los Angeles
3
4
Pacific Ocean
0 50 U.S.
Diego
MEX.
SOURCE: Chicago Tribune, news reports
Knight-Ridder Tribune
2
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
gifts of love
833 Mass
749-4333
CORNUCOPIA
A RESTAURANT & BAR
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The Etc. Shop
Valentine's Day
Gift List
For Her:
* Jewelry
Heart Lockets
Sterling Silver
Marcaselle & Onyx
1928 Jewelry
* Ray Ban® Sunglasses
* Lingerie
For Him:
▼ Valentine Boxers
▼ Silk Boxes
▼ Leather Gloves
▼ Leather Bomber Jackets
▼ Formal Wear
▼ Ray Ban #Sunglasses
Dickinson
Dickinson
841-8600
2335 IOWA 51
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
CAPE FEAR (R)
(4:40), 7:15, 9:45
GRAND CANYON (R)
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For That Very Special Someone (Upstairs)
▼ Novelty Lingerie
Garter Belts
Stockings
▼ Novelty Briefs
▼ Body Paints
ETC., ETC., ETC.
JFK(R)
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FINAL ANALYSIS (R)
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FRIEDGREEN TOMATOES (PG-13)
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Man charged with setting church fires
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A drifter diagnosed as a schizophrenic has been indicted in 20 church fires in Florida and Tennessee, a prosecutor said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Patrick Lee Frank, 41, was charged with setting fires that caused millions of dollars in damages and threatened the life of worship. Attorney Ken Sukhia, said
Sukhia would not discuss a motive or what evidence linked Frank to the fires.
The 10-count federal indictment covers 16 fires set in Gainesville, Lake City, Ocala, Winter Haven, St. Augustine, Jacksonville Beach and High Springs. They are among 50 suspicious church fires reported primarily in north-central Florida since April 1990.
A Tallahassee grand jury charged Frank with nine counts of arson and one count of interstate movement with intent to commit arson. The maximum sentence on each count is 10 years.
The Rev. David Pittman, rector of the Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, had a mixed reaction to the indictment. His church was destroyed Jan. 21, 1991, in the first fire Frank was charged with setting.
It has not been determined where prosecutors would seek to try Frank first, Sukhia said.
A four-count indictment was issued in Knoxville, Tenn., for four fires in the Chattanooga area.
A task force of federal, state and local agents previously had named Frank as its prime suspect, and investigators concentrated on 30 church fires reported last year.
"I don't really have any feelings except for pity, compassion," Pittman said. "There also is a feeling of sadness that such things happen."
No suspicious church fires have occurred since Frank's Nov. 13 arrest in Ocala.
Frank also had been named a suspect in four of six church fires in his hometown of East Ridge, Tenn., near Chattanooga.
As the arson cases were announced, Attorney Reginald Black dismissed misdemeanor charges on which Frank had been held since his arrest.
Earlier this month, an Ocala judge ruled Frank was incompetent to stand trial on trespassing, loitering and prowling charges. Frank had been arrested after he was found sleeping in a vacant restaurant.
After hearing from psychiatrists for the defense and prosecution, Marion County Judge John Futch had ordered Frank committed to a mental hospital for six months of evaluation and treatment. Both doctors agreed Frank was a paranoid schizophrenic.
After the prosecution filed the automatic dismissal motion saying it was not feasible or warranted to continue the misdemeanor case. Fitch rescinded the commitment and handed Frank over to federal marshals.
WEATHER
Today high: 44 low: 30
NEBRASKA Omaha 40/27
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 52/29
KANSAS Lawrence 44/30
Dodge City Wichita 46/18
MISSOURI Kansas City 44/30 St. Louis 50/38
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 56/38
3-day outlook
TODAY Cloudy with a good chance of rain and possibly a clip of thunder later in the day.
TOMORROW Decreasing cloudiness during the day. Winds W to SW, 10-20 mph.
SUNDAY Increasing cloudiness during the afternoon. Winds S, 10-20 mph.
Across the U.S.
Boston 40/26
Chicago 44/36
Dallas 69/44
Detroit 38/26
Houston 76/54
New York 42/38
Los Angeles 63/52
Philadelphia 45/31
San Francisco 59/50
Washington 54/37
50 44 47 50
40 30 32 33
30
20
10
0
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 40/27
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO
Denver
52/29
KANSAS
Lawrence
44/30
Kansas City
44/30 St Louis
50/38
Dodge City
46/30
Wichita
48/30
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
56/38
3-day outlook
Forecast by Rob Koch, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Cornucopia
A Restaurant & Bar
1801 Massachusetts 842-9637
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
strategy for success
LSAT
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuart Finst Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, dailies during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer-FimHall, Lawrence, K6045
Native Creations
Purveyors of fine Native American art
Presents
An Exhibition of Art Work
by
Arthur J. Short Bull
Oglala Lakota Artist
Including
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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7:00 Thursday, Feb. 12
1:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
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7:00 Thursday, Feb. 13
4:00 Saturday, Feb. 15
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Films are screened in Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union
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Enter the drawing for free KU vs. OU Men's Basketball Tickets
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10
Films are screened in Woodriff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA店 Level, Level 4, Kansas Union
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Attention Undergraduate Students
Nominations are now being accepted for the
Graduate Student Teacher Award
The KU Endowment Association and the Graduate Student Council are supporting four graduate recourses.
excellence in teaching by graduate students
anyone may nominate a graduate teacher or graduate lab supervisor by writing to the Graduate School, Room 222, Strong Hall.
Letters of nomination should be submitted to the Graduate School no later than Thursday, February 20th
no later than Thursday, February 20tt
For further information, please call the Graduate Student Council at 864-4914 or the Graduate School at 864-3301.
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University Daily Kansan/Friday,February 14,1992
CAMPUS/ AREA
3
Clinic is special for team and kids
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
Allen Field House will be filled with smiles Sunday afternoon. The Kansas men's basketball team will be there, but the bleachers will not be full
About 120 Special Olympic athletes from eastern Kansas will be the Jayhawks' guests for a basketball clinic from 1p.m. to 3p.m.
Junior forward Macolim Nash said that both the team members and the Special Olympians had on hand.
"It goes both ways," he said. "It's a thrill to work with the kids."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said the experience was good for the players.
"It shows the kids how fortunate they really are," he said.
The clinic comes in the middle of the Big Eight Conference season and the day after a game with Colorado, but Williams did not think that was a problem.
"We have done it in the middle of the season before," he said. "It's good to have a break."
Senior forward Alonzo Jamison also said the break was beneficial.
"You need some type of break during the season," he said.
Jamison said he enjoyed working with the athletes.
Jerry Green, assistant coach, said the Kansas players and coaches would instruct the visitors about the fundamentals of the game.
"To see their faces light up when they make a basket, for me, is special," he said.
"We take it on a project because we only have a certain amount of time we can give," he said. "It is a challenge to make sure the project
Chuck Weinhardt, assistant director for the Kansas Special Olympics, said the clinical always was one of the highlights of the year for the athletes.
They recognize the players and watch them play. He said, "It's fun for them to play basketball with them."
Weinhardt said the event was publicized throughout the state.
Kansas Special Olympics had to restrict the number of participants because too many people showed interest this year. The athletes who cannot attend are placed at the top of the list for next year, he said.
The clinic has been conducted since 1984, Weinhardt said.
He said the Jayhawk staff made all the arrangements after Kansas Special Olympics made the initial request.
"The clinic is a great opportunity to get college athletes involved with Special Olympics," Weinhardt said.
KU involvement does not stop with the clinic. Kansas Special Olympics worked with the University on a summer sports camp in which coaches, playwrights and volunteers of variety of sports work with the athletes, Weinhardt said.
"The University has always been very supportive of our efforts," he said.
African Americans live with potential for blood disorder
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
African Americans have faced many obstacles throughout history, but sickle cell disease is one obstacle that people may not have thought much about.
Sickle cell disease is a blood disorder predominantly diagnosed in
Black History Month
cans. It affects red blood cells, making the cells long and thin instead of round and flexible. When many of the diseased cells become trapped and clog the blood vessels, oxygen
MUSIC BY JOHN BAYLEY
cannot travel through the body normally.
Sickle cell disease often is diagnosed when the first year of a child's life, Valeh
The oxygen deprivation causes severe pain in the joints, arms, legs or chest, said Tribahwan Vats, director of pediatric hematology and oncology at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
No cure exists for the disease, but it can be treated with antibiotics, intravenous fluids and pain medication.
"The only possible cure is to some how alter the sickle cell gene," Vats said. "We are trying to do research on it to control it effectively."
He said bone marrow transplants could be performed in an attempt to replace diseased red blood cells with healthy ones. He also noted that procedures still in the resource stage
According to a medical report, about 0.2 percent of African Americans have sickle cell disease.
Ten percent of African Americans carry the sickle cell trait.
Carriers of the sickle coil trait rarely have symptoms of the disease unless they become severely dehydrated from activities such as strenuous exercise. But sickle cell carriers can pass the disease on to their children, Vats said.
"We tell them that if you marry another person with sickle cell trait, the chaness of having a child with sickle cell disease are very high." he said
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said three KU students had been treated for sickle cell disease at Watkins in the past five years.
Vockey said the reason the University did not have a large number of students with sickle cell disease was that the disease made college life difficult.
"They tend to have to drop out for whole semesters because of flare-ups with their disease," Yockey said. "The disease sickle cell anemia is a tremendous obstacle to a college education It's not a handicap, but it's like a handicap because of the obstacles it presents to college students."
One student now is being treated at Watkins for the disease. The student
Sickle cell disease
Affecting one in 1,600 U.S. African Americans, sickle cell disease is an incurable genetic disease. It prevents affected red blood cells from carrying oxygen to the body's tissues.
---
Evolution of the disease: a hypothesis The coincidence between malaria and sickle cell gene frequency in Africa has led some scientists to believe that the mutation came in response to malaria.
Sickle red blood cells
Sickle red blood cells
Sickle cells are stiff,
rod-like structures with irregular shapes. They don't easily move through blood vessels,
causing clots.
Distribution of malaria
Frequency of the sickle cell gene
1-20%
5-10%
1-5%
The numbers:
.2%
of U.S. African Americans have sickle cell disease
8-10%
of U.S. African Americans carry the gene
25% chance of having disease if one parent has the trait
Jeff Meesey. Daily Kansas
has trouble walking on campus because of the pain involved with sickle cell disease. Yockev said.
"It's a miracle that he's in school," he said.
Yockey said it was unusual, but possible, for a person with sickle cell disease to live past the age of 30.
Athletes are tested for the sickle cell trait at Watkins because strenuous exercise in high altitudes could bring on the symptoms of the disease.
Michelle Raney, nurse at Broken Arrow Elementary School, said most children with sickle cell disease were
diagnosed before entering school because of screening available through the Douglas County Health Department or private physicians.
*Unfortunately, our health care delivery system is such that my hunch is that we may be seeing more children who are not diagnosed before coming to school because of the lack of health care accessible to many families in this country. 'Raney said.'
Raney said she knew of one child with the disease at the four schools where she worked.
Valentine thief takes candy and present
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
Stephen had been the victim of a burglary in which someone entered her room and stole a Valentine's Day present.
Stephen, Bonner Springs freshman,
said she purchased leather boots as a
gift to her husband.
"The boots were wrapped in Valentine's Day paper," Stephen said. "I'd only had them for two hours. He hadn't even seen them yet."
The person also took a Valentine's day card and used Stephen's keys to unlock her car and eat a box of Valentine candy, she said. The box and
candy wrappers were left on the front seat.
The unidentified person has visited the fifth-floor room in McColm Hall twice and has taken almost $3700 for clothes, clothing, cash and electronic items.
The person entered Stephen's locked room and stole $3,105 worth of items between 6.15 and 7.15 p.m. daily, according to KU police reports.
Someone again entered the room between 2 and 4 p.m. Wednesday and took a velvet jewelry bag containing a gold herringbone chain and other gold jewelry. There was no sign of forced entry, according to KU police reports.
Jewelry belonging to Stephen's roommate, Carmen Rupprecht,
Stephen said she lost $475 worth of jewelery.
Kansas City, Mo., freshman, was among the items stolen.
Nothing has been recovered, according to police reports, but Stephen said that Rupprecht had stolen the bracelet in the stairwell of McColum.
Stephen said that she had been worried that the person might come back and that her or her roommate might be in the room to the room while the person was there.
Stephen's door was locked before both incidents, she said. Student Housing changed the lock vestied day.
Dawn Meisenheimer, resident assistant at McColum, said she had talked to residents on the floor about the burglary. Some residents said an unknown person had knocked on doors asking for residents who did not live there, she said.
"No one actually saw anyone going in and out of the room," Meisenheimer said.
Meisenheimer also said she and the floor's other resident assistant might plan a program to inform residents about personal security.
She said she had warned her residents to watch for strangers, male or female, and to call a resident assistant if they saw anyone suspicious.
Students have described the alleged burglar as a Black male, 19 to 20 years old, of medium height, with some facial hair. One student described the suspect's hair as a cross between a box cut and wet curls. The suspect may have been wearing a dark blue jacket and blue jeans, according to KU police reports. Anyone with information may call KU Crimesoppers at 864-8888 or 864-5572.
ALASKA DANCE
Christine McFarland/KANSAN
Native steps
Performing an adaptation of a native Iranian dance, Yassi Charmchi, Teheran junior, and Naz Zanjani, Teheran freshman, entertain a crowd at the fourth-floor lobby in the Kansas Union. The performance yesterday was sponsored by Student Union Activities.
Student panel talks about sex violence
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
A panel of six student leaders agreed yesterday that education was the key to eliminating sexual violence at the University of Kansas.
The panel was formed to respond to the results of "The University of Kansas Survey on Sexual Violence" that were released Wednesday.
A student affairs research committee randomly selected 1,500 KU students last spring and sent them the surveys in order to measure the extent and impact of sexual violence. Students returned 540 surveys.
The results indicated that 100 percent of men and 95.6 percent of women who have been forced to have sexual intercourse were acquainted with the rapist.
About 93 percent of both male and female respondents listed alcohol and the feeling of power or control as factors contributing to rape. Sexual harassment, campus lighting and pornography were cited as the remaining three of the five major contributors to rape.
James Baucm, off-campus senator and panel member, stated, "We need to emphasize that alcohol is a drug and Americans use it too much."
Greg Hughes, vice chairperson on the University Senate Executive Committee and panel member, said the state was obligated to provide a safe campus for students by covering the cost of improved campus lighting.
I don't know if campus lighting will
eradicate rape, but it might help curb other violence. "Hughes said.
"We still have problems with sexual roles and violence," she said. "People are tired of hearing it, but the problems are still there."
Loraine Reesor, coordinator of the panel and assistant director for new student orientation, said peer education was crucial.
Kristin Lange, student body vice president and panel member, said both sexes needed to be educated about sexual violence.
She said many programs sought to educate women about rape, but new programs needed to be directed at men.
"We need to look at male attitudes and how we can change certain male perceptions of sexual behavior," she said.
Jill Fritzemeyer, co-director of the center for community outreach and panel member, said she recommended a mandatory first-year class to educate all students about issues of sexual violence.
"It's a women's issue but not a women's problem — 99.9 percent of rape, whether the victim is male or female, is perpetrated by males," Lange said.
"We need to continue our education programs," she said. "I think they do eventually make a difference."
Student panel members were chosen because they represent different gender and ethnic groups and are active in organizations that relate to the subject.
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University Daily Kansan/Friday, February 14, 1992 /
OPINION
MKNEELY
I'll NEED MICROPHONES—LOTS OF MICROPHONES...A FULL-BLOWN VOUCHER SYSTEM, SOME WEASEL-WORDS AND THE BIGGEST TAX BREAK YOU CAN FIND!!
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FEDERAL RESCUE SQUAD
"Message:
Who cares?"
Bill may make trials fair
In response to the editorial board's comments on my legislative efforts, I feel compelled to correct some misconceptions that the board seems to have and to reiterate the more salient points of my amendment.
The first significant misinterpretation stems from the original article of Feb. 4, in which it was erroneously reported that current Kansas statute prohibits the defense from presenting the alleged victim's past sexual history in a rape trial. Strictly speaking, this is untrue. Current Kansas statute (K.S.A. 21-3525) allows the defense to present as evidence the alleged victim's past sexual history if the defense can prove its relevancy to the case. The defense must follow a clearly proscribed set of rules outlined in the statute.
Once the motion is made, the court rules on the request of the defense and determines what may be introduced in court. When I realized that this mistake had been made, I called the Kansan newsroom to suggest that a clarification be printed the following day to avoid potential misunderstandings. This mistake is an easy one to make, and as such I was inclined to overlook it.
My main grievance with the editorial board is its use of the word "requiring" with respect to the proposed legislation. Nowhere in the proposed amendment does the word require or any of its derivates appear. In order to clarify my position and the legislation, I will outline the essence of my proposal and my reasons for suggesting additions to the existing statute.
Jean Winter Guest columnist
The essential feature of the proposed amendment deals with the past sexual history of the defendant, whether with the alleged victim or other persons. It is designed not to delve into a person's private life, but rather to bring to light any history of sexually aggressive behavior. In no way does the proposed amendment mention or advocate the introduction in court as evidence any promiscuous behavior on the part of the defendant. I am in complete agreement with the editorial board and its concern that it is "unjustifiable to use a reputation of promiscuity to justify rape." This is a blatant abuse of the judicial system and the due process of the defendant, just as it would be a violation of the due process of the victim.
I am not advocating the violation of the defendant's constitutional rights; I am merely proposing to redress the imbalance inherent in the existing statute. As it stands, the statute does not provide for the equitable treatment of the defendant and the alleged victim. If the potential exists to enter as evidence the sexual history of the alleged victim, is it not just that the same principle can be applied with respect to the defendant? I would
The editorial board takes exception to the introduction of past alleged rapes in the present trial as being irrelevant. To this I would counter that if the court finds the prosecution's motion to enter as evidence a history of sexual aggression acceptable, the establishment of a pattern of behavior is most relevant to the present trial. In murder cases, no one objects to the prosecution's attempt to establish a pattern, so why should another violent crime be exempt from such examination.
arguethatitis.
I take offense to the suggestion that without bruises or other acceptable signs of violence, the case is solely "the accuser's word against the defendant's sand, therefore, unsubstantial in court." By choosing this phrasing, the editorial board is invalidating the experiences of a large group of victims of acquaintance rape, a significant percentage of which show no outward signs of the violence done to them. Although it is certainly true that without these visible signs of rape it is difficult to prosecute and convict a rapist, the editorial board seems to imply that her testimony is insubstantial if she cannot be bruises, and therefore, she is better off not even attempting to prosecute. I am sure that everyone is concerned with victims' rights and wants to empower them in the judicial process. I am sure that the board will agree once it understands the legislation I am seeking to enact.
Jean Winter is an Emporia senior majoring in humanities and history.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Student 'bodies' need more
The University's offering of recreation facilities is lacking in capacity and availability
Chalk up another one in the long line of things that the University of Kansas needs to do to keep the student body happy.
Every student who has tried to play a pickup game of basketball knows the problem. Presently, the University has six courts for the student body to play basketball on. In addition, those of you who need to borrow a ball better get there quickly because there are only five of those to check out.
Although Robinson Center is a nice gymnasium, it is not enough to keep everyone happy. The problem escalates whenever an intramural season starts up. Whether it is volleyball, basketball or the Crimson Girls practicing, they take courts away from the hacking style of shirts and skins that is the cornerstone of the center's activity.
For those of you who enjoy lifting free weights or working on nautilus machines, the problem is just as severe. Various clubs and
sports use all the facilities, which is fine, but time and equipment need to be available for walk-in activities.
Solutions are easier than building a parking garage and restoring Hoch Auditorium
If the University allowed for Robinson to be open longer, made buildings such as the Anschutz Sports Pavilion more accessible to the students and reopened Allen Field House to students when the football and basketball teams were not practicing, we would be well on our way to developing recreational harmony. Although this would incur some costs, they would be nominal.
Long-term financing for upgrading could then be developed. For example, Penn State University channels money from the athletic department to intramurals and recreational play.
As it stands now, KU has inadequate room for its student "bodies" to relax and exercise. There are schools half our size with twice the space for student sports.
Life without MTV does exist
Jim Brown for the editorial board
Chance that service be removed spurs action; public outcry should come for real-life issues
Francis Fukuyama, in his essay "The End of History," says that the world's political system has arrived at its ultimate end — liberal democracy and Western-style consumerism. One event that would seem to indicate that he is correct is the recent rash of protest against the removal of MTV from various local cable systems around the country. John Mellencamp gives a free concert to support the pro-MTV forces, tearful women are seen (on MTV) at shopping malls railing at a cable company that would deny their right to see the new Warrant video, and the whole thing reminds one of the movie "Foot-loose."
This would surely support Fukuyama. In a world where consumerism is all-important, what could be more fundamental than the
right to consume?
Perhaps it is because "I want my MTV" is not nearly so stirring a battle cry as "Give me liberty or give me death" or "Workers of the world, unite." But this whole MTV flap is indeed full of sound and fury and signifies nothing. Are we really so apathetic that only a threat to our MTV can mobilize us?
Turn off your MTV. Stop living life vicariously. There is a real world outside the cable system. Experience it. Write a letter to the editor. Drink tequila 'til dawn with the homeless guy who walks down your street every day. Ask the girl you stare at every day in class out to dinner. Build a boat. Raise your voice and be heard, whether it be to speak out against racial hate, social injustice, or the lack of recreation facilities at Robinson Center, for there are indeed more things under heaven and on earth than are dreamt of in MTV's philosophy.
Mark Coatney for the editorial board
Members of the editorial board are Alexander Bloemhof, Jim Brown, J.R. Clairborne, Mark Coatney, Amy Francis, Tiffany Harness, Tiffany Lasha Hurt, Kate Kelley, Julie Ellen Li, Stephen Martino, David Mitchell, Chris Moser, Beth Randolph, Martin Scherstunl, Jiankua Lasson, Frank Williams and Sarah Zercher.
Important search is on
The search for a new executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas is underway. This search could continue well into the summer, but regardless of its time span the result will be a permanent fixture at KU. I believe it is time for KU to look outside its conservative realm and find a progressive leader who can help advance KU academically and culturally. Society is changing, and KU has merely remained stagnant. KU needs a qualified person in that position who will accept the challenge of our diverse society and make profound changes necessary to the lives of students and faculty.
I suspect that most students do not really care who is chosen as our next executive vice chancellor. If Chancellor Gene Budig were to step down, would you care who became the next chancellor? The person we employ as executive vice chancellor today may be our chancellor tomorrow. All students should be aware and concerned about this possibility. More importantly, students who have felt unrepresented in the past should become involved and vocal in this search. Why? I answer that question by examining the duties
of the executive vice chancellor :
He or she acts as a channel to the chancellor for administrators of respected offices such as academic affairs, student affairs, affirmative action and the University ambassador. He or she also supervise, coordinate and evaluates the functions and activities of those offices. It is also the duty of the executive vice chancellor to take the necessary steps to secure the successful functioning of programs and activities from these administrative offices.
Now, with these particular offices in mind, try to think of all the important student issues that make their way to the executive vice chancellor and perhaps the chancellor: plans (or lack of plans) for a multicultural center, mission, tuition and revenue code reports, minority recruitment and retention ideas, sexual harassment policies and grievances. The list goes on and on. Clearly, finding a capable candidate is in the hands of Budig and the search committee, but students should not be unheard. If anyone knows what KU needs from the prospective candidate to fit this position, it's the students. Unfortunately, this search committee has only two representatives from the student body. However, there are avenues a student can take to express their concerns or
Lettersto the editor
questions regarding the search: contact your student senator! The phone number for the Student Senate office is 864-3710.
Angela Cervantes, student senator
U.S. armv actions OK
I write this concerning David Caruso's article of Feb. 11. I realize this was merely his opinion, but I must ask if he ever took a history class. Remember a man named Hitler who emerged to unite Germany about 50 years ago and started World War II? Is it possible that last year we prevented World War III?
I don't like death and destruction, but the United States needs a powerful army to defend the world. I suppose you wouldn't mind if a foreign army moved into your front yard, ate all your twinkies and stole your MTV.
Every war is going to take the lives of innocent people and consecrated soldiers. Nobody minds calling Hitler's troops evil, but they were simply defending their home, like Saddam's troops. What if it was your father who risked his life in the desert? My brother-in-law and best friend played in the sandbox for the sake of (do I dare say) saving the world from another Holocaust. Don't even think of insult-
John Naughton, Manhattan sophomore
Fight for parking rights
Inaddition to the problem that exists with the Parking Department's attempted restriction of the lot behind Fraser Hall, another problem with the Parking Department exists, one just as aberrant. I found out last week, while trying to attend a night class that I had enrolled in and paid for, that I was not going to be allowed to park my car within a mile of the building which housed my class. It was a game night.
One of the attendants, who was guarding the parking lot to make sure that none of those pesky, unauthorized students snuck in, told me that I would be sure to find a spot up on Jayhawk Boulevard. Yeah, right. Everybody knows that those spots fill up by 5 p.m. on game night. I was forced to park my car in a residential neighborhood and walk almost at mile back to my building, at night, in the dark. It is ridiculous that the fans of the Kansas basketball team are given first priority to the parking
I am not suggesting that all reserved parking for Kansas basketball fans be reappropriated for student use. I am suggesting, however, that basketball fans be made to share those spaces with students and others who would like to see these spaces being used in design and Design Building. One lot or a level of the parking garage should be made available to accommodate those students.
In further abridging the rights of students to make use of the permits that we pay so excitably for, the Parking Department is committing a heinous act. They have already gouged us by overselling the yellow zones by over a thousand spaces and exacting financial penalties for arbitrary "infractions" which are now at their discretion. It is ridiculous that the sticker I paid $50 for a month ago is reduced to so much worthless paper on any night that the Parking Department sees fit.
I think it is time that the students, who provide the livelihood of the Parking Department, stand up and demand our rights. Call or write the Parking Department today and let them know that their rights end where ours, the students, begins.
Jean Carter, Wichita senior
at this school at the expense of the students
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS
Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochele Olson
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Myers
Graphics Jeff Meesey/Aime Brainard
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr .. Bill Leibengood
Management .. Rich Hitchhiker
National sales mgr .. Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr .. Ame Johnson
Production mgrs .. Kim Wallace
Marketing director .. Keith Leeer
Creative director .. Laenne Bryant
Classified mgr .. Kip Chin
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be phooped. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Suffer-Flint Hall.
Stick
AAAREGH!
by David Rosenfield
AAARGGH!
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!
≥ SIGH ≤
HAPPY
VALENTINE'S
DAY!
≥ SIGH ≤
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
5
KU day lessens pre-college fears
Hispanic-American high schoolers find guidance from HALO members
By Ranjit Arab Kansan staff writer
Three years ago when Monique García was a senior at Bishop Carroll High School in Wichita, a guidance counselor not to go to the University of Kansas.
Richard Truillo, Topeka junior, performs a skit about college decisions.
She said that he suggested she go elsewhere for two years and then transfer to KU.
"Because I am Hispanic, he did not think I could handle it uphere," García said.
Her father brought her up to the Lulac National Education Services Center Day at KU, where Hispanic college students discussed common concerns.
Yesterday, as a KU student and Hispanic-American Leadership Organizer, I volunteered.
A Wichita junior, she was one of six HALO members who spoke to about 140 Hispanic-American high school students at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
The panel completed the third annual Lulac National Education Services Center Day at the University.
Pearl Rovaris, office of admissions representative, said the center was a government-financed program targeted toward educationally disadvantaged Hispanic-American high school students.
Students from Wichita and Kansas City, Mo., were invited to the program, Rovaris said. Along with the panel discussion, students were given tours of the campus and met with administrators.
Suzanne Racine, HALO president, said the goal of the day was to bring awareness to Hispanic-American high school students.
"We would like them to come to KU." Racine said. "But we are just encouragement them to fill out applications and keep their options open."
Racine said the day also gave high school students a chance to overcome their fears about college life.
"A lot of students are scared of KU
because it is so big," she said. "This allows them to become familiar with our campus and the people, too."
Victor Hernandez, educational counselor for the center, said he talked to the students throughout the year about their college options.
The organization's main concern is to address the 50-percent dropout rate of Hispanic-American high school students nationwide, he said.
Hernandez said the day also gave KU a chance to recruit students.
"It is definitely a tool, and it goes both ways," he said.
Utley Bush, Miami junior, was one of the HALO members who performed
skits for the students
Bush said the main problem in mug schools was a lack of proper guidance.
The day gave students the chance to see how Hispanic students could succeed.
Melinda Arzola, high school junior from Kansas City, Mo., said she did not plan to go to college right after graduation and said she eventually planned to attend.
"At least I have some idea of what it is like to go to college and I am not foggy about it anymore," Arzola said.
For some, Sevier book stirs racial issues
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
A newly-released book about the April 21 death of a Lawrence American Indian has raised questions about racist attitudes in Lawrence.
"Hitchita! A Documented Story of the Gregg Sevier Homicide" was released last week to KU and Lawrence bookstores.
Sevier, then 22, was fatally shot in April in his home by two Lawrence police officers. One week after the death, a coroner's inquest ruled the homicide justifiable.
him more aware of racism in the community.
Lance Burr, a Lawrence attorney representing the Sevier family, said that reading the book made
The book's author, Jerry Thomas, a retired college instructor living in Hawaii, reprinted transcripts from a city commission meeting, the coroner's inquest and letters written by city, state and federal officials. He spent six months in the Lawrence area gathering information and evidence for the book.
"The book makes everybody, Indian, Black and white, look at themselves and ask 'Are we racist?' he said. "It forces us to consider if we are racists based on our environment and on how we were raised."
In the book, Thomas compares solving racism to recovering from alcoholism.
"I call myself a recovering racist in honor of Mr. Sevier," Burr said. "I like Thomas' analogy of how recovering alcoholics and recovering racists are very similar."
Don Bread, instructor of tribal management at Haskell Indian Junior College, said the book portrayed an accurate view of racial tensions in Lawrence.
"The book tends to reflect the feelings in the community," he said. "People will see that things went wrong and that we are still wanting answers."
After the inquest, American Indians protested the
Lawrence police and district attorney's treatment of the Sevier case. They also protested investigations of the deaths of three American Indians since 1899, which remain unsolved. Their criticism was directed toward the police department and the Lawrence City Commission.
Commissioner John Nalbandian said he did not plan to buy the book because he already had conducted research.
"I hadn't planned on buying one, but I have the transcripts of the coroner's inquest," said Nandaliadan, who is also a KU professor of public administration. "I have had Dan Wildeat (head of the department of natural sciences at Haskell) speak to my class as well as Chief of Police Ron Olin. So I already have a pretty good understanding of the case."
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said he had not read the book.
"I haven't read it, and I'm not planning on buying one," Wildgen said.
Party, not politics Students celebrate Vietnamese culture
Students lay concerns of homeland aside in preparation for New Year's celebration
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Celebration temporarily replaces political concerns this semester as the Vietnamese Student Association focuses on activities in honor of the Vietnamese New Year.
The association will perform dragon and traditional dances and have a fashion show at 7:00 tomorrow night at the Kansas Union Ballroom. The program is sponsored by the association, the Office of Minority Affairs and Student Senate.
Michelle Doan, co- vice president of the association, said the group had concentrated the entire semester on planning the program. In addition to the dances and fashion show, there will be a mock Vietnamese wedding.
Doan said that last semester the association, which has about 65 members, concentrated on fighting the deportation of Vietnamese people from camps in Hong Kong and Thailand back to Vietnam.
Doan said that last semester the association sent a petition to President Bush calling for an end to the practice but that no reply had been received.
"He doesn't realize the number of deaths on his head." Doan said.
Because some of her cousins are in the camps, Doan said she would continue to write letters to her senator. She also has written Sen. John Danforth, R-Missouri.
Le Vu. co-ice president, said that most people left Vietnam because of the oppressive conditions and government domination but that other factors, such as the economy, also contributed.
"But the campsaren't any better," Vu said. "They are unsanitary, and
"We want to try to get the club recognized on campus."
Nam Lam
Vietnamese student
association president
health care and food is minimal. The worst part though is that people in the countries who are sending people back know these people will be punished for leaving. They know well what the consequences are and don't care."
Vu said the goal of tomorrow's celebration was to provide the University and members of the association with a sense of the culture.
It is the first time the festival has been open to everyone,he said.
Vu said the association would present a slide show tomorrow to acquaint members with the many facets of Vietnam. He said the association wanted to present a positive side of Vietnam and show that it can be a beautiful place.
Uv said that the group had not redirected its focus but that the political focus became overshadowed by work for the show.
Although the official new year, Tet, was Feb. 4. Nam Lam, president, said the association waited because many members spent the official holiday with their families.
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 520-421-3900 Sussex 841-0100
Hey Students!!!
If you liked Like Skewalker and Indiana Jones, you'll love Young Jim Hawkins as he's pitted against the most remarkable pirates in fiction.
You asked for it back, now the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents A Special Event
The National Theatre of the Deaf in Treasure Island
Treasure island rekindles the spirit of fun and adventure we all love...full of laughter and suspense...buried treasure and romance.
Don't miss this heroic tale staged by the Tony Award-winning company!
JACKFISHER'S FLAG
KU student tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved; KU student tickets are only $8 & $6.50; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982
You'll See and Hear Every Word!!!
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Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activate Fee, Squawhat Society, and the Kansas University Endowment Association
1/2 Price for KU Students!!!
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, February 18, 1992
Haskell Indian Junior College Auditorium
Sephardic Singer and Classical Guitarist Gerard Edery
Saturday, February 15, 7:30 pm Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr.
In Commemoration of the quintetcentennial of the expulsion of Spanish Jewry AND in celebration of the permanence of the Lawrence Jewish community center, we proudly present a concert of Ladino music with a special mortgage burning ceremony.
ceremony.
No Admission Fee
Sponsored by The University of Kansas Hillel The Lawrence Jewish Community Center Jewish Community Women
Attention!!
May '92 Graduates
Order Graduation Announcements on:
February 17th-19th
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Orders will be taken at either the Kansas Union or Burge Union store
Orders must be prepaid
Visa, Mastercard, Discover &
American Express Accepted
KU
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Ks. Union 864-4640
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SUMMER RESEARCH AWARDS FOR
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WOMEN AND MINORITY MEN IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Monetary awards to undergraduate Juniors for participation in research programs with Biology faculty at The University of Kansas.
Eligibility: Women and minority men with interests in the biomedical sciences.
Amount of award: $2,000.
Application deadline: March 16, 1992
Application forms are available from Sylvia Suarez, Administrative Assistant, Howard Hughes Program, 6007 Haworth Hall (864-3933)
6
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
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Feb.17-Feb.20
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Tuesday, February 18
11:30am to 1:00pm
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A young man's obsessive involvement with a mysterious older woman.
“...a deliciously mysterious novel."
-Ann Hood
TREASURES
A beautiful woman with long hair, wearing a black dress, poses with her hands clasped together in front of her face. The background is a dark, blurred image of a room with a bed and a lamp.
A new novel by Carolyn Doty Fiction Writing Teacher, University of Kansas
Don't Get Caught in the Dark...
It's time to see the light. The KU police may be looking for you. That's right, if you're riding without a lite, and you're spotted after dusk, you can get nailed with a $15.00 ticket. Think about it. The solution is simple. Come in and save 10% on any lites and help us keep your record clean. While you are here, check out our super Deals on Wheels plus a Free lite with any new bike purchase! Offer good through February.
CYCLE WORKS
Bicycle Ride
1601 W.23rd CYCLEING AND FITNESS 842-6363
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SHEYLAND
Christine McFarland/KANSAN
Talon-ted
Showing off for an audience of KU retirees, this red-tailed hawk is one of the animals cared for by WILDCARE, a wildlife rehabilitation and public education department at the University of Kansas. Nancy Schwarting, director of WILDCARE, gave a slide show and brought animals yesterday to the Adams Alumni Center to promote the protection of wildlife through public education.
Positive HIV tests of six Texas students elicit fear of school teams, officials say
The Associated Press
BOGOTA, Texas — A small, rural high school where six students tested positive for HIV has averted panic, but its sports teams have suffered from opponents' irrational fears, administrators say.
"What bothers me is that we've taken a step forward to educate our community," Superintendent Freddy Wade said. "Rumors persist, and our team is being singled out."
Two junior varsity basketball games were canceled because opponents and their parents feared infection, Rivercrest High School officials said.
The school in northeastern Texas has only 197 students; therefore, some health experts said it was remarkable that six test positive for the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. Other experts said there were schools all over the country with clusters of students infected with HIV; the students simply aren't yet aware of their infection, the experts said.
brought to wider attention a situation that the Taleco-Bogota Consolidated Independent School District first learned about in October.
The experts were quoted in the Dallas Morning News, which today
Bogota, about 70 miles west of Texarkana and the Arkansas state line, is a town of 1,421. Talco is about half that size.
The six unidentified students told staff members at the Ark-Tex Council of Governments in Texarkana that they got the virus through heterosexual contact, said Dona Spence, the agency's HIV-AIDS case manager.
ATTENTION SENIORS!!
Please nominate your favorite administrator or staff member in the division of student Affairs for the 1992 CLASS award (Citation for Leadership and Achievement in Student Services). The nomination forms are in the Organization and Activities Center, 4th floor Kansas Union.
DEADLINE: Wednesday, Feb.19 4:00 pm
The Board of CLASS Officers
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NATION/WORLD
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
7
NATION/WORLD BRIEFSC
Washington
Newsday reporter keeps quiet
A New York Newsday reporter declined to reveal his sources yesterday to a special Senate counsel questioning him about his articles on Anita Hill's sexual harassment allegations against Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.
Reporter Timothy Phelps, subpoenaed by special counsel Peter Fleming Jr., said he was asked to explain his stories word by word.
Phelps, who was questioned in closed session,
told reporters in a break, "We are not responding,
except to say we wrote what was written."
Phelps' lawyer, Robert Warren, said the reporter objected to revealing sources on constitutional grounds; the First Amendment protects freedom of the press.
New York Newsday, in a legal memorandum, also argued that both houses of Congress had refrained, for more than a century, from forcing journalists to identify confidential sources.
Abidjan, Ivory Coast
Police breakup student protest
Hundreds of student protesters tried to march on the city's business center yesterday, but they were turned back by police who fired tear gas, threw stun grenades and beat them with truncheons.
About 1,000 students were protesting the government's refusal to punish the army commander who ordered a raid on a university campus nine months ago.
Yesterday's protest also came after the government's seizure of copies of two opposition newspapers that compared President Felix Houphouet-Boigny to the brutal former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin.
Houphout-Boigny had refused to punish Gen. Robert Guei for ordering the raid at the University of Ivory Coast on May 17. A government commission investigating the incident recommended that Guel be punished.
Los Angeles
Man convicted of storing guns
A man investigated for allegedly threatening to kill President Bush was convicted of illegally stockpiling weapons.
A jury Wednesday convicted Robert Thomas Ward of possessing 10 unregistered machine guns, two silencers, and other silencers without serial numbers.
Ward, 45, of Oxnard, could get up to 20 years in
ward at his onencenting up to He remained in
Federal authorities in July said that they had learned that Ward had bragged about scouting out an area near the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library where he could get a clear shot at Bush at the library's dedication Nov. 4.
Authorities found the cache of weapons at a wounded homicide, not charge with threat to the president.
Bush and former Presidents Reagan, Ford, Nixon and Carter attended the dedication.
From The Associated Press
Peace force of 13,000 may go to Yugoslavia
UNITED NATIONS — U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali will recommend quick deployment of up to 13,000 peacekeepers to keep Yugoslavia's war from reigniting and spreading, U.N. sources said yesterday.
The Associated Press
A cease-fire in the Serbian-Croatian conflict has been in place since Jan. 3. But the pact has been frequently breached, and many officials fear fighting will resume – and perhaps spread to other republics
with citation and per capita GDP. repub.
— unless the peacekeeping force is sent soon.
The U.N. Security Council is expected to authorize the force early next week, and the first peacekeepers could begin arriving within two weeks, U.N. officials said. The cost is broadly estimated at $400 million a
The deployment would be the largest such operation since the U.N. sent 20,000 peacekeepers to the Belgian Congo, now Zaire, in 1960
The war erupted after Croatia and Slovenia
declared independence from Yugoslavia last June 25. After brief fighting in Slovenia, the war shifted to Croatia, where fighting between the Croatians and the Serbians has taken more than 8,000 lives.
U. N. representative Francois Giuliani said that Boutros-Ghali decided to recommend the deployment. Cyrus Vance, his special envoy in the Yugoslav crisis, has called for an 11,500-person force to be sent quickly. A 75-person liaison team is already in Yugoslavia to encourage compliance with the cease-fire.
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman on Wednesday gave fresh assurance that he unconditionally accepted the U.N. plan. But about a third of Croatia has been captured by Serb forces, and some Serb leaders want to hold onto their gains.
Milan Babic, the leader of an ethnic Serbian enclave in western Croatia, rejects the U.N. plan. Babic warned yesterday that there would be large casualties if peacekeepers were sent.
Muslims leave Kashmir border
Militants give up plan to storm, fearing Pakistani attack
The Associated Press
MUZAFFARABAD Pakistan — Muslim militants yesterday gave up their plan to storm a ceasefire line that divided the disputed territory of Kashmir, stepping back from a bloody confrontation that already had left 16 dead and hundreds wounded.
The development underscored the volatility of the situation in Kashmir, where dozens of groups have been fighting to split from India. More than 3,700 people have been killed in fighting in the last two years.
Pakistan and India, traditionally antagonistic neighbors, went to war in 1948 and 1965 over Kashmir, a former monarchy divided by departing British colonial rulers in the 1947 partition.
India frequently accuses Pakistan of arming, training and harboring Kashmiri militants. Pakistan denies the allegations and accuses India of committing atrocities to crush the uprising.
In the latest confrontation, the Jammu-Kashmir Liberation Front had vowed to storm the U.N.-monitored cease-fire line and march into Indian-controlled Kashmir to show support for militants who were fighting for an independent state there.
The Pakistani government opposed the march, saying it could lead to another war with India. Kashmiris on both sides of the cease-fire line viewed that opposition as a betrayal — one that could deepen the split between militants who wanted all of Kashmir to be a part of Pakistan and groups like the Liberation Front that wanted an independent nation.
In a dramatic reversal, the front's leader, Amanu-lah Khan, called off the march, saying he had no choice because Pakistani troops were bent on killing him and his supporters.
On Wednesday, 16 militants were shot to death as they tried to storm past barricades along the winding route to the cease-fire line, hospital officials said. 350 other people were hurt, 60 of them seriously, the officials said.
Arafat says anti-Semitic tape was altered
The Associated Press
GENEVA — Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat said yesterday that a tape in which he purportedly described Jews as trash was doctored. But despite his effort to distance himself from the controversy, the allegation still is likely to inflame ill will in both Palestinians and Israelis.
Israeli officials said the tape, broadcast Tuesday on CNN, proved what they had been contending; Palestinian leaders are conciliatory in public but anti-Semitic in private.
Arafat went on the offensive, again accusing Israel of blocking progress in the Middle East peace talks.
At PLO headquarters in Tunis, Tunisia, representative Ahmed Abdel-Rahman accused Israel's secret service agency, the Mossad, of assembling the tape to discredit the Palestinians and harm the peace process.
Arafat was irritated about attention devoted to the tape controversy, saying it undermined his address to the U.N. Human Rights Commission. At a news conference in Nairobi, he brushed aside most questions about the time.
"It is a dubbed tape," Arafat said. "It's a fabricated tape, and I am not concerned with a fabricated tape." CNN said the tape was of a Jan. 30 telephone conversation.
Arafat implied that at least parts of the tape were genuine when he said sections were fabricated. But he refused to say which parts, instead expression negation about his telephone having been bugged.
In his speech, he blamed Israel for stalling the peace process.
"The bilateral negotiations are going round and round in the whirlpool of Israeli obstacles." Arafat said. "They have not taken a single step forward in the direction of the essentials."
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FEBRUARY IS KU MONTH AT
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Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlets
Throughout the month of February, you'll receive an additional 10% savings
off your purchases at all participating outlet stores. Just present a valid KU ID. Since you'll always find great savings to 60% at our outlets, this is a great opportunity to save really big! (And, it's a great place to take your parents when they visit.)
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Dahl, "Your favorite hairstylist," has returned to:
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Discounts may not be combined with any other special offers
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SISTER UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
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Friday: 7:00 & 9:30
Saturday: 7:00 & 9:30
Sunday matinee: 2:00
Tickets $2.50 available at the SUA Box Office. 864-SHOW
Midnight Movies
Friday & Saturday $3.00
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ARTCARVED
See the ArtCarved Representative at:
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Burge Union Feb. 12 & 13
KU Bookstores
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8
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
Photographers Needed! Call Leanne at 864-4358
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We at Pizza Shuttle refuse to resort to the unprofessional and negative advertising aimed at us in recent months. We do promise though to give you a great pizza at a great price. Thanks, John, Karen & Crew
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Be Mine
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Sweet hearts
Kansas Union food service employee Sharon Gauna decorates cookies for the Union's Valentine's Day celebration. "Be My Valentine" was among many phrases Gauna wrote on the cookies yesterday. The Union will sell the cookies today for $5 at the 4th floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14 1992
9
Primary may not be canceled
By Greg Farmer Kansan staff writer
A KU professor said yesterday that attempts to cancel the Kansas presidential primary came too late and that legislators would be forced to finance the election. But another KU professor said he was not surprised lawmakers had not appropriated money to pay primary costs.
The Senate voted 25-15 yesterday to concur with a House of Representatives decision to cut the projected cost of the primary. The vote apparently ends a Senate attempt to cancel the April 7 primary and continues the legislature's quest to appropriate the $1.5 million to pay primary costs.
"It seems to me that what happened was they went charging off to cancel the primary without doing their homework," Ggetter said. "Now they are in a more complicated position."
Russell Getter, associate professor of political science, said Kansas was going to have a primary because legislators had waited too long to cancilt it.
If Kansas were to cancel its primary, the state would select delegates to the political parties' national conventions at caucuses.
Getter said it probably was too late to make caucus preparations.
"If the parties could get registered for the caucuses, they would have to develop caucus plans and register candidates," he said. "That would be placing tough time constraints on the party to develop the caucus structure."
Ken Collier, assistant professor of political science, said that deciding to have the primary was easy but that providing the money was more difficult.
"The question is how much more democratic the primary is," Collier said. "Is it worth the money? I prefer primaries, but I understand why the state doesn't want to pay for it."
He said caucuses usually attracted only hard-core supporters because the vote was taken at political party meetings where which party platforms were developed.
Collier said primaries were more democratic than caucuses because more people participated by voting individually at booths.
"Ithink the primary issue is one that should be addressed and discussed because it asks us to decide how we want our government to work," Collier said.
He said states held primaries or caucuses for democratic and economic reasons.
Primary Candidates
Here are the 32 candidates who filed before Wednesday's deadline for the Kansas presidential preference primary.
DEMOCRATS
Jeffrey Marsh Fairfield, Iowa
McDonald Alpine-Jemings, Okla.
Bob Kersey-Omaha, Neb.
John Barnes-Caney, Kan.
Charles Woods-Graceville, Fla.
Raymond Vanskiver-Wichita
Tom Harkin-Bethesda, Md.
Lyndon LaRoche Jr. Round Hill, Va.
Edmund Brown Jr.-Alexandria, Va.
Larry Agrine-Irwin, Calif.
Bill Clinton-Little Rock, Ark.
Ralph Spelring-Elkhart, Ind.
Do Beamgard-Atwood, Kan.
William Pawley Jr.-Miami, Fla.
Gary Haupti-Salina
Paul Tsongas-Boston
Gary Hawks-Toneka
REPUBLICANS
"These are the democratic ways to select presidential candidates," Collier said. "But economic reasons are important, too. Iowa holds its caucus first, and the businesses make a lot of money. National voters watch what happens in Iowa because of the timing of their primary."
George Zimmerman - Dallas
Jake Beemont - Kansas City, Kan.
Thomas Fabish - Harbor City, Calif.
Tennie Rogers - Sierra Madre, Calif.
Stephen Kozcak - Washington
Pat Paulsen - Los Angeles
Philip Skow - Carbondale, Kan.
David Duke - Metairie, La.
Jack Fellure - Hurricane, W.Va.
George Bush - Alexandria, Va.
Daugherty - Aiken, S.C.
Charles Doty - Tulsa, Okla.
Patrick Buchanan - Vienna, Va.
Isabell Masters - Topela
Hubert Patty - Jackson, Miss.
Collier said that if Kansas held its primary earlier, the state would benefit more.
"If the primary could be held in late February, then people throughout the nation might care what happens," he said. "Otherwise, it's not likely to matter much to the national election."
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WHERE?
The Lawrence Donor Center!
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Noller
Ford
WHEN? Hon-Thurs
Mon-Thu
8:00 am - 6:00 pm
Fri 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
Sat 9:00 am - 1:00 pm
WHAT?
Earn $15 for first plasma donations!
Earn $10 for whole blood donations!
WHY?
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Enjoy movies or study while donating!
Jack Melissa Kyle Kaul
Happy Valentine's Day to all the DUDS SUDS Staff! You're the Best!
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Adam ♥ Maria ♥ Brad ♥ Darren
THOUGHT-PROVOKINGIII PROVOCATIVEIII HILARIOUSIII The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts New Directions Series Presents the
Obie-Award Winning Writer Actor Comedian Commentator
SPALDING GRAY
Monster in a Box
[FEBRUARY 24]
KU student tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office, Liberty Hall, and the SUA Office. Kansas Union, all seating is general admission; student tickets are only $8; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 212-643-3962
Gray's 12th autobiographical monologue, it begins where Swimming to Cambodia left off. Don't miss Gray describing what happened as he tried to complete his first novel and "the dizziness that comes from too much possibility."
Partner Catered by the New York St. Louis Grand Central Market Life Event
and held at 10am on Sunday, May 17th from 11am to 4pm.
New York State University will be hosting a call for the grand final of the
NYC Design Competition.
"An Evening with Spalding Gray:
Get psyched to see Spalding Gray live! The SUA Film Series will present Gray's award-winning Swimming to Cambodia February 20 (7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) and February 21 (8 p.m., Hashinger Hail). For more information, call 864-3-SHOW.
[FEBRUARY 25]
8:00 P.M. MONDAY & TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24 & 25, 1992 LIBERTY HALL
1/2 Price for KU Students!!!
University of Colorado at Boulder
Summer!
Think community. The Boulder campus takes on a special quality in the summer. Faculty come to class in shorts. Small discussion groups meet under the trees on campus and around the campus for comfortable learning community - who work, study, or just relax together.
Think challenge. Choose from over 500 courses, including archaeological field study in Steambot Springs, production with the Colorado Shakespeare Festival, an intensive Spanish institute, a biology field course on plants of Colorado, performance with the Colorado Lyric Theatre festival, and much more.
Summer in Boulder, Colorado. Who can describe it? You won't want to miss it. Here's your chance to make the summer of '92 one you'll always remember.
Think money. Tuition in the summer is lower than during the following academic year.
Think outdoors. Colorado has more than 1,000 spectacle peaks soaring 10,000 feet and 53 peaks over 14,000 feet. Boulder has parks, open space, and hiking and biking trails galore. Boulder is *the* place to be outdoors.
Think outdoors. Colorado has more than
Term A: June 8-July 10
Term B: July 14-August 14
Term C: June 8-July 31
Term D: June 8-August 14
Call or mail the coupon for a free CU-Boulder Summer Session Catalog, which contains everything you need to know about special courses, registration, housing, tuition and fees, financial aid, student services, and class schedules.
For information, call (303) 492-2456.
Shorter, intensive courses also available
Yes, send me the free 1992 CU Boulder Summer Session Catalog
Name
Address
City State Zip
Date of Birth Social Security Number*
016
Mail To
Office of Admissions • Regent Administrative Center 125 • Campus Box 30
University of Colorado at Boulder • Boulder, CO 80309-0030
*For record keeping and identification of students only
(303) 492-2456
Affirmative University Institution
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Information Meeting: February 5, 1992 at 8:00 pm, Kansas Room, Kansas Union. Or step by the SIA office, four floor Kansas Union, 8:30 - 4:30 midnight Thursday morning.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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10
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT
HAPPENINGS
BARS
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill,
1601 W. 23rd St.
Friday: Now See Here, 10 p.m. to
1:30 a.m.; cover charge: $2
Saturday: Big-screen coverage of
the KU-CU game
1:30 p.m., cover charge: $2
Bogarts of Lawrence
611 Vermont St.
Saturday: Ricky Dean Sinatra,
9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m., cover
charge: $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Friday: LoveSquad, 10.p.m to 2a.m., cover charge: $3
Saturday: Baghdad Jones, 10.p.m to
2a.m., cover charge: $3
Sunday: Nova Mob, 10.p.m to
2a.m., cover charge: $3
Monday: Open mike, 9:30 p.m to
2a.m, no cover charge
Tuesday: Fungo Mungo, 10.p.m to
2a.m, cover charge: $3
Wednesday: Dwardes,
10.p.m to 2a.m.
Thursday: Monkey Meet, 10.p.m to
2a.m., cover charge: $3
Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire Wednesday: Karaoke night, 10 p.m. no cover charge
The Brass Apple, 3300 W. 15th St.
Tuesday: Karaoaknight, 9p.m. to
1:30 a.m. no cover charge
Flamingo Club, 501 N. Ninth St.
Friday, Saturday: toast dancers, noon-1 a.m., m. cover charge $2 or a two-drank minimum
Henry T's Bar & Grill, 3520 W. Sixth St
The Jazzhaus of Lawrence, 9261/2 Massachusetts St.
Thursday: Karaokenight,
9p.m.to 2 a.m., no cover charge
Massachusetts St.
Friday, Saturday: Guerill Theater
10 p.m. to 1:30 a.m., cover charge:
¢¢
Thursday: The Picadors, 10 p.m. to
1:30 a.m., cover charge: $3
9:30 p.m to 2 a.m., cover charge: $1
Johny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St.
Friday, Saturday: The 39th Street
Blues Band.
The Power Plant, 901 Mississippi St
Friday. Sunday: alternative music
night
Riverside Bar and Grill
$20 N. Third St.
Friday: Billy Speans,
p. 9-m. l. cover charge: $2
Shiloh, 1003E. 23rd St.
Friday: Valentine Party,
Band: The Regulators,
9 p.m. to 1 a.m., cover charge: $3
Saturday: Dance lessons,
7:45 to 8:45 p.m.
Band: Rio,
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.,
cover charge: $3
The Yacht Club, 350 Wisconsin St.
Tuesday: Karaoke night, 9 p.m. to
1 a.m., no cover charge
ARTEXHIBITIONS
Spencer Museum of Art
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.
Beyond the Floating World:
Japanese Prints in the
Twentieth Century
runs through March 15
Mexican Retablo Painting:
The Art of Private Devotion
runs through March 8
Documenting the American Dream: FSA Photographs of the Great Depression runs through March 8
THEATER
The IngeTheater
Friday-Saturday: "The Blonde"
8p.m., tickets $3, students
MUSIC
Friday: Kansas City Concert KU Symphonic Band Yardley Hall, Johnson County Community College, 8 p.m., admission free
Sunday: Sigma Alpha Iota Benefit Concert, Swarthout Recital Hall, 1 p.m.
Sunday: Winter Concert KUymphonic Band, Crafton-Preyer Theater, 3:30 p.m., admission free
Lawrence Arts Center
200 w. 9th Street
Sunday: Jazz Concert
featuring Nathan Burg,
8 p.m., tickets: $5 students
Tuesday: Special Event "Treasure Island" performed by National Theater of the Deaf, 8 p.m. Haskell Junior College
Heart to Heart
NSAS
"I sometimes dread Valentine's Day if I know I can't see him. So I'm, kind of excited." Wendy Fischer, St. Louis sophomore
Photo Illustration Derek Notan/KANSAN
GEORGETOWN
Photo Illustration Derek Nolan/KANSAN
Valentine's Day makes long-distance love difficult
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
Aromatic dinner for two, complete with candles, roses and champagne, is an image some couples conjure up when they think of Valentine's Day. But some students at the University of Kansas will anticipate little more than a phone call, card or package from their Valentine.
These are the students who will anticipate the mailman's arrival today and who will wait by the phone for an expected call.
These are the students who skipped today's classes to get an early start on road trips to Missouri or Texas or farther.
These are the students on the KU end of long-distance between two cities.
Laura Bryant, Dallas senior, and her husband will be apart on Valentine's Day.
Bryant saw her husband last weekend, so being together would not work out this Valentine's Day, she said. But she's not complaining.
"It's kind of fun because I'll probably get a surprise in the mail," she said.
Bryant met her husband in their hometown of Dallas after her freshman year at KU. He graduated from Texas A&M University in December 1990 and has been working in Houston. They were married Jan. 4.
Bryant said she would join him in Houston after she graduated in May.
"It's not so bad when you're busy, but on weekends I notice the separation because I know I could be doing something with him," she said.
Bryant, who is a member of KU's tennis team, said she and her husband had spent only one Valentine's Day together.
"Last year I was in Austin for a tennis tournament, so he drove there to see me," she said. "He came to the match, then we went to dinner."
She said her plans tonight probably would consist of an evening with friends.
Allen Omoto, KU assistant professor of psychology, has spent four years at KU developing a measure for determining closeness of college couples throughout an academic year.
He found that the more interdependent partners were, the more likely they were to stay together. In most cases,
But Omoto said that intimate phone conversations, letters and occasional visits could produce the same effect because these communications often offered opportunity for self-disclosure, expression of feelings and support for one another.
*Anecdotally, people who have those kinds of relationships find the time they spend together is more meaningful.*
Omoto said holidays such as Valentine's Day often were harder on separated couples psychologically.
"Holidays are a time that people who are in those relationships find themselves thinking of their partners a lot more." Omoto said.
Continuing a high school relationship is a common reason for couples to have to spend time apart on romantic holidays.
Chad Boeger, Overland Park sophomore, and Lance Lemay, Kansas City freshman, both have girlfriends who are still in high school back home.
Lemay said he saw his girlfriend almost every weekend but that the day-to-day separation was difficult.
"It was really rough on both of us at first being so far apart," he said. "It caused a lot of problems. When she came here, she felt uncomfortable because she didn't know anybody."
But Lemay said they had become more used to the separation and that he planned to see his girlfriend this Valentine's Day.
Some couples are lucky that Valentine's Day is on a Friday this year.
Wendy Fisher, St. Louis sophomore, and her boyfriend, who attends the University of Missouri, will spend their first Valentine's Day in three years together today.
Fisher said she had dated her boyfriend since high school and that expensive phone bills were common. She said they saw each other every two or three weeks, in the summer and on holidays because they both were from St. Louis.
"I sometimes dread Valentine's day if I know I can't see him," she said. "So I'm kind of excited."
Once-banned play premieres at KU
Russian playwright visits Lawrence for the opening night of 'The Blonde'
By Svala Jonsdottin
Kansan staff writer
A Russian play, once banned by the former Soviet government, premiered Tuesday at the University of Kansas.
"Volodin is probably the most prominent playwright of the older generation in Russia today," Marinov said. "In the forty years of his career, his plays have been staged throughout the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, as well as Germany, France and Britain."
Alexander Volodin, a 73-year-old Russian playwright and author of the play, came to Lawrence this week to see the western premiere of his play, "The Blonde: A Story for Film With One Intermission," which is directed by Sam Marinov, Lawrence graduate student.
Marinov emigrated from the Soviet Union to the United States in 1860. He directed plays in various theaters there, but this is his first production at KU. He has also directed plays at the University of Houston and in regional theaters in Texas.
"The play is concerned with the universal themes of pursuit of happiness and finding a meaning in life," he said.
"These themes are universal to any human being, regardless of place of origin."
The KU production of the play features alternating filmed and live scenes. The film segments were produced by KU students and were shot in Lawrence and other Kansas locations last fall.
"The form was harmonious with the way the play was written, since the combination of theater and film plays a pivotal role in the play," he said. "I have never seen any production like this one. It was a complete discovery."
After seeing the production on opening night, Volodin said he was pleased with the director's decision to mix film with live theater.
Volodin said the play originally had been intended as a screenplay when he wrote it in 1979, but the Soviet government prohibited the production of a film based on the screenplay. "The Blonde" was staged once by a Russian amateur theater.
"At that time, work that explored personal relationships was not exactly in line with the ideologically correct dogma," Volodin said. "Also, the main character is unsatisfied with her life, which was another indication that something was wrong with life in the Soviet system."
This is Volodin's second visit to the United States and his first viewing of one of his plays outside the former Soviet Union, he said.
William Kuhlke, professor of the
ater, Soviet and East European studies and Slavic languages and literature, translated the play with the help of Marinov and Frank Doden, graduate teaching assistant in English. Khulke said one of the interesting aspects of Volodin's plays was that he worked in both theater and film, and his plays reflected that.
"That fits into what we are trying to do here at the University in the department of theatre and film, to find ways to explore and train people in both media," he said.
Nicole Day, Lenexa senior, plays the lead role of Irena. She said the role had been difficult to approach, since Irena's personality was so different from her own.
"She is a very impulsive person who wants to live a very exciting and unusual life," she said. "She seeks that in other people, but she does not find it. In the end, she realizes she can only find happiness within herself."
When working on the role last fall, Day sought many ways of understanding her character. At one point, she even followed one of Marinov's suggestions and bleached her hair.
The play will be shown tonight at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 2:30 and 8 p.m. at the William Inge Memorial Theatre in Murphy Hall.
"It was an absolute disaster, so I dyed it back," she said. "Dying my hair blonde did not make me feel any different, and in the show I wear a wig."
Professor publishes fourth novel
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Carolyn Doty is perfecting her craft through the art of teaching.
Doty, who teaches fiction writing at the University of Kansas, is the author of four critically acclaimed novels. She said that her teaching and writing skills complemented each other.
Often, Doty's ideas come from her teaching methods. Sometimes she hasher students explore stories from the perspective of a secondary character rather than the perspective in novel, she said. It's the same technique she uses to develop her ideas.
The novel is about the developing relationship between a man and a woman. The man thinks the woman is his father's mistress, said Doty, associate professor of English.
Her fourth novel, "Whisper," was recently published by Charles Scribner's and Sons, a publishing company in New York City.
"Whisper," which took Doty three years to write, is a work of metafiction, a style of writing that involves weaving well-known stories into her own novel.
This is me
"It's a.kind of Scheherazade," she said. "The woman tells the man a series of stories before he falls in love with her. It was really hard, but it was delicious fun to write."
Derek Notan/KANSAN
Darolyn Doty, assistant professor of English, is surprised about how successful her new book is doing.
A reading of the novel will take place 8 p.m. Monday at 100 Smith Hall. Paul Lim, assistant professor of English, said the reading would be theatrical, with actors reading the dialogue and Doty narrating.
"Personally, I think that the book experiments with form and breaks new ground with form," Lim said. "I think she's a tremendous asset to the English department."
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
11
Performances honor poet, raise money for schools
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
The celebration of the life and work of Langston Hughes at the Lawrence Arts Center last night was a huge success, said Barbara Clark, staff member at the center.
About 70 people listened to poetry and jazz music in honor of Hughes' work. Hughes lived part of his life in Lawrence and went to Pinckney Elementary School before he moved to New York.
The center earned $350 from the program, which will be used for the libraries at Pinckney and New York elements.
Members of the Black Poets Society from the University of Kansas performed some of Hughes' poems such as "I Dream a World," "Dream Deferred," and "Freedom Train."
Shanta Griffin, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, said Hughes was a role model.
"I look up to him as a person that I would one day like to be like to mimic," she said.
Griffin, who performed "Hammer Song" and "Heaven to Hell," said it was not difficult to interpret Hunters' poetry.
"Anyone can understand it," she said. "It's a universal language. People are people. It's just words with meaning and understanding."
Members of the society also performed some of their own work.
Lauri Conner, president of Black Poets Society, went to a predominantly white school like the one Hughes wrote
Conner wrote a poem that commented on and graded Hughes' essay from two different perspectives. One was from a Black teacher and the other from a white teacher. The teacher gave him an 'A' and the Black teacher failed him.
Conner said Hughes and other Black poets were sources of inspiration.
"They're the ones that taught me I can do anything," "she said.
The Ben Graham Quartet also performed at the program. They played jazz in the background while Hughes' poetry was read by one of his friends. Dan Jaffe of Overland Park.
Jaffe said he met Hughes in 1965, two years before he died. Hughes accepted Jaffe's invitation to read some of his poetry in Jaffe's literature class at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
JOHN LEE EASTMAN
He said Hughes' poetry was based on a variation of jazz
Christine McFardand/KANSAN
Dan Jaffe, reads a Langston Hughes poem as Jin Cordes of the Ben Graham Quartet plays jazz music. music called scat, which is music done by using words. The music gave Hughes' poetry a beat, Jaffe said.
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PERSONAL GROWTH GROUPS
Women's: Tues. 1-2:30 p.m.
Feb. 25-April 28
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February 29 is SOLD OUT!
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Dates: February 21, 22, 23,and 27,28 at Lawrence High School
Times: All shows 7:30 pm, Sunday, the 23rd,
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Prices: Firstweekend: $B, $10. $7
Second Weekend: $B, $10
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
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Speaker criticizes proposed U.S.-Mexico free trade pact
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
Some Mexican workers live in shacks with no plumbing, electricity or clean water and work long hours for $4 a day, and the conditions will continue if the United States-Mexico free trade agreement passes, said a speaker last night at a Latin American Solidarity dinner.
"We have no problem with trading with Mexico," said Jack Hendrick, vice president of the United Auto Workers Local #249 in Kansas City, Mo. "But North American free trade needs to be structured so workers on both sides of the border can grow."
About 30 people attended the speech at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Hedrick, who studied Mexican
Hedrick described working conditions in the maquiladoras, or foreignowned facilities in Mexico along the U.S. border. Ninety percent are American-owned, he said.
working conditions and free trade for about nine years, talked about the problems with U.S. corporations in Mexico and how the current free trade agreement will worsen working conditions.
"These people are treated like slaves," Hedrick said. "Foreign countries take their business there and put nothing back into the country. Companies dump toxic waste and chemicals into the water, and the workers make about $4 a day. They can't even afford to buy the products they produce."
He said U.S. citizens should not allow Mexicans to be treated poorly by U.S. corporations.
The Coalition for Justice in the Maquiladoras, an organization to which Hedrick belongs, is working to change the trade agreement to include environmental and child labor laws.
Liz Maggard, Latin American Solidarity member, said the proposal was on the fast track in Congress, which means Congress can vote yes or no, but cannot amend the bill.
"Until the bill's amended with standards, groups will hope that Congress votes no," Maggard said. Jon Vincent, director of Latin American studies, said the trade proposal was important because it would affect all people politically and economically
"The proposal is complicated because about two dozen government committees are dealing with specific items of it," Vincent said.
Kansas Union/SUA Valentines Day OPEN HOUSE CARRIAGE RIDES
Friday, Feb 14, 5:30-7:30p.m.
$5 per person
Tickets at SUA box office Feb. 14.
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan/Friday February 14, 1992
13
AUG
Marnee Dietrich/KANSAN
Winter practice
Kansas golfer Aaron Sheaks, Wichita junior, reads the break of the green before attempting a long pout on the public course at Alvamar Golf and Country Club, 1800 Crossgate Dr. Yesterday was the golf team's first day of practice.
Jayhawks will meet Buffs here
Richey likely to return to play
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Adonis Jordan said the Kansas Jayhawks' blowout victory against Iowa State Wednesday night was just what the team needed after Saturday's loss at No. 2 Oklahoma state.
"It was good to get that nasty taste out of our mouths." Jordan said.
The Jayhaws did so in a big way. 91, 60, and junior center Eric Pauley said the Jayhaws got the victory by concluding that he had brought over the loss to the Cowboys.
"I think we were very composed after a loss like that," Pauley said. "We were worried about playing Iowa State, not Oklahoma State."
Now the Jayhawks must concentrate on playing tomorrow against a Colorado team that Wednesday night — died — who else? — Oklahoma State.
The Buffaloes, who just a week and a half ago had yet to claim a Big Eight Conference victory, followed up a victory at home against Oklahoma and an overtime loss at Iowa State with a 57-33 victory against the Cowboys in Boulder. Colo.
Oklahoma State's loss, combined with Kansas' victory, put the Jayhawks, 18-8 overall, in sole possession in the Big Eight with a 6-1 league pair.
The victory also pushed Colorado's record to 11-9 overall and 2-5 in the Big Eight. The Buffalooes success against Oklahoma State may not come as a surprise to Kansas—Colorado oncey upset the Jayhawks in Boulder last month.
point guard Billy Law had a chance to send the game into overtime with 2 seconds left in regulation, but he missed the first free throw of a two-shot foul. Trying to miss the second shot, Law actually made it, Kansas got and protected the ball, and went home with an 81-80 victory.
"For him to be that young," senior forward Alonzo Jamsion said of Boyce after the first encounter, "he's going to have to Big Eight the next couple of years."
"He doesn't play like a freshman," Kansas coach Roy Williams said after the game in Boulder. "He plays like a senior."
The Jayhawks were hurt in that game by freshman guard Donnie Boyce, who scored a game-high 27 points for the Buffaloes.
In that game, Colorado's senior
In addition to Boyce, Colorado has been receiving strong play from junior forward Randy Robinson, who is averaging 15.3 points a game in Big Eight play.
For Kansas, Jordan, who scored just seven points in the first meeting with Colorado, will be trying to repeat the excellent performance he turned in against Iowa State. The 5-foot-11 point guard scored a career-high 25 points on 10-of-14 shooting.
Jordan, who had been discouraged with his play lately, said a discussion with coach Williams helped changed his focus.
"In the past month, I've been more worried about pleasing the media and everybody else than anything," he said. "From now on, I'm just going to worry about pleasing myself and coach Williams."
VS.
(4) KANSAS JAYHAWKS
COLORADO
BUFFALOES
Coach: Roy Williams Record:18-2,(6-1)
Coach: Joe Harrington Record: 11-9, (2-5)
Game time: 1 p.m. tomorrow at Allen Field House. It will be broadcast on channels 8 and 9 in Lawrence and on 105.9 KLZR and 90.7 KJHK.
Probable Starters
Colorado
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
24-F Alonzo Jamison 6-6 Sr. 10.5 4.3
34-F Richard Scott 6-7 So. 10.3 4.4
51-C Eric Pauley 6-10 Jr. 8.2 3.1
23-G Rex Walters 6-4 Jr. 16.3 3.2
30-G Adonis Jordan 5-11 Jr. 13.9 3.7
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
34-F James Hunter 6-4 Jr. 10.0 3.5
25-F Randy Robinson 6-7 Jr. 13.7 4.5
2-C Poncho Hodges 6-9 Jr. 6.9 6.4
15-G Billy Law 5-10 Sr. 9.5 3.9
24-G Donnie Boyce 6-5 Fr. 16.0 5.5
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
Courtside-
Kansas swingman Patrick Richey, who had surgery three weeks ago to repair a stress fracture in his right knee, likely will return to action tomorrow. Richey, who has supped up the last two games, said he had healed faster than expected. He originally was expected to pass four to six weeks.
Center Greg Ostertag ignited the
crowd in the first half of the Iowa State game by stealing the ball at midcourt and going the rest of the way for a dunk. Ostertag he almost didn't make it down the court, however.
Kansas baseball opens season today
"I ran out of steam at the top of the key," Ostertag said. "That's why I was standing on the ground when I dunked it."
Jayhawks will play Arkansas team
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
The University of Kansas baseball team is looking forward to playing at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock for more than one reason.
Besides being KU's season opener, the meeting will give the Jawahars a chance to play outside for the first time in four days.
Mild temperatures have allowed the team to spend much of the winter practicing outside. But with the sudden return to winter weather, the Jayhawks have been inside forced in Anschutz Sports Pavilion instead of Hoglund-Maunin Stadium.
Coach Dave Bingham said the weather had not posed a significant problem.
The Jayhawks and the Trojans will team
up to play in the All-Star game. The
teams will play at Wolverine Park.
"We have been able to develop some pretty good drills indoors," Bingham said. "When we make the move from outside to inside, it's not as devastating as you might think. Outside of lining up and playing a game, you can get a lot accomplished in there."
Bingham said Anschutz's artificial turf helped the Jayhawks prepare for the Trojans because Little Rock's playing surface also is turf.
"He's right on schedule for six or
Kansas will send Curtis Schmidt to the hill for Friday's game. Schmidt, the only senior on the squad, had a 6-5 record last year with a 3.03 ERA. His feat last year of playing seven complete games is something Bingham said he hoped would not be repeated this year. Bingham said Schmidt, who rested his arm during the fall and did not start throwing again until November, was approaching mid-season form.
"When we make the move from outside to inside it's not as devastating as you might think."
Dave Bingham Kansas baseball coach
seven innings." Bingham said. "He's in pitching shape about as close as you canget. He needs one time under game conditions."
Friday's game also will be Little Rock's season opener. The Trojans' original opener, scheduled for Wednesday with Henderson State,
was rained out.
Little Rock is moving into the Sun
Belt Conference this year after com-
peting in the Trans America Athletic
Conference and competing in the
overall last year and 6th in the TAC.
Little Rock coach Gary Gogan said that although last year was a disappointment, he had high hopes for the new season.
"We thought last year we had a chance to do well," Hogan said. "And I came away with a bad taste in my mouth."
The Trojans will look to seniors Steve Mapes and Terrence Conner for offense. Mapes, a native of Topeka who played at Allen County Community College in Iola, hit .308 last year. Conner hit .343 with six home runs and 39 RBI.
The Trojans are returning only three pitchers from last year's squad. Senior Chris Johnson, a native of Independence, Mo., was 5-5 last year with a 5.33 ERA.
Jayhawks expect to work on Sunday
By Cody Holt
Kansas sportswriter
All of the ingredients will be present for an upset in Ames, Iowa, on Sunday when Kansas, at first place in the Big Eight Conference, will play last-place Iowa State.
- Iowa State upset second-place Oklahoma State 55-50 Wednesday in Stillwater, Okla., for its only Big Eight victory of the season.
- Kansas lost 65-54 to Colorado on Wednesday in Boulder, Colo., for its second conference loss of the season.
- Kansas humiliated Iowa State 88
- Jan. 22 at Allen Field House.
Kansas's 59 point win against margin was its largest ever against a big Eight eagle.
"I's going to be a pride thing for them," senior guard Kay Kay Hart said, "if they don't beat us, they're sure we makeweplayverywell to beat them."
Hart said the Jayhawks would try to use their loss to Colorado as motivation against Iowa State.
Kansas has not won at Iowa State since Feb. 18, 1987.
"Our loss at Missouri brought us
down to reality," Hart said of Kansas' first conference loss, a 57-56 decision in Columbia, Mo.
No. 16 Kansas, 18-4 overall, slipped into a first-pair tie in the Big Eight with Nebraska, 17-5 overall, after the teams with teams have 72 conference records.
"After that we started playing like we were capable of. I hope (the losto) Colorado will be another wake-up call."
Freshman forward Angela Aycock said that Iowa State's upset in Stillwater would help the Cyclones but that Jayhawks should do well against them.
*If we go out and play with intensity
unless the buzzer sounds, we can beat them
Hart said the Jayhawks were still in the driver's seat to win the conference title.
"I think it will help them mentally," Aycock said. "They will still have problems matching up with us.
"The loss hurt us but it definitely doesn't put us out of contention," she said. "I think we're in control of our own fate."
Game time: 2 p.m. Sunday in Ames, Iowa. The game will be broadcast on KJHK 90.7.
Women's basketball probable starters
**Kansas 18-4, (7-2)**
23 Terrill Johnson F F Str. 5-11 7.3 RPG
32 Danielle Shareef F F Str. 5-10 8.3 5.9
30 Angela Aycock F F Fr. 6-2 9.8 4.3
30 Jo Jo Witherspoon G Jr. 5-8 3.0 1.3
30 Kay Kay Hart G Str. 5-7 9.8 3.7
**lowa** 3-18, (1-8)
21 Shanda Fitzgerald F P Jr. 5-11 5.2 4.2
23 Melanie Young F So. 5-11 3.9 3.8
4 Leslie Maple G Sr. 5-7 9.2 3.2
5 Tynnetta Rasheed G Sr. 5-10 11.6 4.1
Cledella Evans G Jr. 5-7 3.1 2.0
Source Kansas Sports Information Department
U.S. hockey wins again
MERIBEL, France — The United States clinched a berth in the Olympic hockey medal round, beating Finland 4-1 yesterday behind goalie Ray LaBlanc's second outstanding game and Scott Young's twogoals.
Tim Sweneye's goal at 13:55 of the second period broke a 1-1 tie as the Americans boosted their record to 30 and set themselves up for a high medal-round seeding.
The United States leads Pool A with two games left in the preliminary round, against Poland (0-3) and Sweden (3-0). Last night Sweden beat Germany 3-1. Sweden and the United States will meet in the final preliminary round game.
"You always want to finish first in your division," U.S. captain Clark Donatelli said. "Why shoot for second place?"
After winning the gold medal in 1980, American teams missed the medal round and finished seventh in 1984 and 1988.
Four teams from each of the six-team pools advance, with the first-place teams playing the fourth-place teams in the other pool, and the second playing the third
OLYMPIC BRIEFS
Mikko Makela, who scored Finland's goal, said that if the Americans played their game the same way throughout the tournament, the United States could finish strong. But Makela warned that Finland should not be counted out yet.
Donatelli said: "The media hype's going to build up, but all along we've been expecting it because we've
been expecting to win."
The Americans' determination was evident in a come-from-behind 6-3 victory against Italy and a tight 2-0 victory against Germany.
COUNTRY
ALBERTVILLE 92
Finland, the 1988 silver medalist,
is known for superior stick handling
and passing but could not overcome
the Americans' effort.
Sweeney put the Americans ahead on a pass from C.J. Young from center ice past Teemu Selanne and onto Sweeney's stick 40feet from the goal. Sweeny shifted the puck to his backhand and slit it between Markus Ketterer's pads.
LeBlanc, who had 46 saves in the victory against Germany, stopped24 shots against Finland.
C. J. Young also assisted on Sean Hill's goal from close in at 9:52 of the third period. Scott Young, a 1988 Olympic who played for 1991 Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh, scored on a breakaway at 13:08 after stealing the puck.
Finland tied the game 1-1 on Makela's fancy shorthanded goal at 9:42 of the second period. He faked out defenseman Scott Lachance in the slot, wentinalone on LeBlanc and put in a backhander.
Scott Young scored the first goal at 18:44 of the first period when he picked up a loose puck near his own blue line, skated up the right side and blasted a 40-foot slap shot that hit Ketterer's pads and went in.
Olympic Games
U.S. wins gold in skiing
TIGNES, France — World Champions Donna Weinbrecht and Edgar Grosspiron collected freestyle skiing's first Olympic gold medals Thursday, then set about lobbying for more medals in their sport.
"It's a young sport, and after this we will have to continue to work hard so that the other freestyle disciplines
— ballet and aerials — also become medal events at the Olympics," Gosprion said after his victory.
Weinbrecht, the 25-year-old American who won the second U.S. Gold, predicted a bright future for freestyle skelling.
"The sport is really going to go places after what happened today," Weinbrecht said. "It means a dream come true. I have waited for it for years."
It was the first time the Olympics had awarded medals to freestyle skiers, Weinbrecht and Grospiro, a 22-year-old Frenchman, were mobbed by fans who turned the event into a carnival in the snow.
Walker set to bobsled
Grospiron said the sport evolved quickly.
"I'm fired up," the Minnesota
Vikings' running back said Thursday,
less than two days before his
Winter Olympic debut in the two-
LA PLAGNE, France — Herschel Walker was getting restless in the NFL, so he's ready to explode into Olympic form and help break a 36-year U.S. medal drought in the bobsled.
Olympic medals count
Olympic Games
Country G S B T
Austria 4 4 4 12
Germany 4 4 2 10
Unified Team* 3 3 3 9
Norway 3 1 2 6
France 2 3 1 6
Finland 1 1 2 4
U.S. 2 0 1 3
Italy 1 2 0 3
The Netherlands 0 1 1 2
China 0 1 0 1
Canada 0 0 1 1
Japan 0 0 1 1
Sweden 0 0 1 1
Switzerland 0 0 1 1
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
man race. "This is the big-medal game."
Walker began bobsledding in 1990 and has entered only one international race. U.S. bobsled officials gave him a competition waiver for the early season World Cup tour because of his football commitments.
But Walker's explosive start makes the No. 1 U.S. sled, piloted by Brian Shimer, a medal contender against strong European and Canadian competition.
From The Associated Press
14
UniversityDaily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
Men's tennis trip could serve as catalyst
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas men's tennis coach Scott Perelman said he was looking at this weekend's Ice Vollies tournament in Napoleonia as a potential momentum builder for the Jayhawks.
The Jayhawks left yesterday for the four-team tournament, which begins today and runs through Sunday. Kansas will play at 6:30 p.m. today against No. 24 Minnesota in the first round, with No. 16 Tennessee and Southern Methodist competing in the other half of the draw.
"I think this will be a good test for us." I think this would be a good test for us. Mr. said. If we could.
would be a good sign of improvement."
Such a sign of improvement heading into the USTA/ITCA National Team Indoors would bode well for the Jayhawks, he said.
The National Team Indoors will take place Feb. 19-23 in Louisville, Ky. Perelman said that other than the NCAA and Big Eight Conference championships, the National Indoors was the biggest event of the season for the Jawhaws.
"Anything you do at the National Indoors is magnified two or three times nationally," he said. "A win this weekend would give us good momentum going into the National Indoors."
In Minneapolis, the Jayhaws will be facing a Golden Gophers' squad that is coming off a 9-0 loss against No. 10 Notre Dame. Minnesota lost five three-set matches in the dual match.
"Minnesota is a Big Ten favorite," Perelman said. "I was a little surprised by that score."
A Kansas victory against the Golden Gophers could set up a possible rematch against Tennessee. The Jaya-hawks lost to the Volunteers 6-3 at the Tennessee Invitational two weeks ago.
The Jayhawks' lineup this weekend will be similar to the one that faced Tennessee. Seniors Rafael Rangel and
Paul Garvin will play No. 1 and No. 2 singles, respectively, and a combination of senior Pat Han, junior Carlos Fleming and sophomore Rhain Buth will fill the No. 3, No. 4 and 5 singles slots.
"He deserves to be given a shot," Perelman said.
The 'Hawks doubles lineup will consist of Garvin-Fleming at No. 1, Han-Buth at No. 2 and Rangel-Ortiz at No. 3.
Perelman said the only lineup change would be at No. 6 singles, where sophomore Ian Goodman will replace freshman Manny Ortiz. Goodman won challenge matches against Ortiz in practice.
Women swimmers lead Big Eight championships
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska's men's team and the Kansas women were the leaders yesterday two days in the four-dayBig Eight Conference Men's and Women's Swimming and Diving Championships.
In the men's 400-yard medley relay, second-place Kansas was disqualified because of a false start and forfeited 26
points, leaving Nebraska with a 206-180 lead.
Meanwhile, the Jayhawk women, producing what Nebraska's women's coach Ray Huppert called an outlier, are more than 1-78 advantage over the Cornhuskers.
NCAA qualifying time of 1 minute,
19.80 seconds.
The Nebraska men had to battle from the start to earn their lead. Kansas opened the night's session by winning the 200 freestyle relay in an
The Jayhawks also were favored to win the 400 medley, but Nebraska's foursome of Seddon Keyter, William Campbell, Peter Giraudeau and Alan Kelsey proved to be better, winning in a meet-record time of 3.18.37.
The Kansas women also won the 200 freestyle relay in an NCAA qualifying event.
ley relay and got another victory from Krista Cordsen, who successfully defended her 200 individual medley title.
Nebraska's Michelle Butcher set a meet record in the 500 freestyle. She swam the event in 4:50.58.
Kansas junior Zhawn Stevens won the 202 individual medley with a time of 1:49.20, defending his title from last year.
--school Education Students
Students who are in grades GPCs (GPCs included) must attend the student teacher meeting on Wednesday, February 19 at 4:00 p.m. to m382 Biol-ing. The information is available in 118 Hallway C.
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Have your entry blank stamped at each of the locations listed, then drop it off at SUA. Be sure to include your name, phone number and KUID. Only completed forms will be considered. One entry per person. Union employees not eligible. Entry Deadline: 2 pm, Feb. 14. One winner drawn. Need not be present to win.
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David T. the trumpet teacher? He was FIRED? Why?
Why?
DeJeanse, we met at the jail a couple of days ago. I 12 call you that. Please call or send a message. (You can do both.)
For all the things you ve pulled as stunts
we're just a little ticked;
As to how you'll get your comeuppe
~ well we don't like to predict
Suffice to say you should beware
At work, at home, at play-
You've never met a sliver pair
>Sohave a nice V-Day!
Amy - Hey baby - Happy Valentine's Day! You've made me happier than I have been in a long time, and I thank you that. You've got the best qualities in the world. You believe me, if I had three wishes, I'd wish for each time Kiss please. Excalibur Man. David T. the trumpet teacher? He was FIRED?
MIDWEEK 2PM 29TH BIRTHDAY CHAG
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Himucks, hugs or sparks
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120 Announcements
Adult Children of Alcoholics Group Wed. 4-5, 30 p.m. Concerns may include trust, anger, selfesteem and addictive relationships. Call CAPS 864-9808 for information.
Hillel-
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CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
130 Entertainment
With Cannibal Corpse and Gorguts Friday, February 21 at the OUTHOUSE (4miles East of Mass. on 15th St.) All ages · 9p.m. Showtime · Get there early!
Don't miss Nova Mb mob featuring Grant Hart from Dunday Su Duphe 16 Bottleneck 18 ove r the
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140 Lost-Found
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14. 1992
15
Babysitter needed. First Methodist Church. First & third month each month. 9:15 a.m.-10:30 Min. wage. Call 865-1542 Leave message or after 6:00 p.m. need now!
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigangoboys/glrsummer camps. Teach camps, rifling, sailing, watermarching, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, $ salary 1,000 or more. Kitchen, 1785 Maple, 714, IL, 600-786-4424
Catering Department, Kansas and Burge Union hiring caterers to work Thursday, February 20-, m. 4p-m, Friday, February 21- 8a.m. 3p-m, Tuesday, February 22- 8a.m. 3p-m, Wednesday, February 25 8.30m - 9a.m. 8.42p per week to work one or more days, but must work the entire shift and follow dress code for caterers. Will pay for hiring employment. Apply Kansas and Burge Union工资, 8th Level Kansas Union Building EOE
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
CNA's: 'Explore the possibilities of home care
to help your clients with their needs to contact your
clients without interruption. Flexible,
uniform allowance, and training provided.
Call Campbell County Visiting Nurses 843-7328 for
P.O. Box 1507.
Counselors/support staff children's camps north-east top salary,mbu/blutray,travel allowance, craft room, one of the following activities: archery, dance, drama, drivers, drums, field hockey, football golf, guitar, gymnastics, hockey, kitchen supervisor/workers, lace maintenance, nature nurses, photography, rocker, kitchen supervisor/workers, lace secretary, secretary, tennis track, waterskiers, weights Droopy for an interview on Wednesday, groundbreaking Regionalist & Roadmasters in the Kansas University
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING. Students Needed:
Earn $2,000 + 100th in World Travel Exp. Mex.
Work on projects with the following
Guides, Waiter/Wafler, etc. Holiday, Summer
and Career Employment avail. 40 experi-
mennts per week.
Daycare needs a responsible assistant for Tues and Thur 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. More hours of work at Daycare are available.
Entry level Earn $10/hr 1922 Expansion. International firm. Full Part time positions, very flexible schedule. Great for students. Exceptional advancement potential, 842-6499
Helped Wanted: Full. Part time help for midnight to 6AM and 6AM noon shifts. Please apply in person to Phillips 64a918 and Iowa. Must be neat, clean, and enjoy working with the public.
IMAGE CONSULTANT Set own hours. Image improvement, color analysis, make up and skin care.
Jobopening to oversee rehab work Hours needed 0 a.m. - 8 a.m. m - 10 p.m. m - office duties and working with patients Tuesdays and Thursdays 0 a.m. - 12 p.m. 12:30. Call between 0 a.m. and 12 p.m. 749-0130
Naisim Hall is looking for a responsible, mature individual to work 24 hrs per week in exchange for a one-year contract.
> `ps? We are looking for distributors Ex...`
> `ps? We are looking for distributors Ex...`
> `Send Long S A E S distributors distributors A+1213 Hillwood HD Forked River NJ 04731`
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> `7 3001 - 3004 for 3month old B443 525 3890`
Earn $5,000 to $10,000 this summer painting houses in
Earn $5,000 to $10,000 this summer painting houses in
five final hiring for these positions
are being held now! 1) Structural Management 2)
Medical Arts Management 3) Professional Painting Prices 4) manage 1
OVERSEAS JOBS $900-2000 sum. Summer, YR.
oversee, Country, All fields will use inter-
site data. Send resume to job.com/overseas.
Part time now full time in summer, answering questions, showing apartment and general office maps. Send resume to: Office of Administration, 90 M-F. Possibility for 10-20 hours a week until May mid-term then sw/kw through mid August. Must
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN. 4/Rm. prices Dayay149.
Panama City $139, Kitch. Wrift & Trans Available
CALLCM at 1-800-423-3264
Positions available in food service, laundry, maintenance, light haksp. Children's summer camps in NY, PA, Mass, Maine. Free Room & Board + use of facility! Call Ameni 1430-6425
SUMMER JOB'S OUTDOORS! National Parks,
Canada. Job #3415; Sailboat Sunsail, 118 East
Napkirk for Free Daffodil. 118 East Napkirk
Wanted: If you are personable, energetic and enjoy being around people, come join our summer waitlist. Call Tatyana at 312-548-1656 in kaukaun. Call Tuesday-thursday for 3:30 for an appointment. Call Troy, 631-4821
WE'RE SWAMPED! Local business needs students now to staff envelopes at home. Excellent earnings. All materials provided. Send SASE MAIL: SASE MAIL, Box 1021, Olate, HS 66026 Immediate response.
Waterfront Jobs-WSI Summer Children's Camps-Northeast Mon and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiers, lifeguards, and counselors. Beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday. Feb 19 from 11am-5pm in the Waterfront Business Building.
Tennis jobs=sunriver's camps=northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Drop by for an interview on Wednesday Fei. Faji. Tianglei trippe in the Regional and Orcad Houses in the Kansai Union
We're Looking for A Few Good Men and Women! If you think we ve got what it takes, we love to have you at Naishtm Hall. Applications will be available at the front desk beginning February 17 and are due by March 29.
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered Mild Midwest Driving
Driver Education offered Middle West
driver education obtainable, transportation provided 841
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
FAVOR FACTORY The Ultimate in library. Let us
provide you with the latest and best library and library
returns. Call us NO.W 789-1033
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
16 East 13th 842-1133
DWI/Traffic and most other legal matters Free Consultation
823 Missouri 843-4023
DUI/TRAFFIC
DUI/TRAFFIC
• Criminal Defence • Fake IDs
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
KU student would detail your car professionally for 600. For more information call 749-0708
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vias, senior partner modeling & arts portfolio
about us
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding &
portraits, Intro ID photos, student prices call
the studio.
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Student rates. B42-344
Former Prosecutor
16 East 13th 749-0087
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 490-6078
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
9212 Mass. 841-1071
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Recycle your laser printer toner cartridges for only $9. Call LRC NRS 6268. We also buy empties
Tired of taking a beating at buyback time? Get £5
free daily meals and 20-30-texts. Free
Free details mailed. *1 800-200-2007*.
Copying. hardbinding and gold stamping
Encryption Printing Service. 312 E 9th St.
840-843-5767
Tired of crowded tutoring sessions, high rates?
Private French lessons. Call莱伦 DuPriest. 661-328-5049
Want to learn guitar: stringing blues, goodtime
rock, insightful and theory too. Call Benato at
bda64716-8500-4913-8286.
Word Processing Service - Term papers, thesis,
and coursework.
Double spaced page bid. call 832-3541 (Computer Pro-
fessional).
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 845-203, days or evenings
1-Shell check always included. 2-Same day service
programs. 3-Grad, project jobs. Call Mindy's
Typing Service.
1+ Typing/WP Letters, term papers, resumes,
842-475-430; 30 days anytime wkends
From Quality, Selling to Mining Last Entry. Manage the distribution of materials and reliability call Louise at 524-897-3084 with Sally at 524-897-3160.
From Quality Tying to Mapping List Entry Maintenance/Production, and Personalized PC Training* For Experience and Reliability call Louse at 843-4626 with your ideas
K's Professional Word Processing, accurate and
callable, call after k. m41. 6345
PINK ALA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for success 'Now' Call
Word Perfect Wide Processing Laser Printer
Near campus $1 50 double-spaced page
Call 842
Word Perfect HM Compatible Word Processing
Ink JP Printer, near Orchard Chair, no calls
in the system.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertation, resumes. Editing, composition, rush writing.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
18. Schiwun Letour Luxe 18-speed touring bike
Cannondale book, bookkurt, very good condition
MotoGP
AMPEG Tube Amp. P2-15 chs, CRATE Amp.
pre-amp and 18-20 rb-cable. Best offers. 749-9701
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glass-ware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, hand-knives, vintage shoes, children’s bents, Penthouse, vintage clothing, books, carnival glam. Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising memorabilia, art objects, military collectibles, country furnish, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale memorabilia, military uniforms, Duolon, military collectables, country furniture, stuff it will blow you away! QUANTRIL S’FLEA MARKET! B11 New Hampshire. Open every Fri, Sat and Sun 10s. For booth rental info call 842-6816
Attention Bards and DJM. Wicked equipment for
all of your needs. Technique Titanium-M-7000
FV Sub cabinets. Technique Titanium-M-7000
FV Sub cabinets.
IBM compatible, 3 color monitor, duk disk drive.
ibm host printer, all software, and desks and desk
phones.
State of Kansas Trade-in:
Excellent condition
international mail,
scripter, $9.00 up and based on usage. Call Syllabus
phone: (801) 264-7855.
state of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
some with automatic document feeders and
orters. $499.00 up and based on usage. Call Sylvia
- 800-825-0259
Electronic Typewriter as new $100 Includes 60,000 word spelling checker. LCD display, application card.
HOMEWORK IELPER MAC1/100 MG 139
Color Note $.600/unit Call Nett 749
FORSALE ELECTRIC GUTTAR Kramer Amherst
board, gear rail, intrect, test, semi-metallic, hard shell
board, gear rail, intrect, test, semi-metallic, hard shell
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.95
841-794-841-8903
Mac SE, 20 mG HD, modem, Imagewriter II, color
Desk writer, 21000 IBD 1001-594-6846
Gibson S100 Strat-shape guitar, DDors Ditation Pendel, Pedal Mini Amp $150, 864-7050
Genuine ROLLERBLACK skates for the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are best. All models available. Many colors 843-2121
Moving. Can't take couch, microwave, dorm frig.
file cabinet. Bike pisser bldset, office cabinet
frame. Dorm frig.
Specialized RB 20° RB's Shrimp Shannon Components Look Palm Joices JJ at aa8-0426 $OBS OB
1979 Buckley Req Limited, 71,000 actual mileage
4 E-Engine, run very good, $1500, 1350-4350
8 E-Engine, run very good, $1500, 1350-4350
340 Auto Sales
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
1980 Dodge Diplomate, looks, runs great was $1500
now $1300. Must sell Now. 864-766-7565
1997Corolla 2dx 43p. A5m/FM, Cass low miles reliabl
offer $600/off 885 must sell!
THULE root rack w/ locks and four bike holders
$75. Roller扎架 2d 300 size 10 use twice (96
85)
1986- Rong Dragon 4-w drive, automatic, Bull bar,
wheels, air-conditioning. Many extras
available.
1045 New Jersey BJ's MC/Visa
78 Dodge Colt, Knits Well, Body Rough. $400. 749-139
82 Dodge Colt, Knits Well, Body Rough. $400. 749-139
1986 MAZDA RV7.7 Red Automatic, Loaded with Power Maxwell #F4 002-5230 5234
79 Nissan 200 ax, 5 spd, AM/FM, Good condition,
B.O.B. B.O.B.
360 Miscellaneous
$500 O.B.O. 841-4822/ have message
Vitae AT&T and AM JIM (90) 637-4700
8 Vetta 4D, AC Cruise, Spp.4M AM-FM Caa, 610 mL garage, DRG 440 854-3214 or 840 3125
1986 MAZDA RX-7 Red Automatic Lender with
5 VOLKSWAGEN 9494
24 Years of Experience
SHELL/LUNCAST
On TV's VCR's, instrumental musicians, musical instruments, cameras and we honor Vision/MC/MEX Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry.
1800 W 74 h. 191-199
Ordinary Guy sees Ordinary Girl for coffee and long walks 846-6345. Talon
NEEDED: 2-3 non-student student MIZUO Basketball game! Call Erica at 865-970
Wanted—one non-student B-Ball ticket to Colorado.
Oklahoma OK State. Call Etzalhazte 965-790-3681.
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1, 32BRaps, near campus, no pets, available June
Aug. 18g 182-897
BRI BSulease DW, Bailoney, Carport, Water Paid Avail March 1 July 1 Newspot, Rent $825 EMI
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1&2 bedroom apartments. Across KMU. On bus route. Fully furnished. Parking. Pool on site management. Heat, AC, water and laundry. 7414 W. Irwin Hall. Call 843-8228 or 852-1701.
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus. Washdir/water, microwave, ceiling fan, mini blinds. Call ist Management, Inc. M-F 2p-m 5m. fq 794-1556
*Jozy Victorian one bedroom apt. near campus*
in available $335, 842, 6384
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K U
841-6254
Hilvine Apts $95 lease signing bonus! + 2 Bed &
Bathrooms. On-site rent. 843-544-749 or 749-606-
On-site rent. 843-544-749 or 749-606-
Heatherwood apartments - 1, 2 and 3 bedroom
apartments available now until the end of May. On
these days only.
Get a group! Restored bed in bath/place (wood
guests, WQ) overnight, front ST, AT, STN
Fréree Beb. Rent two bd ap $95.00 Ends July 31st.
On busroute. Call 749-437-482
Available now at 1339 on partially furnished studio only $20.00 + utilities 749-7586
Boardwalk
apartments
1 & 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Spring &
Fall Move Inc.
524 Frontier 842-4444
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT
CALL US FIRST
1st MANAGEMENT INC
New locations on campus: 1, 2, and 3 bedroom
rooms. Additional rooms are available.
New mini-binches. Call now for an appointment. M
MARINA SCHOOL OF ARTS
480-769-5960
www.marina.school.org
Looking for a place? Cox 2夜睡 ap, in the morning. Go to your room, six month utilities. Negotiate through time.
Louisiana Place Apt. 9a. Now leasing nice 2BR Apt. Campsite Beautiful campus of the city. Call (817) 643-8200.
Nismath Hall is looking for a responsible, mature individual to work 24 hrs per week in exchange for a year of paid employment.
Park25
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
842-145-125
4 stops on property
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
- Volleyball Court
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- *2 Pools
- On KU bus route-
COLONYWOODS APARTMENTS
--i non-smoking roommate needed for 3 bedrooms furnished duplex to buscribe with full bath WD, DW, microwave & garage. Large bedroom $155 plus 1/3 utility. Please call 749-2181 after 6.
EXERCISE ROOM
ON BUS ROUTE
BRIDGEHAIL COURT
• INDOOR/ OUTDOOR
POOL
BASKETBALL COURT INDOOR/OUTDOOR
VOLLEYBALL COUR
3 HOT TUBS
ASK ABOUT THE REDUCED SECURITY DEPOSIT!
$355-$425
=
Models Open Daily
Mon - Fri 10:60 m
Sat. 10-4p.m. Sun. 12-4p.m.
Call 842-5111
1301 W24th
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, gender, 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 dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
New 2BR BLE to campus, Available Now; All Appliances, $450/MO. Low utilities. Call Troy 822-365-1799.
SHORT TERM LESASES NO AVAILABLE onboulevard 2bpr, brt apartement townhouse
TRAILER
South Point
1, 2, 3, 4 Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
- Small pets OK with deposit
Open 10-5, M-F
2166 W.26th 843-6446
Naismith Place
- Incur rupture in happt
* Incur rupture in happt
* Prep cryotherapy
* Prep cryotherapy
* Pfp, allyl PTVPs
* Pfp, allyl PTVPs
* Incur management of 1353
* Incur management of 1353
* 2NkEs of happt
* 2NkEs of happt
* Sr bed, Ss softball to 700 N/C
* Sr bed, Ss softball to 700 N/C
* Call for Appointment
* Call for Appointment
New leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bedroom facility. Central per room, all awaiiities, all appliance's, central per room, all amenities, full maintenance and management. Quality at the best price in town. 814-6086. Spanish Crest Apartments.
One bedroom for sublease at Haver Place. Furnished water paid. Walk tacoma and downstairs.
Spacitions 3 BDR Duplex $75.00, Fully equip kitchen, back desk, near campus and bus route 43
Spaunceus 3 new bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688
Midlife here one bedroom apt $25 014 Mississippi
student room close to campus ap$90 0042-8740
Sublease study room $18,000 a year
vary through May, no deposit, very clean and very
quiet (Orest House) +2 will call 749 7986
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232
(Next to Bedwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
No Appt. Necessary
meadowbrook
IRED of being crammed into small living areas?
Wide range of GREAT studios and 2 Bdrm. apts
Lighted Tennis Courts
Laundry facilities in most buildings
Carports/Garages available Playgrounds
College living that makes cents! Naismith offers you the best living arrangement on campus. Convenient service allows you to eat anytime you want and best of all you do so without leaving the building!
Water Paid/Free Basic Cable KU Bus Stops
Sublease till May one bedroom apt furnished, central A/C free/ water账及 no water. new kit & sath, on bus rt., laundry, $256 monthly 911-343-8650 upstairs, new luxuries -now sapphire bedroom basic, cupfire, dishwasher, pool, on bath, utilities, weight room, good night. 841-1756
Why settle for rising dorm rates and diminishing services when you can enjoy all the benefits of living in Naismith Hall? Make the educated decision. Make it Naismith.
If You Thought We Were Too Expensive, You're About to Get an Education.
Ask about our "Upperclassman Special" or our $250 "Move-In Bonus" for next
It's Time to Step up to
Expierenced Professional
Meadowbrook
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun.14
Sorry No Pets
Call now to reserve your room.
842-4200 15th &Crestline
Naismith Hall
430 Roommate Wanted
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence,KS 66044 (913)843-8559
FEBRUARY RENT FREE. Roommates wanted to share duplex in JOP by JCCC, 35 min from Kluwer air pool available - barks vacant. FREE Roommate special situation C Mike at Kluwer-145 452-7417
Female roommate wanted: nice, spacious, central a/ & heat. DW, fireplace $219, ip 83, i297-1997
Female housemate wanted. House border campus.
Non-smoker and not pets. 749-2644
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
WASHER/DRYER/GARAGE/ONE BUS
NISSEN! MOVEIN/MIDIEDIALY RENT IS
NEGOTIABLE CALL 842-1772!
Furnished Campus Place Apartment needs roommate $180 mo. call 841-8505
FEMALE roommate wants to share 2BR, 2 bath,
120' x 107' units, on bus route, water pdl
$12.50 10.75' units, cable wires.
One female student for a furnished 5 Dkr Town house located on bus route. W/T) pool, parking space.
Female, share large office close to campus.
$200.0 + 1/2 bath. 841-647 After 3 hours. 842-537
842-539
Female wanted to share 3 bedroom furn. apartment 1 / Suitcases 87/90 mm. Call 682-1177-anyname
d/F Roommait need ASAP 3 bedroom tow-
nage for $1400 monthly, low utilities,
eferences of $500/month.
Looking for female roommates share + b-droom furnished upstairs $100/month starting May. Call Kim
Roommate wanted to share nice 2 bH apt 1 Bk from campus *$210 a month* + 1/2 utilities
Policy
Roommate need by March 11. B1 HOUSE in E
r
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted! Non-smoker for 3 bedroom furnished duplex with 2 full bath, WD, DW, microwave, and garage. Rent negotiable. Call 841-1698. Leave message.
Roommate needed immediately! Low Rent 749-
3084
Roommate wanted. Furnished apartment near campus and downstairs / 1 unit /184 ./m83. 843. 84
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University Daily Kansan
191 Stauffer Flint Hlnt
Lawrence, KS 6045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
www.deliverycharts.com/martin-1985
"Those, sire, are the uncommon folk."
16
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 14, 1992
"Love 'Me Like A Hawk"
Kansas and Burge Unions Valentine's Day Open House
TODAY! 11 am-2 pm
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
...
Feb.14 DAY
Last Chance to Register to win a Spring Break Trip for two to Florida! Entry forms located throughout Unions and in Kansan
B
Feb.14 EVENING
Fresh Flower Sale in both Union lobbies and Wescoe Terrace, 11-2
Create Your Own Valentines in the Kansas Union lobby
Register for Carriage Rides, SUA office, 8:30-4:30
Jayhawk Mascots roving, passing out chocolate kisses
♥
♥
A baker will be available to decorate giant heart-
shaped cookies, 11-1, Kansas Union lobby
Two for one bowling in the Jaybowl
Information Counter, Kansas Union lobby
Candy "Conversation Hearts," $1.50/lb.
Piano music, Kansas Union lobby, 11-1
Fortune teller, Kansas Union lobby, 11-2
Free Red Passion Punch, 11am, Kansas Union lobby
Register at the Bookstores to win free tickets to the KU-OU Basketball Game Feb. 24
Bookstore discounts,specially marked items
Half-price discounts on specially marked sandwiches and strawberry sodas at Wescoe Terrace, while supplies last Candy count at Wescoe Terrace
Candy count at Wescoe Terrace
Carriage Rides, 5:30-7:30 pm (Advance tickets should be purchased at the SUA Box Office)
Two for one bowling continues until 1 am in the Jaybowl
SUA movie:"101 Dalmatians," 7 & 9:30 pm
SUA movie: "Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down," midnight
Drawing for winner of Spring Break/Dream Date contest (Need not be present to win)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,NO.96
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
MONDAY, FEBRUARY17 1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Lawmakers question NCAA's expanded role
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
When Don Fambrough was Kansas' football coach, he spent days traveling so he could be with future players when they signed letters of intent.
That was in the old days, he said. The days before the National Collegiate Association established guidelines prohibiting a player's attendance at a player's signing.
"It's such a small thing, but it is a perfect example of something they've taken away," Fambrough said. "They have done a lot to take some of the fun out of coaching and playing."
Fambrough is one of a growing number of people nationwide who are questioning the NCAA's role in collegiate athletics.
He counts himself among supporters of a local lawmaker's recent efforts to protect the rights of students and uni-
ties, including themselves under the NCAA's scrutiny.
A bill introduced last session would require the NCAA to provide players and universities with due process if it
imposed a sanction or penalty on a Kansas university.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee is scheduled Wednesday to meet.
Fambrough said he could support the bill because he had firsthand experience dealing with the NCAA's guidelines.
In 1971, Fambrough's first year as head coach at Kansas, the NCAA penalized his team because a player had been outgrown earlier than regulations permitted.
"It is no example that if one individual is guilty, it penalizes too many people," he said. "In my experience with them, the (NCAA) is the only organization in the whole United States system where you are guilty before you have a trial."
One freshman team member that year was State Sen. Wint Winter, Jr., JR.
He remembers sitting in one of the season's first meetings and seeing a teary-eyed Coach Fambroub announce that there would be no post-season play that year.
It was an image that did not fade fast from Winter's memory.
He wrote about NCAA due process for the University of Kansas Law Review in 1977 and kept up with the organization's activities.
During the 1991 legislative session, he introduced the bill requiring due process for students and universities. He vetoed the bill, and it now awaits House action.
"My concern mostly is with punishment," Winter said. "The NCAA finds an individual who is doing something wrong and then punish the whole institution. This hurts not only the student athletes but all students because of the very big impact on revenues those programs have."
The University's latest brush with NCAA violations was in 1988 when the basketball team was prevented from defending its national championship the following year because of recruiting violations.
Winter said other states and the U.S. Congress also had looked into the NCAA'spolicies.
BLUE VALLEY
Justin Knuppi/KANSAN
Greg Ostertag, freshman center, helps members of the Special Olympics teams with their free throw shots during a practice with the Kansas men's basketball team. About 300 Special Olympians participated in practice yesterday.
Big help
Kansas diver beats pain, finishes third after hitting board
By Chris Jenson
Kansan sportswriter
He did not know how far he would have to go.
Tim Davidson planned to give his all to help Kansas win the big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships this past weekend.
Saturday morning, Davidson was competing in the men's three-meter diving competition when his arms struck the board. He could not complete the dive and fell to the water in pain.
Davidson was attempting reverse
2 divides somersault, his most difficult
divide.
After the accident, Davidson met with Kansas swimming and diving coach Gary Kempf and diving coach William Pfid did not want to leave the competition.
"When I was kicking out of the dive I hit both my arms from the knuckles to about 3/4 up my forearm, "Davidson said. "I just came a little closer to the board than usual. I had a slight pull with my shoulders. I was leaning into the board when I should have been pushing away."
"This team is really special, and we had a great shot at the title, so I wanted to do my part in getting points." Davidson said. "It was for the team and all the fans. I think anyone would have done the same."
With his mind set on competing, a doctor examined him and gave him the
"As soon as it happened I knew I
could go on." he said.
Hitting the board left Davidson's arms virtually immobile, especially in the wrists. A trainer taped Davidson's wrist to give him support for his entry into the water. But this did not stop the pain, which started in his fingers and traveled up his arms.
Kempf said he admired Davidson's fortitude.
"The attitude of the team is really portrayed by Tim," Kempf said. "It was a big part of what I grew up with. I have ever seen. That is the kind of attitude I am of our proud人of me."
Davidson's comeback was not easy.
After hitting the board he still had eight dives to complete in the preliminaries and six more in the finals that evening.
Davidson was in the fourth place overall after the preliminaries. He finished in third place. But Davidson said he wanted more.
"I am happy with my finish, but I
said, "I can capabl doing better,
he said.
Earlier in the four-day competition, Davidson finished second in the one-meter diving event.
X-rays taken yesterday showed that neither arm was broken. He will receive a diagnosis today.
Davidson was pleased with his decision but upset that the men came up short in their quest for the conference and they were its team finished second to Nebraska.
"I would do it again in a second," he said. "I never had a doubt about what I had to do."
LUNA
Tim Davidson, Ann Arbor, Mich., sophomore, prepares to dive during a recent practice.
Israeli air assault kills Muslim leader
The Associated Press
SIDON, Lebanon — Israeli helicopters yesterday blasted a convoy carrying the leader of the pro-Iranian group Hezbollah, killing him and his wife and son. Shiite Muslim leaders vowed revenge and called for a holy war against Israel.
The dramatic strike, which could damage the Middle East peace process, capped a day of Israeli air attacks on south Lebanon that left eight other people dead and 29 wounded.
The raids came less than 48 hours after an attack on an army camp inside Israel, in which three Israeli soldiers were hacked to death.
In a terse statement issued at the group's headquarters in Beirut, Hebollah said its leader, Sheik Abbas Musawi, 39, his wife, Siham, and their 5-year-old son, Hussein, the youngest of the couple's six children, were "martyred" in what it called "a cowardly air attack." The statement gave no other details.
In addition to Musawi and his family, four other people were killed, and 18 were wounded, police in Lebanon said. They said eight of the wounded were in critical condition.
Sheik Mohammed Fadallah, spiritual mentor of the Shiite militants, called the attack a "barbarian crime" and said in a statement, "I call upon all resistance fighters to escalate their jihad (holy war) against Israel."
Hezbollah, or Party of God, was considered the umbrella group for the Shiite Muslim holders of Western hostages in Lebanon. It opposes the Middle East peace talks, the next round of which are to begin Feb. 24 in Washington.
In Washington, President Bush declined comment on the effect the attack might have on peace talks. He said he did not have detailed information on the raid.
In Jerusalem, the Israeli military acknowledged it had carried out the convoy attack, but suggested it had not specifically targeted Musawi, who was in a convoy that was carrying militia leaders from a meeting.
But Defense Minister Moshe Arens told Israeli television the attack was designed to harm Hezbollah.
It was "a message to all the terrorist organizations; that if any of them opens an account with us, we will settle that account." Arens said.
In its statement, the army blamed Hezbolli for 52 attacks on the Israeli-controlled zone in south Lebanon in 1991 and said the group had stepped up attacks in recent months to try to scuttle the Middle East peace talks.
Arens called Musawi "a man with a lot of blood on his hands" and said, "One may assume that the fact that he was killed isn't entirely confidential."
The attack on Musawi's convoy followed air strikes earlier yesterday on Palestinian refugee camps at Ein El-hilweh and Rashidiyah, in which police said four people were killed and 11 wounded.
At Rashidiydeh, the Israelis struck an empty two-story military base that had been used by Fatah, the mainstream Palestinian Liberation Organization faction
Israel had blamed Fatah for the fatal raid early Saturday on an Israeli army camp near the West Bank, in which three soldiers were killed by Arab assailants armed with knives, axes and pitchforks.
Overall enrollment is down — slightly
Spring 1992 enrollment figures taken at the 20th day of classes shows enrollment dropped by two this semester.
Lawrence campus other campuses (total KU enrollment)
(27,088) (26,804) (27,182) (27,335) (27,333)
22,992 22,847 23,392 23,612 23,655
Spring 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
1992 2,440
1991 2,391
1990 2,356
1989 2,290
1988 2,271
University of Kansas Medical Center numbers:
(spring enrollment)
0 500 1,500 2,500
Source: Division of Student Affairs,
Department of Educational Services
Jeff Moesey, Daily Kansas
Celebration marks Spanish recognition of expelled Jews
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
In March of 1492, the Spanish government issued an edict expelling Jews from Spain. This year, Spain is recognizing the Spanish Jews with a special celebration and exhibit of their Sepharadic, or Jewish-Spanish, culture.
Locally, Hillel and the Lawrence Jewish Community Center on Saturday remembered the 500-year anniversary with their own celebration.
The program at the center, 197 Highland Drive, included a religious service, music and the burning of the community center's mortgage, which recently was paid off. About 70 people attended the celebration.
Javier Martinez, teaching assistant in Spanish and Portuguese, said Spain was having Seafard '92, a celebration to commemorate the expulsion and recognize the Spanish Jews. He said seafard meant "Snain" in Hebrew.
Martinez said the Spanish celebration also would include an exhibit of Sephardic culture.
However, David Katzman, professor of history, said that the official recognition began two years ago when Spain
"There is a large amount of Jews of Spanish origin all over the world," he said. "Spain wants to recognize them, and it may be a way to look for forgiveness for what happened in 1492."
Martinez said having the Middle East peace conference in Madrid, Spain, could have been the first step in recognizing the
allowed the existence of synagogues
He said that until that time, it was illegal to have synagogues or Jewish services in Spain.
Daveen Litwin, Hillel director, said the local program was in remembrance of the expulsion but was also a celebration marking the permanence of the Jewish community in Lawrence.
"We want to celebrate how we all came to be here," she said. "Jews are dispersed all over the world and have found a place in America. We want to celebrate that in this community."
Gerard Edery, a singer and classical guitarist, performed folk songs of the Sepharadic tradition, which originated in Spain.
"After the expulsion, the Jews spread across the world," he said. "In most places they adapted to the culture of the country they ran to. Some traditions were supported, but most died out."
Edery said Turkey was the only place where Sepharadic Jews continued all the traditions and the language. He opened his performance with a song that originated in Turkey.
Leni Salkind, president of the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, said the celebration commemorated the anniver-
"Everyone is celebrating the quincentennial of Columbus discovering America," she said. "But this time marks quite a different experience for the Jews in Spain. While he was exploring for Spain, Jews were being expelled from Spain."
2
University Daily Kansan / Monday. February 17. 1992
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ON CAMPUS
Archaeology Club will meet at 4 p.m. today at the seminar room in Spooner Hall.
The Graduate Student Council will sponsor a reception for Andrew Debicki, candidate for vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service at 5 p.m. today at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union.
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. Beginners are welcome.
Black Student Union will meet at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
International Student Services and Legal Services for Students will sponsor an income tax workshop at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
The KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information session about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 3 p.m. Wednesday at 4039 Wescos Hall. An information session about studying in French-speaking countries will be at 4 p.m at the French Department Library.
The Juggling Club will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the lower lobby in
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30 Wednesday at the conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
ENVIRONS will meet at 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the Walnut Room in the
Kansas Union.
The University Placement Center will sponsor the Principal-Counselor-Student and Community College Conference at 9 a.m. Thursday at the Kansas Union. KU students will have the opportunity to visit with their former high school and community college counselors.
Latin American Solidarity will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Lewis Hall.
■ Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Daisy Hall Room in the Burge Union.
GLSOK will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
- Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. Friday at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
The Brazil-Portugal Association will sponsor the 14th Annual Brazilian Carnival from 8 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall.
WEATHER
Today
high: 47
low: 30
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 44/29
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO
Denver 44/22
KANSAS Lawrence 47/30 •
Dodge City Wichita 47/29
MISSOURI
Kansas City 48/30 St. Louis 46/36
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City 58/34
3-day outlook
NEBRASKA Omaha 44/29
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 44/22
KANSAS Lawrence 47/30
MISSOURD Kansas City 48/30 St Louis 46/36
Dodge City Wichita 47/28
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 58/34
3-day outlook
TODAY Morning rain and thunderstorms likely. Winds W to NW, 10-20 mph.
TOMORROW Mostly sunny. Winds NW, 10-15 mph.
WEDNESDAY Partly cloudy. Winds SW, 5-10 mph.
Across the U.S.
Boston 46/30
Chicago 50/33
Dallas 72/42
Detroit 42/32
Houston 77/50
New York 47/38
Los Angeles 63/50
Philadelphia 49/38
San Francisco 57/47
Washington 55/39
50
43 50
47 32
30 29
10
0
CORRECTION
Because of a photographer's error, the pianist pictured on page 1 of the Feb. 11 issue of the Kansan was misidentified as Jay Stutler. The correct name is Pete Rende.
Forecast by Andy Kula, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
ON THE RECORD
- Televisions, videocassette recorders, stereo equipment and cash, valued together at $2,280, were taken between 6:30 and 9 p.m. Friday from three KU students' apartment in
the 3800 block of Clinton Parkway.
Forced entry into the apartment caused $150 in damages, Lawrence policereported.
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3
Rock Chalk Revue 1992 approaches curtain time
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
People dressed in egg costumes, evening gowns and circus outfits gathered at Lawrence High School yesterday.
It was not a costume party. The Rock Chalk Revue dress rehearsal was in full swing.
More than 300 students are preparing for the debut of Rock Chalk Revive 1992 on Friday night. There will be six performances of the show Feb. 21-23 and Feb. 27-29.
Rock Chalk Revue is a KU student-run variety show, which raises money for the United Way of Douglas County.
This year, Rock Chalk has had to make some adjustments.
In previous years, the show had been performed at Hoch Auditorium. When fire gutted Hoch last summer, part of the Rock Chalk tradition was destroyed as well.
With three more performances than last year, Rock Chalk Revue 1992 is building the foundation for a new tradition. For the first time, Rock Chalk will be performed during two weekends instead of one and will be staged at Lawrence High School.
Andy Martin, executive producer, said it was necessary to split the performance run into two weekends.
"It's a matter of supply and demand," he said. "With limited seating available at Lawrence High, we needed to make it convenient for the most people to come to the show."
Todd Miller, executive director, said that he expected the others to sell out also.
He said the sellouts would benefit the revue's casts.
"Playing six nights to a sold-out house will be a real energy-high." Miller said.
"I think the show will be a lot more intimate due to the fact that it's a smaller theater. In Hoch, if you were in the balcony, you couldn't see the audience from your ear well because the acoustics were distorted."
Shannan Fisher, director of the Delta Delta Delta/Sigma Phi Epsilon show, said splitting the performance run into two weeks had drawbacks.
"People might get burned out a little bit,"
said, "but we have to raise the money.
This炎热."
Scott Iverson. business manager. said Rock
Chalk would not make as much money from ticket sales this year as in previous years.
He said Hoch Auditorium had 9,300 seats available for the three performances. The Lawrence High School auditorium has 1,000 seats, 6,000 seats available for the six performances.
"We had to scramble and think of new ways to raise revenue because of the loss of seats," Iverson said. "Ticket sales used to be our main source of revenue."
Rock Chalk sent "Friends of Rock Chalk" brochures to 3,800 KU alumni in November who had been involved in the revue. The brochures asked the alumni for donations.
Also for the first time, Rock Chalk has corporate sponsorship to help raise revenue.
Last year, Rock Chalk raised $32,000 for the United Way of Douglas County.
Rick Zikes, production manager, said the move to Lawrence High had given Rock Chalk Revue more independence.
"I think it's been a positive thing in one respect," he said. "This year, we have minimal University involvement. It's completely student-run."
REVO
In the middle of an all-day rehearsal for Rock Chalk Revue, Rebecca Proffitt (center)
Lawrence sophomore, and friends perform their act, which is a pun on the Madonna song
"Vogue" and is titled "Phone." They rehearsed vesterday for the revue, which begins Friday.
Counties hurt by indecision
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
Indecision by statelawmakers has left Kansas counties scrambling to prepare for the April 7 Kansas presidential preference primary, said Patty Jaimes. Douglas County clerk.
"When the Legislature couldn't make a decision, it threw us off," she said. "If we had known we were going to have a primary, we would have planned right along. We were sort of hung up."
"When the Legislature couldn't make a decision, it threw us off," she said. "If we had known we were going to have a primary, we would have been planning right along. We were sort of hung up."
The Legislature decided last year to conduct a primary but did not appropriate funds to pay for
Gov. Joan Finney recommended $1.5 million for the primary in her fiscal 1993 budget proposal, but the appropriation was sidetracked in the Senate by attempts to cancel the primary.
Those attempts apparently failed Thursday when the Senate voted to concur with a House of Representatives decision to require that the primary be conducted for $1.5 million.
No money has been allocated to pay for the primary, but anti-primary lawmakers, led by State Sen. Lana Olean, R-Manhattan, are conceding that the April 7 election will take place.
Jaimes said the five weeks the Legislature should debate the question of whether they should have briefed their election preparations
Jaimens said absentee ballots for overseas militiamen personnel has to be mailed 45 days before the election.
"We have requests from military members who are overseas and want absentee ballots," she said. "We need to have those ballots in the mail by Friday in order to meet the deadline."
She said she also was concerned about paying election costs.
"When we were preparing our fiscal-year 1992 budget request, there wasn't a great deal of interest in having a presidential primary." Jaimsaestud. "We justdidn'tbudgettoavfor it."
She said she would be less concerned about paying for the election if she were guaranteed a share of the votes.
She also said she would use the money Douglas County allocated for the November election to pay for the primary.
KANSAS
16
"Then we'll just have to wait and see if the state decides to appropriate money for the primary election," Jaimes said. "If not, we'll look to the general fund for some help."
Julie Denesha/KANSAN
Sweet 16
Clyde Lovellie accepts the jersey that was retired in his honor Saturday at Allen Field House. Lovellie was KU's second leading all-time scorer behind Danny Manion. He is a former senior team member B. H. Born, who was named Big Eight All-American in 1951 and 1952
Destructing the tradition African Americans break down historical skin-color definitions
By Svala Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
When Benita Reed was growing up, she was called names because of the shade of her skin.
I was taunted for my se darker than anyone in my
family," said Reed, Wichita senior. "But my parents taught me that it is not your skin color which makes you beautiful. It is you yourself; who you are."
She realized as she grew older how impor-which makes you beauti-ful. It is you yourself; who you are."
She realized as she grew older how important it was to be proud of
Black History Month
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.
who she was and not look to white society to define beauty, she said.
"It is all in how you view yourself," Reed said. "If you are confident, people will treat you with respect."
Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African-American studies, said the concern with the shade of skin of African Americans had its roots in slavery.
"The lighter you were, the more valuable you were as a slave," he said. "The lighter slaves received special treatment and worked in the house, while the darker skinned worked in the fields."
This idea continued through history, where lighter-skinned African Americans were considered less threatening by white Americans and allowed to succeed and become leaders of their race. Gordon said.
"I would say that more than 80 percent of the great achievers in African-American history were light-skinned," he said. "This is
simply a reflection of American values. "
In the 1660s, the rediscovery of African heritage changed the way African Americans viewed themselves, he said.
"The idea of 'Black is beautiful' was born and continued through the '70s and into the '80s," Gordon said. "I think now the movement is that Black people prefer to be Black. That I see as a trend, and it is a good one."
Angela Newman, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said white society was more accepting of lighter-skinned African Americans.
"I have an aunt who could pass for white, and that made her more acceptable in her job and in society," she said. "The other Black senior, said white society was more accepting of lighter-skinned African Americans.
"I have an aunt who could pass for white, and that made her more acceptable in her job and in society," she said. "The other Black women in her church hated her because she was more accepted."
Newman's generation is less concerned with the shade of their skin, because they grew up proud of being African-American, she said.
"I never wanted to be lighter," Newman said. "I never wanted to be darker. I just wanted to be me."
James Madison, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said economic competition made African Americans value lighter skin.
"The darker youare, the more youareassociated with Africa, which to white peoplemeans being inferior, subhuman and lesscapable," he said. "Lighter-skinned Blackscan utilize their skin color economically,since they are considered more capable."
Madison said apart from trying to be accepted by society, there was no real conflict between lighter and darker-skinned African Americans.
"There is only the competition for the advantages of white society," he said.
Barbara Ballard, acting dean of student life, said she did not think African Americans today dwellled on the issue of skin tone.
"I am sure people think of it, in the same way that some people prefer blondes or brunettes, but it is not an important issue to most people," she said. "Things have changed, and people look at beauty according to their own culture, not someone else's perceptions."
"I think the question is whether you let society tell you what is beautiful," she said. "I
Self-esteem and confidence play a big role in how African Americans view themselves, Ballard said.
Self-esteem and confidence play a big role in how African Americans view themselves, Ballard said.
"I think the question is whether you let society tell you what is beautiful," she said. "I agree with Dr. Martin Luther King, when he said that it is not the color of your skin, but the content of your character that matters."
Desire Brumsey, Santa Ana, Calif., sophomore, said that because she had light skin, some people thought she felt superior to other African Americans.
The idea that lighter is better is fostered by society. Brumsey said.
"For me, that is not true," she said. "I know I have African blood. I know that I am Black, and I am proud of being Black."
"It has a lot to do with what we see on television," she said. "You hardly ever see dark skinned Black women, or even men, on television."
In spite of the beauty ideals displayed by popular culture, Brumsey said all African Americans should feel proud of who they were.
"I think when they said Black is beautiful, they meant all shades of skin," she said. "All in all, Black is Black, and we are all Black and proud."
Project leads student to testify in state Senate
By Ranjit Arab
Kansanstaff writer
What started as a class project for Sherry Clayton ended in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Friday in Topeka.
Clayton, Topeka junior, said she was assigned a project for her Social Work 521 course, which required students to identify a proposed bill on social policy, go to a hearing on the bill and write a legislator expressing their views.
But when Clayton decided to follow the proposed Victim's Right Amendment, she took the assignment one step further.
She collected 200 signatures for a petition which supported the proposed amendment.
The amendment would entitle victims to be informed and present at all critical stages of the criminal justice process. Aside from the initial testimony, victims would be notified of bond, arraignment, sentencing and parole bearings.
She said the proposed amendment was
meaningful to her because she was the victim of an assault and attempted kidnapping 17
The assailant eventually was caught and convicted, but Clayton said he was freed four years later.
"I picked up the paper and read that he had raped a woman," she said. "It was frustrating to read about this criminal getting out early about any notification or voice in the system."
David Barney, social welfare graduate
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who heads the committee, said it would be about 10-20 points each in the race.
teaching assistant, assigned the project. He said it was unusual for a student in the class to become involved in the policy-making process.
If the proposal passes the committee, it will be sent to the Legislature for approval.
Winter said that Clayton's testimony and petition were impressive, but that he wanted to be sure the proposal did not infringe on the constitutional rights of defendants.
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4
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 17, 1992
OPINION
LIFE IN
HELL
1992 BY MATT GROENING
BINKY'S GUIDE TO LOVE
DID I SAY SOMETHING BELOW MY LITTLE DUMPING?
OCCASIONAL SATISFACTION QUARANTED
CHAPTER V
WHAT DOES LOVE FEEL LIKE?
LOVE SECRET #9 TRY TO USE ROMANTIC HOLIDAYS FOR SINCE ERE LOVING SENTIMENTS, AMOR, AND MATTER YOU SUBTLY DISQUIZED IS USUAL TENDERTABLE
HAPPY VALENTINE'S LOVE OR BRADE Nose!
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY, ROSE BALL Body!
FOR THE NEW LOVER, PASSION OVERWHELM AS ALL RATIONAL THOUGHT.
I'M SINGIN' IN A FREEZING SLEET STORM
OBSESIVE CONTEMPLATION OF THE LOVED ONE CONSumes THE DAY
ARE YOU OK?
GUH
THE PERCEIVED SUPERIORITY OF THE LOVED ONE BEcomes A SOURCE OF ENDLESS DELIGHT.
SHE HAS THIS Haunting NASAL GIGGLE THAT IS THE SURETEST THING I'VE EVER HEARD
SUSTAINED LOVE REVERIES CAN LEAD TO OPTIMISTIC CONCLUSIONS.
EVERTHOUGH HE SAYS HE'LL NEVER GET MARRIED AND HE HATS KIDS, I THINK WE'LL GET MARRIED AND HAVE KIDS.
THE LOVERS BASE BLISSFULLY IN EACH OTHER'S REFLECTED SPLENDOR
WHY WUV WOO.
HUH?
I LOVE YOU.
OH, WHY WUV WOO TOO.
THE LOVERS ENTER A SECRET WORLD OF THEIR OWN.
SHOULD I ANSWER THE PHONE? THAT'S THE TWEELTH CALL YOUIGHT.
RING!!
RING!!
RING!
WHEN THEY BOTHER TO CONSIDER THE EXISTENCE OF OTHERS, LOVERS MAINLY FEEL SORRY FOR THEM
HI THESE LOVEBIRDS!
DOON'T WORD SOMEMORE MANHATTEN, THE DUNGE RESTS OF SERIOUS RELATIONSHIP!
MUNDANE EVERYDAY EXPERIENCES BECOME Suffused WITH THE SPECIALNESS OF THE LOVE SENSATIONS.
THESE ARE THE GREATEST FOREM BOSS I'VE EVER WASTED!
OUTSIDERS MAY FIND THE LOVES' EXUBERANT BEHAVIOR A CAUSE FOR CONCERN
THEY ARE NOT HARM BUT THEN THEY ARE HAPPY!
Army spouse sets priorities
I hope to graduate from the University of Kansas. That is my priority these days. I've shelved my other goals of plastic surgery, writing a best seller, performing on stage with "Chicago" and having a clean house all for another time.
I'm really determined to finish because this is the fifth college I have attended, and I've yet to graduate from one. In addition to being a Nontrad (older student married with children), I'm a military spouse. This means that my whole life is separated into six-month to four-year assignment blocks. Some of those assignments, such as Germany, offer little in continuing education for spouses. (Unless one wants to be a helicopter mechanic or enter the exciting career of law enforcement.) Some assignments are spent having babies (even more stressful than a Western Civ final, and it last a lot longer). Army spouses have a national pastime
A. B. SMITH
Kate Kelley Staff columnist
called "going back to school."
Sometimes you get volunteered up to your neck in activities relating to your Army person's job, your children's activities, needs of your Army community, and all of that. This always results in burnout and a vow to never say yes again.
This is what happened to me during our last assignment in Germany. I was teaching eight aerobics classes a week, had a position on three different boards and was a Boy Scouts troop treasurer. Plus I was drowning in family-support activities. I was used up,
wrung out, ready for the old-shel-fole-ovice-vibrant-person-Army-wives' home. (There is one in heaven, and we don't have to do anything.)
Then came the orders for Fort Leavenworth. My husband would be in Army school, my children would be in their school, and I could go to school, too. No more volunteering. No more stress. (Well, I may have gone a little far on that one.)
A lot of military wives go back to school because they are tired of volunteering, but there are no paying jobs for them. No one likes to hire someone who's temporary. Ask any military wife about career opportunities. She'll either laugh in your face or break into sobs. There are probably more overeducated, over-qualified military spouses than in any other demographic group. Because we all go back to school, and back, and back, and back.
Kate Kolley is a Fort Leavenworth junior majoring in English.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
We must help former Soviets
Isolationism could jeopardize the New World Order, bring bloody conflict to independent states
Dangerous. That's the best way to describe the U.S. response to the current food crisis in the former Soviet Union.
Despite recent demonstrations in Moscow and growing signs of unrest throughout the region, the United States' response has been inadequate. President Bush's commitment of $5 billion in leftover food, medicine and supplies from the Persian Gulf War is nothing but a drop in the bucket.
American aid, which amounts to 16 million meals, is enough to feed the city of Moscow for two nights. Not a very significant contribution from a president who says he is committed to maintaining the New World Order. In contrast, since 1990, the European Community has provided roughly $80 billion in assistance.
It is understandable that Bush hesitates to increase foreign aid in an election year. The economy is bad, and many voters resent sending money abroad when there are such
hard times at home. Pat Buchanan, Bush's Republican primary opponent, is trying to capitalize on those sentiments with his "America First" campaign, which focuses on domestic issues and promotes isolationism
But clearly, too much is at stake for the United States to turn its back now. As the harsh Russian winter sets in, food shortages likely will grow worse. The Yeltsin government already is overburdened as it implements free-market reforms. The United States and other Western democracies must step up their commitments to Russia and the other republics to ensure that Yeltsin's plans are successful.
If Yeltsin fails, the region probably will be thrown into a new period of instability unseen since the days leading up to the socialist revolution of 1917. The prospect of bloody conflict in a region with the world's largest stockpile of nuclear weapons is something that should alarm us all.
The United States cannot put its head in the sand as the New World Order continues to evolve. Isolationism is a danger we cannot afford.
Chris Moeser for the editorial board
NASA data alarm president
With ozone hole enlarging, and on his mind.
The recent finding of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration about the growing ozone hole is a troubling development for the world.
Now President George Bush embraces a faster implementation of policies to decrease air emissions of harmful chlorofluorocarbons and aerosols for business and private use. This move should be applauded. It represents political courage to turn away from such enthusiastic friends as big business.
For the past several years, scientists from all spectrums have warned about the problems that lie ahead for the world ecology if nothing is done to reduce emissions of ozone-depleting chemicals. Bushhas exercised limited leadership on the environmental front for most of his term. But now the President has demonstrated a much-warranted change of heart.
Bush turns attention to ecology
In 1988, Bush pledged in his campaign that he would become the environmental president.
However, he has been slow to propose environmental legislation. The Bush administration's foot-dragging on this issue has been abhorrent. Recently, Bush sided with big business in favoring a long-term schedule to decrease harmful air emissions, arguing that the ozone depletion problem was not significant.
Yet the findings of NASA earlier this month have provoked a complete about-face in Bush's environmental policy.
A little more than one year ago, the United States participated in one of the most successfully fought wars ever waged. It is irresponsible to say that the United States massacred more than 100,000 people. Massacred means "to kill ruthlessly and indiscriminately." At no time were civilians targeted intentionally, but unfortunately they suffer most in war. The Iraqi populace is suffering even now because of Saddam Hussein's current refusal to sell oil in exchange for food and medical supplies as outlined by the United Nations.
Even though election-year politics surely played into the change somewhere, Bush's decision was more than he had to do. The president has charted a responsible and necessary course to improve the national and world environment. With so little time left, Bush may yet be able to preserve his claim as the environmental president.
Stephen Martino for the editorial board
The United States fought a just war in the gulf, but was the war justifiable? Saddam threatened the oil flow to the Western powers, threatened the security of Israel and the entire Middle East and was well on his way to establishing nuclear power. I would say we were justified.
Gulf war was justified
It is true that the West and the former Soviet Union are in part responsible for Saddam's rise to power. As previous and new reports indicate, this was done to ensure a balance of power between Iraq and Iran during their 10-year war. The end of the Cold War is what made the
gulf war so successful. Now that the rest of the world will not have to serve as pawns between the United States and our former enemy, perhaps real world peace is possible.
Lettersto the editor
At the same time, we should realize that the world has never been so unstable. The Commonwealth of Independent States is looking civil war in the eye with its tens of thousands of nuclear weapons. North Korea is one year away from the bomb. Libya has constructed a new chemical plant, and Iran recently has amassed a huge stockpile of weapons mainly provided by China. The world is still a dangerous place.
Travis Carlisle
Lawrence sophomore
War is inevitable reality
I have a few words in response to David Caruso's column, "Advertisements glorify warfare's obvious horror," printed Feb. 11.
War is horrible, of that there is no doubt. "Military action is important to the nation—it is the ground of death and life, the path of survival and destruction..." "(The Art of War" by
Sun Tzu). When Sun Tzu wrote those words, he meant the death and life of nations. I am glad that I live in a nation where I am free to speak my mind. Mr. Carusso should be too, for if we did not live in such a nation, Mr. Carusso might be dead or in jail by now for speaking his piece.
A volunteer army is surely a stronger one. Professional soldiers of the United States and other countries defended a tragically oppressed Kuwait. One of my best friends commanded a tank during that time. He was not happy about what he had to do, but he did his job in a professional manner. He was not stripped of his identity; he acted as a skilled member of a team. Do we want our country defended by skilled volunteers in command of technologically superior equipment designed to defeat the likes of Saddam Hussein? Is war good? These are two distinct thoughts that Mr. Caurso unsuccessfully attempts to interweave.
The United States is not advertising for soldiers to participate in a warmongering cruse. In fact, most soldiers never see combat. Advertising employed by the military serves to attract bright young men and women who seek to gain both the tangible and intangible benefits of serving their country. Exciting
advertisements distinguish themselves from the market clutter we are all deluged with daily. But when a person responds by taking an oath to uphold the Constitution and support the United States of America, that person is well aware of the consequences of his or her actions. Many enlist the benefits, despite the potential risk of serving in time of war. I think it is safe to say few enlist hoping to see combat. Most are proud to serve.
I suggest Mr. Carusuro-read the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. Our country gives us rights and privileges many would die to have, including freedom of the press and the right to free speech. Regrettably, many real people died in the course of attaining and preserving our freedoms. Regrettably, more may die.
We would all like to live in a world of consummate peace. Unfortunately, reality must intrude on Mr. Caruso's utopia.
Doug Deady,
Lenexa first-year law student
Vets know war horrors
I am writing in response to Mr. Caruso's
poignant column of Feb.11. I earnestly agree that our society glorifies violence and warfare to a profane extent. Indeed, there is nothing adventurous or challenging about killing people and destroying property. I have never spoken to a combat veteran who did not describe his experience as the most horrible sacrifice in his life.
I think it is difficult for many people to fully comprehend the realities of military action. This is especially true given the emphasis in Hollywood on Rambo and the likes. To thoroughly understand the brutality of combat, volunteer some time in a Veterans Affairs hospital.
KANSANSTAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
Talk with the veterans and get to know them as people. I know they will enjoy the companionship. Most importantly though, we should all remember this: If the women and men of our nation had not been willing to make that sacrifice in 1778 and 1861 and 1917 and 1941 and on across our history, we likely would not continue to enjoy the freedoms of our Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager,news adviser
D.W. Jackson,
Lawrence graduate student
Editors
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Editorial ... Beth Randolph
Planning ... Lara Gold
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Sports .. Eric Miles
Photo .. Jule Jacobson
Features .. Debbie Myers
Graphics .. Jeff Meesey/Aimee Brainard
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JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
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Creative director. Leah Levine
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Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position. Good letterheads should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Sauser-Flint Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday. February 17, 1992
5
Jury finds Dahmer sane discards expert testimony
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — In the end, jurors who decided Jeffrey Dahmer was sane when he killed and dismembered 15 young men and boys cast aside the opinions of medical experts and listened to one person: the serial killer himself.
Dahmer told police he killed "for my own warped, selfish desires for self-gratification," and the jury concurred.
Dahmer's confession, as recited by two police detectives, came through more clearly during his three-week sanity trial than experts' descriptions such as "paraphyllia disorder not otherwise specified," some jurors said.
"The professional words were confusing," juror Karl Stahle said after the verdicts were read Saturday.
"His whole conduct showed he was a con artist. ... He had just one thing on his mind — to satisfy his ego and to satisfy himself," Stahle said.
The jury's decision that Dahmer was not insane means he faces mandatory life sentences. A hearing was set for today, when relatives of his victims plan to speak in court.
Dahmer did not take the stand during 12 days of testimony. His lawyer, Gerald Boyle, made good on a promise to have Dahmer speak through his
lengthy confession.
Dahmer told police he seduced victims, drugged and strangled them, then had sex with the corpses. He later mutilated bodies, saved skulls and ate a heart, biceps and thigh.
Wisconsin law required the jury to determine whether the former chocolate factory worker had a mental disease or defect when he killed. If he did, jurors had to decide whether he knew right from wrong or could not control himself.
"We never got past the first question," said Russell Fenstermacher, one of two jurors who dissented and said Dahmer was mentally ill. The unusual trial required that 10 of the jurors agree.
"We all agreed there was a problem," Fenstermaker said. "Whether we interpreted it as a disorder or a disease is what seated us."
Throughout the testimony, it seemed the factor that would determine whether Dahmer would be sent to prison or to a mental institution was his measure of control, or, legally speaking, his ability to "conform his conduct to the requirements of the law."
Boyle and District Attorney E. Michael McCann said that the jurors would have to wrestle with the issue of control.
The lawyers relied largely on testimony from seven psychiatrists and psychologists, five of whom agreed either willingly or under cross-examination that Dahmer suffered from a mental disease. Most mental-health professionals classified the disease as necrophilia, a sexual attraction to corruces.
McCann argued three times in the absence of the jury that necrophilia legally was not considered a mental illness but a personality disorder. Circuit Judge Laurence Gram Jr. rejected the argument each time, leaving McCann with a backup argument — that regardless of whether Dahmer suffered a mental disease he could have chosen not to kill.
"We had never heard of paraphylla or necrophilia, let alone trying to spell it," said juror Elba Duggins, who voted with the majority that Dahmer had not suffered from a mental disease.
"When you look at the experts, they can't agree on it. ... If they had seven doctors up there agreeing, it may have been different," she said.
Fenstermaker said Dahmer would have been found sane even if the jury had said he was mentally ill.
"He could have conformed his conduct to the law," he said. "It would not have changed the outcome."
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The Student Senate Elections Commission has increased the recommended amount of money Senate candidates can spend on campaigns for the 1992 Student Senate elections.
Karisan staff writer
Voluntary campaign limits raised for KU Student Senate
By Jay Williams
"We want to explain what we are looking for," said Chris Thomas, elections commissioner. "We want to explain the code as it applies to them."
The workshop will be the first opportunity for potential candidates to receive official information about the Senate elections, which will take place April-9.
The formal announcement will be made at the first candidate workshop from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Thomas said the increase was considered a cost-of-living adjustment.
The commission raised the voluntary limit for Senate candidates from $75 to $100. The voluntary combined limit for student body president and vice president will remain at $600.
"There was no mandate for this year
The two coalitions in their year's 'election, Impact!' and FACTS, both set
The administration said it thought the ruling applied to University elections; therefore, the commission decided to end mandatory limits,Denton said.
"Mandatory limits were not working anyway," she said. "Groups were working around the limits."
"It creates a lot more latitude for the coalitions and less work." she said.
from people involved last year," he said.
Callie Denton, elections commission chairperson, said voluntary limits started with last year's election because a Supreme Court ruling stated that imposed campaign limits were a violation of free speech.
Because the limit is voluntary, the candidates do not have to follow the proposed limits. A coalition or candidate wanting to set a different limit must declare a specific amount to the commission.
"We cannot tell them what to spend," Thomas said. "We can only make recommendations."
individual campaign limits, Denton said.
Jason McIntosh, FACTS presidential candidate last year, said he understood the position of the commission, but the voluntary limits could lead to problems.
"There is room for disparities in spending," he said. "Somebody could spend a lot of money and buy the election."
McIntosh said a candidate with a lot of money could use the money to advertise on a large scale.
"The more a person is present to the voters, the more chance he or she has to get the vote," he said.
Thomas said that should not be a problem in Senate elections.
"The thing to keep in focus is that it is a student election," he said. "It's something that should not dominate somebody's life totally."
Candidacy forms for president and vice president will be available beginning Feb. 26 in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall. The filing deadline is March 4.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 17, 1992
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Crosswalk conflict heats up City Hall
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Kenson staff writer
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The crossing at 17th and Massachusetts streets measures about 40 feet across, but it is causing a mile-wide rift at City Hall.
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About 50 residents of Babcock Place, 1700 Massachusetts St., and concerned neighbors met with city officials Friday at Babcock Place to express opinions about the dangers of the intersection, which has no pedestrian crosswalk and no stop light.
Mayor Bob Walters had not finished his opening remarks when a person in the group said, "Excuse me, Mayor, but I just had trouble crossing the street to get here." The statement brought apolause from the group.
Debate about the crossing re-ignited Jan. 29 when Theresa Knight, an 86-year-old Babcock resident, was struck by a motorist at 117th and Massachusetts streets and later died in injuries.
Babcock residents said that because of the high volume of traffic on Massachusetts Street, it was impossible for the residents to walk across the street to restaurants or the pharmacy. Most Babcock Place residents are retired or disabled individuals.
"With the recent defense cuts and United Airlines' decision to reduce the number of airplanes they plan to buy in the coming years, Boeing took a look at their long-term needs," he said. "Plus, they said that they could continue to use their existing wind tunnels versus building newer ones."
Residents, neighbors and KU students who walk to campus from east Lawrence have to walk either to 19th or 14th Street to cross Massachusetts.
The tunnel project would have helped the local economy, Toebben said.
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"We are disappointed in the announcement," he said. "It would have been an outstanding contributor to Lawrence and to the University."
Ruthie Herbeck, a Babcock resident,
said the two block walk was a heavy
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Campus and local leaders have expressed disappointment about Boeing Company's decision to cancel its plans for a billion dollar wind tunnel complex that could have created 150 to 200 jobs.
VILLAGE CHURCH
Lawrence Mayer Bob Walters said Boeing officials remained impartial to the city's lobbying efforts.
City officials traveled to Seattle in November hoping to persuade the company to build in Lawrence.
Lawrence was one of five cities vying for the tunnel project. The Tenn. Railroad, Ridgway, Hanging Rock, Ohio and Portage, Ind.
"Most of the time, crosswalk gives you a sense of security that doesn't exist," she said . "From our data we have collected, a crosswalk is not what you want. Because of the closed gaps in traffic, it just isn't safe for a pedestrian crosswalk."
The tunnel would have been used to design aerospace and airplane vehicles.
Boeing's announcement Friday came after recent indications of a decline in the airspace industry, as well as a downturn in Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Kansan staff writer
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Boeing cancels project; disappoints city leaders
By Andy Taylor
Boeing officials at the Seattle headquarters could not be reached for comment.
Terese Gorman, city engineer, said that last year the city's traffic safety commission determined that because of the heavy flow of traffic at the intersection, a pedestrian crosswalk would not be advisable.
Engineers hired by the Kansas Department of Transportation are conducting a traffic study of Mass Street from 14th to 19th streets.
penalty for the elderly residents.
Carl Locke, dean of engineering, said Beeing's announcement would affect a number of KU engineering students and faculty.
"I walk to 19th Street, and there are a lot of entryways and driveways which make things very dangerous," she said. "Many of the residents cannot even walk half a block because they get too tired to walk."
Locke said that considering the state of the aerospace and aircraft industries, the announcement was not a surprise.
"The thing that Lawrence would have provided is a large pool of engineering graduates, students and faculty," he said. "We anticipated a joint-cooperative effort with Boeing."
Locke said the University had strong ties to Boeing.
She said taxi cab fares to take residents to the pharmacy one block away cost between $5 and $8.
The study is expected to be done by April 1, he said.
"We have many graduates working for Boeing," he said. "A matter of fact, a couple of people on Boeing's floor at the committee were KU graduates."
"They showed no reaction to Lawrence," he said. "Other than to ask pertinent questions about the law, you have every careful to not make an opinion."
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ATTENTION Pre-Med Students! Including dental, optometry and veterinary students
Informational meeting February 17,7 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union
Representatives from the KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
-Application Procedures
-Admission Requirements
-Answer questions concerning application information
For more information call 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall
INTERNATIONAL
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 17. 1992
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney's visit to Brazil this week coincides with growing tensions between U.S. and Latin American military establishments.
Defense secretary to visit Brazil
Cheney arrives Wednesday for talks with President Fernando Collar de Mello and ranking Brazilian military officials, after first traveling to Guatemala and Panama. He also plans to visit Argentina and Chile during a 10-day swing through the region.
Poland's new center-right government has decided on an economic program that backs away from the shock therapy of the past two years in favor of pumping up battered state industries.
Poland studies economic policy
For years, the United States backed repressive military dictatorships in Latin America, arguing they were needed to control the spread of communism. By 1990, civilians were back in power throughout the region, but in many countries the armed forces remain powerful behind-the-scenes actors.
Prime Minister Jan Olszewski and his Cabinet approved the policy Friday, and it was to be formally announced at a news conference today. The state news agency PAP released a brief outline late Saturday.
Now, with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the communist regimes of eastern Europe, U.S. officials are pushing for further retrenchment of armed forces in Latin America. Last November, Cheney urged deep cuts in Latin military budgets.
It is the longest trip to the region by a U.S. defense secretary in years and comes as the United States seeks to restructure ties with Latin militant organizations following the end of the Cold War.
Warsaw. Poland
The program amounts to an admission that radical economic reforms adopted in January 1990 under then-Finance Minister Leszek Bacerowicz have failed to win social approval despite lowering inflation and restoring goods to shops.
However, the plan stresses that the fight against inflation will not be abandoned and that the government deficit will be kept within reasonable limits in part through new taxes.
roland now will shift away from fiscal austerity and tight money policies designed to fight inflation toward government investment and easier credit to overcome recession.
The Balcerowicz program, worked out with Western advisers and endorsed by the International Monetary Fund, was considered the most radical in Eastern Europe.
From The Associated Press
Zaire forces squelch pro-democracy march
The Associated Press
BRAZZAVILLE, Congo — Security forces in Zaire fired on pro-democracy demonstrators yesterday during a church-led march. Government representatives said the march was an illegal attempt by subversive priests to bring down President Mobutu Seine Seko.
The television transmission monitored across the Congo River
A television reporter called the march illegal and said demonstrators had faced the full rigor of the law.
There were conflicting reports on the number of casualties. Radio France International quoted Zaire's communications minister as saying 13 people were killed.
Zaire's state-operated television reported two deaths, describing them as demonstrators killed when they attacked police with knives. A representative of the opposition Christian Democrats said at least six demonstrators were killed and the party's leader, Joseph Ieo, was beaten up.
in the capital of neighboring Congo, said two Belgian priests had been arrested during the march and would be expelled.
Marchers called for the reopening of the country's national conference on democracy, suspended by Mobutu in January after opposition delegates appeared to have won control of it. National conferences have been used in some other African nations to wrest control of power from authoritarian leaders like Mobutu.
The television reporter reading the statement said it was issued by the Interior Ministry. The statement ended: "This demonstration is the result of the action of some priests longing for political activities and subversion."
Many workers in key government-controlled sectors of the
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economy have gone on strike in support of a resumption of the conference.
Mobutu's prime minister, Ngua Karl-I-Bond, suspended the conference on grounds it was costing too much and was getting out of control. Opposition and church leaders said the conference was suspended because opposition delegates had won control of it.
Human rights group reports on political prisoners in China
The report was done by Asia Watch, an international human rights group based in New York, and the Tibet Information Network, which has headquarters in London.
BEIJING - China has detained many more political prisoners than it has acknowledged, according to a human rights report released today.
The groups said that their report documented 360 cases of Tibetan political prisoners and that it was released to coincide with a meeting of the U.N. Human Rights Commission on violations in Tibet. Beijing authorities have acknowledged only about half that many cases.
Two-thirds of the prisoners named in the report were under 25; the youngest was a 13-year-old girl. One-third were women, most of them nuns. Their sentences ranged from one year to life imprisonment.
When added to those previously identified by the two human rights groups, the number of known Tibetan political prisoners is 680, the report said.
The Xinhua report said that conditions at the Tibetan Autonomous Region Jail were so good that "if the regulations of the jail were not on the wall, people might not regard it as a jail."
Since 1987, Tibetans repeatedly have demonstrated for independence, and the Chinese have sent security forces to crush the opposition. Lhasa, Tibet's capital, has been under martial law for more than a year, but there still are periodic reports of anti-Chinese activities.
The official Chinese news agency, Xinhua,
released late yesterday its own report, in which it
said that maltreatment of criminals was banned and
was put into place. The report was provided
with clean culls, nourishing food and books.
The Xinhua report did not mention Tibetans detained for political offences.
Chinese troops occupied Tibet in 1959. China claims that Tibet has been an inalienable part of its territory for 700 years.
The 66-page human rights report details 360 such cases, nearly twice the number that Chinese authorities have acknowledged. All are identified by name, age, birth place and incarceration site.
The Associated Press
The report was based on three lists compiled by inmates and former inmates, some of whom had access to official records, according to the report.
The report said the vast majority were "non-violent protesters, detained for exercising their internationally recognized rights to freedom of expression and association."
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School: University of Kansas
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Dance of the dragon
Uhering in the New Year, Buddha (right) entices a dragon into joining in the Dragon Dance as a wish for good luck throughout the new year during the Vietnamese Culture and Fashion Show at the Kansas Union Ballroom. The dance was presented Saturday night by members of the Pho Hien Buddhist Temple of Kansas City, Mo., in tribute to their Vietnamese ancestry.
New program at KU targets 19 state community colleges
By Jenny Martin Kansan staff writer
Using a new program developed by the Office of Admissions, the University of Kansas is increasing its commitment to community college transfer
The program, called the KU Connection, was developed to strengthen ties between the University and students from the 19 Kansas community colleges.
*Community college students are more and more an important part of the incoming class each year,* said Deboorn, director of the Office of Admissions.
a-ball seminar. The seminar included information about admissions, orientations and travel.
A pilot seminar of the program began
Commun-
xity College in Westfield Park.
The next seminars at Johnson County Community College will be conducted March 4 and April 15. Faculty advisers will speak more specifically about how the enrollment process works at the University.
About 20 Johnson County students interested in transferring to the University attended the first of three hour-and-
Castrop said she would like the program to expand into Kansas City Kansas Community College next year.
Plans also are being made to offer parts of the program to other Kansas
Laurie Welch, assistant to the director of admissions at KU, said she was the community college liaison and will be person for all 19 community colleges.
"We want these students to know we have a commitment to them." Welch said. "This program will increase the visibility of the University at the community colleges."
Welch said that in the last three years, the University had seen an increase in the number of students who transferred from community colleges. She attributed the increase to the high cost of four-year institutions.
Many students attend a less expensive two-year community college and then transfer to a larger public university, she said.
The KU Connection conducts a visiting day March 23 at the University for students from all of the Kansas community colleges.
Transfer Day will serve as an opportunity for community college students to visit the campus and learn more about the University as they make the transition from a two-year college, Welchsaid.
The University will continue to visit all community college campuses twice a year.
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Today is the last day to order Graduation Announcements
Orders may be placed at either the Kansas Union or Burge Union store
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Orders must be prepaid Visa, Mastercard, Discover & American Express Accepted
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 17, 1992
9
Kansas women swim to title
By Chris Jenson
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf wanted a dominating performance from the women's team at the Big Eight Conference Championships. And that is exactly what he got.
Kansas' champions won their first Big Eight championship since 1989 during the weekend at Oregon.
The Jayhawk scored 741 points and outdistanced second place Nebraska's 586.
"Before the meet, we talked about going in and dominating the competition," Kempf said. "This was the most dominating team I've ever coached."
On the men's side Kansas' hopes of its first conference championship since 1979 were denied by a disqualification.
The Jayhawks were disqualified because of
a false start in the 400-meter medley relay, where they had finished second, and lost 26 points. Nebraska won the meet by 17 points, 684.510.667.5.
Kempf said that he did not see the violation occur and that he questioned the call.
"I don't like to see the outcome of the meet dictated by anyone but the athletes." Kempf
"I thought both teams swat great," he said.
"The men just had a bad break."
Although not completely satisfied with the men's outcome, Kempf was not disappointed with either team's performance.
Highlights abounded for the Jayhawks.
Sophomore Krista Cordsen led the way for the women by being named the meet's outstanding swimmer. Cordsen captured Big Eight titles in the 100-meter freestyle, 100 breaststroke and the 200 individual medley. She also was a member of the 200 and 800 freestyle
relays and the 200 and 400 medley relays, all of which won.
"The whole team deserved the outstanding swimmer award," Cordsen said. "But I would have given up all my individual honors to make sure we won the championship. I think everyone would have."
Kemp said that Saturday, the final day of the four-day competition, was the decisive one.
Senior Barb Pranger also was outstanding for the women, capturing the 100 and 200 butterfly titles. She also was a member of the 400 free relay and the 200 medley relay.
"Saturday morning was the best swimming I have ever seen," he said. "It will be a long time in my career before I see a morning like that one."
Of the 37 Kansas swimmers who competed on Saturday, 34 swam in the top six championship heats and only three swam in the con-
"We have a great bunch of kids," Kempf said. "I wouldn't trade any of these girls or girls for anyone else anywhere."
solutionfinals.
Overall, Kansas accounted for eight Big Eight meet records, five NCAA qualifying marks and one pool record. The Jayhawks won one and 20 individual champions in the competition.
The men were led by sophomore Dan Querciagrossa, who set a Big Eight record in winning the 1,650 freestyle in 15 minutes, 25.39 seconds. He also won the 500 freestyle and finished fifth in the 200 butterfly.
Kempf, who was named Big Eight coach of the year for both the men's and women's teams, said that the meet gave him one of his most emotional weekends in his 16 years as coach.
"In my mind, I coached two championship teams," Kempf said.
Big 8 Conference Championships results
Kansas individual champions (women)
Kansas State Champions (5)
200 medley relay: Carlson, Corden,
Hancock
100 active medley relay; Carson, Cordsen,
200 relay relay; Carson, Cordsen,
Prenger, Liaty (1.44 6.6)
800 freestyle relay; team (7.28 2.83)
200 freestyle relay; team (1.33 1.44)
400 medley relay; team (3.47 0.77)
500 freestyle relay; team (3.26 6.00)
50 freestyle; Branimal (23.87)
100 backstroke; Carson (57.69)
100 butterfly; Pranger (55.12)
100 freestyle; Corsden (51.25)
100 breaststroke; Corsden (1.04 4.2)
100 freestyle; Swizie (1.50 8.9)
200 individual medley; Corsden (2.02 4.2)
100 freestyle; Prenger (2.02 9.8)
I. KANSAS 741
2. Nebraska 586
3. Iowa State 354
4. Missouri 211
Kansas individual champions (men)
Scoring
200 medley relay: Stumman,
Stevens, Riddle, Taylor (1.310)
200 freestyle relay: R, Townsend, S.
Townsend, Bantjerger, Taylor (1.980)
100 breaststroke: Englahr (57.18)
200 individual medley: Inglehart (1.99-1
1.650 freestyle: Quercigrosa (15.25-3)
200 butterfly: Starling (1.49-6)
1. Nebraska 684.5
2. KANSAS 667.5
3. Iowa State 344
4. Missouri 189
Jayhawks destroy Buffaloes, 82-45
Defensive pressure ignites Kansas win
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
What a difference a month — and a different gym — made for No. 4 Kansas on Saturday against Colorado.
Last month at Colorado, the Jay-
hawks barely escaped with an 81-80
victory against the Buffaloes. Saturday,
however, was a different story.
Kansas bolted to a 42-16 halftime lead and held Colorado to 24.5 percent shooting from the field in claiming an 82-45 victory.
The win capped a week in which the Jayhawks, 19-2 overall and 7-1 in the Big Eight Conference, defeated Iowa State and Colorado by an average of 34 points. As it was against the Cyclones, defense was the catalyst for Kansas against the Buffalooes.
"I thought we really were good defensively," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "We forced some turnovers early, got our break going and got a lot of easy shots because of our defense."
Kansas took control early and dominated throughout the first half. After trailing 4,2 the Jayhawks on a 14 to 9 lead from the second their way to 4,2 the 26 point halftime lead.
"It sort of snowballed on them early," Williams said. "The other thing is, we can really run the basketball pretty well. We can do a pretty good job of converting. In the first half, we had a pretty good scoring run. Every time they turned it over, we were able to go down and capitalize."
Colorado did not do much of anything right in the first 20 minutes. The Buffaloa committed 18 turnovers and made just 5 of 23 shots in the first half. During one span in the first half and early in the second半分, Colorado went more than 14 minutes without a field goal.
Kansas outrebounded the Buffaloes 43-41 and held Colorado freshman Donnie Bieber, who scored 27 points in a 6-5 victory. Kansas, to 5 points on 2-of-16 shooting.
"We certainly didn't execute well, but that can happen in this building," Harrington said of Allen Field House. "This was a new experience for most of our team."
Kansas sophomore forward Richard Scott said the Kansas crowd, although short of capacity for the security guard, played a big role in disturbing Colorado.
Colorado coach Joe Harrington said the Buffaloes, coming off a victory against Oklahoma State and playing their third game in six days, lost their coopresure early.
"The field house is a tough place
of the crowd." The crowd is a great
sixth grade group.
Kansas junior guard Rex Walters, who led the Jayhawks with 22 points, said Kansas took advantage of a fatigued Colorado team.
"We played just a phenomenal game," Walters said, "and I think we caught Colorado on a bad day. They were coming from an emotional high against Oklahoma State. I just think maybe they weren't in it as much as they needed to be."
Harrington said the game proved Kansas deserved its high ranking.
"Kansas is right where they ought to be, in the top five," he said. "They certainly played like they were No. 1 today."
Swingman Patrick Richey, who had surgery Jan. 22 to repair a stress fracture in his right ankle, appeared in his first game in a month for the Jayhawks. He scored one point and grabbed three rebounds in 17 minutes of action.
Courtside
Scott, who is shooting 31.5 percent from the free throw line this season, revealed Saturday that he has been the most successful Cook about his free throw shooting.
"I just tell him what I think about when I'm at the line," Scott said, "and he comes back with ideas for me. He has told me to concentrate more and work on my routine more."
Kristen Pettv/KANSAN
KANSAS 23
KU
COLLEGE 52
KAN
5
Attempting to dish the ball, freshman guard Greg Gurley encounters opposition from Colorado.
Kansas women lead Big Eight after win against Iowa State
By Cody Holt
Freshmen succeed in filling gaps left by injuries of three starters
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women basketball team's nation-leading defense yesterday took an unscheduled afternoon off, but its offense was more than capable of picking up the slack as the Jayhawks defeated Iowa State 94-74 yesterday in Ames. Iowa.
Iowa State's 74 points tied Creighton's effort for the most points scored against the Jayhawk defense in a loss to Creighton 74-51 on Jan. 9.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that she was happy with the victory but that there was still room for improvement.
However, Kansas' 94 points fell only one point shy of its best offensive output of the season, a 95-42 victory against Minnesota.
"There's always something to improve on," she said. "Today, I wasn't happy with our defense."
Freshman forward Alana Slatter scored a career-high 26 points off the bench in 22 minutes of play. Slatter hit two home runs and six of seven from the free-throw line.
Washington said she was not surprised with Slatter's performance.
Individual offensive performances outweighed any lack of intensity Kansas may have had on the defensive end.
Since the onslaught of injuries, Aycock has become the Jayhawks' second-leading score with a 9.8-point average. Junior Stacy Trutt leads the team with a 12-point average in a non-starting role.
The play of Shareef and the freshman tandem of Aycock and Slatter has been crucial to Kansas' continued success since the loss of three starters to injuries earlier this season. Senior Tanya Bonham and junior Lisa Tate and Marthea McCloud all sustained season-ending injuries earlier in the year.
Senior forward Danielle Shareef scored 20 points for the Jayhawks and freshman forward Angela Aycock added18.
"I'm pleased for Alana, she had a great game," Washington said. "She's a great player and is only beginning to realize her potential."
Kansas, 19-4 overall and 8-2 in the Big Eight Conference, seized sole possession of first place with the help of Oklahoma's 92-89 victory against second-place Nebraska Saturday in Norman, Okla. The Huskers dropped into
"We need to get some offense out of our post," she said. "We've really focused on that and I'm really pleased with our vowel plaques."
Washington said inside play had become a concern for the Jawahreskys.
a second-place tie with Colorado, both with 7-3 conference records.
Kansas plays host to Nebraska Wednesday night at Allen Field House in a match-up that could determine the Big Eight Champion.
Kansas 94
Player
Johnson M 25 FG FT R A L P T
Johnson 25 37 0/2 0/2 7 4 2 6
Aycock 27 9/14 0/4 6/1 6 1 4 18
Sharecf 23 8/12 4/6 4/6 1 7 4 20
Witerspoon 15 2/4 0/2 0 0 3 4 11
Hart 31 4/7 0/2 0 0 3 4 11
Kite 15 1/9 0/2 0 0 3 4 11
Miles 15 2/8 0/2 1 2 1 4 26
Slutter 20 10/14 6/7 6/7 1 4 2 6
Truit 19 1/4 3/3 2 9 4 5 0
Baker 19 1/4 3/3 2 9 4 5 0
Percentages: FG 60% (37/62), FT 65% (13/20)
Three-point goals: 3/5 (Hart 3), Blacked shots:
Johnson, Aycock) Steals: 13 Johnson 6, Aycock
Trufft, 2 Traitt, Witherow, Hart)
Iowa State 74
Fitzgerald 23 1/2 12 0 0 4 2 3 2 0
Evans 9 0 1 0 0 4 3 2 0
Young 34 4 6/4 13 1 6 1 9
Maple 34 4 6/4 13 1 6 1 9
Macle 35 9 10/4 6 1 7 1 3 26
Van Dean 12 0/2 12 2/2 0 0 2 10
Herbert 8 3/5 14/4 2 2 0 0 2 10
Gayon 10 2/4 14/4 2 2 0 0 2 10
Jayon 27 1/4 24/4 1 3 5 5 8
Wright 1 0/0 1 0/0 1 3 5 8
Halftime: Kansas 51, Iowa State 28.
Officials: Robinson, Lewis.
Percentages: FG 49% (27/55) FT 16% (82%)
Three-point goals: 0 (2/18) Blocked 2 (Blocked)
[Good] Sweats: (3/8) Sweat 2 (Good)
[Bad] Van, Daeus, Herbert. May) 26%
Olympic UPDATE
The Associated Press
ALBERTVILLE, France — Neither Herschel Walker's bomb on the bobsled nor Eric Flaim's burnout in speedskating yesterday could dull the glow of the U.S. team's surprise showing midway through the Olympics.
During the weekend, the Americans kept chugging along toward perhaps their best overall performance in the Winter Olympics.
More than a medal bonanza — the United States already has matched its total of six in 1983 and still hopes to surpass its record of 12 — the Americans are showing strength in a wide range of supposedly un-American sports and doing the grunt work for 1994.
The Americans have the only unbeaten, united hockey team following Canada's first loss, 5-4, against the Unified Team.
There is no chance they'll catch the Winter Games powerhouses — Germany games with 18 medals; Austria has 16, and the Russian-led Unified Team has 14 — but the Americans see medal opportunities this week in hockey, speedskating, skiing and women's figure skating.
Walker, the Minnesota Vikings tailback who thought he could barge into the Games and run away with a medal, finished seventh in
"Across the board in the contemporary Games since 1966, these are probably our best finishes." U.S. Olympic Committee representative Mike Moran said. "We're very happy with this and this year as we step into governing bodies. Everybody, since Calgary, stepped up a couple of notches."
Silver medal redeems downhillers' honor
The Associated Press
Flaim came here looking for a gold to complement the silver he wonin themen's,500-meter speed-skating. But a sudden sickness caused by food poisoning left him 24th.
MERIBEL, France — Alpine skier Hilary Lindy figures her surprising silver did more than just redeem the honor of America's downhillers.
Koss, a 23-year-old medical student, had to overcome his own medical problem, virtually climbing out of a hospital bed to win the race. He spent 36 hours in a hospital last week with a painful case of pancreatitis.
"It's disappointing, but we're not going to give up," said Walker, who gets another crack at a medal this weekend in the four-man bobsled. "There's no doubt I was expecting more."
"We kind of thought he would be the hero we were looking for," Hickey said. "The U.S. hasn't won a fight since World War II, but we have one coming in the four-man."
it sent a message — "Your turn"
— to their teammates and rivals,
the slalom racers.
But he looked healthy and fast when it came time to race, finishing in 1 minute. 54.81 seconds — fourhundredths of a second ahead of longshot countryman Adne Sondral — to cap a four-medal day for Norway. The Norwegians also won gold and bronze in the men's super giant slalom.
"It better get those other guys pumped up in the rest of the events," Lindh said.
Team leader James Hickey, a member of the U.S. four-man teams in 1968 and '72, acknowledged that the coaching staff might have expected too much from Walker in his Olympic debut.
the two-man bobsled with driver Brian Shimer. But their time was respectable . . . 69 seconds behind Switzerland's gold medal winners Gustav Weder and Donat Acklin — and their placement was the best for a U.S. team since a fifth place in 1980.
U. D. downhill failures to finish in the top 10 of any World Cup race this season, so they entered the Olympics as the U. Team's soft app
The slalom racers—Dianto Roffe, Eva Twardokens and Julie Parisien—were considered the best prospects for an American skiing medal.
"The downhillers always feel like they're second-rate citizens," coach Paul Major said yesterday. "But now the downhillers have their medal and their chests are pumped up. They're waiting to see if the gate racers do their part."
Olympic medals count
OLYMPIC GAMES
| Country | G | S | B | A | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Germany | 7 | 7 | 4 | 18 | |
| Austria | 4 | 6 | 6 | 16 | |
| Unified Team* | 5 | 4 | 5 | 14 | |
| Norway | 6 | 3 | 3 | 12 | |
| France | 3 | 3 | 1 | 7 | |
| U.S. | 3 | 2 | 1 | 6 | |
| Finland | 3 | 1 | 2 | 6 | |
| Italy | 1 | 3 | 2 | 6 | |
| Japan | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| The Netherlands | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Canada | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | |
| Switzerland | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | |
| China | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | |
| Czechoslovakia | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | |
| Sweden | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | |
| Luxembourg | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
Country G S B T
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight Riddler Trubun
U.S., Swedish hockey teams meeting in rematch
The Associated Press
MERIBEL, France — The U.S. hockey team has a chance to play host country France, but first they must beat Sweden.
"You'd like to have the highest seed you can because, in theory, that gives you an easier game in the medal-round quarterfinals," U.S. coach Dave Peterson said. "If we finish first, we'd come back against France."
The United States (4-0) meets Sweden (3-0-1) in tonight's preliminary-round finale. A win or tie would give the United States the top seed in its group, setting up tomorrow's quarterfinal against a spunky but talent-poor French team.
Alosw would drop the U.S. team to No. 2. That would mean a Wednesday clash with Czechoslovakia, which beat the Unified Team in preliminary play.
"You don't want to finish second in that pool. You'dmuchrather play France," said Canadian coach Dave King. "Sweden can't afford to lose. Neither can the U.S. It'll be a real tough game."
It is a rematch of their intense and physical pre-Olympic encounter of Feb. 5 in Chamonix. The Americans, though outplayed, won 3-2.
10
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 17, 1992
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Tuesday Feb.18
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PORTLAND, Ore. — Readers of the Oregonian learned yesterday that Deion Sanders was leaning toward a full-time career in baseball. But they did not learn the nickname of the baseball team he plays for.
Sanders plays part time for baseball's Atlanta Braves and full time for profootball's Atlanta Falcons. He said recently he was thinking about devoting more time to baseball.
SPORTS
The Associated Press
Oregon paper drops some team nicknames
Oregon's largest newspaper has stopped using nicknames to refer to sports teams called the Braves, the Redskins, the Indians and the Redmen.
But the Oregonian's story about Sanders did not mention the Braves by name. It referred to the team as "National League champion Atlanta," or "the baseball team."
"I have directed this action with the belief that these names tend to perpetuate stereotypes that damage the dignity and self-respect of many people in our society and that this harm far transcends any innocent entertainment or promotional value these names may have." he wrote.
Editor William Hillard informed the newspaper's staff of the new policy
nian to decide it would stop using team nicknames that offend racial, religious or ethnic groups.
"We do not expect the rest of the journalistic world to fall into line behind us, nor do we presume that our action will change any team names," Thompson said in a statement.
in a memo Friday.
Managing Editor Peter Thompson said Saturday that staff discussions during the World Series led the Oreo-
Men'sennisloses, wins
"But we have concluded that we will not be a passive participant in perpetuating racial or cultural stereotypes in our community," he said.
the Kansas men's tennis team went 1-1 over the weekend in the Ice Volley's tournament in Minneapolis. After losing to Minnesota 5-3 Friday night, the Jayhawks blanked Southern Methodist University 7-on Saturday.
Vietnam's first marathon
A Briton won Vietnam's first major marathon Sunday after American Bill Rodgers buckled under the heat. Some
If this sounds like you, we'd like to show you the many opportunities beginning soon in 90 countries. You should apply now for openings beginning in the next 12 months.
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The Kansas baseball team split a two-game series with Arkansas-Little Rock over the weekend. After Kansas won the opener on Saturday 12-1, Arkansas-Little Rock rebounded to beat the Jayhawks 8-3 yesterday.
FILM SEMINAR
Tues., Feb. 18 at noon
or Wedds., Feb 19 at 4 pm
Governors Room, Kansas City
Yesterday: UALR 8, KANSAS 3
Baseball team splits series
American war veterans ran on behalf of their former comrades-in-arms.
The weekend of races was organized by the communist government as part of its search for international support and tourism revenue to help its sagging economy.
Tim Sautar, 36, a British lawyer living in Hong Kong, was timed in 2 hours, 43 minutes. 26 seconds, for his first marathon victory. Luu Van Hung of Vietnam finished second in 2:44:52.
Hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese lined the course to cheer some
KANSAS 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 1 | 1
UALR 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 11 | 6 | 2
Wirk Paul: Schmidt (1.0) LP; Chris Johnson
(0.1) HR: Karsay - Hampson (1.0) John, (1.0)
Marius: Karsay
INFO TABLE
Tues. and Wed.
Feb. 18, 19-192, 9 am-4 pm
Kansas Union
For more information call
1-800-555-4121
350 runners from 26 nations, including 70 Americans, competing in the first Ho Chi Minh City International Marathon. Several thousand runners also competed in other events Saturday.
KANSAS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 9 1
UALR 0 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 x 8 7 2
WP; Andy Biemal (1-0) LP; Jimmy Walker
(0-1) S; Chris Dennis IRN; none
The toughest job you'll ever love.
Saturday: KANSAS 12, UALR 1
CONGRATULATIONS $\Delta \Gamma$ New Initiates
LIFEGUARD
Julie Acker
Beth Aiman
Kristen Armacost
Christy Brown
Traci Dalrymple
Kelly Dalton
Mandy Darr
Sandra Derikrava
Emilie Elmore
Denise Elwood
Rachel Estrada
Carrie Frenzel
Mischa Gould
Crista Hanley
Windy Hodges
Kim Hyman
Marijana Juric
Krissie Kaplan
Gretchen Kaufman
Tracy Kaufman
Genny Kilgen
Christy Korth
Paula Kropchak
Kelly Lake
Nicole Liggett
Kara Meysenberg
Paige Milroy
Julie Porter
Keri Rathbun
Stephanie Reed
Alison Smith
Amy St. Marie
Heather Tiner
Jennifer Torrez
Diana Walker
Kim Wendt
Courtney Williams
Mary Williams
Amy Wittenauer
MATHEMATICSPRIZE COMPETITION
Junior level: Open to all undergraduates of non-senior standing
First Prize----$75
Second Prize----$40
Senior Level: Open to all undergraduates
First Prize--$100
Second Prize--$50
Both exams will be given on February 26,1992
To participate you must register in 405 Snow by noon, February 26, 1992
COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
Two pieces of batter-dipped chicken & fries. Enquiries 3/18/92
LONG JOHN SILVER'S
2-Piece Chicken
and Fries $1.99
Good at:
1503 W. 23rd St.
LONG JOHN
SILVERS.
SLAIRD 58499
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
--entry level Earn $10/hr 1992 Expansion. International full. Furn. / Part-time position, very flexible schedule. Great for students. Exceptional advancement potential. 842-699
One piece of batter-dipped fish, chicken, & fries.
Offer Period: 9/18/19
Fish, Chicken and Fries $1.99
Good at:
1503 W.23rd St.
LONG JOHN
SILVERS
SCALLOP SHOP
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
Fish, Shrimp and Fries $1.99 One piece of batter-dipped fish, three pieces of batter-dipped shrimp & fries.
LONG JOHN
SILVERS.
SLAERTH ENGINEERS
Good at:
1503 W. 23rd St.
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
6-Piece Shrimp
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
6-Piece Shrimp and Fries $1.99
Six pieces of batter-dipped shrimp & fries.
Offer Expires: 3/18/92
Try our fast drive-thru service for lunch and dinner. On Tuesday students receive a 20% discount on regular price entrees.
WINE MOVED UP
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
Good at:
1503 W. 23rd St
LONG JOHN
SHIVERS.
SEAFOOD SHIVERS
The Etc. Shop
Not valid with any other coupon or discount.
928 Mass 843-0611
V
Classified Directory
100's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Services
235 Typing Services
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
124 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
100s Announcements
105 Personal
300's
CAL- always said you liked the personalis. Will you be my valentine? I'll be yours. OF COURSE: You're oceau. Love your small -Guesa Who? David T. the trumpeter teacher? He was FIRED?
Dear Jeanie, we met at the Jazzbar a couple of weeks ago. I'd call you now. Please call or send a note to Box 15 at the Kansan. Your Valentine.
No Admission. No Rental. Tenthous on drink
Oy Adrienne, Happy 21st B-Day! Tonight we drink they are cute! Love our bodies! Diane and Diana
110 Bus.Personal
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
NO GIMMICKS -
EXTRA INCOME NOW!
ENVELOPE STUFFING — $800 · $800 every week
Free Details: SASE to
Brooks international, Inc.
P.O. Box 680605 • Orlando, FL 32688
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Class to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and accessory store. VA, Master's degree. VA, Master's degree & Discover cards accepted.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization makes Avail-
able Larkey, Lyacky & *Drown* Court Creekshot.
120 Announcements
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Book Signing, Carolyn Doty a fiction writing teacher at KU, signing her novel *WHISPER* on Tuesday, February 18, 11:30:00 p.m. Mt. Oread Bookshop, Kansas Union, Level2
Still Hot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
IVE GOT TO CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT TO BE STUCK IN LAWRENCE!
$
DAYTONA BEACH
from $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
from $128
STEAMBOAT
from $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH
from $122
FORT LAUDERDALE
from $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
from $119
MUSTANG ISLAND/
PORT ARANSAS
from $128
DON'T WAIT THAT IT'S LATE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
图
SUNNY & BEACH BREAKFAST
11th Annual Celebration!
--entry level Earn $10/hr 1992 Expansion. International full. Furn. / Part-time position, very flexible schedule. Great for students. Exceptional advancement potential. 842-699
400's
Dear Student, don't let me down. Be at the Kansas Union on Thursday, Feb. 20 from 9:10 a.m to the principle, Counselor Student-Community College. Call (817) 345-6820 U J K for details. Your high school counselor
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2435. Headquarters
Gap & Lesbian Peer Counseling. Affinity understand-
standing voice. Free, confidential referrals calle
returned by counselors.) Headquarters 812-2435 or
KuInfo. 810-3650. Sponsored by GLOSX.
Feeling confused, anxious, blue? Counseling can help make sense of your world. Student rates.
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
Students who wish to teach the fall semester (GPCs) must attend the student teacher meeting on Wednesday, February 19 at 0:00 m. in Moriah Hall. Information is available at 1124 Bailah Hall.
Womyn: 'let *dance* on February 21st 8to12 P.M.
Womyn: 'let dance' on Fairgrounds Fairgrounds
GHFREE FREE: 643-7575
GHFREE FREE: 643-7575
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support,
your own guidance, call headquarters or KU,
for confidential information.
130Entertainment
With Cannibal Corpsse and Gorgus Friday. February 23 at the OUTHUSE and *4 miles East of Mass on 15th St.* All ages - 9p m. Showtime - Get there early!
Free Party room at Johny's *Tavern* & Up / Under
Across the bridge at Massachusetts
*Tavern* & Up / Under
FADRE & CANCIN SPRING BREAK of "82!" Seven night
trips to CANCIN & CANCIN
Dublin Trains TODAY 1-800-800-6000
140 Lost-Found
Please! Expensive double rope bracelet if found call 843-667, very sentimental.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babyjacket needed: First Mother教堂 Church, First Church, 86-154 Lea Message or after 6:00. Call 86-154-154 Lea message or after 6:00.
GAM! COUNSELORS wanted for private Michiganbots/girlr/summer camps. Teach: swimming, caneoning, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1,000 or more plus &k8. MarSea Meger, 725 Maple, Nl. (610-800-9467)
Catering Department, Kansas and Burge Union hiring caterers to work Thursday, February 20, m-4p.m. Friday, February 21, m-3p.m. Friday, February 21, m-3p.m. Friday, February 25, 8-30a.m. m-4p. $2.5r. sign up to work one or more days, but must work the entire shift and follow dress code for caterers. Will pay the day following employment. Apply Kansas University Office, 6th Level, Kansas Union Building, EOE
CNA's. Explore the possibilities of home care where you can give care to someone with special needs. Flexible scheduling, uniform allowance, and training provided. Call Dougherty County Visiting Nurses #845 739. Ask for information.
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 + / month and World travel avail. Mexico,
Guatemala, Panama, Ecuador, Guatemala,
Mexico, Waite/Waiter, etc., Holiday, Summer,
and Career Employment available. No experience.
Apply at www.cruiseline.com.
Daycare needs a responsible assistant for Tuas & work.
Baby needs 11.35 am - more hours of work if available in 11.35 am.
EARN up to $80 a week and more part-time selling on our sale. Save $20 off. Great opportunity for you and your family.
help Wanted. Full Part-time help for midnight to
AM and 6AM-no-shifts. Please apply in person to
philips at 5th and 10th. Must be neat, clean,
and enjoy working with the public.
11
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 17, 1992
Job opening to oversee rest work. Hours needed 6 a.m.-8 a.m. and 5:30-10 a.m. Office duties and meetings: Tuesday, Thursday and Thursdays 12-30 a.m. and Fridays 10-20 a.m. Call between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. 749-0130
Naismith Hall is叫着 for a responsible, mature task to work 24hrs per week in exchange for a day off.
Need a job? We are looking for distributors. Excel-
ware Distributor, Long Yue, NY, Galaxy Distributors,
Long Yue, NY, Galaxy Distributors, Long Yue,
NY, Galaxy Distributors, Long Yue, NY, Galaxy Distrib-
uted.
Looking for a job that offers money ($5,300+), travel, experience, advancement, and a challenge?
Call now: 842-0924
need daycare Monday and wednesday mornings
7:30 a.m to 1:00 for three month old. Call 842 8524 after 5:00
Earn $5,000-$10,000 this summer painting houses in
earn home. Final hire for these positions
will be paid by the employer.
Painting and management (3) Painting only. All-
Pro Student Painters Inc 1-800-2-mane
OVERSEAS JOBS $800-2000 mo Summer, Yr.
69% BSL&P & LCSL PW 69% Aero
AAA/COOL PW 69%
Part time now Full time in summer, answering
your questions. We will accept no more than
work. Must be available at least 2 hours mornings
after 9 AM M-F. Possibility of 10-20 hours a week until
mid may then 8am/wk through mid August. Must
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN. 4/Rm. prices. Dayaplan, $129.
Panama City $139, Kitch. Wrftf & Trans Available
CALL CMi at 1-800-423-5264
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS' National Parks,
Fireworks, Fire Crests. Over 9,000 Openings!
Stamp for Free Details. Sullivan's, 113 East
Wowalk, Kispiala MT. 59901
PEACECORPS
NEEDED: A degree or work experience in agriculture, skilled trades, health/nutrition and business. RECRUTERS on your campus this week. Call 1-800-255-4121 ext.100 for more information.
SUMMERJOBS
Positions available in food service, laundry, maintenance, light hsksp. Children's summer camps in NY, PA, MA, Maine. Free Room & Board *12* days. Summer internships. Average earnings $4,000.00 University Directories, the nation's largest publisher of campus telephone directories, lives over 298 college students for their sales training programs. Students have experience in advertising, sales and public relations selling yellow page advertising for your campus telephone directory. Positions also available for faculty training in school or camp training program in Chapel Hill, N.C. Looking for enthusiastic, goal oriented students for challenging, well-paying summer job. Interruptions may be on February 27th at the Placement Center.
Wanted: If you are personable, energetic and enjoy being around people, come join our summer staff team at Lake Quivera County Club in Kansas City. Call Jill Thursday through 3:55 for an appointment.
*aforefront JOB-WS Summer Children's Camps-Northeast Men and Women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, water safari, swim lessons, summer camps for beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowances. Drop by for an interview with our staff. Apply to Reelismalist & Greads Groups in the Kansas Union.
WE'RE SWAMPED! Local business needs students now to staff enclosures at home. Excellent earnings! All materials provided. Send SASE
Mail to: KAREN BURTON Box 102, Olathe, KS 6062 Immediate response!
225 Professional Services
*We're Looking for AF Pew Good Men and Women! You think we go we got what it takes, we do love to have a place where we can meet at Nahumsh Hall. Applications will be available at the front desk beginning February 17 and are due by April 30.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
School Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
School Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
divorce; criminal & civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
FAVORIT FACTORY The Ultimate service. Let us work for you. We specialize in library and video library services.
Government photos, passports, immigration,
veteran sector portraits, modelling & art portfolios
www.gov.uk/sports/photos
KU student would detail your car professionally for 600. For more information call 749-7078
RICK FRYDMAN
Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Students rate: 842-3244
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding & Grooming ID photos ID photos; student patient call: Kaihong 841-6981
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES - Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
9012/J Mass. 441.071
DUI/TRAFFIC
DUI / TRAU
FREE Initial ID
* FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
Former Prosecutor
16 Eam 13th 749-0087
Recycle your laser printer toner cartridges for only
£"call (R1) 865-2698. We also offer vermin
Tred of taking帐付 at buyback time? Get $6.
get a pet account when buying on季
Freed up $80, 200, 400, 600, 800, 1200, 1600
Tired of private tutoring sessions, high rates? Private French lessons. Call Dean: 698-253-7011
Want to learn guitar, stinging blues, goodtime rock, insightful folk and theory. Call Heaton at 617-520-8934.
Word Processing Service: Term papers, thesis,
reports, etc. Fast, accurate service. $2.00/part,
double spaced page, call 842-3034. Computer
Processing Services. Lawrence.KS
235 Typing Services
- Elder Woman Word Processing - Former editor
- Revision of Word documents and function files in grammatically correct pages of the manual.
1+ Typing/WP: WLers, term papers, resumes
842-747-549 3 on wkdays anytime wknds
*From Quality Taping to Mailing List Entry Maintenance; Production, and Personalized PC Training. For Experience and Reliability call Louise at 43-4052 with your ideas.*
1-Spell checks always included. 2-Same day service available. 3-Grad programs welcome. Call Mindy's office at (865) 279-0000.
K's Professional Word Processing, accurate and
affordable, call after 1 p.m. 841-6345
`PINK A LA MOE` make an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for success! `Now` Call
Board Proefkontrol Seminare
Korrespondierst du Computer-Based Tool
Management (KOB) de la Réseau
Robinet IMH Combinéur Tool Presence
Korrespondierst du Computer-Based Tool Presence
KOB de la Réseau Robinet IMH Combinéur Tool Presence
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertation research, Eagle composition, rush manuscript writing.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
87 Swainm Lectur Louis 18-speed touring bike,
88 Swainm Lectur bookkrack, very good condition.
89 Swainm Lectur bookkrack.
1 set student basketball tickets for all remaining home games. Best Offer. Call 913-756-6611
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glass-ware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and couture jewelry, playful toys, Penthouse vintage clothing, books, carnival glaze, Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising materials, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale tools, vintage kitchenware, stuff it will blow you away! QUANTRIL $1 FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Friday. Call 843-629-5700 for a detailed info call 843-629-5700 For
Attention Battens and DJs: Wicked equipment for cheap. Peavey SB-2 and international speakers, EV Sub cabinets, Technique Turnables, M-7000
Pricem prices. Budget Call Evan 841-9109
IBM compatible, 3 color monitor, dual disk drive.
dot matrix printer, all software, manuals and desk
touchpad.
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and
sorters. $499.00 up on usage. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0292
Some with automatic document feeders and sorters. $499.00 and up on usage. Call Sylvia 1-800-825-0256
Floor of your room COLT? 3 burgery room size CARPETs, highly used. $0 each, pad available. 785-612-5100
FORSALE: ELECTRICGUTTURK, Krammer Ameter,
Krammer Amter, pearl inert, red gemstone, hard shell
pearl, pearl inert, red gemstone.
Or Sale! 1 student season basketball ticket. Call
49-6000, best offer, cash-on-balance
Gibson S100 Strait-shape guitar, DOD Distortion
Pedal Fender Mini Ammun 180-840-7050
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.95
www.miraclive.com
Mountain Rike, 1991. Trek 500, bought new on 1-31
Moving. Can't take touch, microwave, dorm fry,
file cabinet, Progent bicep, dresser, office cabinet
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Specialized RB 20 *Sirius Shimanou Components*
Looked Pallet Calles Db at $32,946 $252 OHO
Genuine ROLLERBLADES skates of the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollbacker brand skates are many colors. All models available. Many colors. 843-2124
Tescom Remote CD player $50. Maximum 900 Camera. Tesscens, Flash, bag, remote tripod, tripod, F12
HOLDER roof rack wocks and for bike holders
THULE holder extra 300 mm used to twice $6
ROVER roof rack wocks and for bike holders
340 Auto Sales
1979 Buck Regal Limited 7,100k actual mileage,
4 E-Engine, runs very good. $1500, 863-4539
1997 corolla 210x 45p. AM/FM, Cass low miles re-
habilitated 600s offer 86% must sell!
1979 Honda Accord. 4 door. 5 speed. A/C/ 91,000 miles. $1200 or best offer. 865-2432
1980 VM SCI睿 4 spid AM-MFAM K. Guns Great $800.
mmw8-1637-8587 Before noon, after 6 p.m.
1986- Ford Ranger, 4-wheel automatic, Barb roll, Chord Rampers, air-conditioning. Many extras
1980 Dodge Diplomate, looks, runs great was $1500
now $1300 MUST sell NOW 864-766 sesponse
1962 MAMIA RX-7 Red, Automatic, Loaded with Power Mountron $ 0.000 749-5714
On TV, VCS, VRCS, stereo, music interactive
media, WWE and many more. Visit www.
MC.MCA.com. Diet Jiahawk Jewelry & Jewellery.
187 Mercury Lynx - Automatic, A/C Cassette, 4 doors, 56k. Excellent condition, $300-865-3523
360 Miscellaneous
§ Vetta 4, AC, Cruise, spp. AM-FM, Ca; 61, 302
mi, garage 4, 4250±844 (dary) or (away)
Ca; 61, 302
78 Dodge Cull, Runs Well, Body Rough. $400. 749.
182
Ordinary Guy seeks Ordinary Girl for coffee and long walks 843-6345. Talon
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits! OMNITRITION BURNER. $29.95
Wanted one non student B-Hall ticket to Colorado,
or OR State. Call Elizabetht 856-300-5000
leaveway.
Wanted: Non-student basketball kickoff for Kansas
vs Missouri; March 8 | Call Ken 641-4800
BUY SELL LOANCASH
Need 2 student tickets for OSU-KU game - will pay
$15. Call 861-8447, leave message
370 Want to Buy
400s
405 For Rent
Furnished room for responsible female. K near U.
841-6254
Free Fb. Reb. two bt. ap. $95.00 Ends July 31st on Busroute. Call 749-347-82
Wanted: 2 Johns to KU-MU Basketball game. $$
Call: JACK 844-7653-5561 1-288-6870
1, 3 BRapts, near campus, nopets, available June
1st, Aug 18z 8971
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing a 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. From KUK. On bus route 8. Pupil room. Free WiFi. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trash. Cheap bedrooms! 1741. W. Call Chisla
HR Sublease DW, Halton, Carport, Water Paid
1864, 1958-71 - July 31 - No Payment. Km$ 828
1664, 1863 - 4744
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus. Wahier/dryer, microwave, ceiling fan, min-binders. Call1st Management, Inc. M-F 2p.m - 5m. 749-1566.
G got a group? Restored borehole biath葬场, wood floors W/D near riverfront 418-STAR (7827)
Heatherwood Apartments - 1, 2, and 3 bedroom
apartments can be rented until the end of May. On
844-8744
Hilvill Asps $1k lease signing bonds 1 & 2 bed
cabin on site. Hilvill Asps $30,000 on site.
On site landing. Hilvill Asps $85,454 or 749,655
合
Available now at 1338 Ohio partially furnished stu-
dior only $29.00 + utilities 749-756
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, 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.
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT?
CALL US FIRST
MANAGEMENT INC.
New locations on campus. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Washer dryers, microwave, ceiling fans, min-blinds. Call now for an appointment. M:2p. 5.m. p:49. 1566.
Louisiana Place Apts. Now bearing nice BRP Apt Bordering Campsa Beautiful view of the city. Call
Nasmith Hall is looking for a responsible, mature individual to work 24 hrs per week in exchange for time off.
New 2BL, Bile to campus, Available All Appliances, $450/MO Low utilities, call Trier 492-616-8307
New leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bedroom Apartments for $130 per month. Low utility costs. Excellent location with excellent maintenance and management. Quality at the best price in town. b41 4868. Great Crest Apartments
One bedroom for sublease at Hanoi Place. Purchased, water paid. WalktoKampot and downto Kuala Lumpur.
TRAILRIDGE
842.7333
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per
per room. Call 618-492-7988.
Boardwalk
1& 2 Bedroomapts.
Now Leasing for Spring &
Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
razor/ceeze/high angle
* Dtk to Ubuse bus interface
* Pdk to Ubuse bus interface
* Palp Tv Panel
* Palp Tv Panel
* On-site management
Office desk space 18.15
Office desk space 18.15
* Bike E of Iowa
* Bike S, on-site management
* Bike W, on-site management
* to 250 Nc (C)
* to 250 Nc (C)
* Call for appointment
* Call for appointment
Naismith Place
Sublease now one bed apartment. nt 404 Mississippi
Nice, spacious, close to campus. $251 004-8746
SubLEASE studio, available immediately. February
through May. no deposit, very clean and easy
to move in. 3BR, 2BA.
Studio, Old West Lawrence, wood floors, Many Windows, Claw foot tap, sunroom, A/C Call 811-267-9030
PARKS & SPIRITS
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Park25
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
MARKET PLACE
- Luxurious 2,3,& 4 Bedroom TownHomes;
* Garages; 2/2 Baths;
* Microwave Ovens
* Some with Fireplaces
* On KU Bus Route
* Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc
841-5444
No Appt. Necessary
- Volleyball Court
841-8400
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
--bath, on bus lr, auntry, 8x0mm lr + 843-633
Sublease avail. now - spacious, luxury twobedroom
basic, basic cable, dishwasher, pool, on bus
low, low utilities, weight room, good ingnst.
817-376
25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and homes for the fall term. studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath
- On KU bus route--
4 stops on property
- 4 stops on property
* 2 Laundry Rooms
- 2 Pools
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
2 Laundry Rooms
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
824 1455
- 2 Laundry Rooms
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
*Large, spacious floorplans
perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
*Carnet colors*
- Mauve, Beige, and Gray
- *2 Full baths available in 2,3; & 4 bedrooms*
- *Large bedrooms & closets*
- *Pool & volleyball*
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
2166W. 26th. 843-6446
---
meadowbrook
Come Visit Meadowbrook Apts
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apts, to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE Studios and Two Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5 Sun 1.4
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
It's Time to Step Up To
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
MFADOWRROOK
Sublease may till May 10 pay rent. Save $250 per month. No deposit, new kit & on bus, on lt. laundry, $28 monthly 911-835-4830
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students! !---- You can get rid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
Save $$$ with each new deposit
- Dine Anytime meals
Sublease avail. now - spacious one bedroom apt,
water, basic pool, on bus route 8941-8716.
Sublease. Avail now to May 31, 2 BR apt, water,
low付, lows $300/mo - 794-5424
"The Woods"
- Macintosh Computer Room
Plus...
- Exercise Room
Laundry Facilities
• Dishwasher
• Microwaves
• Mini Blinds
• Water Paid
- Weeklymaidservice
- Front door bus service
- Walk to K.U.
Call now to reserve your room.
- On Bus Route
* Heated Pool
* 3 Hot Tubs
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Location-Lifestyle The Best Value
- Flexible Leasing
Summer sublease 1 yr, old 2 BH spaciation 40m²
Newly built 30 m²
North Winds Api 450/m² *Mike Cale or*
Mike Cale *Mike Cale*
The Best Value In Town 842-5111
open 7 days a week
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths,
close to campus, furnished. Call 749-3876.
430 Roommate Wanted
1. non-smoking room size needed for 33 bedroom fur-
rances, 60' x 80' w/ enclosed bathrooms & a
morgue room & a garage. Large bedroom $15 plus 1
bedroom. Small bedroom $12 plus 1 bedroom.
Call Mikeat 1-451-2527 for details
FEMALE ROOMMATE
NEEDHOLD
FEBRUARY RENT FEER-LIKE. Wooimmites wanted to share duplex in OP by CPY 35min. from KU w/car pool available. 2 bfrms vacant. FREE! Phone direct for special situation Call Mike at 141-6257 for details
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
WASHER/DRYER/GARAGE/ON BUS
ENABLED/NDISKED/INSCHEDLED MOVE INIMEDIATELY RENT IS
NEOLEGAL CALL: BABB A-847-1723
b & hast 10W, lfirewall $21p in m2.19e% in
c2.84e% in m2.19e% in m2.19e%
/ suititions 7/15t 76/00 month. Call 811-177-4943
Looking for female roommates share 4-bedroom
or studio, Call Kim or Trista for more info. 864-6144
www.tristanefacilities.com
FEMALE roommate wanted to share 2BR, 2B bath &
room on bus route, water pdp
182.507.702, Calgary, Canada
Female housemate wanted. House bordering campus.
Non-smoker and no pets. 749-2646
Roommate wanted to share nine 2 B pt A1. Bk for $2500 a month + 7/12 utilities
$3875
M/F Roommats need ASAP 3 bedroom townhouses close to school, low utilities. M/F rooms 86-481-3411
Roominate need by March 1. 3 BH室 in E. Lawrence $10/mth + 1/7 utilities. Call Mindy at (855) 269-4200.
- Policy
Non-smoking roommate needed ASAP for beautiful, spacious 3BR townhouse. Garage, fireplace, washer/dryer hookup, near bus route. $210/mo + /1 others. #84-0562
One female student for a furnished 5 Bbm Town house on location w/ W17, pool, parking lot, private apartment.
Roommate wanted! Non-smoker for 3 bedroom furnished duplex with 2 full bath, WD, DW, microwave, and garage. Rent negotiable. Call 841-189. Leave message.
Roommate needed immediately through July. $183
Roommate - Fourth, $450 and amenities, great
Roommate needed immediately!' Low Rent 749-
3084.
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $290/mo 841-1287
Roommate wanted Furnished apartment near camp and downtown. 1/4 utility .1/804 /m43
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Classifications
105 personal
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University Dial Kansan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
DIDN'T WASH
HANDS
MEN
© 1980 Universal Press Limited
12
University Daily Kansan / Monday. February 17, 1992
Jayhawk Bookstore at the top of Naismith Hill JBS Briti-Bus Call for Special Charter Rates Mon.-Thurs. • 843-3826
The Men of Delta Chi would like to Congratulate Alpha Xi Delta with best wishes!
FREE PIZZA
BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza
(of course!)
Tornado
Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) 842-3232
14th & OHIO (UNDERTHE WHEEL)
SPECIAL COUPON
PYRAMIDPIZZA
Happy Chef
MONDAY MANIA
Buy Any PYRAMID PIZZA & Get The Second Pizza (of equal value)
PYRAMID
FRIES
"Make Pizza It Cure!"
Lawrence toddler beaten to death, according to coroner's final report
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
Mother's boyfriend charged with child abuse, first-degree murder
The final autopsy report on a 23-month-old Lawrence boy confirmed that he was fatally beaten, the Douglas County coroner said.
Atlanta pathologist Kris Sperry conducted the autopsy in Lawrence after Eric Brewer's death Feb.5. Douglas County coroner Carol Moddrell, who assisted Sperry in the autopsy, received a copy of the final 15-page report Friday afternoon and gave copies to the Douglas County district attorney's office and Lawrence police.
caused internal bleeding, according to the coroner's reports.
Eric died from a ruptured liver that
Donald Earl Bruce, the boyfriend of Eric's mother Wendy Brewer, was charged with first-degree murder and child abuse in connection with the child's death.
A preliminary hearing for Bruce is scheduled for Wednesday.
Wendy Brewer was charged Thursday with involuntary manslaughter and released on bond.
Her preliminary hearing is scheduled for 4.p.m. Wednesday.
Jerry Wells, Douglas County district attorney, said the two cases
He said he did not expect charging anyone else in the case.
might be combined after the preliminary hearings.
Moddrell said she requested the assistance of Sperry, a Lawrence native, because the case was complicated.
She said that according to Sperry's report the child could not have lived for more than 15 minutes after a blow that damaged his liver. Even if the boy had been taken to the hospital for medical care, he probably would have died.
Moddrell said a blow that resulted in
death within 15 minutes was a lethal injury.
Sperry's report also recorded other injuries to Eric Brewer, including several bruises, Moddrell said.
Lawrence police said the boy was not injured with a weapon.
Alita Cooper, assistant professor of human development and family life, said child abuse in most cases was promoted by problems such as economic pressures, dysfunctional families or lack of support in families.
"It happens everywhere, and it happens in every stratum, even in Lawrence," Cooper said.
Scholarship hall parking faulted
Students send a letter to KU officials criticizing lack of spaces and lighting
ByErik Bauer
Kansas staff writer
Sarah Kraus is scared to park outside Douthart Scholarship Hall at night.
"It's not a real safe neighborhood to walk around by yourself," she said.
Kraus, Waukesha, Wis., senior, is one of about 80 residents from Douthart and Grace Pearson scholarship halls who is upset about the lack of parking spaces and adequate outdoor lighting on Louisiana Street between 13th and 14th streets.
Residents sent a letter to KU officials Wednesday detailing their complaints and concerns about safety.
The letter was sent to Ken Stoner, director of student housing, Jim Wilkins, assistant director of systems residence life, Donald Kearns, director of parking department, and Chancellor Gene Budig.
s and residents can park in the lot during it only residents can park there after 5
Kraus said the construction of Amii Scholarship
and the return of residents to Pearson Scholar-
ship Bath were made possible.
She said she estimated 27 parking spaces were lost because of the Amira construction.
"They should have supplied us with a parking option before they put the hall up," she said.
Kraus said scholarship hall residents were allowed to park in the Alumni Place overflow, yellow sticker parking lot at 12th and Louisiana streets.
But the lot is always more than full, Kraus said.
Many residents are forced to park on Tennessee and Ohio streets, where they frequently are ticketed, she said.
Kraus also said the lighting on Louisiana was inadequate and many residents did not feel safe walking from their cars to the halls because of crime in the area.
A KU student was sexually battered and sodomized Feb. 4 at the 1200 block of Louisiana street, according to Lawrence police reports.
Kraus said residents called the police Feb. 8 because an unidentified man was wandering around outside Douthart.
Police questioned the man and let him go because when they arrived, he was not committing a crime, said Lt. John Mullens. KU police representative.
Mullens said the police were patrolling the area more frequently because of the number of residents who were nearby.
Stoner said he was concerned about campus safety, but the facts in the letter were inaccurate.
The construction of Amini Hall actually provided scholarship hall residents with more parking spaces, he said.
"There's more spaces down there this year than last year," he said.
He said the housing department was working with the All Scholarship Hall Council to improve the outdoor lighting.
"We can all share a concern for the safety and security on campus," he said.
Stoner said he would respond to the letter in the middle of the week because he needed time to obtain facts.
Shan Schwartz, president of the All Scholarship Hall Council, said scholarship hall residents had tried since last fall to find options for additional parking spaces.
"Even though we gained some to make up for the ones we lost in the alley, there seems to be a lot more cars," Schwartz, Topeka sophomore, said. "The parking situation is worse than it has ever been."
Kearns said the residents' problems had nothing to do with parking and the police needed to address their concerns about safety.
He also said parking services had sold too many parking stickers in various lots, including those currently used by the scholarship halls.
It is normal to sell more stickers than there are spaces because not everyone parks in the lots every day, he said.
The 843-0611
Etc. Shop 928Mass
THE Call
PRINCETON
REVIEW
843-313
MY 70 MAYTER
Ray-Ban
A PROJECT BY
BAUHAUS & LAWRENCE
FOR SALE AT THE ROGERS STATION
The Men of Sigma Alpha Epsilon would like to thank the following groups and individuals for their help and support after the fire at the $ \Sigma A E $ house December 9,1991:
THE GREEK COMMUNITY
A TΩ ΔTΔ ΦΔΘ ΠKA KΔ
AXΩ BΘΠ ΓΦB ΦΓΔ ΣN
AΔΠ KAΘ ФKY AEΠ ΔX
ФKT ΣΦE AΓΔ ΔΔΣ ΣK
KKΓ ΦKΘ TKE AKΛ ΔY
ПВΦ AOΠ ΛXA ΣX ΔГ
KΣ Acacia Triangle XΩ
LAWRENCE FIRE & POLICE
DEPARTMENT
Fire Marshall Rich Barr
Fire Captain Donald Knight
Danny Kaiser
--Assist. Dean, Student Life
Margaret Miller
--Assoc. Dir., Organizations & Activities
Bob Turvey
--Assoc. Dir., Student Assistance Center
KU STAFF AND FACULTY
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
Jason Fraim
Jason Lohmeyer
Scott Morris
Chad Seymour
John Sheehan
Andrew Shore
Hall Director David Platt Staff and Residents
IRP RESIDENCE HALL
PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION
THANK YOU VERY MUCH!
HARRIS CONSTRUCTION
JOHNSON CHEMICAL
ΣAE HOUSE CORPORATION
FRIENDS OF MEMBERS OF THE FRATERNITY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.101.NO.97
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Dahmer receives 15 successive life terms
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer was sentenced to life in prison yesterday after some relatives of his 15 victims called him a devil and Dahmer told the judge he knew that society would never be able to forgive him.
Dahmer was stone-faced and spoke in a low monotone as he described his crimes not as acts of hate but as the work of a sick man.
"I take all the blame for what I did," he said.
Moments before, nine relatives of Dahmer's victims, many wearing picture pins of their loved ones, described the pain that they had suffered because he killed, butchered and had sex with the corpses of their family members.
A jury decided Saturday that Dahmer, 31, was sane when he killed 15 young men and boys who he had lured to his home. Dahmer pleaded guilty but insane.
The former chocolate factory worker confessed to 17 slayings since 1978 after his arrest last July. He is to stand trial in an Ohio killing, and was not charged in one Milwaukee death because of lack of evidence.
"I hope God has forgiven me," Dahmer said. "I know society will never be able to forgive me. I know the families of the victims will never be able to forgive me for what I have done."
The sister of victim Errol Lindsey shouted "Satan!" at Dahmer and screamed, "Jefrey, I hate you!" as she lunged toward him, shaking her fist and shouting obscenities. She was escaped away.
Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Laurence Gram Jr. sentenced Dahmer to 15 consecutive life prison terms. Under consecutive sentences, if Dahmer gained parole in one sentence the next sentence automatically would take effect. The prosecutor said Dahmer would not be eligible for parole for 96 years.
Dahmer's lawyer, Gerald Boyle,
said no appeal was planned.
Danmer said he did not seek freedom, but understanding, by pleading insane.
"I wanted to find out just what it was that caused me to be so bad and evil," he said. "The doctors have told me about my sickness, and now I have some peace.
"This has never been a case of trying to get free. I didn't ever want freedom. Frankly, I wanted death for myself."
LANE! LANE! LANE!
Pippilian Dahmer said that he turned to God since his arrest.
From acting to basketball, Czaplinski plays with passion
KANSAS
BASKETB
Senior guard Lane Czaplinski attempts to break the pressure defense of center Greg Ostertag and guard Greg Gurley. As a walk-on player who normally sees action in the last few minutes of a game, Czaplinski has become a favorite this season among KU fans.
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
George Czaplinski likes to talk about Christmases when his son Lane was 8 or 9 years old.
"Each Christmas, Lane would get a basketball," the elder Czapinski reminded. "And he would go outside in company." The driveway, so he could play basketball.
So this year, when he had to practice during the holidays, Lane's father said Lane told him, "Dad, this is nothing new. I've always played basketball on Christmas."
Only now, instead of snowy driveways, the stage is Allen Field House for Lane Czapinski: walk-on, actor and former junior-varsity basketball player who thought his playing days were behind him.
The cheers of "Lane! Lane! Lane!" usually come with 3 or 4 minutes left in games that the Kansas Jayhawks lead by 20 points.
"Those moments when you run on the court and look up and see the people roar ... It's just unreal," Lane said. His dark eyes widened as if he had just unwrapped a new basketball at Christina's team, one of the best situations in America.
"It's all like out of a weird dream sequence."
Unplanned labor
That's what they call a non-scholarship player who earns a spot among scholarship athletes on a varsity team.
And Lane Czapkinski (pronounced Cha-PLIN-skee) is a walk-on. But it might be more appropriate to call the most valuable player on last season's JV team an "ask-on."
"I was laying over there," Lane said, as he motioned across a cluttered room to his bed at Naismith Hall, where he is a resident assistant. "Coach (Mark) Murgeon called and asked if I wanted to play with the varisity for a couple of weeks. It was a chance to be a part of something that had always been a dream of mine."
It wasn't in his plans. After a stellar junior season, he already had quit the JV squad. But it didn't take long for Lane to accept the invitation from his former JV coach.
"I felt like I had such a good season last year that that was as far as I could go on that level," he said of his JV success. "I felt like I was going to goon and try some other things out in my life to fill the void that basketball had filled. I wanted to find other passions to pursue.
"Butplaying for the varsity was a completely different proposition. It would actually be playing basketball on another level."
Lane's hard work in practice paid off and made Kansas coach Roy Williams decide to keen him permanently.
"Coach Williams needed a practice player," Turgeon said. "It was just going to be a temporary thing, but Lane worked his butt off."
Williams said that after guard Sean Tunstall was suspended before the season began, he asked Turgeon if he had anyone he could recommend as a practice player.
"Mark mentioned Lane, and I bought, 'Oh yeah, I remember Lane,' Williams said. "His work ethic and attitude were great," he added, which made me decide to keep him."
That work ethic includes finishing first in team sprints at the end of practice, something Lane does regularly.
George Czaplinski, once a basketball coach himself, was not surprised by his success.
"I've never been around a player that has worked as hard as Lane," he said.
Lane said his hard work came from trying to attain one simple goal.
"I've always wanted to be as good as I could be." he said.
Before he discovered basketball in the third grade, Lane skipped from passion to passion with the same desire.
First it was a longing to be a firefighter. Then there was a snake-loving period — "We had to go to every snake pit we could find," he said—and after that, dreams of becoming a magician sent him to every magic shop in the Kansas City area.
"Lane has always had a wide range of interests," his father said. "He's tried a lot of different things. He's not hyper, he's just very productive. And he has always pursued his interests with a passion."
Once he found basketball, however, he stuck with it, said his mother, Jane Czaplinski.
She remembers late-night basketball at their western Wyattone County home, and Lane, her only child, would not stop playing.
"There were always kids coming over and playing," she said. "He lived and breathed basketball."
George's background helps explain Lane's passion for the game. The elder Czaplinski played one season at Kansas and was a standup player at McPherson High School in central Kansas. He was the all-time leader scoring there until
Continued on Page 8
College students ignore Norplant
Birth control method not popular
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
A birth control method hailed by some members of the medical community as the most significant advance in contraception since the birth control pill has had little response from KU students.
Norplant is a set of six small, flexible tubes filled with a synthetic hormone that is inserted into a woman's upper arm through a minor surgical procedure. The tubes gradually release progestin, a synthetic hormone, into the body for up to five years.
Progestin makes ovulation difficult, thus preventing pregnancy. The method is considered more than 99 percent effective.
Janine Demo, coordinator for health education at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said she did not consider Norplant a breakthrough in contraception.
Henry Buck, Watkins gynecologist,
said that he had discussed the method
with patients but that none had chosen
Norplant since the method became
available at Watkins about two
"There's not going to be a major advancement in birth control until they come up with something beside the condom for men," she said.
The costs and side effects of Norplant are turnoffs for students.
"I did not think that it was going to be a very popular method of birth control for college students," he said. "Manufacturers are marketing it more toward women considering sterilization, but Norplant is here in the Watkins pharmacy, and we are ready to put it in. I think at some point and time, there will be more interest among college students to use it, but right now, there's very little interest."
Buck said cost was one of the barriers for college students against choos-
months ago.
Watkins charges $450 for Norplant implantation, and the University of Kansas Medical Center charges $510. The Med Center charges $150 to have the hormone capsules removed.
Norplant is covered by Medicaid but not by many insurance policies.
Birth control options
| Norplant |
|---|
| Effectiveness: | 99-99, 5 percent |
| Cost at Watkins: | $450 |
| Possible side effects: | breakthrough bleeding; implants can be felt and sometimes seen; headaches |
| Benefit: | convenient |
| Time factor involved: | effective within 24 hours of implantation |
Source: Watkins Memorial Health Center and Mosby's Medical and Nursing Dictionary
$390
(five-year supply)
headaches;
nausea;
high blood
pressure
Birth control pills are a cheaper option for KU students than Norplant, but Norplant is cheaper than buying birth control pills from an outside pharmacy. Buck said.
the pill
98-99.5 percent
Buck said there was a 60-percent chance that women on Norplant would have breakthrough bleeding, or irregular periods, during the first year of use.
The capsules also can be felt easily under the skin, and they can be visible.
A five-year supply of birth control pills from Watkins costs $390. If students bought birth control pills for five years from an outside pharmacy, it could cost them more than $1,000, he said.
less expensive
effective aftertaking pills between seven and 21 days, depending on the strength of the pill
Norplant also has side effects that can be disturbing for some women.
"That turns a lot of people off of this method," Buck said.
Norplant is not a recommended contraceptive method for women who are overweight. Buck said some of the hormone gets stored in the body fat of overweight women, reducing the method's effectiveness.
Thomas Snyder, director of benign gynecology at the Med Center, said 275 women had Norplant inserted at the Med Center since February 1991, when Norplant became available there. Twelve women in the past year have had Norplant removed at the Med Center.
He said breakthrough bleeding was the reason for most of the removals.
"I think it depends on their social circumstances and their ability and willingness to take oral contraceptives," he said.
Snyder said that the Med Center had inserted Norplant into several college women but that Norplant was not the ideal contraceptive for everyone.
Hate-speech resolution might be resuscitated
The hate-speech issue is not dead at the University of Kansas.
By Svala Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
Although a resolution opposing harassing speech was rejected by University Council on Feb. 6, the Human Relations Committee intends to rewrite the resolution and submit it again, said Maggie Childs, head of the committee.
The resolution was misunderstood, Childs said.
"People jumped to conclusions," she said. "They thought we were going to legislate behavior, when all we meant to encourage people to be sensitive."
Childs said the policy was intended as a philosophical statement and was not meant to be included in University grievance procedures.
"We need to encourage the community to use the freedom of speech with caution." Childs said. "We also need to
The resolution stated that the University supported free speech except when it directly threatened someone or had no moral or social value.
"We already have harassment codes that limit speech more than this resolution," she said. "The document is not an indication of the present as an opinion of the community."
Rewriting the resolution will include making the wording clearer and simpler in order to avoid further misunderstanding, she said. The committee has not set a date for resubmitting the resolution.
encourage people to read the rules that are already in effect at this University."
The KU Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action grievance procedures include handling discrimination on the basis of race, sex, color, national origin, religion, ancestry, sexual preference and disability.
Tom Berger, acting director of the office of affirmative action, said the office had received a number of complaints involving hate speech.
KU's Discrimination Hearing Board conducts hearings of complaints, but the burden of proof of discrimination is on the complainant, he
"Whether the board would find name calling discriminatory, I cannot tell," Berger said. "What I can say is that name-calling has been found to be a probable cause for discrimination."
Ahlate-speech code could encourage people to come forward, be said.
"I think hate speech is something the University community needs to disbribe."
Tim Miller, board member of the Douglas County chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, opposed the resolution.
"I don't think I have changed my mind, but I think I do understand the intent of the policy better after talking to members of the committee," said Miller, assistant professor of religious studies. "Perhaps we need a condemnation of hate speech to make clear that it is repulsive to the University community.
2
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
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Open Mon - Thurs 8am - 6pm
Fri 8pm - Sat 9am - 1pm
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An "Environment in Crisis" Series THIS OLD EARTH
Peter Matthiessen
Biodiversity in Baikal, Siberia's Inland Sea 19 February 1992, 8:00 pm, Kansas Union Big 8 Room
John W. Terborgh Conserving Biodiversity in the Tropics 25 February 1992, 8:00 pm, Alderson Auditorium
David Blockstein
David Blockstein
Towards a National Strategy for Conserving Biodiversity
2 March 1992, 8:00 pm, Woodruff Auditorium
Free to Students, Faculty and Staff, and the Public
Presented by: the KU Systematics Group, the CLAS Lecture Series, and ENVIROS
--p. m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
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Trevor Squibb, 22, of Omaha, Neb., was arrested on a theft charge in connection with the theft of a four-foot tail, brown teddy bear valued at $329. Lawrence police said that Squibb confessed to taking the bear at 4:50 p.m. Saturday from Bobbi's Bedroom, 2429 Iowa St.
ON THE RECORD
ON CAMPUS
Seven businesses in the Holiday Plaza shopping center at 25th and 10th streets were either damaged or robbed or both between 3:30 and 8 a.m.
Godfather's Pizza
Sunday. The back entrances to Pizza Hut, Ultimate Tan, the Shin Asian Supermarket, Cross Reference Bookstore, Holiday Travel Inc., Cathy Restaurant and H&R Block were pried open, causing about $1,995 worth of damage. About $1,000 in cash was taken from the stores, but police have not identified anyone in connection with the crimes, Lawrence police reported.
- The Office of Study Abroad will have an information table from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today at the fourth floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
International Student Services and Legal Services for Students will sponsor an Income Tax Workshop at 11 a.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
Students Against Hunger will meet
me at the Oread
the Earnest in the Kappa Sigma
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
The Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30
The University of Kansas ANIME will meet at 6 p.m. today at 315 Art and Design Building
- Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor a pre-physical therapy meeting at 7 tonight at the conference room in Watkins.
Public Relations Student Society of America meet at 7 o'clock at the
The Chess Club will meet at 7 toight at Alcove 1 in the Kansas Museum
The Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7 30 tonight at the Oread Room in the K
WEATHER
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas Support Group will meet at 8 tonight. Call Headquarters at 841-2345 or KU Info at 864-3506 for the meeting location.
Today
high: 43
low: 28
50
40 43 52
40
30
25 27 30
20
10
9
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 39/24
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO
Denver 46/22
KANSAS
Lawrence 43/28
MISSOURI
Kansas City 42/26
St. Louis 49/32
Dodge City 51/25
Wichita 48/26
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City 55/32
3-day outlook
TODAY
A 60 percent chance of rain changing to snow by afternoon, light snow tonight.
TOMORROW
Skies will be partly cloudy.
THURSDAY
Skies will become mostly clear.
Across the U.S.
Boston 43/36
Chicago 4'
Dallas 7
Detroit
Houston
New York
Los Angeles
Philadelphia
San Francisco 61/37
Washington 52/43
Forecast by Michael Hudson, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
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Application forms are available from Sylvia Suarez, Administrative Assistant, Howard Hughes Program, 6007 Haworth Hall (864-3933)
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Application deadline: March 16,1992
Hey Students!!!
If you liked Tike Skywalker and Indiana Jones, you'll love Young Jim Hawkins as he's pitted against the most remarkable pirates in fiction.
You asked for it back, now the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents A Special Event
in Treasure Island
PIRATE FLAG
Treasure island rekindles the spirit of fun and adventure we all love...full of laughter and suspense..buried treasure and romance Don't miss this heroic stage taged by the Tony Award-winning company!
You'll See and Hear Every Word!!!
KU student tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved. KU student tickets are only $8 & $6; 50, to charge tickets by phone using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Suzhoubout Society, and the Kansas University Endowment Association
1/2 Price for KU Students!!!
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, February 18, 1992
Haskell Indian Junior College Auditorium
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
CAMPUS / AREA
3
Deaf learn with music
Therapy enhances clients'abilities
By Julie Wasson Special to the Kansan
The 4-year-old boy does not know his own name.
He is completely deaf and does not speak. He has trouble maintaining eye contact with anyone, and his attention tends to wander.
But Stephanie Philbrick is trying to help him, and she's using music to do it.
Philbrick, Bath, Maine, senior, is using sign language to teach her client his name, but she will use music to teach him other skills.
He wears a mechanism on his stomach that vibrates in response to sound
"We do stop-start exercises when he'll move around while the music is playing, and when it stops, he's sup-posed. He's also helping in developing his attention span."
To encourage eye contact, Philbrick will play music while the boy looks her in the eye, but will stop the music when he looks away.
"He really reacts well to music," she said. "He enjoys it. So when I stop the music, he goes away."
Music therapy is part of the department of art and music education and music therapy, in the School of Education. It has been offered as a graduate degree since 1946. This semester, there are 85undergraduate and graduate music therapy majors.
As part of their training, Philbrick and other students in the department work with children and adults — from the hearing impaired to the developmentally disabled.
She said that many KU students had misconceptions about music therapy.
"Unfortunately, most people think of music therapy as a bunch of people getting together and singing songs," she said. "It's so much more that that."
she said. "It's so indefinite than that... A really basic definition would be that it is the use of music to reinforce or change non-musical and musical behaviors, and to enhance the quality of life."
Music therapy majors take instrument classes and music history classes in addition to their music therapy classes. They study learning theories, behavior modification and human development.
Outside of class, music therapy majors work with clients in a learning, rather than professional. capacity.
They have to devise a treatment plan for each client, according to that individual's abilities. Most of this work is done in the music therapy clinic in the Dole Human Development Center.
Before graduation, every music therapy major is required to do a six-month internship at a professional clinic or hospital.
Philbrick said that she had taken piano lessons for 12 years before she came to KU and that she wanted to remain actively involved in music. She also knew she wanted to enter a helping profession, and said that music therapy offered her a perfect combination of these two interests.
"I like to see people make progress," he said, helping them learn to help themselves.
Nicole Burchinal, Leavenworth senior and music therapy major, said her reasons for going into music therapy were similar to Philibrick's.
"I'ts really rewarding to watch a client learn new things," Burchalin said. "Music therapy sometimes helps with the learning techniques haven't."
Philbrick said that music was an effective tool in therapy for many reasons.
"It can be used with so many people because almost everyone has been exposed to music at some time," she said.
Alicia Clair, professor of music education and music therapy, said that students probably unknowingly used music therapy in their everyday lives.
VIRGINIA GREEN
Timothy Halpern, 6, tries to match tones with the help of Alice Ann Darrow, center, associate professor of speech/language/hearing and Shirley Davis, graduate teaching assistant of music therapy.
*"Students listen to certain kinds of music at certain times."* *said she.*
Movement and muscle action are stimulated by music that is rhythmic, has irregular beats and a lot of percussion. Clair said. In contrast, music
with a more regular beat has a calming effect.
Every individual reacts differently to certain types of music, she said, and with a little experimentation, students can learn what type of music affects
them.
"We've had students do research that shows that music can improve your endurance if you choose music that is appropriate to your pacing," Clair said.
1987
Christine McFarland / KANSAN
Anticipating her graduation in May, Heather Cooke, Tulsa, Okla., senior, orders graduation announcements. The announcements went on sale yesterday in the Union Bookstores and can be ordered today and tomorrow.
Gettin' ready
Book teaches fast track to learning
By Svala Jonsdottin
Kansan staff writer
Local author gives 5-minute technique
Mark Eberra wants to help you learn faster.
"Let us say it we it 2o' clock in the morning and you have a test the day after," he said. "You have a book to read, and you need to know how to get this information into your mind so you will not forget it. Then you can call toll-free and speak to expert consultants who can help you with that."
That is, if you have bought his book,
"How to Become an EXPERT at Anything in 5 Minutes or Less!"
Eberra's book, which was published in December, is intended to help people learn faster and memorize more efficiently in four steps.
A computer program is included with the book. The buyer also can register in the "Expert Network," which gives access to the 24-hour, toll-free hotline.
"The book teaches techniques that empower you to learn and memorize," said Eberra, a Lawrence resident. "Through these techniques you can memorize and recall any kind of information."
The technique, which he calls mind computer interaction technology, is built on his work and study of adult education. Eberra has a master's degree in adult education from the University of Missouri at Kansas City and worked for two years for the Internal Revenue Service in Kansas City as an employee development specialist, he said.
Some of the book's techniques include dividing information into small chunks in order to memorize it, linking new information with existing knowledge, using images to recall items from one's long-term memory and knowing how the mind works in order to be able to use it better.
"The days of lifelong employment with one company are over, and people have to learn all their lives to get new skills." Eberra said. "Students who are graduating
M. RANDALL MCKINNEY
need to be able to learn and become experts, maybe at many things."
"How to Become an EXPERT..." sells for $19.95 through mail directly from Eberra's company, and also is available in the Adventure and Mt. Oread bookstores in Lawrence.
Lisa Eitner, buyer for the M. Oread Bookshop, said study-skills books were becoming more popular, as students realized they needed to have better skills to enter an increasingly competitive job market.
"We have seen an increase in sales of books on how to study, how to take tests and how to improve reading and memory skills." she said.
"However, I respect the notion that people can become more efficient." Zimmer said. "Every student is challenged to do that because of the volume of studying and all the extracurricular activities available."
Lorna Zimmer, director of the KU Student Assistance Center, said becoming an expert on anything in five minutes was not consistent with what was known about the learning process.
Zimmer said that memorization techniques were helpful for students, but that they only were one part of learning.
"Our philosophy is that a C student can become a B or an A student with improved study techniques, but there is no magic formula," she said. "You also need to understand the conceptual part of the material and know how to apply what you have learned."
Tribal casino could entertain KU students
Kansan staff writer
By Gayle Osterberg
Kochenstaffwriter
A pile of chips and a roll of the dice can mean different things to different people.
Some Kansas lawmakers say casino gambling would lead to organized crime and social problems.
But to four Native-American tribes in Kansas, the opportunity to own and operate a casino is a chance to generate much-needed revenue for an improved quality of life.
With the help of Mirage Resorts Inc., the tribe hopes to design and manage a complex that will include a Native-American theme hotel, restaurants,
The Sac and Fox tribe formally announced Thursday its intention to develop a $75-million entertainment and gaming center in Kansas City, Kan., pending state approval.
For KU students, a nearby casino could provide an alternative form of weekend entertainment.
Michelle Campbell, a St. Louis sophomore who organizes social events for Delta Gamma sorority, said the complex could be an attraction for KU students.
"I think the state could make a lot of money from students, because I'm sure a lot of sororities and fraternities would use the facility for parties and functions," she said.
shops, movie theaters, bars and a casino
Steve Hagerott, Mandan, N.D., junior, that he did not think casinos were good for a community but that he probably would go if one opened.
At least one casino has profited from being near a university.
"It would depend on what kind of games they had, but I would go just to see what it was like," he said.
At 5 p.m. each Friday, the Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Norman, Oka., opens the doors of its Thunderbird Entertainment Center and does not
close them until 1 a.m. the following Monday.
During the weekend, the casino offers blackjack, craps and keno at tables crowded with University of Oklahoma students.
Jamie Capps, OU senior, said the casino had been the most popular nightspot in the area this year.
"It's something different to do," she said. "Lots of people go there after being someplace else, because it's open all night. I've been there at three or four in the morning, and it is always packed."
One KU student said he feared low budgets would keep him from traveling to Kansas City, Kan, if the Sac and Fox complex was built.
"I don't think I'd be interested in gambling, because I don't have any money to lose," said Jay Lebeau, Lawrence graduate student. "But it's a good opportunity to get some money flowing into the tribes."
Sandra Keo, head of the Sac and Fox tribunal council, said revenues from the
resort would be shared with Kansas City, Kan., the state of Kansas and the American-Indian community.
"This facility will attract millions of visitors to Kansas and showcase Native American culture," she said. "The economic multiples of this activity will greatly benefit the Sac and Fox Nation, Kansas City and Kansas."
The 843-0611
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The Kansas City, Kan., mayor and council have been working with the city to make
Finney, who signed a compact authorizing the Kickapoo tribe to operate a casino on its reservation, has been negotiating with the Sac and Fox tribe.
The governor has come under fire recently from Attorney General Bob Stephan, who said Finney could not have compelled compact without legislative approval.
Stephan filed a lawsuit with the state Supreme Court, but a representative of Finney's press office said the governor would continue negotiations until the court directed her otherwise.
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Don't Get Caught in the Dark...
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OREAD
4
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
OPINION
MAXCLEY Chicago Tribune
AND THE BABY WILL BE HERE IN TIME FOR YOUR CONVENTION! ISN'T THAT WONDERFUL, DEAR?
PENNA ABORTION CASE
SUPREME COURT
Presidents Day is holiday to commemorate all leaders
Yesterday was Presidents Day, the day Americans get rip-snorting drunk, line the streets to watch parades, dress up in green and sport buttons with witty sayings like, "Kiss me, I'm a President."
Well, maybe not. Actually, it's the day we don't get any mail and can't get any money out of the bank. But this just goes to show the confusion associated with the holiday. For example, despite what your calendar and the first sentence of this column say, it's not actually Presidents Day. While that is the common name for the holiday, the title has never been formally changed to Presidents Day.
After all, the formal name celebrating President George Washington's birthday, Washington's Birthday, is far more original. You gotta love those bureaucrats.
However, because President Abraham Lincoln also was born in February, the holiday has become associated with both men. And deservedly so, because Lincoln will forever be remembered as The Great Emancipator, Honest Abe or That Tall Guy with the Dorky Hat.
Washington, on the other hand, was the Father of Our Country, the Man Who Could Not Tell a Lie and the eighth President of the United States.
While Washington is commonly referred to as the nation's first president, he technically does not deserve that honor. Washington was the first
10
David Mitchell Staff columnist
president under the Constitution and the first president elected by the people.
However, the first president of the United States was John Hanson. That's right, John Hanson. Now if you're wondering, "Who the hell is John Hanson?" reread the first sentence of this paragraph where it says, "The first president of the United States was John Hanson."
Hanson, a representative from Maryland, was elected president under the Articles of Confederation in 1781. Six more presidents followed before Washington was elected president under the Constitution in 1789.
Before Hanson became president, he served several years in the colonial government. He helped to organize resistance to British taxes and organized troops when the Revolutionary War began.
Washington's predecessors are not given the same status as presidents elected under the Constitution because of the failure of the Articles of Confederation. They also served only
brief terms and were elected by Congress, not the people.
Though it is odd that our first president is a forbidden man, it is not uncommon. Many of our leaders have slipped through the cracks of the history books. Unless a president serves in times of war, economic depression, scandal or other crises, he is likely to be forbidden.
Hanson himself died in 1783 while the new nation was just beginning to walk. But if history had turned out a bit differently, we might have celebrated Hanson Day yesterday. School children would confuse Hanson state with Hanson, D.C. Fruit pickers would gather Hanson apples. And the Super Bowl Champions would be the Hanson Redskins.
To make a short story long, Presidents Day should not be just a day of rest for postal workers, but a day to remember all the presidents. Men like Washington and Lincoln should be remembered because they led the nation through difficult times. Men like Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan should be remembered because we can learn from their mistakes. Finally, men like Hanson, Franklin Pierce and James Polk should not be forgotten because they contributed to our long, proud and controversial history.
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tyson trial sends right signal
Conviction shows that juries will not be swayed by power and wealth when dealing with rape
The great champion takes a fall and the result is a knockout by millions of women victimized by rape and sexual harassment.
Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson's rape conviction sends the message to women that the law in many cases will protect the victim and convict the assailant, regardless of who he is and how much power and wealth he possesses.
During the William Kennedy Smith trial and Clarence Thomas nomination hearings in 1991, women's rights in general were decimated. Women who stood up and tried to prove that politically and economically powerful men had raped or sexually harassed them, were dealt critical blows.
Anita Hill many times during questioning in the Thomas hearings worked to convince the Senate hearing committee that she wasn't lying. This circumstance with the questioning that harassment and rape victims receive is not uncommon but rather a pitiful hole in the U.S. legal system that continues to bury victims of these sexual crimes.
During harassment or rape cases, the credibility of the victim is questioned rather than the validity of her plea.
It is hoped that Tyson's recent trial and conviction marks a prelude to what will become a period for recognizing the inequalities dealt to women in our complex legal system.
More condom sense is needed
Frank Williams for the editorial board
The condom may not have been the most popular topic Feb. 14, but it should not be ignored
Safe sexual practices need to be publicized. And Valentine's Day was the perfect time to emphasize them. For some people, starting Condom Sense Week on Valentine's Day is a blunt way to take the romance out of that day. But the timing was appropriate because Valentine's Day is the day of love.
The advertisements promoting Condom Sense Week use a cartoon character to illustrate the proper use of a condom. This may not be the most serious approach, but it is a practical way to deal with a sensitive issue. The use of a condom is something personal and private, but it is also something that people should be more aware of. Condoms are only effective when used and used properly.
Condom Sense Week is a way to bring awareness to people. Condoms may not be
romantic but neither is a sexually transmitted disease. The World Health Organization is predicting that by the mid-to-late 1990s, 15 million to 20 million adults will have the AIDS infection. The organization had originally predicted that such a number would not be reached until after the year 2000. This makes it painfully apparent that if people are aware of ways to prevent the spread of STDs, they are not using the methods available to them.
Increasing awareness of condoms may lead to increased use. This is important. Many think it is impossible for them to contract a disease, but usually those are the people most likely to contract a disease because they use no form of prevention. Many STDs are curable, not all of them. People need to be aware of preventive measures and should use them. That is why Condom Sense Week is important, even though it may not be romantic. Valentine's Day lasts for only 24 hours, an STD can last for days or a lifetime.
Amy Francis for the editorial board
Editorialists reflect the majority opinion of the University Daily Kansan editorial board. Opinions expressed in letters, cartoons and guest and staff columns are solely those of the author or artist. Views expressed in columns and cartoons are not necessarily shared by the Kansan.
Members of the editorial board are: Alexander Bloemhof, Jim Brown, J.R. Clairborne, Mark Coatney, Amy Francis, Tiffany Harness, Tiffany Lasha Hurt, Kate Kelley, Julie Eileen Litt, Stephen Martino, David Mitchell, Chris Moeser, Beth Randolph, Martin Scherstuhl, Tiffany Frank, William Williams and Sarah Zercher.
Indian Express, New Delhi, India, on Boris Yeltsin and Western aid:
In his public utterances during his just-concluded tour of the United States and Europe, he repeatedly spoke of the threat he faced at home both from fascists and communists.
Boris Yeltsin...is greatly disappointed at the trickle of emergency aid which has so far reached the Russians who are starved of most daily necessities.
If, despite this, he feels let down by the Western aid givers, the reason is his apparent lack of grasp of the processes of democratic governments.
The danger of Russia's relapse into dictatorship of one kind or the other as a result of economic misery and political chaos has, however, never been overlooked in the West.
International perspectives
**Arab News, Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, on Bill Clinton:**
The media orgy on Gennifer Flowers' revelations of a supposed 12-year love affair with Arkansas governor and leading Democrat presidential candidate Bill Clinton raises more questions than it answers.
First and foremost is the question: Who cares? A lot of people, judging by the public's opinions, are unaware.
affair.
Maybe it's a result of relentless media frenzy in tracking down every bit of dirt on politicians that they can get their hands on. But large sections of the U.S. voting public have expressed concern over the private life behavior of presidential candidates. For them, a distinction between private and public morality is nonexistent.
For many others, what a candidate does in his or her private life, as long as it doesn't affect their public performance of duties, is absolutely irrelevant to how they judge that person, or whom they vote for.
The shortage of food and the fall in real earnings aren't enough, at least yet, to blow the cool of the Muscovites. But it seems that people who are in opposite camps of thinking are organizing themselves politically.
There is a very colorful collection of political groups that goes under the name of the opposition. It is somewhat ominous that in their
■ Helsingin Sanomat, Heinsinki, Finland, on the former Soviet Union:
speeches, in increasingly angry tones, they bring up the themes of Russia's national losses and humility.
It must be recognized that there is a great amount of frustration in Russia for political demagogues to feed on. The difficult task of the leaders ... is not to fall prey to the temptations of the demagogues and to ensure that the forebodings do not realize themselves.
Gulf News, Dubai, United Arab Emirates,
on Boris Yeltsin:
What a change from the glorious days in August last year, when Muscovites defied the coup plotters in the Kremlin and President Boris Yeltsin stood on a tank to celebrate democracy as no leader had done before in Russia.
The communists, who bitterly bemoan their fall from power, staged a protest march in Moscow and other cities and shouted slogans against Yeltsin, demanding his resignation and urging a return to the old order. Not to be outdone, Yeltsin's supporters also held a rally in Moscow, albeit on a much smaller scale ...
No doubt, the two rallies demonstrated that the ideological struggle between communism and Russia's new-found democratic principles is not over.
But it is the three or fourfold rise in consumer prices following Yeltsin's drastic economic reforms — and the continuing food shortages — that have provided the fuel for the protest and embolized his enemies to try to unseat him.
Russia is really embroiled in an ideological battle — with rival groups still divided over what should be the republic's political and economic system. Sure, the Russian people voted for democracy and market reform when they elected Yeltsin, but if they are to do so again at the next election, assuming there is one, they will want to see some results for Yeltsin's reforms.
Just now, it is not only Yeltsin who will have to keep his nerve but also the West, if the battle to save Russia for democracy is to be won.
El Mercurio, Santiago, Chile, on Venezuela;
One of the most serious sequels of the failed military uprising in Venezuela has been the press censorship, based on the temporary suspension of constitutional guarantees.
The Venezuelan armed forces have felt the impact of the bad economic situation, and certainly their ranks feel the influence of the frequent reports of corruption aired by the media.
The coupattempt caused a sour feeling in the Latin American community, because Venezuela was always seen at the various regional political forums as having a consolidated image that was worth being imitated.
The reaction by many Western leaders was quick, and President Carlos Andres Perez immediately received the support from other leaders. The coup in Haiti, Latin America had not had a similar experience. Democratization in the region was a fact in recent years, with the approval of the United States. Besides, the small number of the Venezuelan plotters made it clear that their movement didn't have enough support and was unable to endanger the stability of the democratic regime.
La Stampa, Turin, Italy, on Algeria:
Algeria's declimated Islamic Salvation prince is certainly not able to loose an armor of his own.
The generals know this. But they also seem not to understand that, by cutting the legs off the ISF, they are clearing their way for radical Islamists who were kept at bay by the moderate Islamics.
This abortive democratic situation has injected a crazed mix of injustice and frustration into the poor.
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager,news adviser
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olesn
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Meyers
Graphics Aimee Braindan/ Jeff Meesey
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ..Bilbeebengo
Regional sales mgr ..Rich Haharburger
National sales mgr ..Cotta Hanna
Co-op sales mgr ..Arjone Johnson
Production mgrs ..Kim Wallace
Marketing director ..Lisa Keeler
Marketing director ..Kim Claxton
Creative director ..Leen Tan
Classified morr ..Kio Chin
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be phonetic. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stuffer-Fint Hall.
Loco Locals
NOV
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
Educating against bias
5
Lawrence schools strive to stop racism at early age
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
Martin Luther King Jr. dreamt of ending racism.
Children inspired that dream.
"I have a dream that one day ... little Black boys and Black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers," King said in 1963.
Representatives of Lawrence Public Schools said yesterday that they hoped their attempt to educate children about all cultures would help King's dream come true.
Bill Wilson, director of human resources for Lawrence Public Schools, said the district had tried in recent years to design a curriculum that included all cultures.
He said the district was trying to purchase text-books that were written by minority authors and looked at history without bias. He said the district was unwilling to use its programs to see if students were being excluded.
"We have and will continue to look for ways to encourage our teachers to look at history from a more complete perspective," he said. "We want bias-free teaching from bias-free textbooks. A historically accurate look at the world is what we want."
Wilson said that the school district was trying to attract more minority teachers.
The district uses about 200 placement bureaus throughout the nation to search for candidates for positions, Wilson said. Many of those have a large
Black History Month
"I don't know if schools alone can educate racism
away."
Brad Tate
Brad Fate Lawrence High School principal
pool of minority applicants.
"We have tried to work with our staff to help us recruit more minority teachers and staff," he said.
The district employs 90 minority members, 47 of which are teachers or support staff. Wilson said the
"We are not having a lot of success recruiting minority faculty members, but I think we are doing all we can," he said.
"Conferences teach faculty members to think along the lines of cooperative learning," he said. "Everybody can learn, and we should all learn from one another."
Wilson said that the district encouraged teachers to attend conferences
Toni Harrell, librarian at East Heights Elementary School, 1430 Haskell Ave., said it was important for schools to teach children about different cultures at a young age.
"It is never too early to learn about diversity," she
said. "Our goal is to expose children to different cultures
that they can understand that people are different. We want to provide all students with a positive self-image."
Harrell said that 30 percent of the students at East Heights were African-American and that 15 percent were Native-American.
Brad Tate, principal at Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St., said that attempts had been made to integrate African-American history into U.S. history and literature courses. But he said he was not sure those efforts were having much effect on racial relations.
"The high school is not any different than the community," Fate said. "There are lots of things that we do to lessen tension, but tension remains. We have kids here that are very prejudiced. I worry about it a lot, but I don't know if schools alone can educate racism away."
Norma Norman, associate director of minority affairs at the University of Kansas, said that education at the primary and secondary levels would help with the racial problems at institutions of higher education.
"I have been very supportive of educating children starting in preschool," Norman said. "We want to promote personal wholeness and personal self-value. If we do this from preschool through high school, then students who come to the University will be more open to different ideas."
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Join KU's leaders.
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A JOMATHAN DEMME PICTURE
SWIMMING CAMBODIA
Films are screened in woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union
Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Office, Level 4, Kansas Union.
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
In a busy world, it is hard to find time to
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Macintosh PowerBook
Macintosh PowerBook
University of New York at Buffalo
Information Technology and the Digital Universe
Web-based Information Technology Laboratory
www.uib.edu/buffalo/ITlabs
Sometimes to do your best work all you need is a change of scenery.
The new Apple* Macintosh* PowerBook* computers give you the freedom to work anywhere you want, any time you want.
The Apple SuperDrive* disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks—
They're small enough to fit in a book bag. Powerful enough for your toughest class assignments. And they're affordable. too.
They run virtually all Macintosh software. And can run for up to three hours on a single battery charge.
They can be expanded to up to 8MB of memory and come standard with plenty of hard disk storage.
KU
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BOOKSTORES
With built-in AppleTalk* Remote Access software and a modem, you can use a PowerBook to retrieve files from your project partner's Macintosh without leaving the library. Or log on to the library computer without leaving your room.
allowing you to exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer. Add SoftPC and you can run MS-DOS programs, too.
There are three models from which to choose: the PowerBook 100 is the lightest, most affordable PowerBook, the PowerBook 140 offers higher
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performance and a built-in Apple SuperDrive disk drive, and the PowerBook 170 is the highest-performance PowerBook. All three offer bright, adjustable backlit screens and the simplicity of Apple's latest system software innovation—System 7. And their ergonomic, all-in-one design makes them comfortable to use—no matter where you do your best work.
See the PowerBook computers at our place today, and while you're in, be sure to ask us for details about the Apple Computer Loan.
There's no telling where a PowerBook could take you.
864-5697
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18. 1900
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Thinking About
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Come to the Candidate Information Workshop Wednesday.
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Appointment Necessary
148 Burge Union (913) 864 5665
This program will focus on a variety of issues of importance to women.
Tuesday, February 18, 1992
7:00-9:00 p.m.
women.
*Sexual assault including date and acquaintance rape
*Relationships that involve verbal, physical, and sexual
*Special concerns International women may have with regards to safety.
7:00 9:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
Facilitators:Rape Victim Support Service
Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc.
Office of International Student Services
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Commission on the Status of
Women, Students Against Violence Against Women, and Women's Student Union. For more information, contact Shelly Robinson at 864-3552.
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Germany to probe deaths
Hospital reveals baby drownings
determine whether drownings also took place in other hospitals, Hans-Joachim Jentsch, justice minister for Thuringia state, said yesterday.
The Associated Press
BERLIN - An eastern German state has ordered a probe of all its hospitals after one institution revealed that it drowned extremely premature babies in the Communist era.
Government officials will seek to
The news magazine Der Spiegel reported over the weekend that the Erfurt Women's Hospital had used buckets of water to dispose of premature babies.
Der Spieler quoted hospital director Erich Wagner as saying he assumed the procedure, which he banned in 1982. was standard practice throughout former East Germany.
The report of the drownings adds to several allegations of atrocious medical practices under the former Communist regime.
Other reports have alleged that hospitals sometimes took vital organs for transplant before the donors were clinically dead and that doctors used experimental hormones on young children so they would grow up to be superior athletes.
Canada's Indians seek sovereignty
The Associated Press
The Assembly represents Canada's 500,000 Indians who live on reservations.
TORONTO — Canada's Indians have jumped into the national constitutional debate, saying that if French-speaking Quebec is to be accorded special status, aboriginal people want it, too.
Just when Constitutional Affairs Minister Joe Clark thought he was reaching a deal to satisfy Quebec and head off a referendum on sovereignty, the leader of Canada's main Indian organization launched a national campaign that seems to be complicating matters.
"If there's going to be any recognition of Quebec as a distinct society, we want the same thing," said Ovide Mercredi, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations.
In three days of aggressive campaigning, Mercredi laid out Indian demands at a constitutional conference in Toronto, before a parliamentary committee, and at a Quebec National Assembly committee meeting.
Mercedri asked Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa to open a dialogue with Indians on the constitutional issue.
the alternative, which we do not
for, or is confrontation." Mercredi
goldstein
The French of Quebec long have struggled to protect their language and culture in the North American sea of English. They demand that their
distinctiveness be entrenched in the constitution and that they be provided with the tools to protect and promote the French way of life in their province.
Bourassa's government scheduled a referendum for October to push Ottawa to action. In it, Quebeckers will vote for a plan presented by the federal government or for sovereignty, if a satisfactory federal deal is not forthcoming.
Mercedi told the Quebec legislative committee that it would be ill-advised to go ahead with a referendum without first resolving native issues.
"Our rights do not take a back seat to yours," Mercredi said.
The Indian offensive has angered both Clark and Quebeckers.
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INTERNATIONAL
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18. 1992
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS
Moscow
Saddam Hussein's youngest son is taking an increasingly important role in Iraq as his father tightens his protective shield, said Khalid and knowledgeable travelers from Iraq.
Ousal Hussein, 26, never has held an official position in the Baghdad hierarchy or authority.
An attempt by Hasidic Jews to reclaim 12,000 sacred books from Russia's largest library erupted into a brawl inside the building. One police officer was treated for a bloody nose.
Brawl erupts in Russian library
Now Qusai heads the Special Security Apparatus, the nerve center of Saddam's pervasive internal security network, said the sources, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity.
What happened to MIAs?
From The Associated Press
About 55 members of Moscow's Jewish community arrived at the Russian State Library, formerly the Lenin Library, with an order from the Russian government for the books' release. But the Hasidim were unaware the order was no longer valid.
Saddam tightens inner circle
Rabbi Boruch Shlomo Cumin of Los Angeles, who has been in Russia for 16 months trying to reclaim the books, said fighting broke out when a library official ordered the Jews to leave and called on police to force them out.
Nicosia, Cyprus
Some U.S. deserters, POWs may have gone to USSR
Select Committee on POW-MIA Affairs said they were surprised by the openness of Russian officials.
"The level of cooperation and seriousness on pose with which every agency has received us and addressed this issue is very impressive," Kerry said.
Russian officials had never before acknowledged the possibility that American POWs or MIAs from Vietnam were brought to the Soviet Union.
The Associated Press
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Sens. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Robert Smith, R.N.H., also said Russian officials agreed to open archives and share information on the fate of some of the 2,273 Americans missing in action in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.
In a news conference at the conclusion of a four-day visit to Moscow, the leaders of the Senate's
841 010
"We were specifically told, for instance, that a number of deserters from Vietnam were contacted in Japan and came through the Soviet Union, spent time here, but ultimately departed," Kerry said.
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"In fact, we were told that they tried to turn them and make them into agents. They were unsuccessful," Kerry said.
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A senior U.S. official said Baker had made clear to Yeltsin the importance of Russia repaying the loans that the United States guaranteed for the grain sales. He said Russia had kept up its payments in accordance with the provisions of U.S. law.
and facilities to help Russia store and destroy its nuclear weapons.
Yeltsin asks for additional $600 million
The guarantees request caught Baker by surprise, U.S. officials said, but he promised to take it to Washington for consideration.
The United States already has provided $3.75 billion in grain credits, of which $3.1 billion have been used, U.S. officials said. The remaining $675 million will be used by April 1, Yeltsin said. The additional guarantee will be used in the second quarter of 1992, he added.
Yeltsin also said he hoped to be able to announce at a July summit in Washington an agreement on further reductions in both sides' long-range nuclear arsenals. It was the first time July has been mentioned as the summit date, and U.S. officials insisted that a date has yet to be set.
The Associated Press
Yeltsin's appeal came as Baker promised $25 million from the United States for a center to help former Soviet nuclear scientists. Baker also said the United States would provide an array of equipment
MOSCOW — Russian President Boris Yeltsin yesterday asked Secretary of State James Baker for an additional $600 million in credit guarantees so his country can buy U.S. grain to feed its people.
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Continued from Page 1
former Kansas State star Steve Henson broke his scoring record.
Walk-on plays with passion
During the 1970s and early '80s, George coached at Wandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan., where he had former Kansas star Calvin Thompson and former Missouri and NBA guard Larry Drew as standout players.
Lane said his father never directly encouraged him to become a basketball player.
George said he was thrilled when he found out his son would be playing at KU. "But," he said, "I never got too catch up or excited at games."
"I've always been very intense about things I've enjoyed," he said. "I gained an interest completely by myself."
Changing plans
Lane played that interest out at Sumner Academy in Kansas City, Kan., where he was an honor student and senior-class president in addition to being a starting guard on the basketball team.
Plans to attend Princeton or Rice universities fell during his senior year in high school, however, about the same time his parents divorced. Lane wound up at KU—the last school on a list of nine he was considering.
Lane said his parents' divorce had nothing to do with his decision to attend Kansas.
Lane always wanted to play college basketball, but not at some small remote school. He wanted to get away from home and try out for a walk-on spot somewhere.
"Those schools were just so expensive," he said.
"It was a difficult time for Lane," she said. "It was a difficult time for all of us. But he had always wanted to go away from home for college."
But his mother said the divorce might have had something to do with Lane's decision.
Junior varsity teams can be havens for players who know they won't be getting much fan recognition, but they can also stay 'solely for their love of the game.
Lane joined the JV team during the 1988-89 season, his freshman year.
Although he didn't play much his first year, Lane developed into the team's best player by his junior year.
"Last year, Lane was everything I wanted in a point guard," Turgeon
It may have been because Lane was trying to be like Turgeon, who played on the Jayhawks' 1985-86 Final Four team.
said. "He was such a good leader. He really made coaching easy and very enjoyable to me."
"I've always taken an interest in headguards who can outthink people on the court," Czapiinski said. "So I tried to emulate Mark Turgeon."
Turgeon said, "Lane was just very good for our program.
Different pursuits
But, by last summer, with Lane feeling he could go no further at Kansas in basketball, he decided to quit the JV team and try something different.
With a 3.5 grade point average as an English and psychology major, Lane took his love for art and literature to England to study theater. He saw 14 plays in Stratford and London and said the experience was fantastic.
"I was drinking汁 and tonics with
"I was drinking汁 and tonics with
the premier Shakespearean
actors in the world," he said. "I was
there, watching this point.
Basketball was behind me."
"I believe that if whatever you're interested in makes you happy, you should throw your whole life into it. That's what I try to do."
With that philosophy in mind, Lane auditioned for a play when he got back to the University in the fall. He said he read a few words from King Lear and got a part in a play. "The Resistible Arturo Ul." It was his first time acting.
"I used to walk from Naismith to Allen," he recalled. "Now I was walking from Naismith to Murphy. I remember thinking, 'I'm doing the same thing from 7 to 11 each night, I'm just doing it on a different stage.'"
Lane said he sometimes got an empty feeling when he walked by the field house, saw the lights on and knew someone was practicing.
Soon, with Lane still rehearsing "Arturo Ui," Turgeon called and asked him to play with the varsity team.
Lane said he was able to do both things at once, even though he missed two exhibition games because he had to appear in "Arturo Ul."
"It took a tremendous amount of energy," he said. "But it's not hard to muster up energy for things like that."
Lane will need some more of that energy to face an uncertain future. He will graduate this May and probably
Keeping perspective
will take some time off.
"Eventually," I'd like to go to graduate school," he said. "But right after college, I'd like to travel as much as possible to see new things and have new experiences, so maybe I could find new passions to follow.
"I would like to do some things that seem a little less practical right off the bat. That may lead me to careers that are maybe less conventional but more rewarding."
For now, the reward Lane is looking for includes a Final Four berth for the Jayhawks — no matter how much court time he sees.
"Lane sits on the end of the bench and knows he won'tget toplay lot, but he's the biggest fan we've got." Kansas center Greg Ostertag said.
Lane said he couldn't be in a better situation than he is in now.
"I try to keep it in perspective," he said. "I am a basketball player. I think there are more important things in life. I don't know if there are more fun things.
"It's extremely enjoyable," he said of his bench-warmer role for the Jayhawks. "Not too many people are low enough to criticize the 13th man on the team."
That includes the Kansas fans who chant "We want Lane" when the Jayhawks have a big second-half lead in the field house.
"I can't help but feel extremely flattered," Lane said of the times he hears the rhythmic chant of his name by thousands of people. "How can you not have fun with it? I don't think they're making fun of me, I just think they're having fun."
They're having fun and calling for a crowd favorite, said Kansas fan Keith Zielinski, Kansas City, Kan.
"We do the chant to get him in the game, Zielinski said, "like to see him do well. I'd like to see him get more playing time."
Soon, however, the basketball and the dream Lane has been living will be over, and he is not sure he is ready for that.
"Nothing is more important to me than basketball right now," he said.
"For many, many years of my life, I've been going to school and playing basketball. Sometimes it seems like this is what I'm going to be doing the rest of my life."
"I think it will be a shock when I won't be playing."
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OREAD
XXXII
SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
9
Sweden skates to tie against U.S. hockey team
U.S. coach snubs opponent after game
The Associated Press
MERIBEL, France — Nothing like the Olympics to foster good sportsmanship.
Just 2:04 into the U.S. hockey team's 3-3 tie with Sweden last night, former NHL gentleman of the year Mats Naslund bloodied the face of U.S. defenseman Greg Brown by checking him from behind into the boards.
The bad will continued 8/2 hours later, as U.S. coach Dave Peterson refused to shake hands with Swedish assistant coach Curt Lundmark at the post-game news conference.
The incidents took away from an exciting game that included 45 saves by U.S. goalie Ray LeBlancand a tying goal by Sweden's Mikael Johansson with 21 seconds to go.
Despite blowing a 3-0 third-period lead, the United States won its group
and earned the right to play France in a quarterfinal game today. The 4-0-1 start mirrors the record the 1980 U.S. hockey team had going into the medal round.
The only bllemish in 1980 was also a tie with Sweden.
Lundmark said that Peterson also swore at Swedish coaches and players between periods but that he did not have anything against the U.S. players.
"It's against Peterson. I think he is not a proud member of the coaches," Lundmark said. "After a game, you have to shake hands. I have been coaching since 1974. Such things that happened in this game have happened before. But after the game, you have to shake hands and be friends."
"This isn't war, guys, this isn't war.
But almost."
It sure seemed like an enemy attack
when Naslund took a running start and a flying leap at Brown. Brown suffered a concussion, a broken nose and an inch and a half
ALBERTVILLE 92
cut that needed 12 stitches. Naslund was assessed a charging penalty and was ejected by referee Seppo Makela.
U. S. general manager Larry Johnson said that another look should be taken at the replay to see what a dirty shot it was. He said that the U.S. team was going to show the tape to the International Ice Hockey Federation and that it would like to see Naslund get thrown out of the tournament.
Naslund never drew as many as 20 penalty minutes in any of his eight seasons with the Montreal Canadians and
won the 1988 Lady Byng Memorial Trophy, awarded annually to the player considered to have exhibited the best type of sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct.
Naslund said that he had never tried to hurt another player and that if the referee had not seen blood, it would have passed as a good bit.
"It's nothing you're proud of. When it happened like this, I think it's part of the game and a lot of un-luck." Naslund said. "I'm not banging my chest and thinking I'm Tarzan, but what can I do now?"
"I felt it wasa very good hit at the moment. He cleared the puck and I just followed through with a hit, like North American-style or whatever you want to call."
that has become known as the "Shame in Chamonix."
Coach Lundmark said that in Chamonix, they thought it would be an exhibition game. But the U.S. team did not want to have it that way.
"It it was very rough, but tonight we wanted to win." Lundmark said. "We told our players to stay up and play closer to them. We have to play them the way they play us. We can't go away from them."
U. S. forward Jim Johannson said that it was pretty rough on the ice.
For all their North American play, the Swedes could not pass the U.S. goalie for more than 46 minutes.
LeBlanc stopped break aways and point-blank barrages and was instrumental in maintaining a U.S. lead built on goals by Clark Donatell, Ted Donato and Marty McInnis.
Le Blanc has played every minute of the tournament and has allowed only seven goals. He had a scoreless string of 136 minutes, 39 seconds snapped by
Tommy Sjodin at 6:21 of the third period. It was the first third-period goal he had allowed in the Olympics.
Hakan Loob made it 3-2 with a power-play-lab at13:25.
Peterson's answers to reporters' questions were brief after the game. He left shortly after refusing to shake hands with Lundmark and was not available for comment on the incident. Lundmark, however, was now
And then, with Sweden's goalie pulled for a sixth attacker, Johannson tried a wraparound from LeBlanc's left and the puck deflected off the right skate of U.S. defenseman Dave Tretowicz and into the net.
Lundmark, however, was very available.
"Why? Why? Why? Why! can't explain it.
I think it's very bad for sport," the Swedish coach said. "After the game, when 60 minutes is played, then you have to shake hands and forget everything that's happened."
OLYMPIC UPDATE
"It's history. Everything is history.
Even bad accidents, it's history."
Unified Team pair wins ice dancing
Marina Klimova and Sergei Ponomarenko of the Unified Team won the Olympic ice dancing gold medal yesterday, edging Isabelle and Paul Duchenay, the home-ice heroes.
Another Unified Team couple, Maia Usova and Alexander Zhuilin, took the bronze medal.
Entering the competition in second place behind the Klimova-Ponomarenko, the Duchesnays skated last.
The over-capacity audience was jubilant at the end of the Duchesnays "West Side Story" routine, but the judges placed it only second-best behind Kilmoñarenko's classical dance.
Towin, the Duchesnayswould have had to finish two places above Klimova-Ponomarenko in the free dance. That was impossible before they entered the ice: Klimova-Ponomarenko already had the highest marks in the free skate and were assured of no lower than second in that decisive portion of the competition.
Veteran U.S. skater looks for first medal
Two fourth-place finishes in his strong event — the men's 500 - are the best Jansen has done.
Now that Dan Jansen has kept his feet, it's time for the next step — winning a medal.
His last chance is today, when Jansen returns to the rink for the men's 1,000-meter speedskating. In three Olympics, Jansen has won hearts and provoked tears, but never taken home a medal.
Jansen went to Calgary in 1988 expecting medals in both the 500 and the 1,000. Instead he found heartbreak and the ice, falling students after learning his 27-year-old sister had died of leukemia.
Jansen has since set the world record in the 500, and stands fourth in the World Cup 1,000 rankings.
He skated again Saturday in the 500 and finished in fourth place.
From The Associated Press
Olympic Games
Olympic medals count
Country G S B T
Germany 8 8 5 21
Unified Team* 7 4 6 17
Austria 4 6 6 16
Norway 6 4 3 13
France 3 4 1 8
Italy 1 3 3 7
United States 3 2 1 6
Finland 3 1 2 6
Japan 0 1 2 3
The Netherlands 0 1 2 3
Canada 1 0 1 2
Switzerland 1 0 1 2
China 0 2 0 2
Czechoslovakia 0 0 2 2
Sweden 0 0 2 2
Luxembourg 0 1 0 1
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
SPALDING
Kansas forward Alonzo Jamison and Nebraska's Dapreis Owens scramble for a loose ball during a Kansas victory. The Javhawks and Cornhuskers will plav again tomorrow in Lincoln. Neb
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Big Eight teams falling on road
"Kansas won some big road games early, so they are in good position."
By Chris Jenson
Kansas coach writer
With just about three weeks remaining in the Big Eight Conference regular season, the road is becoming less friendly to visiting conference teams.
The Jayhawks, who moved up to No. 3, started conference play at 5-0, with three of those victories coming on the road.
In the first 13 conference games this season, only six were won by the home team. In the last 19 games, 17 were won by the home team.
Last night, the road claimed yet another victim as Missouri beat Nebraska 87-61 in Columbia, Mo.
"It is hell in this league, that's for sure," Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said at the Big Eight's weekly coaches' teleconference. The Cyclones cracked The Associated Press 'top-25 this week. They are ranked 23rd.
"What makes
Kansas good is their depth. They have the total package."
Danny Nee
Nebraska basketball coach
Orr said.
With two conference road games this week, Kansas coach Roy Williams
"I can't really explain it," Kansas State coach Dana Altman said. "Teams like Missouri and Kansas can do well on the road, but mostly the home court gives the weaker teams an advantage."
Other Big Eight coaches agreed with Orr at the teleconference.
said he hoped to break the current conference streak of losing on the road.
"I hope we can turn it around since we have road games coming up," he said. "But the court is still the same size on the road, and the referees will still allow the other team five players on the court."
The coaches agreed that parity in the league had made every game a battle and that no longer were there any pushovers in the conference. Every team in the conference has a winning percentage above .500.
"The intensity level rises in a conference like ours," Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said. "It is tough to be up every night, and without the home-crowd advantage, it makes it tough."
Sutton and the Cowboys should know. After suffering road losses at Colorado and Nebraska, the Cowboys fell to Iowa State in front of a rowdy Hilton Coliseum crew in Ames, Iowa. They also fell to No. 8 in the nation after
the losses.
Sutton said the home crowd helped in boosting the Cyclones to their overtime victory.
Colorado coach Joe Harrington, whose team upset the Cowboys in Boulder, Colo., said Kansas' Allen Field House and Oklahoma State's Gallagher-Ia B arena were the toughest arenaes in the Big Eight.
"Their crowd played the part of the sixth man," he said. "That crowd was not going to let them lose."
When it comes to tough conference road victories for Kansas, Nebraska's Devaney Center is high on the list. Nebraska coach Danny Nee, who is 4-1 against the Jayhawks in Lincoln, Neb., during his career, said his team usually played well against Kansas.
"We have been fortunate to play our on-game against Kansas." Nee said. "We've played well."
Looking ahead to tomorrow's game against Kansas, Nee had nothing but praise for the Jayhaws.
"Williams has done a great job of balancing the old and the new and getting them to play well together," he said. "What makes Kansas good is their depth. They have the total package."
In other conference news:
■ Iowa State's junior guard Justus Thipper was named the conference's player of the week. He had 50 points and 12 rebounds in three games last week. In the Cyclones' victory against Oklahoma State, he scored 22 points.
- Iowa State coach Johnny Orr expressed concern yesterday that the Big Eight postseason tournament could limit the number of conference teams that make the NCAA Tournament. The Big Eight could have as many as six teams in this year's tournament.
"But unless somebody knocks that top team out of there, we're not going to get it," Orr said. "The Big Ten, with no tournament, will get six or seven in there."
Kansas pitcher shocked by Trojans
By Jerry Schmidt Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas pitcher Jimmy Walker learned a valuable lesson Sunday in Kansas' 8-3 loss to Arkansas-Little Rock.
Based on the Jayhawks' 12-1 rout of the Trojans on Saturday behind the pitching of senior Curtis Schmidt, Walker expected an easy outting for his first start of the season. Schmidt held Arkansas-Little Rock to four hits and one run in five innings, striking out six batters and walking one. Junior pitches Todd Breyfogle, Joel Bacon and Tom Stewart held the Trojans scorele for the final four innings and gave up two hits.
"I thought I could just throw my hat out on the field and beat them," Walker said.
But Sunday was a different story.
The Jayhawk pitching staff gave up seven hits and walked seven batters. Walker said it was a case of taking the Troians for granted.
"I took them a little lightly," said Walker, Nickerson junior. "I was getting the ball up the first two innings and luckily I was getting some fly balls."
The trouble for the Jayhawks began in the third inning when Walker walked four straight hitters. The result was a four-run inning and a 4-2 lead for Arkansas-Little Rock.
"It got us in a bind," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said of the walks.
Bingham hesitated to pull Walker out of the game in the third inning in hopes that he would出 of the jam. But Bingham said he would handle things differently next time.
"From my standpoint, I wouldn't want to take him out that early," he said. "We may have learned something about our personnel. We may have to make that move a little earlier than we did."
Bingham said the Jayhawks' problems were not limited to pitching. They also struggled offensively, he said. But that was a problem he said he expected early in the season.
"It was going to take a guy with a lot of confidence to steen up and do something," Sweden said. "We could never get that guy to the plate. We probably don't even know who that guy is right now."
Saturday's offensive hero was John Wuycheck. The junior from Phoenix was 2-for-5 with five RBIs, including a three-run home run in the fourth inning. Sophomore centerfielder Darryl Monroe was 2-for-2, scored four runs and stole two bases.
Sun avenueier was 3-for-4 Sunday with one run batted in.
Walker said that for Kansas to be successful, Sunday's performance could not be repeated.
Kansas will play Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.
"We have to play with the same intensity whether it's a KCAC team or a Division I team," he said. "We can't be up for one game and down the next."
Top-25 AP Polls
Here are the top 25 teams in The Associated Press 1991-92 college basketball polls (records through Feb. 16 in parentheses) and last
Previous Women
Previous
1. Duke (20-1) 1 1. Virginia (22-1) 2
2. UCLA (19-1) 2 2. Tennessee (20-2) 3
3. Kansas (19-2) 4 3. Stephen F. Austin (21-1) 4
4. North Carolina (18-3) 4 4. Maryland (20-3) 5
5. Arizona (19-3) 5 6. Mississippi (22-1) 6
6. Ohio St. (17-3) 8 6. Stanford (19-2) 7
7. Indiana (18-4) 8 7. Iowa (19-2) 6
8. Oklahoma St. (21-3) 8 9. Miami (22-1) 8
9. Missouri (17-3) 9 9. Purdue (16-4) 9
10. Arkansas (19-5) 11 10. Vanderbilt (17-5) 10
11. Michigan St. (17-4) 12 11. Penn St. (17-6) 11
12. UNLV (22-2) 15 12. SW Missouri St. (20-2) 12
13. Kentucky (18-5) 19 13. Hawaii (17-2) 13
14. Alabama (19-5) 16 14. George Washington (17-4) 14
15. Southern Cal. (17-1) 16 15. West Virginia (19-2) 19
16. Florida St. (18-6) 23 16. Washington (15-6) 18
17. Syracuse (16-5) 17 17. W. Kentucky (16-6) 15
18. Tulane (19-4) 14 18. Kansas (19-4) 16
19. Cincinnati (19-4) 24 19. Cleveland (18-7) 23
20. Nashville (15-6) 17 20. Texas Tech (18-4) 17
21. Connecticut (18-5) 18 21. Houston (17-5) 20
22. Seton Hall (15-6) 25 22. Alabama (18-5) 21
23. Iowa St. (18-6) — 23. North Carolina (18-5) 24
24. St. John's (14-7) — 24. Wisconsin (16-5) 25
25. Georgetown (15-6) — 25. Texas (15-7) —
10
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
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By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
Speech opens Panhellenic's Week for the Enhancement of Women
Marking the beginning of the firstever Panhellenic-sponsored Week for the Enhancement of Women, a former head of a national sorority said persistence, perseverance and faith should be the agenda of sorority women and all women.
"We have to have the belief that we can make a difference," said Sue Supple, former president of Kappa Alpha Theta. Supple spoke last night to more than 40 students at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
lege in Greencastle, Ind., started the first sorority because female students were being excluded from clubs and fraternities.
Supple said the struggle began in the 1850s when the women's rights movement gained momentum.
She discussed sorority history and the struggle of women on college campuses to have an equal voice.
The sorority was named Kappa Alpha Theta.
She said a female student at a col-
She said sorority members once were looked down upon by male students because they were viewed as less intelligent.
Supple said sororities were started for support and sisterhood, not social reasons.
Supple talked about several recent examples of sexual harassment in the Greek system and the various ways women could band together to combat such problems.
asked by a sorority on the campus to discontinue the song. The fraternity dropped the song and later apologized.
She said a fraternity that sang a traditional song at football games that mentioned sorority women surrendering their bodies to fraternity men was
Supple said women did not have to tolerate sexual assault and harassment.
The campus had been plagued by several cases of rape, she said.
Supple said sororities needed to concern themselves more with support and education. The all-sorority grade point average is dropping below the all-women's average on a national level.
"We have to stand for those things
She said some sororites had not taken action because they were afraid of blacklisting or losing their invitations to parties.
"I can tell you, it doesn't have to be that way," she said.
our founders stood for," she said.
Supple said the time had come for change.
But she said the survival of the greek system demonstrated that young people still adhered to sound principles.
Nicole Roberson, Ellsworth junior, said the speech helped remind students of the challenges that women have faced as well as their presence on college campuses.
"This week is long overdue," Gard said.
Sarah Gard, president of Panhellenic, said it was important to discuss issues pertinent to women in sorority chapters and other women on campus.
"I remind us of why we're here and how we came about," Roberson said.
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100's
Classified Directory
200's
**Announcements**
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
130 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lock & Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Merchandise
---
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Dear Jeanese, we met at the Jazzhaus a couple of weeks ago. I'd call you but. I could call or send a message. I'll be there for you. You Adrienne, Happy 21 B-day! Tonight we talk till they are cure! Love you rooms Stacy & Diane
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928 Mass. 843-0611
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. B.C. classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and accessory store. BMW, MVA, Mastercard and Discover cards accepted.
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Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
DOUGLAS COUNTY RAPE VICTIM SUPPORT
SERVICE
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes use of the most recent research in Layback, Lawach and *Grown & Town Creek Books*.
120 Announcements
Confidential assistance 24 hours call Headquarters
814-284-8360 KU Info Center you need help
For anonymity info and support for AIDS cases, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly, understand-
standing voice. Free, confidential referrals (calls
returned by counselors). Headquarters 812-245 or
KU info. 863-3060. Sponsored by GLSOK
School of Education Student
Students must attend teacher GUPS meet
must include attend the student teacher meetings
on Wednesday, February 19, at 4 p.m. in m331 Palliery
This meeting is mandatory.
information is available in m171 Bailey Hall.
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is - call 812-254 or call 1419 Mass. Headquarters Council
INTERNATIONAL
CAREERS
CONFERENCE
For more information contact International Studies and Programs 108 Lippincott 864-4141
1.
Womyn. 'Let daise' on February 21st to 121P.M.
Womyn. Douglas Court Fairgrounds for CHEF
CREME FRENCH
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support
is available at the department or KU lia-
ture for confidential data.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
11
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DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDALE $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND / PORT ARANSAS $128
PORT HUNTING THE PROJECT
11th Annual Celebration!
SKI & BIKING
Sunchase
BKKKK
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
130 Entertainment
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
With Carmichael Corpse and Friends Friday, Feburary 18th at 9 p.m. Get tickets online at 15b St. All ages 14m & up. Show details Get there
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern U & Under
Across the bridge on Massachusetts. Call 647-8777
CANCIN SPRING BREAK OF "92" Seven night
guarantees
Ground Tour Times 1-000-388-5100
140 Lost-Found
Please! Expensive double rope bracelet if found
alreadyFLAZ123 (very continental)
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Part time now Full time in summer, answering phones, showing appointments, and general office work. Send resumes to 90-93 M-F. Possibility of 10-20hrs week until 9 a.m. Work walked through mid August. Must be 641-857-999.
SPRING BREAK TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN. 4/Rm. prices. Daxiana 749.
Panama City $139, Kitch. Wrift & Trans Available
Cali Call at 1-800-423-5264
SUMMER JOB'S
SUMMER JOB'S OUTDOORS! National Parks.
Firecres. Forest Fire. Over 9,000 Openings!
Stamp for Free Details. Sullivan's. 113 East
Waynison. Kalipegia MT. 59900
Assistant need at chiropractic clinic and fitness center. Neary lodging from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Call: (855) 276-4988
Positions available in food service, laundry, maintenance, light lighing. Children's summer camps in Sunbury and Portsmouth. Salary & use of facilities. Call Arlene 1-800-434-6438.
Summer internships. Average earns $4,000.00. University Directories, the nation's largest publisher of campus telephone directories, hires over 250 college students for their summer sales projections. Experience is required. Students experience in advertising, sales and public relations selling yellow page advertising for your campus telephone directory. Positions require a Bachelor's degree and paid training program in Chapel Hill, N.C. Looking for enthusiastic, goal oriented students for challenging, well-paying summer job. Interests may be teaching or on February 27th at the Placement Center.
NEEDED: A degree or work experience in agriculture, skilled trades, health/nutrition and business. RECRUTER'S on your campus this week. Call 1-800-255-4121 ext.100 for more information.
PEACECORPS
Need job? We are looking for distributors. Excellent applicant with a Bachelor's degree or required training! Supplied software A+ E Enrollment suite A-7A121 Hillwood RD. Forked River, NJ 08721 need daycare Monday and Wednesday morning need hospitality job in NYC.
Earn $5,000-$10,000 this summer painting houses in your home town. Final hiring for these positions are being held now! 1) Striately Management 2) All-Purpose Painters 3) All-Pro Student Painters IIC 1-800-2-master
Coordinator for Student Senate Transportation Board needed. Responsible for administering day-to-day operations, preparing Board's budget and report, creating a schedule of speaker spokesperson and liaison to the general public. Student monthly position. 20 hours /wk. $400/month. Applicant must be a student for Summer 1992. Pick up application information from the Student Senate office. 40 Kansas University deadline. Wednesday, February 25, 5:00 p.m.
Daycare needs responsible assistant for Tuem & Thure 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. More hours of work at Tuem & Thure.
EARN $m to $0 a week and more part-time selling
*The Jawahraya安全* condemn Great opportunity
to sell on line.
Entry level Earn $130.34; 1966 Expansion Interna-
tional School; Gradual Career Guide; Exceptional
Great for Graduates
Help Wanted: Full. Part-time help for midnight to 6AM and 6AM-sunny. Please apply in person to Phillips at 649 and 6th law. Must be neat, clean, and ennov working with the public.
Job opening to oversee rehair work. Hours need 6
a.m.-8 a.m. and 5:30-10 p.m. Office duties and
working with patients Tuesdays and Thursdays
from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Call between 8 a.m.
and 12 p.m. 749-9130
sainthi Hall is lit for a responsible, mature individual to work 24 hrs per week exchange for another.
OVERSEAS AS JOBS $900-2000 per summer Yr.
round. All Countries, all Fields. free
to apply. Call 348-557-1060 or visit
www.overseas.jobs.com
Attention College students. The Kansas Nat'l Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. The 'uft assists will pay up to $10,000. To see if you are interested, contact us.
RE ON TV. YET for commercia. Now
you can film all ages. For casting info. Call (435) 791-8111.
www.rkfilm.com
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michiganbogs/grassmuseum Camps. swim, swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1,000 or more plus R&H. Mar Siege. 178a Maple, ID. 60039.
...atering Department, Kansas and Burge Union h caterers to work Thursday, February 20,
9a.m - 4p.m. Friday, February 21 - 8a.m - 4p.m.
Please visit www.kansasburgeunion.com or mail 8-250-7360. 8 a.m - 4 p.m. HR sign up to work one more days, but must work the entire shift and follow dress code for caterers. Will pay $15 for uniforms. Office, App. Kansas and Burge Union Unions Personnel Office, 9th Level, Kansas Union Building EOE
CNA's. Explore the possibilities of home care students. Learn to take one-to-ten attention to your clients without interrupting them or uniform allowance, and training provided. Call Douglas County Visiting Nurses #433 738k. Ask for a tour.
CURSIVE LINES WOOKING - Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 + month of travel/work in Mexico,
Argentina, Ecuador, and Peru.
Guides, Waters/Wafternaut, etc. Holiday, Summer
and Care Employment available. No Experience.
SUMMER'92
Looking for a job that offers money (S5, 300+), travel, experience, advancement, and challenge? Call now: 842-0924
Waterfront Jobs-WSI Summer Children's Camps-Northeast North Men and Women can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiers, lifeguards, swim lessons, a beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary room & board, allowance. Drop by for an interview at the Waterfront School. Regionalist & Gredo Banks in the Kansas Union
WE'RE SWAMED! Local business needs students now to stuff envelopes at home. Excellent earnings. All materials provided. Send SASE Homemaking Program-B P Box 301, Olathe, KS 65720.
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered the Midwest Driving
Assessment Center. A vehicle license,
transportation permit, 841-375-6260.
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, service KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Government photo passports, passports, immigration,
vice portraits, modeling & art portfolios
www.gov.gov.au
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Student rates. 842-2344
Model Photography, Model Portfolio Wedding &
portraits with ID photos. student prices call
(800) 342-7511
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(073) 481-6879
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
Free Consultation
823 Missouri 843-4023
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES - Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
0712/ Mass. 841-1071
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
divorce, criminal & civil matters
16 East 13th 842-1133
Tired of taking a look at a busback time? Get $15. More per seatbelt and save when buying the busback time.
Tired of cross tutoring sessions. hupra%rates?
Private French lessons. Fluency. Call Deanna-66
520-317-4896
Want to learn guitar stinging blues, goodtime rock, insightful folk and theory too. Call Benato at 718-450-6239.
Word Processing Set - Term paper
Word Processing Set - Term paper
double spaced page, call 849-7843. Computer Pro
computer pro.
double spaced page, call 849-7843. Computer Pro
235 Typing Services
under Woman Word Processing. Former editor of *The Journal of Medical Language and punctuation*, grammatically correct pages of the *Journal of Medical Language and punctuation*.
1-Spell check always included. 2-Same day service
partners and programs we welcome. Call Mindy's
Typsing Services.
Word Perfect Word Processing Laser Printer
Near campus $ 180/double spaced page Call #824
tenance/Production, and Personalized PC Training! For Experience and Reliability call Louise at 843-4026 with your ideas.
i- Typing/WP: Letters, term papers, resumes,
842-4754-1234 whenyanks anytimes ankles
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis sertation resumes. Editing, composition, rush writing.
PINK A LA MOODE Get an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for success! Now! Call
K-3 Professional Word Processing, accurate and affordable, caller! l p.m. 814.635
Word Perfect HM Compatible Word Processing
Int. J Printer, or Oneward Chair, No calls
to Word Perfect HM.
300s Merchandise
Floor of your room COL3? 5 bigroom size CARPETS, lightly used,充电后, pad available, $49.95
305 For Sale
Specialized RB 20* Sirius Shimanu Components
Look Pad Calle LDS at $329-$490 $252 GHO
Miracle Video - Adult movies for sale. From $9.90.
Call 841-7504, 841-8903
16) Schwimm Letout Lux-18 speed touring hike,
Cannondale II book, bookrack, very good condition
with cover.
Moving. Can't take couch, microwave, dorm frig,
file cabinet. Puppet lingerie, office cabinet
kitchen.
Mountain Bike, 1991 Trek 830 bought new on 1-31-
29 stored indoors, Kari 830, Kari840-1100.
386-25 MII Spring Special computer, 4 M RAM,
1.2 & 1.14 Laptop, 130 MB Hard Drive, 14"Super
MOB HAM, 130 MB HAM, 101 keyboard, munter case
MS-DOS 2.0, Serial鼠 $15.00, bargain bytes
832-2472
1 set student basketball tickets for all remaining home games. Best offer. Ball 913-758-6011
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade pottery, fine art books, boys Penthouse, vintage clothing, books, carnival glass, Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising materials, art prints, military collectibles, country furniture, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale imported percalent figurine, and so much more. The entire collection is for the Doulton, military collecta
Attention Bands and DJs: Wicked equipment for cheap. Peavey SB-2 and international speakers. Sub Cabinets, Technique Tumblers. M-7000 amp. Prices negotiable. Call Evan 841-909-0361
IBM compatible, 3 color monitor, dual disk drive
IBM printer matrix, all software,管理和 desk
support.
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and sorters. 499.90 up on based use. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0292
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and
sorters. $499.00 up on usage. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0295
Genuine ROLLERBLADE skates for the GUARANTEE TEDDY LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are made by all. All models available. Many colors. 832-214
ROLLERBLADES ROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
FORSALE: ELECTRCUGUITAR Kramer American Pacey, Flower Rose Tromelo, rosewood finger板, pear ilai窥, red, semi-metalic, hard shell case, stand, amplifier 520, OBD 1, 451-0280
Tee Remote CD Player $50, Maximum 900 Cameras
fitted $80, Maximum 240 cam record, tripod, tilt
Fees $80, DBS 822 900 888
1979 Buck Req Realized, 71,000 active male
4 B engine, runs very good, $1500, 843-399
6 B engine, runs very good, $1500, 843-399
THUILE roof rack w/ locks and four bike holders
$70 Holder rack 2 extra 3d straps to use twice 65
Holster rack 3 extra 3d straps to use twice
340 Auto Sales
1997 Cullorca 2dr 45p AM/FM, Class low-mileage
sold $600 (offer of $800 must sell)
1979 Hyundai Accord, 4 door, 5 speed, A/C, I/O, 91,000 miles $1200 or best offer 86-243-242
- **406 Ford Hurdler** 4-w drive, automatic, Roll har-
ron wheels, air conditioning. Many extra
features.
WV WWSCore 4 spool. AM/MF Fan. Runs Great.
obbs 083-1873-8879 Before Nas. after 6 nm.
1987 Mercury Lynx Automatic, A/C; Cassette
doors. 968. Foyt condition. #3000463333.
78 Dodge Coll, Runs Well, Body Rough $400 749
1324
Top Corolla GTN5wam Cam-85red 2ed -5 pcd. apc
roofum rood roof, surname, USSR 304 9715
360 Miscellaneous
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
on TV, TW's jewelry, strenuous, manual instrument
MVS, MCRS, MIX, Dishawayk & Jewelry,
14W BM (I), Dishawayk & Jewelry,
14W BM (II)
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits. OMNITRITION
LIVE ON.
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
Noon - 600 Post, Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Noon - 6:00 Tues - Sat.
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry,
rare comes, etc. Call David 841-2665
370 Want to Buy
Wanted—one non-student B ball ticket to Colorado,
Oklahoma or OR State. Call Elizabeth 865-396-9000
Need 2 student tickets for OSU KU game - will pay
Wildcard: ~DABK5.bk50.o:bvscw1.4d880064 game > \
callum.DAY 04A9-8563-3568 2014-08-07
vs. Missouri, March 8 CallKen 841-4800
15$each. Call Andy 841-470, leave message.
Wanted to play in FTU篮球联赛.
Wanted - Non-student basketball ticket for Kansas
w. Merriman, Marshall KU 40498
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 HB Sibuseh, DW Baleceny, Carpentr, Water Paid
Avail. March 1; July 31. No/deposit. Rent $42
$85
1. 2.38APs, near campus, no pets, available June 1st, Aug 1st 8g24897
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Accessed from KU. On bus route. Fully furnished. 600 sq ft. Private pool. On-site management Heat, AC, water and trash pad. Cheap bills paid! 1741 W. Kirchner Call Chris
合
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K U.
841-6254
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
AVAILABLE NOW 2 New Bedroom Apartment
Furnished 1BR/1.5BTH in the center of the
fap, mini-binds. Call 1548 Management Inc.
Free FEB rent. Two bd apt. $95.00 Ends July
31st. On bus route. Call 749-3475.
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, housing situation 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.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
841-5444
Sublease till May one bedroom apt. furnished, central A/C/free water & cable. no water, new deposit, on bus at rt., laundry, $265 monthly 913-843-0858
Sublease avail - now-suspicious, luxury tworoom apt. basic cable, dishwasher, pool, on bus, low utilities, weight room, good mgmt. 841-
EASTERN INDUSTRIAL HILLS
Sublease avail, now - spacious one bedroom apL,
water basic, bus route 892 814 3756.
SUNRISE VILLAGE
- Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
- Garages; $ 1 / 2 $ Baths
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KU BusRoute
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
---
A tree
Park25
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath
- 2 Pools
- Volleyball Court
- On KU bus route-
On RO bus route 4 stops on property
4 stops on property 2 Laundry Rooms
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some washer/Dryer hookups
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
842-1455
--new locations on campus. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Washer/dryers, microwave, ceiling ans, mini blinds. Call now for an appointment. Mon-Fri. 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 749-1356
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT? CALL US FIRST
CALL US FIRST
MANAGEMENT IN
Looking for a place? Cory 2 bed apartment, at the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July. $389/month + utilities. Negotiable. Call Security 041-2669
Louisiana Place Apt 4. Now leaning nice 2HR ApT bordering Campus Beautiful view of the city. Call 617-358-0958
vaisitt Hall is looking for a responsible, mature individual to work with on board and be contact. Contact Julie at 842-4848
New 2BR. BRE to campus. Available Now! All Appliances, $40/MO. Low utilize. Call troy 842-759-1361.
HORTTEMLEASEMISON AVAILABLE on stu
1.2hr and 3.1hr and 2.12h/bottom房
Now leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bed apartment (for one person) on a low floor, with balcony and terrace. Excellent maintenance and management. Quality at the best price in town. 814-6886. Spanish Crest Apartments.
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
- Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
* New kitchens
-Carpet colors:
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
*2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
*Large bedrooms & closets
*Pool & volleyball
Naismith Place
Inquiry form (hcp)
19kb to KU Busheye
50kb to KU Busheye
PLC data (7P/8P)
PLC data (7P/8P)
On-site management
25kb to KU Busheye
19kb, E of fowr
on 28kfout 0x10dab
to 25kfout C)
to 25kfout C)
Call for Appointment
to KU Busheye
meadowbrook
Come Visit Meadowbrook Arts
G got a group? Restored 8 bed with 4 bighouse fire, wedge, FWD, w/D, near riverfront. B4-STAR (7827)
Heatherwood Apartments - 1, 2, and 3 bedroom
You can move until the end of May. On bus route 843-7548
Hillview Apts $15 lease signing bonus! 1 & 2 bedroom apartments $22 & $38 plus on bus. Deposit $200. Available now at 1339 Ohio partially furnished studio only $200 + 00s + utility 749-766
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apts, to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
---
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
NOW AVAILABLE Studios and Two Bedrooms
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
It's Time to Step Up To MEADOWBROOK
MEADOWBROOK 5th & Crestline 842.420
15th & Crestline 842-4200
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Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
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430 Roommate Wanted
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By GARY LARSON
On great! It's Atlas!
how much you wanna bet
he sits right in front of me!
Theater of the Gods
12
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 18, 1992
--at a meeting last night at New York Elementary School, 936 New York St.
CHANCELLOR'S STUDENT AWARD NOMINATION FORMS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN THE ORGANIZATIONS & ACTIVITIES CENTER,
400 KANSAS UNION
COMPLETED FORMS MUST BE RETURNED TO OAC BY 5:00 P.M., FRIDAY, MARCH 6
Awards include:
The Agnes Wright Strickland Award
The Donald K. Alderson Memorial Award
The Class of 1913 Award
The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award
Description of Awards included on nomination form.
Merchants propose district expansion
--at a meeting last night at New York Elementary School, 936 New York St.
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
East Lawrence residents worried
Carmen Crouse would like to look out of a window in her east Lawrence home and see the same neighborhood she has lived in for almost 20 years, not a gray expanse of parking lot and business complexes.
"We would like to see this neighborhood kept for single-family, tenant-owned homes," said Crouse, who lives in the 800 block of East 12th Street.
Although the bulldozers, land speculators and surveyors have not landed in east Lawrence, a local neighborhood group has concerns about a report issued by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and Downtown Lawrence, an organization of downtown business owners.
The report does not specify details, but it does recommend that the Lawrence City Commission determine the boundaries of the central business district without negatively affecting Lawrence merchants.
Chamber of Commerce officials discussed the report with the East Lawrence Improvement Association
The report said that the most significant problems with the downtown business district were parking, accessibility to businesses, lack of available land for further development and offering a variety of services and businesses in downtown Lawrence.
Lawrence does not have a defined central business district, but different zone classifications separate commercial property from residential property.
In order for the business district to meet those concerns, it could have to look for other places for expanded parking and development.
Earl Reimann, president of Downtown Lawrence, said the report, which will be presented to the city commission on March 17, said that business, city and neighborhood groups should
trying to do is to enhance the
"What we are
economic vitality of
the downtown
business district."
Earl Reineman President of Downtown Lawrence
seek various ways to help with the expansion.
"The main thing is to examine any alternatives that might be available and whether that means expanding the traditional boundaries of the business district," Reinman said. "What we are trying to do is to enhance the
economic vitality of the downtown business district."
M
Shelley Miller, who lives in the 900 block of Pennsylvania Street, said she thought the neighborhood association needed to discuss the alternatives further. Miller is a member of the improvement association.
Miller said any further expansion of his business district would have brought no benefits.
"My reaction is that this is a process that needs input from all sorts of sectors," Miller said. "And I want to see that there is broad-based input. It's safe to say that the east Lawrence neighborhood wants to be included in the process."
"Any buffer or green space will come out of the neighborhood," she said. "That's hard for people in any neighborhood, likeours, wherefinancing is difficult and where people live in housing less than $30,000. If you are big and have lots of property in the neighborhood, then you might be able to have a working relationship with the city."
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RECK CHALK REVUE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
CHANGING FLACES
FEB 1992
ROCK·CHALK·REVUE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
February 29 is SOLD OUT! Buy your tickets today at SUA
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
---
Dates: February 21, 22, 23, and 27, 28 at Lawrence High School
Times: All shows 7:30 pm, Sunday,the 23rd, 2:00 pm only
Prices: First weekend:$8,$10,$7 Second Weekend:$8,$10
Kansas Union coupons will be available as well as drawings for KU Sweatshirts and T-Shirts from the KU Bookstores
THE LAWRENCE DAILY
JOURNAL-WORLD
---
Sprint.
SUPPORT KU'S PHILANTHROPY FOR THE UNITED WAY!
KU Undergraduates
(Including Community College Transfers!)
Talk to Your Former High School and Community College Counselors! They will be here at KU to ask YOU how well they prepared you for the challenges of the university.
---
The 43rd Annual Principal-Counselor-Student and Community College Conference
Thursday, February 20,1992 in the Kansas Union 9:00 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
El Dorado-B
Ellinwood-D
Ellis-D
Ellsworth-D
Emporia-Malott Room, Level 6
Eudora-D
Chanute-B
Chaparral-D
Chapman-B
Chase County-D
Cheney-D
Cinnarron-D
Clay County Community-B
Colby-D
Coldwater-D
Concordia-D
Conway Springs-D
DeSoto-B
Douglas-D
Dighton-B
Downs-D
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
Allen County-B
Barton County-B
Butler County-B
Cloud County-B
Coffeyville-B
Dodge City-B
Fort Scott-B
Garden City-B
Haskell-B
Highland-B
Hutchinson-B
Johnson County-Regionalist Room., Level 5
Kansas City Kansas-Alderson Aud., Level 4
Neoosh County-B
F.L. Schlagh-Aleave 1, Level 3
Fort Kindley Memorial-D
Fort Scott-B
Fredonia-D
B=Kansas Union Ballroom D=West Dining Area,3rd Floor Room Scheduled for Student Conferences
Bazine-B
Beloit-B
Bishop Carroll-B
Bishop Ward-Oread Room, Level 5
Blue Valley, Randolph-D
Blue Valley, Stilwell-Alderson Aud., Level 4
Bonner Springs-B
Buhler-B
Burlingame-D
Burlington-D
KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS
Andover-B
Atchison-Alcove H, Level 3
Atchison County Community-B
Atwood-D
Augusta-B
Gardner-Edgerton-B
Goddard-B
Great Bend-Wheat Room, Level 4
Hanston with Bazine-B
Hayden-B
Hesston-D
Hiwatha-B
Highland Park, Topeka-B
Hill City-D
Hillsboro-B
Holton-B
Humboldt-D
Hutchinson-Kansas Room, Level 6
Immaculata-B
Independence-B
lola-B
J.C. Harmon-B
Jefferson County West-D
Jetmore-B
Junction City-Malott Room, Level 6
Kickapoo Nation-D
Labette County-D
LaCrosse-D
Lansing-B
Larned-D
Lawrence-International Room, Level 4
Louisburg-B
Lacas-Luray-D
Madison-D
Manhattan-Malott Room, Level 6
Maur Boll-B
McPherson-D
Mission Valley-D
Mulvane-D
Newton-B Nickerson-D
Oakley-D
Olathe North-Kansas Room, Level 6
Olathe South-Kansas Room, Level 6
Onaga-D
Osage City-D
Osawatomie-D
Osborne-D
Ottawa-B
Paola-B
Pawnee Heights with Bazine-B
Peabody-B
Perry-Lecompton-B
Phillipsburg-D
Plainville-D
Pleasant Ridge-D
Prairie View-D
Pratt-B Protection-D
Rock Creek (St. George, Westmoreland)-D
Rossville-D
Royal Valley-B
Russell-B
Sabeth with Wetmore-D
Salina Central-Alecove G, Level 3
Salina South-Alecove G, Level 3
Seaman-B
Shawnee Heights-Big 8 Room, Level 5
Shawnee Mission East-
Centennial Room, Level 5
Shawnee Mission North-
Carry Room, Level 6
Shawnee Mission Northwest-
Walnut Room, Level 6
Shawnee Mission South-
English Room, Level 6
Shawnee Mission West-Pine Room, Level 6
Southeast of Saline-B
Spearville with Bazine-B
St. John's Military-Alecove F, Level 3
St. Marys-D
Stockton-D
Sublette-D
Sumner Academy-Alecove G, Level 3
Syracuse-D
Topeka-B
Topeka West-Big 8 Room, Level 5
Turner-B
Ulysses-B
Valley Heights-B
wabausee-D
Washburn Rural-Big 8 Room, Level 5
Washington, Kansas City-B
Wellington-B
Wetmore with Sabetha-D
Wichita East-Alcove A, Level 3
Wichita Northwest-Alcove D, Level 3
Wichita South-Alcove B, Level 3
Wichita Southeast-Parlor C, Level 5
Wichita West-Alcove C-Level 3
Winfield-B
Wyandotte-B
MISSOURI HIGH SCHOOLS
Central-B
Lee's Summit-B
Mary Institute-B
Park Hill-B
St. Louis Country Day School-B
St. Teresa's Academy-B
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.98
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 19, 1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
University compromises on parking
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
Twenty-six parking spaces in a lot east of Fraser Hall sparked a controversy that ended yesterday in a compromise.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said he and Chancellor Gene Budig would recommend to the Board of Regents tomorrow that 11 of the 26 parking spaces in lot 14, located east of Fraser Hall, be reserved for cars with blue parking stickers until 7:30 p.m. on weekdays
The Regents must approve the recommendation before it takes effect.
The University Parking Board, University Senate Executive Committee and University Council had recommended to Shankel and Budig that parking in the entire lot be restricted until 8:30 p.m. on weekdays.
But Shankel, influenced by student opposition to restricting the lot, said he hoped the compromise would satisfy faculty and students.
"I tried to accommodate some of the needs of both groups without satisfying all the needs of either group," he said. "The rationale behind my decision was that both sides had legitimate concerns and good arguments."
Shankel said faculty members wanted the restriction on the lot to be extended from 5 to 8:30 p.m. because they had difficulty finding parking places when they came to campus in the evening to teach or work in their offices.
Frances Ingemann, presiding officer of SenEx and Council, said she thought the lot should be restricted until 8:30 p.m.
"I heard several of my colleagues talk about coming up on campus to work and not being able to find a parking place," she said. "They are being denied the right to work at their jobs the way they would like by a lack of parking."
Ingemann said she would support Shankel's decision if it solved the problem.
"We will just have to wait and see if there is enough parking for faculty after the decision is approved," she said. "I hope this works out."
Elizabeth Banks, secretary of SenEx, said faculty members should
be able to park on campus when they chose to come to their offices.
"Faculty members have paid a bundle for their parking stickers," she said. "They are not driving up here to go to The Wheel. They are coming up here to do their work."
Banks said Shankel's decision did not satisfy anyone completely but was reasonable considering the lack of parking on campus.
"Parking facilities on this campus are not adequate," she said. "This University is behind the times. We haven't kept up with the demand for spaces."
Donald Kearns, director of parking,
said more than 6,000 parking spaces on
campus were open to students after 5
p.m.
He said less than 200 spaces were restricted past 5 p.m.
Alan Lowden, student body president, said the parking open to students was not as accessible to campus buildings as the restricted spots.
He said faculty always received priority in parking decisions.
"Students are getting the raw end of the deal," Lowden said. "We're restricted from campus driving all day, and now faculty members want more reserves for them that they may not use."
Jason McIntosh, senior senator,
said that more than 800 students had
signed a petition opposing restriction
of the lot.
He said students were upset that when they drove onto campus to go to the library and the only parking spaces available were restricted.
"Students drive around looking for a spot and find one, but it's always one of the restricted spots," McIntosh said. "There is a parking problem on this campus that needs attention. We hope this restriction is an isolated incident."
McIntosh and Robert Thompson, engineering senator, discussed the decision with Shankel.
Thompson said he was not pleased by Shankel's decision but was happy the administration had considered student concerns.
"After the issue was passed by Council, it seemed like a done deal." Thompson said. "It's very rare for the administration not to go along with Council decisions."
100
Doug Riat. assistant director of facilities planning, (second from left) explains some of the first steps toward cleanup to reporters yesterday.
Workers scavenge Hoch remains
By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
Harry Buchholz Jr. spent yesterday in the damp basement of Hoch Auditorium, sorting through what was left of the office where he worked for 23 years.
He and his coworkers, electronic technicians in facilities operations, were attempting to salvage some of the equipment on a bright light and sound to the stage above.
"This is a big empty hole," said Bucholz. looking around his former office. "A big loss."
Construction workers last week completed stabilizing the auditorium floor with timber and support posts, then installed it to the basement. The work cost $9,300.
Structural beams are now tangled and warped. The auditorium seats are reduced to their metal frames, and the remnants of the auditorium chandelier lay in the middle of the rubble.
University officials yesterday guided reporters through the rubble of the auditorium, explaining their three-year, $18 million plan for reconstruction of the 64-year-old building. Hoch was gutted by fire June 15.
Now that work on the basement is complete, the University will contract a company to clean up the auditorium floor, said Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning.
Bids for that part of the project will be accented beginning Feb, 28, he said.
A third contract will be awarded to stabilize the facade and the remaining side walls, construct a temporary wall on the south end and build a temporary roof over the structure to prevent further weather damage.
The University has about $372,000 set aside from other facilities operations projects, including a planned refoiling of Hoch, to pay for stabilizing the structure. Wiechert said.
Eventually, the University plans to rebuild the auditorium for use as a library.
lion from the Legislature for planning funds for the Hoch renovation. Gov. Joan Finney last month did not include the allocation in her budget proposal, but the University is lobbying legislators for the plan.
Wiechert said University officials had met with the president of the joint legislative committee on state building construction to discuss the project.
The University has requested $1 mil-
As Wiechehr walked through the front lobby of the building yesterday, where a few fliers still hung on a bulletin board, he said KU was in the process of salvaging office and classroom space in the front section of Hoch.
"It may be possible to use part of the building," he said. "Right now, we have no idea how much that would cost."
Wiechert said facilities operations had determined that approximately 20 rooms could be used for classroom or office space in the front part of the building, which is where the least amount of damage occurred.
boxes sit full of file cabinets, desks, light fixtures, public address systems and wooden doors.
"Some of it's been wet, some of it has not been wet," said Doug Riat, assistant director for construction administration for facilities planning.
Some equipment was salvaged immediately after the fire, but most of it rested in areas that the University determined were unsafe, Riaat said.
In the basement of the building,
Jim Mailen and Les Rollins, two instrumentation electronic technicians for facilities planning clearing equipment out of the basement yesterday, said they would try to salvage a high-niced infrared camera.
Rollins, who said he arrived at the scene when the roof caved in, said workers salvaged a few items the day after the fire.
"We lost an awful lot," he said.
Mailen said they had worked with public address systems and special lighting at Hoch.
"This is where we lived," he said.
"We did."
Tsongas wins N.H. Democratic primary
CONCORD, N.H. — Former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas won New Hampshire's Democratic primary yesterday and promised he would prove himself more than just a regional wonder. Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton ran a strong second, calling himself "the comeback kid" after weeks of controversy.
The second tier of the Democratic field was muddled as New Hampshire counted its leachoff presidential primary votes. With half the precincts reporting, Sens. Tom Harkin of Iowa and Bob Kerrey of Nebraska fought for third place, and former California Gov. Jerry Brown trailed.
Tesonga' challenge is to prove himself outside his native New England, and he targeted South Dakota and Maryland as the places where he would do just that.
A write-in effort on behalf of New York Gov. Mario Cuomo drew a smattering of votes in a count that was expected to be very slow.
Clinton, buffeted by a string of troubles in recent weeks, thanked New Hampshire voters for standing by him. "New Hampshire tonight has made Bill Clinton the comeback kid," Clinton said.
Clinton, anticipating a good showing in his native South in a string of early March primaries, said, "I just can't wait now to take this campaign across the country. I cannot wait to win the nomination and I know, and I want you
"I'm a regional candidate: North, South, East and West," Tsongassaidin the campaign's final days.
Buchanan surprises Bush campaign with strong second
MANCHESTER, N.H. — President Bush gained grudging victory last night in the New Hampshire presidential primary, with Patrick Buchanan claiming more than 41 percent of the Republican vote to fuel his conservative rebellion.
Compared with Bush's claim on 57 percent of the vote, Buchanan's strength was a surprise that jolted the White House.
"We are going to take our party back ... and when we take our party back, we're going to take our country back," Buchanan said. He repeated his economic-policy campaign theme: "There is nothing wrong with putting America First." An ecstatic crowd chanted in return: "God Bless America, God Bless Pat."
The president did not appear to claim his victory Tuesday night, and his written statement was sedate.
"I think the opponents on both sides reaped the harvest of discontent with the pace of New Hampshire's econo
my," the Bush statement said.
He vowed to "take my case to the voters in the next eight-and-a-half months," and said he was confident that a chanman to win the GOP nomination.
Poll of voters leaving their polling places showed that the economy and jobs were the issues that mattered most to both Republicans and Democrats. Early polls reported by ABC found that 52 percent of Buchanan voters said they voted for him to send a message, compared with 47 percent who said he would make the best president. More than half said they would not vote for Bush if he was the choice in November.
"New Hampshire is Pat Buchanan's best shot," said Gov. Judd Gregg, a Bush partisan like most of the Republican establishment. Yet the results were sobering to the Bush camp, coming in the state where primary victory saved the president's 1988 nomination.
In Washington, Democratic National Chairman Ronald Brown played down talk of a late entry.
Tsongas traded places with Clinton in the polls — and ultimately in the final results — as Clinton was buffeted by allegations of infidelity and draft dodging. He vehemently denied both, but it was only in the campaign's final days that he appeared to regain lost momentum.
"I don't believe it will happen but time will tell," Brown said. "It takes more than a buzz to run for president. And this is a tough, aggressive, change-oriented field."
But he couldn't overtake Tsongas, the self-styled "economic Paul Revere" who proposed investment, capital gains and other tax incentives to restore America's manufacturing base, and criticized the Democratic Party leadership and rivals Clinton and Kerrey for supporting middle-class tax cuts.
Ticket deadline approaches for postseason basketball
to know, that I know that in November that we're going to win a great victory against Pit Buchanan."
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
New Hampshire's verdict was not as decisive as many expected just weeks ago, before Clinton's controversies flattened preseason predictions and provoked speculations that Cuomo or another major congressional Democrat might make a late entry.
Kansas basketball fans need to declare by the end of this week if they want to follow the men's team in post-season action.
Applications for student tickets for the Big Eight and NCAA basketball tournaments will be taken until 5 p.m. Friday at the KU ticket office in Allen Field House.
Sherry Benda, an employee at the ticket office, said students had shown more interest in getting tickets for this year's tournaments than in past years. The office did not have a count yesterday of how many students had applied for tickets.
The road to the Final Four
These are the sites for this year's National Collegiate Division I Men's Basketball Championship. Kansas will know its destination March 15.
First and second rounds March 19-22
Dayton, Ohio
Regionals March 27-29
Kansas City, Mo.
Regionals March 26-28
Philadelphia
First and second rounds March 19-22
Greensboro, N.C.
MIDWEST
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
EAST
Worcester, Mass.
Cincinnati
Final April 4-6
Boise, Idaho
SOUTHEAST
Atlanta
Lexington, Ken.
Albuquerque, N.M.
WEST
Tempe, Ariz.
Benda said students who applied would be placed in a lottery to determine who would be included on a list to receive tickets.
The list will be posted at the ticket office the Monday before the Big Eight Tournament and before each NCAA round. If a student on the list does not purchase the tickets, another name will be added to the list.
*If the student cannot go to the games, we are willing to work with you.*
Each student can receive one ticket, Benda said.
The Big Eight tournament will be March 13-15 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
For NCAA Tournament tickets, students do not have to pay when they turn in their applications, Benda said.
Benda said students would need to pay for Big Eight tournament tickets in advance. The ticket package, with seats in the upper level, costs $83 and must be used in with the application.
"Most people didn't know they could sign up ahead of time."
Kevin Sigourney Member of KUAC
Usually, the first two games of the tournament fall during KU's spring
"Normally, the students follow the team wherever they go," Benda said.
The form lists the different locations for tournament games, and students can check which locations they would like to attend. That could be from Worcester, Mass., to Tempe, Ariz., two first-round sites.
Prices and the number of tickets available to the University for NCAA games have not been determined yet, she said.
break. But this year, the games are slated a week later, March 19-22.
If Kansas makes a return trip to the Final Four, which will be in Minneapolis this year, students once again will have the chance to get a ticket.
Last year, about 30 people signed up early for Final Four tickets, said Kevin Sigourney, a student member of the Kansas University Athletic Corporation. Those 30 received tickets to the final Four.
"Most people didn't know they could sign up ahead of time," he said.
2
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas. 119 Stairer-Fill Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Attention All Juniors
九日
Omicron Delta Kappa National Leadership Honorary
Join KU's Leaders. Apply for Omicron Delta Kappa.
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thefollowingareas:
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OFFICE SYSTEMS
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MONDAY--FRIDAY 8:00--5:00
ON CAMPUS
The KU coalition of the Lawrence Alliance will meet at 8:30 a.m. today at 64 Twente Hall.
- The office of study abroad will sponsor an information session at 3 p.m. today at 4039 Wescoe Hall about studying in countries where Spanish is spoken. An information session will be held at 4 p.m. today at the French department library about studying in countries where French is spoken.
PARTY: an alcohol awareness
week at 4:30 p.m. today at
Alpine Lin in the Park
The Atmospheric Science Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 6072 Malotty Hall.
OAKS non-traditional student association p.m. on Sunday 10 a.m. Gayle A. Karges
KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
The KU Alumni Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Summerfield Room in the Adams Alumni Center.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today
at the Walnut Room in the Kansas
Union.
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
The Juggling Club will meet at 7 tonight at the lower lobby in Lewis Hall.
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30 tonight at the conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
University Scholarship Halls for Ethnic Reality will meet at 10 tonight at Pearson Scholarship Hall.
ON THE RECORD
An unidentified person called the answering machine at the Counseling and Psychological Services office in Watkins Memorial Health Center between 59 m. Friday and 8a.m. Mentioned and identified himself as Jeffrey Dahmer He said he needed assistance from the counselors and left a phone number on the machine. Police called the number, which was disconnected. The person was described as a collegiate white male who used a sarcastic tone of voice. No one at Watkins recognized the voice as belonging to one of their patients, KU police reported.
■ A television, videocassette recorder, compact disc player and 120 compact discs, valued together at $2,485, were taken between 5 p.m. Friday and 11:30 a.m. Sunday from a home in the 1500 block of West Ninth Street, Lawrence police reported.
Two watches, a set of golf clubs, a Fender guitar, a bicycle and other items, valued together at $7,925, were taken between 8:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Sunday from a home in the 2600 block of University Drive, Lawrence police reported.
Lack of legislation cancels Senate meeting
The Student Senate meeting scheduled for last night was canceled.
Kansan staff report
Kristin Lange, student body vice president, said the meeting was canceled because no new legislation passed through committees last week.
"We need to root on the 'Hawks," said Lance Wright, social welfare senator. "Besides budget hearings, it is a slow time for the Senate."
Senate budget hearings, which started last week, continue at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
WEATHER
The next scheduled Senate meeting is at 6 p.m. Wednesday, March 4 at the Big Eight Room in the Union.
Today
high: 46
low: 25
NEBRASKA Omaha 39/21 Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 54/29
KANSAS Lawrence 46/25
MISSOURI Kansas City 42/27 St. Louis 42/26
Dodge City Wichita 53/29 51/29
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City 60/35
3-day outlook
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 39/21
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO
Denver
54/29
KANSAS
Lawrence
46/25 •
Dodge City
53/29
Wichita
51/29
MISSOURI
Kansas City
42/27
St. Louis
42/26
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
60/35
3-day outlook
TODAY
Skies will be clear as a high pressure system moves through.
TOMORROW
Partly cloudy, Winds SW, 15-20 mph.
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy, Chance of evening rain. Winds SW, 5-10 mph.
Across the U.S.
Boston 53/39
Chicago 37/19
Dallas 67/44
Detroit 36/20
Houston 70/50
New York 53/41
Los Angeles 64/48
Philadelphia 54/36
San Francisco 68/55
Washington 55/32
50
46
25
50
31
47
32
Forecast by Kyle Lucas, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
Dahmer's parents fear for him
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Jeffrey Dahmer's father and stepmother say they are worried about his safety as he begins serving a string of life prison sentences for killing and dismembering 15 young males.
"There's no doubt what people will want to do to him there," Lionel Dahmer said in an interview to be aired today on the television news magazine "Inside Edition."
ries," Dahmer said. "The confession, the preparation for the trial, these things have forced Jeff daily, hourly to relive those nightmares."
A jury declared Dahmer sane Saturday and a judge sentenced him Monday to 15 consecutive life prison terms. The terms effectively will keep him in prison for the rest of his life. He won't be eligible for parole for 938 years.
Dahmer and his wife, Shari, said his son would have preferred death as punishment.
"He wants to die because he is not coping well with all of these memo-
"The greatest loss to Jeff is his freedom," Shari Dahari said. "So to be alive and incarcerated is a living death for Jeff."
TAXI
Trial testimony indicated that Dahmer feared reprisals from African-American inmates because most of his victims were African-American.
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THIS WEEK SUA
7:00, Tuesday, Feb. 18
7:00, Wednesday, Feb. 19
1:00, Saturday, Feb. 22
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The Color Purple
7:00, Thursday. Feb. 20
4:00. Saturday. Feb. 22
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Friday, Feb. 21 at 7:30 & 10:00 at Hashinger Hall
Women's Student Union
Cosponsored
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SWIMMING CAMBODIA
Films are screened in Woodmuff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union
Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Box Office, Level 4, Kansas Union.
A JONATHAN DEMME PICTURE
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
ALL NEW MEMBERS OF THE GREEK COMMUNITY GOOD LUCK! KU PANHELLENIC
CONGRATULATIONS
SUMMER RESEARCH AWARDS FOR WOMEN AND MINORITY MEN IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Monetary awards to undergraduate Juniors for participation in research programs with Biology faculty at The University of Kansas.
Eligibility: Women and minority men with interests in the biomedical sciences.
Amount of award: $2,000.
Application deadline: March 16, 1992
O.
University Symphony Orchestra Winter Concert Ben Sayevich, Violin Soloist Julian Shew, Conductor
Mozart Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Major $ ^{*} $
- Prokofiev Symphony No. 7, Op. 131 *
Thursday, February 20, 1992
7:30 pm Lawrence Liberty Hall( 7th and Mass St.)
Free and Open to the Public
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
3
CAMPUS/AREA
Peace Corps recruits helpers for ex-Soviets
By Svala Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
Students who want to work overseas will be able to get information on campus today about volunteering in less-developed countries.
The Peace Corps will sponsor an information table from 9a.m. to 4p.m. in the third-floor lobby of the Kansas Union.
For the first time, volunteers will be sent to newly independent Soviet republics, as well as to other countries in Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia and South America.
Melanie Martin, public affairs specialist at the Peace Corps' Kansas City, Kan., office, said the Peace
Corps looked for motivated people who wanted to experience different cultures.
"Right now, we are getting many requests for English teachers, science and math teachers, agriculturalists and business people," she said.
"The new republics are more interested in business people with extensive experience than in recent graduates, but anyone can apply," she said.
Volunteers will be sent to the three Baltic States, the Ukraine and Armenia this summer, Martin said.
In the past five years,69 KU students have served as Peace Corps volunteers. Martin said.
Tom Kenny, Peace Corps recruiter,
said yesterday that many of the students he had talked to were interested in joining.
Eighteen students picked up applications at the information table yesterday, and many more requested information, hesaid.
"People want to go overseas because they hear of these countries in the news," he said. "I think college students are more informed about world events now, and that increases the interest in the Peace Corps."
Kenny joined the Peace Corps after receiving a master's degree in business from the University in 1988. He spent two years teaching business skills to small-business owners in Costa Rica.
electricity and no running water," he said. "It was hot, and there were few comforts, but that was more than made up for by the friendliness of the people."
Philip Lesniewski, Peace Corps recruiter, said many volunteers returned to the United States and graduate school after two years.
"It was an area where there was no
"There are over 150 colleges and universities that offer returned volunteers teaching and research benefits and financial aid," he said. "Many colleges and employers want returned volunteers because of their leadership experience, organizational skills and planning experience they have gained."
Certain student loans can be
deferred during the time of service,
Lesniewskiisaid.
Marian Kamin, San Jose, Calif. graduate student, is considering rejoining the Peace Corps upon graduation in May. She served from 1982 to 1984 in North Yemen after receiving her undergraduate degree at a California university.
"I taught English to students who were planning to come to American universities," she said. "Peace Corps volunteers, money, but they take total care of you."
Kamlien learned Arabic during her stay in Yemen, and she said she learned more in the two years there than in her degree program at school.
"I would like to go back, but it is just
one of many choices," she said. "After my experience, I would definitely like to work overseas."
Candice Autry, Enid, Okla., senior has waited for placement since she interviewed with the Peace Corps in October.
"Basically, they try to match up your qualifications with the country's request," she said. "You can list a preference on your application, but I said I would go anywhere."
Autry said she hoped to gain experience that would help her in her life and career.
"I am looking forward to see what it is like to live in a totally different culture," she said. "It is a challenge and also a learning experience."
PETER DAVID KINNEDY
JulieDenesha/KANSAN
Insects
Carefully positioning a wasp he has just removed from alcohol, Matt Sorochty, Bradenton, Fla., sophomore, pins the insect collected by students and faculty in Ecuadorat the Museum of Entomology in Snow Hall. Sorochty spends most of his afternoons arranging insects for the museum's collections.
Theater group performs play for the deaf
Kansan staff writer
By Ranjit Arab
As the cast of "Treasure Island" sang, "Yo ho yo and a bottle of rum," their every word was seen by the audience.
The play was performed last night in the auditorium at Haskell Indian Junior College by the National Theater of the Deaf, a company of hearing-impaired and hearing actors. Their adaptation of the play combined sign language with spoken words, allowing the audience to see and hear every word.
As a cast of characters signed the dialogue, two actors shared the speaking parts.
The performance also made use of instruments such as drums, a guitar and cymbals.
Along with being the first company to combine sign language with spoken words, the National Theater of the
Deaf was the first professional theater to tour all 50 states.
The company now is on a six-month tour of 22 states and the District of Columbia.
Jacqueline Davis, director of the KU Concert Series, said that the performance was sponsored by the University of Kansas, but that it was performed at the junior college because of a lack of auditorium space.
The play was one of the seven events this school year which had to be rescheduled to Haskell, Topeka or Liberty Hall because of the Hoch Auditorium fire. Davis said.
Brian Somers, Buckner, Mo.
junior, is a deaf student who teaches a
"Everything is integrated so beautifully that the signing becomes a part of the process." Davis said.
She said she had seen the touring company when it performed a version of "The Odyssey" at the University in Spring 1990.
sign language lab at the University.
he said that although he used a hearing aid, the signing of the actors made it easy to follow the plot.
Culver said the performance could help people who could hear by exposing them to sign language.
"The body motions and gestures fit extremely well." he said.
Although he could not hear the musical instruments, he said he felt the vibrations of the drums.
Ken Culver of Lawrence said through an interpreter that the play was very focused.
Hearing-impaired people from Lawrence and surrounding cities were present at the play, he said.
Culver said nothing was lost in the translation from the written word to sign language.
Police look for patterns in recent burglary spree
"It is like watching closed-capca television," he said. "Because you can see all the words."
Lawrence police are investigating several possibly related burglaries of local homes and businesses, a police representative said.
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
An unusually high number of burglaries since the second week of January has prompted police to look for burglar patterns, said Lt. Mark Brothers, Lawrence police representative.
Brothers would not say how many burglaries had occurred.
He said the burglar used similar methods to commit the crimes, such as how they gained entry into homes or businesses.
He said that the unidentified persons consistently burglarized single-family homes, but that the homes were in different areas of the city.
"It is difficult to tell where one pattern leaves off and another picks up," Brothers said.
Police believe there may be a group of people involved in the burglaries, he said.
could be carried, such as a television or videocassette recorder, Brothers said.
Patterns in the burglaries show that people entered residences and took small items that fit into their pockets and then took one larger item that
Paul Kieler's home in the 1100 block of Sunset Drive was burglarized twice last week, according to police reports.
After the first burgary Feb. 12, Kieler,
a 1989 KU graduate, said he asked a
neighbor to watch his house while he
was at work.
He said that he showed his appreciation by taking his neighbor out to dinner Friday night, and that his house was burglarized again while he was gone.
Kieler said he had checked all the city's spawnshops for his stolen jewelry and for other items of his that were identifiable, such as imported compact discs from Holland.
After the first burglary, Kieler and his roommate put a wooden plank in the sliding glass door the burglaries used to gain entry, but the same door was used during the second burglary, he said.
"Now we're keeping someone here all the time." he said.
Brothers, citing the burglaries at Kieler's home, said it was possible that one person who took small items in the first burglary might have returned to take other items in the second burglary.
"If they start that, there are people who should be nervous," he said.
A burglar also might knock on the door to find out whether someone is home, Brothers said.
People whose homes are burglared need to call the police immediately after discovering the crime, and neighbors need to report to police any suspicious people, he said.
In many of the recent burglary cases, people reported the burglaries late and neighbors were not wary of strangers, which makes it difficult for police to find clues to solve the cases, Brothers said.
"It leaves a very cold trail to follow," he said.
Police have not received any reports of stolen jewelry being sold to area pawnshops, Brothers said.
Despite the prevalence of burglaries in the city, campus burglaries have not increased, according to KU police reports.
Lt. John Mullens, KU police representative, said that 13 burglaries had occurred in the last 30 days, which is below the 30-day average.
Five of the campus burglaries have occurred in residence halls, Mullens said.
Forum focuses on international perceptions of domestic violence
By Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
Rape and domestic violence affect women internationally, a speaker said last night at a forum about violence against women.
The program, sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, focused on how women in the United States and other countries deal with standards and customs in their countries concerning violence against women.
These differences often present problems in reporting and identifying situations such as date rape, said Daphne Johnston, assistant director of the office of international student services.
Johnston said lack of communication and misunderstandings intensified the threat of rape for international women.
"A man and a woman from Kansas cannot communicate about sex, let alone a man and a woman from different cultures. They have different patterns of behavior," she said.
ence and abuse in international students' cultures might differ greatly from the standards in the United States.
"Different things are seen as acceptable and unacceptable," she said. "Sometimes I have run into students who can't believe spouse abuse and sexual harassment are illegal."
Johnston said the definitions of vio-
About 25 people attended the program, which was co-sponsored by Women's Student Union, Commission on the Status of Women and Students Against Violence Against Womyn. Women's Transitional Care Services and Rape Victim Support Services also spoke.
Johnston gave an example of an international woman who was forced to have sex against her will and then saw a counselor who told her she had been date raped.
"She told me later that she has no idea what date rape meant," she said.
International women may avoid reporting rape or domestic violence because they had a bad experience with police in their countries or have bad impressions of police in the United
She said that some progress had been made, but that cultural values and legal stipulations, like maintaining visas, made it difficult for international women to escape domestic violence.
States, Johnston said
Connie Burk, Women's Transitional Care Services advocate, said KU police had translated information about WTCS into other languages so international students could know about their options.
"We have had foreign women call on the crisis hot line and participate in our support groups," she said. "But not a lot of women can stay in the shelters because of visas or other complications."
Sherrill Robinson, graduate assistant at the women's resource center, said that because she was an international woman, she had additional concerns.
"On campus, we cannot ignore part of the population," she said. "We need to be aware of different concerns and communicate with international women in our programs."
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19. 1992
OPINION
UN-EMPLOYMENT
HEALTH CARE
5 DEMOCRATS
NEW HAMPSHIRE
THE PRESIDENCY
FINISH
IF I CAN ONLY GET STARTED, THEN...
I'LL BE OKEY DOKEY!
RECESSION
ROB TAPLEY 72
Humor originates in genes
A sense of humor is a strange thing.
One really has no control over it. You either have one or you don't. You either have a good one or a warped one. You cannot choose which one you get; it is hereditary. Does your dad laugh at maimed cats? Watch out, you may not be popular yourself.
Your sense of humor tends to strike when it is least expected or welcome. It is often in a quiet place like a church, museum or string quartet recital where everyone is supposed to be serious and awe-inspired. Out of the blue, some dumb thing, a sight, a sound or a memory hits you over the head and you do that snort-out-your-nose sound that comes only when you are trying not to laugh.
---
One holiday season when I was a teenager, I was sitting in church with my family listening to the organist play advent hymns. A little boy sat with his family in the row front of us. He was an odd looking child. He had a very round head, with that sort of Charlie Brown hair style some little boys in the Midwest still wore, round horn-rimmed glasses. But his most distinguishing feature was a very pronounced underbite. I do not mean a slight one that gives people dimples
Kate Kelley Staff columnist
and can be kind of cute. I mean the kind that makes someone look like a ventilroquist's dummy. It looked as though his chin and lower lip were placed on as an afterthought and not properly blended into the rest of the face. Now, I know this is not funny. I was brought up to be sensitive to people's differences and not to judge a book by its cover and all of that. But nonetheless, I found him funny. I was biting the inside of my cheek to keep from laughing, and almost had it under control. Then I made the fatal move of glancing at my sister. Wendy. She was sitting very primly, looking straight ahead, when我 took me to at her, and when I did, she coyly slid her chin forward, just a fraction of an inch, but more than enough to set me off. First was the old snort out the nose. Then both of our shoulders were shaking, tears were rolling down our faces — we were pathetic. My mother jabbed me with her elbow and gave one of her best we're in church or I'd just-smack you glares to quiet us. Then she looked forward and saw the child, and being our mother, the carrier of half the warped sense of humor gene that we possessed, she started laughing, too. The three of us were making the whole pew shake. My grandmother, who was on one of her rare visits south (from Minnesota, everything is south) to celebrate Christmas with us, glared at us, muttered, her finger, but to no avail. Her eyes were poor, and she did not see the child. Her anger only made the whole situation funnier. Afterwards, we could not ever explain why we were laughing. Everyone would have thought we were cruel. Even though I still know the poor child was not there for our amusement, I still laugh when I remember the whole episode.
So, whether you find humor in "Murphy Brown," "Get a Life" or "WWF Wrestling," remember it is not entirely your fault and try not to disturb too many people with your snorting.
Kate Kelley is a Fort Leavenworth junior majoring in English.
THE UNIVERSITYDAILY KANSAN
Sex poll results are troubling
Survey exposes ignorance illustrates need of more
Assuming the survey is a fairly representative sample of the student population, it seems that many men and women on this
communication between sexes
From the time mothers first dress their children differently, in pink and blue, we are divided into two distinct camps that often have very little to do with each other.
Boysplay with boys, girls with girls,and the two often grow up in ignorance of the other group.
A recent study of KU students would seem to indicate that much of this ignorance of the opposite sex persists in adulthood. The survey showed a marked lack of communication between the sexes. The questions of whether a woman means no when she says so and whether a man deserves sex if he buys a woman an expensive meal showed a strong difference of opinion between men and women.
campus know little more about each other than when they were playing freeze tag together.
The University is supposed to provide an environment of learning. It is the perfect ground to learn more about each other, and the continually high enrollment in Dennis Dailey's human sexuality class indicates that there is strong interest in doing so.
Unfortunately, Dailey's class currently is the only one of its kind offered here. There is both an interest and a need for greater education. It would be worthwhile for the University to provide a few more classes like Dailey's and perhaps a program during freshman orientation that focuses on improving communication between the sexes.
Often what is considered date rape or sexual harassment by one person is considered normal interplay between the sexes by another. Better education and communication between men and women only can reduce these misperceptions.
Mark Coatney for the Editorial Board
Campus requires defrosting
Proper steps should be taken to clear walkways and ramps throughout the winter season
Winter sporadically showed its true colors in the past few weeks. But it appears the University of Kansas has not recognized this.
Granted, the winter weather has been better than normal this year. But weather became typical of winter in terms of hazardous sidewalks on campus, proper measures were not taken to ensure the safety of students, faculty and staff.
Last week, freezing rain covered many campus walkways, steps and ramps for people with disabilities with ice. In some places, the steps were cleared, but the ramps were not.
campus. But an attempt should be made.
Perhaps the steps were clear only because students continued to walk on them, causing the ice to melt or to break away from the cement. It is understandable that bad weather may prevent clearing every sidewalk on
It is dangerous to have students and faculty rushing off to class on ice sidewalks, steps and ramps. It is especially dangerous for people with disabilities to move around on an icy campus.
Some of the money students pay in campus fees should be allocated to remedy this problem. The money that already is allocated is obviously not being spent well this year. It is possible that the University is doing everything in its power to remedy this problem. If not, it should come up with an effective solution soon.
If a lack of finances is a part of the problem, maybe Student Senate can allocate some money for ice removal. Students, faculty and staff are here at the University for a purpose. That purpose cannot be served if we all can't get around.
Tiffany Lasha Hurt for the editorial board
Editorials reflect the majority opinion of the University Daily Kansan editorial board. Opinions expressed in letters, cartoons and guest and staff columns are solely those of the author or artist. Views expressed in columns and cartoons are not necessarily shared by the Kansan.
Members of the editorial board are Alexander Bloemhof, Jim Brown, J.R. Clairborne, Mark Coatney, Amy Francis, Tiffany Harness, Tiffany Lasha Hurt, Kate Kelley, Julie Eileen Lit, Stephen Martino, David Mitchell, Chris Moeser, Beth Randolph, Martin Scherstuhl, Jill Wasson, Frank Williams and Sarah Zercher.
Black History Month overlooks real problems
February always has been an extremely positive month for African Americans in the United States. The commemoration provides everyone an opportunity to analyze and gain knowledge about the contributions Africans have made to the progress of human civilizations. Although the observation of historical events and people is significant, I would like to see more attention given to the problems that are strangling our people.
The events that took place last year are an indication of the perilous position that the African community worldwide finds itself in as we head toward the 21st century. Last year's events were similar to a tornado warning. One event that immediately comes to mind is the gulf war. Gen. Colin Powell led U.S. soldiers against Iraq. President Bush labeled the war a fight to uphold a new world order. Kuwait once belonged to Iraq, long before it was made a country by Britain. What should be disturbing
MELANIE MAYER
David
Goodman
Guest
columnist
to Africans is that Powell acted as a stogie for imperialist aggression. Powell's role of leading troops to annihilate people of color should have been condemned by every country seeking peace. Not only innocent Arabs, but Sudanese refugees, too, were killed by Powelled forces. He was glorified for his actions and highly commended by the president. All African Americans should be concerned by Bush's show of support to Powell for killing people of color.
coming to the shores of Florida is another act of overt racism against Africans. In 1989, when the walls of Eastern Communism came tumbling down, the United States cut its purse strings loose for economic aid and also opened its doors for Eastern Europeans. Conversely, when the Haitians left their country for economic and political reasons after the overthrow of their governments, the United States reacted by overturning their rafts and sending them back to Haiti. Our government also eliminated any chance of economic recovery after the coup. The U.S. government offered the rhetorical explanation that the Haitians wanted to come here to make money. No Duh!! What would you do if you were a citizen of Haiti and the big bully took away all your nickels?
The government's policy against Haitians
The events that took place in the United States were even more devastating. To some African-Americans, California must have seemed like Birmingham, Ala., in 1963. An
African-American man was beaten senseless on a suburban street of Los Angeles by the police. Many people in the Black community will tell you that the behavior and treatment of Rodney King and other African Americans by Los Angeles police is the norm, not the exception. Just a few months later, a young African-American woman was shot in cold blood by an Asian woman after arguing about a bottle of orange juice. A white female judge gave the Asian woman five years probation even after the entire scene was viewed on video camera. These kinds of events send out dire stress signals that our lives may not be worth a bottle of juice.
Before Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall retired, George Bush vehemently stated that he was against affirmative action and quotas. However, when one examines the judicial career of Clarence Thomas, it is evident that there may have been candidate more
qualified than Thomas. Bush's appointment is clearly a signal that he can change the rules when he sees fit. His hiring of Clarence Thomas is an indicator that Bush will hire African Americans who play by his rules. Of course, one of his rules is outward opposition to affirmative action and progressive Civil Rights laws. Thomas' beliefs and philosophies parallel Bush's.
The events of last year should send a tornado warning to all African Americans. It is a tornado that has the oppressive and reactionary wind of David Duke, Patrick Buchanan, Dubuque, Iowa, and the KU Student Senate. It appears that once again the African community is in peril. Americans must gauge the heavy winds and prepare for cover. It's not like we haven't seen these winds before.
David Goodman is a Los Angeles senior maoring in English.
KANSANSTAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS
Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochele Oleson
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Meyers
Graphics Almee Brainard/J Jeff Messieu
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Businesses
Campus sales mgr ... Bill Leibengood
Regional sales mgr ... Rich Harbarger
National sales mgr ... Stetha Mann
Co-op sales mgr ... Anne Johnson
Production mgrs ... Kim Wallace
Marketing director ... Lisa Keeler
Marketing manager ... Kim Claxon
Creative director ... Learning
Classified mgr ... Kiip Chin
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pho-
Guest columns should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kanas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanas newsroom, 111 Suffer-Flint Hall.
Stick
WELL, AS USUAL,
I HAVE A 5-PAGE
PAPER DUE IN MY
HUMAN RELATION'S
CLASS...
WELL, AS USUAL,
I HAVE A 5-PAGE
PAPER DUE IN MY
HUMAN RELATION'S
CLASS...
AND SO, AS USUAL,
I CAN'T GO OUT
AND PARTY WITH MY
FRIENDS TONIGHT.
HUMAN RELATIONS
IS REALLY CUTTING
INTO MY HUMAN
RELATIONS...
AND SO, AS USUAL,
I CAN'T GO OUT
AND PARTY WITH MY
FRIENDS TONIGHT.
by David Rosenfield
HUMAN RELATIONS
IS REALLY CUTTING
INTO MY HUMAN
RELATIONS...
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
5
Breaking through business barriers
Race presents additional obstacles to success for minority entrepreneurs
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
Real estate agent J.R. Demby said that as an African American, he experienced racism at his job.
"You may talk to me on the phone, and depending on whether you detect that I am Black or not depends on what you expect when you come to the office," said Demby, a member of the
L aw r e n c e
Alliance, a city-
formed group
designed to com bat racism in the
the community.
and some people don't," he said.
Black History Month
and some people don't, he said.
Demby is not the only African American in Lawrence who said he had experienced racism.
MR. CLEMSON
Bob Davis, owner of Bob Davis Financial Planning and Insurance, said that despite being an expert in his field, he had lost customers because he was a minority.
"That's when you see that I'm Black. Some poo. I don't know what to with that.
"It's never been blatant," he said.
"But I know."
Davis started his own business in 1987 after working for another African American. Davis said starting his own business was extremely difficult. He did not receive any loans when he started his business, and sometimes he did not know how he would pay the rent.
Davis said running his businesses would have been easier if he had known there were opportunities to help minorities start their own businesses.
"I probably would have grown a lot faster and have had a lot more options." he said.
Davis said he realized being a minority was going to be a problem when he thought of starting his own business. His major concern was wondering who his clients would be since his former employer also was African-
American.
"I asked him if there was room enough for the two of us in business," he said. "I didn't think the market here was accessible to minorities."
Davis said he was applying to law schools to become an attorney to help his business. He found out about a prosecution in the case of minority groups to become attorneys.
Bob Davis
PETER MURRAY
The program would pay for some of the expenses incurred by attending school.
"I never would have done this with out knowing there were things out there to do."
Davis said the same was true for other minorities who might want to start businesses.
The Kansas Department of Commerce lists Lawrence as having 15 minority-owned businesses. The list includes women as minorities.
Mike O'Donnell, director of the Small Business Development Center, said that the number of minority-owned businesses was small, but it did not include all minority businesses in the city because businesses do not have to be certified with the state.
Bob Schum, city commissioner,
said the commission never had
addressed recruiting or encouraged
minority businesses to Lawrence.
No group has come to the commission concerned about the issue, he said.
"It does not appear that Lawrence is a big enough community or broad enough to initiate these programs," O'Donnell said.
He said he thought the only encouragement given to minority businesses from the city was through the Lawrence Office of Human Relations-Human Resources. Other programs exist on the state or federal level.
Schumm said that besides recruiting major industries and offering them tax abatements, he did not know which could recruit minority businesses.
He also said recruiting minority businesses just because the owners were minorities might be harmful to
them because their product might not be marketable in the community.
"A business is not guaranteed to make money," said Schumm, who runs restaurants and other businesses in Lawrence. "To just go out and recruit minority businesses might be the biggest injustice we could do for them. The market mechanism is going to determine who is successful and who fails."
The commission decided on 12.9 percent because it matched the minority population in Lawrence, Bremby said.
Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, said the city had a procurement program, which encourages the city to work with minority businesses.
The City Commission set a goal that 12.9 percent of all contracts more than $20,000 would be awarded to minority businesses. he said.
He said that the issue needed some assessment and that it should be brought before the City Commission who could research the need for a program.
"The whole community could benefit from minority small business enterprise or entrepreneur," Bremby said.
He said that because a minority member often thought differently than the typical white businessman, they could find some niche in the market, either with a unique product or by providing a different service.
No minority incentive plan in Kansas
Kansan staff report
Lawrence, like all cities in Kansas, does not provide specific programs to help minority businesses, an employee for the Kansas Department of Commerce said.
She said a new term was used that might help people understand why minorities need extra incentives to start a business. The term, HUB, stands for "historically underutilized businesses."
"It doesn't mean there is any overt racism." Clark said. "It just that the system is already set up and people turn to a direction automatically."
"There is a lack of understanding of why there should be particular incentives to start minority businesses," said Amber Clark, research analyst and former program manager for the department's office of minority business.
"The problem is that people don't look at the history of minority businesses. The purpose of programs that target minorities is to make sure that they get an equal chance," she said.
She said the office of minority business' job was to get all businesses on equal footing by encouraging whites to consider minority businesses instead of always patronizing white-owned businesses.
The state also provides information to minorities who want to start their own businesses. It helps minorities obtain material, technical, financial and procurement assistance but does not provide any financing.
Iowa, on the other hand, has one of the largest minority incentive programs in the United States, said Mohammed Abdullah, targeted small business specialist for the Iowa Department of Economic Development.
The Targeted Small Business Program includes financial assistance, bond waivers and lower interest rates for minorities.
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
Consignment Boutique
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When Someone You Love Is Raped...
How Can You Help?
She may be your dating partner, friend, or roommate. She can help you, if someone you know and care about was sexually assaulted, you may be feeling confused and uncertain.
To attend this workshop to learn how to help the survivor
Thursday, February 27 1992
7:00:9:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Dr. Richard Nelson JoL. Phelps Counselor Graduate Assistant Counseling and Emily Taylor Women's Psychological Services Resource Center
✓
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall For more information, contact Sherilbon Johnson at 864-3552.
If Your Landlord Is Keeping You From Haying A "Home Sweet Home"... Contact Us!
Your KU student activity fee fund a law office on campus. We'll tell you what you need to know about Kansas landlord/tenant laws. Call for an appointment.
Legal Services for Students
KIDS HOUSE
864-5665 148 Burge Union
An "Environment in Crisis" Series THIS OLD EARTH
Peter Matthiessen
Peter Mattheissen
Biodiversity in Baikal, Siberia's Inland Sea
19 February 1992, 8:00 pm, Kansas Union Big 8 Room
John W. Terborgh Conserving Biodiversity in the Tropics 25 February 1992, 8:00 pm, Alderson Auditorium
David Blockstein Towards a National Strategy for Conserving Biodiversity 2 March 1992, 8:00 pm, Woodruff Auditorium
Free to Students, Faculty and Staff, and the Public Presented by the KU Systems Group, the CLAS Lecture Series, and ENVIRONS
WILLIAM P. HARRIS
Have You Claimed Your Reward?
1809-1874
This week only receive a discount coupon and a chance to win prizes by redeeming your receipts for a rebate. Receipts from the Fall 1991 Semester are eligible for a rebate until June 24, 1992.
KU.L.D. required. Some restrictions apply.
KU
KU
BOOKSTONES
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that shares its profits with the KU students
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
YOUR DEGREE WILL TAKE YOU PLACES.
As an officer in the U.S. Navy, you'll command your own future. You'll join top flight people working with the best in their field. And have the opportunity for world-wide travel.
Navy leadership and executive management training go hand-inhand to prepare you for an exciting role as a Navy Officer.
Navy Officers are:
- Pilots/Naval Flight Officers
- Pilots/ Naval Flight Officers
* Engineers on Nuclear
- Navy Officers are:
- Procurement and Fiscal Manager
RAPHAEL S. CAMPBELL
- Computer Specialists
- Engineers on Nuclear Submarines
- Business Managers
- Civil Engineers
- Lawyers
- Doctors
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Navy officers receive pay and allowances worthy of a professional. Benefits include 30-days paid vacation earned each year, free medical and dental care and low-cost life insurance. And this is just a part of the story. Contact us. We'll tell you the rest.
Minority Officer Recruiters will be at the Minority Engineering Career Fair February 24, 1992.
See us there or call us at 1-800-222-9597 for a private consultation
NAVY OFFICER You and the Navy. Full Speed Ahead.
Get Caught Up in Open RUSH!
R·U·S·H KU
If you are interested in open rush, call the KU Panhellenic Office at 864-4643, or come by room 422 in the Kansas Union
2 11" Medium Pizzas
2 Toppings
2 Cokes
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Every Single Day.
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842-8989
6
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
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Hours:
Mon.- Thurs. 4.p.m.- 1 a.m.
Fri.- Sat. 11a.m.- 2 a.m.
Sun. 11a.m.- 1 a.m.
S. of 15th
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd
MasterCard
We Accept:
VISA
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$0.25 service charge
WEDNESDAYS
$1.00 DOUBLE DRAWS
(24 OZ.)
BENCHWARMERS
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THURSDAYS $2.00 PITCHERS
WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES We've got your number.
EAGLE
We've got your number.
If you want to keep on the "Wellness Road," we've got your number.
Watkins Health Center provides care for most of your health and wellness needs. Eleven physicians are available to you, many on a walk-in basis. There are easily-accessible, specialty clinics such as Sports Medicine, Physical Therapy, Gynecology, Allergy, and Wart Clinic. Health Education offers Nutritional Counseling from a Registered Dietitian and information/personal consultation is also available on a wide range of health topics and issues from Health Educators.
Urgent Care & Switchboard 864-9500
Administration 864-9525
Allergy Clinic 864-9589
Appointments (except Dietary) 864-9507
Business Office 864-9521
Health Education 864-9570
Insurance Information 864-9522
Lab Results 864-9500
Nutrition Counseling 864-9575
Peer Health Advising 864-9570
Pharmacy 864-9512
Physical Therapy 864-9592
Watkins Phone Numbers
Urgent Care & Switchboard 864-9500
Administration 864-9525
Health Center 864-9500 Health Education 864-9570
We Care for KU
Regular Clinic Hours:
M-F 8a-4:30p/Sa 8-11:30a
Urgent Care (Additional Charge):
M-F 4:30-10p/Sa 11:30a-4:30p/Su 8:30a-4:30p
BERVING ONLY LAWRENCE CAMPUS STUDENTS
Unite News of India said about 1.5 million pilgrims gathered in the town. Press Trust put the figure at 5 million.
NEW DELHI, India — The balcony of an old hostel in a southern town collapsed yesterday on top of a gathering of pilgrims. More than 80 people were killed by falling debris and in a stampede of terrified worshipers, news reports said.
Balcony falls at festival
More than 80 pilgrims killed at Indian hostel
kumbakonam, in Tamil Nadu state, that attracts millions of the nation's pilgrims, news reports said.
The Associated Press
Kumbakonam is 1,210 miles southeast of New Delhi and 160 miles south of Madras, the capital of Tamil Nadu.
Neither report could be confirmed immediately but religious congregations often attract millions of people in India, a nation of 844 million people, mostly Hindus.
The tragedy occurred during a Hindu festival held every 2 years in
At least 30 women and three children died in the collapse, and at least another 50 people died in the stampede, news reports said.
Hundreds of people crowded into the balcony of an ancient hostel overlooking a large artificial pool in which people were taking ritual baths. Thousands more were standing at the edge of the tank awaiting their turns, news reports said.
About 50 people were seriously wounded, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.
Specialist testifies that infertility physician accused of fraud deliberately misled clients
It was the first accident in memory at the Mahamaham festival. The first recorded celebration in Kumbakonam was held in 1518 A.D. during the Nayaka dynasty's rule.
The Associated Press
Witness says doctor schemed
ALEXANDRIA, Va. —An infertility doctor who is being tried on fraud charges knowingly led a "staggering" number of patients through false pregnancies and miscarriages, a doctor who examined his records testified yesterday.
Slabs of the concrete balcony fell on pilgrims below, triggering a stumpede, PressTrust said.
Hindus believe a dip in the sacred 5.4-acre pool at a time determined by astrologers absolves one's sins.
"He had a scheme outlined to do all of this," she said.
Judging from Jacobson's medical records, Mary Damewood, an infertility specialist at Johns Hopkins Hospital said Cecil Jacobson knew exactly what he was doing.
Sacrifice meets its course in fluke and perjury. He is accused of using hormone injections to trick some patients into believing they were pregnant when they were not. He is also accused of fathering up to 75 children by using his own sperm in artificial insemination and lying to patients about the source.
"There was only a certain amount (of sperm) there and a number of patients coming in," she said.
Another witness, Launi Jean Robertson, who worked as a receptionist for Jacobson from 1982 to 1985, said that she was convinced that Jacobson had used his own semen and that sometimes one sample would be distributed among more than one patient.
A former lab assistant, Gudrun Slaughter, who worked for Jacobson for eight years, said that she also was
convinced that Jacobson donated his own sperm and that he sometimes would divide it among more than one patient.
Damewood said she examined the records of about 1,000 of Jacobson's patients and found that hundreds of patients had been led through a series of supposed pregnancies and miscarriages.
"The number of patients that have failed pregnancies and these basically unheard of re-absorptions was just staggering," she said.
Several women have testified that Jacobson convinced them that their bodies had re-absorbed dead fetuses.
"The women in the courtroom were just the tip of the iceberg," Damewood said.
Another witness, Vicki Eckhardt, said that she experienced seven supposed pregnancies and seven carriages under Jacobson's care during a three-year period.
Eckhardt also testified that Jacobson guaranteed her she would have a baby. The prosecution said Jacobson told the Federal Trade Commission in a sworn affidavit that he never guaranteed to any patient that she would become pregnant.
"You can't mistake what a fetus looks like," she said. "It must have been clear that these women were not pregnant."
Other former patients who testified yesterday included:
"He reassured me that the child was proceeding to grow normally," she said.
Damewood said she and a radiology specialist examined a number of sonograms from which Jacobson reportedly pointed out fetuses to the patients. They found no signs of fetuses on the pictures.
She said that months later he told her the baby was dead and had been reabsorbed into her body. She later sued Jacobson and received a $130,000 settlement payment.
■ Judith Dowd, who said that she was 46 and suffered from blocked fallopian tubes when Jacobson gave her hormone injections in 1987 and then told her she was pregnant.
Susan Dippel, who testified that two days after another doctor told her she was not pregnant Jacobson conducted a songram and "made a point of saying there's no mistaking that fetal heartbeat."
■ Jean Blair, who said that Jacobson told her six times in 13 months that she was pregnant but said later that each fetus had miscarried. She said she suggested another fertility hormone but "he laughed it off and told me I had been reading those women's magazines again."
interrogated.
She said that another doctor later prescribed the other hormone and she was pregnant within a month.
Jacobson's defense lawyer, James Tate, has repeatedly suggested that the patients may in fact have been pregnant when Jacobson told them they were. Jacobson agreed to stop practicing medicine in 1988. He now conducts privately funded medical research in Provo, Utah.
WANTED
Someone to correctly answer trivia questions about historic downtown Lawrence and KU!
Back to the Good Old' Days
$150 Reward
To enter, fill out an entry form in the
tabloid found inserted in today's paper. Drop it off at the University Daily Kansan business office (119 Stauffer-Flint Hall), or at any of the participating downtown Lawrence merchants! All correct entry forms must be completed and returned to the Kansan or participating local merchants by Wednesday, February 26, 1992. All correct entries will be entered in a drawing to win $150 to be spent at participating local retailers. (University Daily Kansan employees not eligible to win)
INTERNATIONAL
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. February 19. 1992
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS
Moscow
Joint defense plan under way
The United States and the former Soviet Union, in a first step toward a joint defense system, agreed yesterday to set up an early warning center to alert them of ballistic missile attacks, U.S. officials said.
Secretary of State James Baker and Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev also agreed on accelerated high-level talks toward an agreement to air long-range nuclear arsenals, Kozyrev said.
Baker and Kozyrev decided to jettison the arms control negotiating procedures of the Cold War, which involved large teams of experts working for years to reach agreement. They agreed instead to complete the negotiations by July, when President Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin meet in Washington.
Honolulu
Boat found smuggling Chinese
Nearly 100 Chinese nationals were caught aboard a Taiwanese fishing boat, apparently trying to sneak into the United States, immigration officials said.
The boat attempted to dock yesterday in Honolulu Harbor, said Donald Radcliffe, district director of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
The nine crewmen and 96 passengers were discovered after a state marine controller's radio dispatch was answered in Chinese. Most of the passengers were men in their 20s from the Fukien province of south mainland China. None speak English. Radcliffe said.
"I believe it's an organized smuggling operation." he said.
Tokyo
Two strip to help save animals
Two Americans declaring, "We'd Rather Go Naked than Wear Fur," stripped to their underwear yesterday and marched through a crowded shopping district to protest the fur business.
Ignoring the chilly, 46-degree weather, Dan Matthews and Julia Sloane of the Washingtonbased People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals walked for an hour outside Sunshine 60, Japan's tallest building.
"By showing some of our own skin, we hope to save some animal skins," said Matthews, of Washington, D.C.
Inside the building, 101 furriers from around the world were opening a four-day event — the Fur and Fashion Tokyo Messe 1992. Matthews and his company followed 23 American fur companies to Tokyo.
From The Associated Press
Israel kills one, wounds 11 in Lebanon attack
The Associated Press
BEIRUT Lebanon — Israeli artillery and aircraft blasted Arab guerrilla targets in southern Lebanon yesterday, and Shiite Muslim militia unleashed barrages of rockets on Israel in a second day of escalating violence.
A teen-ager was killed, and 11 people were wounded by the Israeli attacks, officials said. No casualties
Lebanon requested an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council to protest Israel's actions and help stop the fighting, which has spiraled since Israeli soldiers assassinated Sheik Abbas Musawi, the leader of the pro-Iranian Hexbollah in southern Lebanon, on Sunday.
Lebanon's U.N. ambassador, Kahili Makkawi, urged the United Nations to force Israel from the security zone it occupies in southern Lebanon.
The Israeli attacks on villages were in retaliation for the hacking death of three Israeli soldiers early Saturday, as well as subsequent Herzollah attacks.
Hezbollah, or Party of God, named the Shiite group's Iranian-educated military commander, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, to replace Musawi as secretary-general.
In other developments:
■ Musawi, his wife and their youngest son were buried in their hometown, Nabi Sheet in eastern Lebanon, after an emotional funeral procession attended by about 40,000 mourners.
A senior Palestine Liberation Organization official, Yasser Abed-Rabbo, confirmed yesterday that the Palestinians would attend next week's Middle East peace talks despite the arrest of two Palestinian delegates in Israel.
Seeking revenge for Musawi's killing by Israeli helicopters, Hezbollah gunrillias again fired rockets at northern Israel and the Israeli-occupied zone in southern Lebanon.
Israeli troops retaliated by raining howitzer shells on the villages of Baraasheet, Jibsheet and Zawtar, which Israel's army described as Hezbollah strongholds.
Sub accused of trespassing
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The former Soviet navy charged yesterday that a nuclear-powered U.S. submarine was secretly in Russian waters when it collided with a Soviet sub last week. U.S. officials said the crash occurred in international waters.
The subdued but unambiguous Russian anger over the underwater bump Feb. 11 in the Barents Sea, near the Arctic Ocean, was a throwback to Cold War skirmishes in the Pacific. The countries still have deployed against each other.
No injuries were reported to the crew members of either submarine. Both were nuclear powered and capable of carrying nuclear weapons, but neither side would say whether the ships were loaded.
"The fact that a foreign submarine should be secretly operating within our territorial waters is bound to cause concern in the Russian leadership," said Adm. Ivan Kapitans in a report obtained by the Interfax news agency.
Kapitants, who investigated the collision, suggested the commonwealth and Russian Foreign Ministry send a letter to the United States citing the collision and proposing new talks over a long-standing dispute over territorial waters, the Interfax report said. Soviet-U.S. talks on the boundary became deadlocked in 1990, the Interfax report said.
Russian officials first reported the crash on Friday but did not identify the metal object that collided with the former Soviet submarine, now under command of the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Pentagon officials in Washington said they withheld information on the crash from the public until
Secretary of State James Baker could discuss it with Russian President Boris Yeltsin in Moscow this week.
Subs collide
s-
si-
ris
in
this
week.
Russian
and U.S. offi-
cials con-
firmed yesterday the object was the USS
Baton
Rouge.A.for-
mer Soviet
Defense
Ministry
press official,
who spoke on
condition of
anonymity,
said the col- lision
Submarines collide
Norway
Barents Sea
Murmansk
Sweden
Arctic Circle
Russia
Finland
0 100 Miles
Map area
Estonia
Latvia
SOURCE News reports
Knight Ridder Tribune
928 Hass / 843-0611
WE ARE MOTORI
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WEAR MOVIE PROTECTION
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the entrance to Kola Bay about five miles inside the zone claimed as Russian territorial waters.
Under international treaties, territorial waters extend 12 miles from a country's coast.
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Attention!! May '92 Graduates
Today is the last day to order Graduation Announcements
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Orders may be placed at either the Kansas Union or Burge Union store
Orders must be prepaid Visa, Mastercard, Discover & American Express Accepted
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
Ks.Union 864-4640
Burge Union 864-5697
Camp Vega
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MAMARONECK, N.Y. 10543
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STAFFING NOW FOR THE 1992 SUMMER SEASON
POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR SUMMER COUNSELORS
WHO LOVE CHILDREN AND HAVE STRONG SKILLS AND ABILITY TO TEACH ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING ACTIVITIES:
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FULL EIGHT WEEK SEASON DROP BY FOR AN INTERVIEW:
TODAY
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19TH
FROM 11:00 AM-5:00 PM
STUDENT UNION-REGIONALIST & OREAD
8
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
Wallyball Tournament 2-on-2
Feb. 23,1992,2:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m.
Entry Fee: $5.00 per team.
Entry Deadline: Feb.19 (sign up in 208 Robinson)
Divisions: Men's, Women's, & Co-Rec
Sponsored by KU Recreational Services
208 Robinson 864-3546
You don't have to look under a rock to find it!
Yes, you can stop searching! Unique Fossil watches are available in a variety of men's and women's styles right here in Lawrence at the Etc. Shop.
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10:30-5:30 M-Sat
til 8 Thurs
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Investing in sleep is good strategy
Cram sessions can cause illness
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Some students may think six to eight hours of sleep a night is an unaffordable luxury during midterms, but health officials say late-night cram sessions can do more harm than good in the long run.
Myra Strother, physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said sleep deprivation was a common problem for college students, especially during exam periods.
She estimated that 40 percent of the students treated at Watkins during finals last semester were sick as a direct result of not getting enough sleep.
When people's immune systems are depleted, they are more susceptible to colds, viruses and other illnesses, she said.
"We usually see them not just because they're exhausted," Strother said. "But often their immune system gets run down."
"It's too bad, because they're stay up to study, but it doesn't do them any good," she said. "It would probably be better for them to take the hours that they were planning to use to cram and sleep instead."
Sleep deprivation also lowers intellectual capacity. Studies indicate that students who do not get adequate sleep have decreased performance on tests, Strother said.
Stress levels are increased dramati-
Strother said a combination of sleep deprivation and artificial stimulants, such as caffine, could decrease students' concentration levels to the point at which students were unable to study.
She said that if students were sleepeprived and under the influence of too much caffeine, they needed to let the effects of the caffeine wear off and then go to bed.
Long-term effects on the body from sleep deprivation include memory loss, difficulty concentrating and nutritional deficits caused by a loss of appetite, Strother said.
Bob Whitman, director of the sleep disorders laboratory at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said occasional loss of sleep would not harm students.
"The general consensus is that students who have a normal sleeping pattern can tolerate extended periods with prolonged reductions in sleep of an hour or an hour and a half without consequences in performance," he said.
Alcohol increases the negative effects of sleep deprivation, Whitman said.
Bob Whitman is director of the med center's sleep disorders laboratory.
"People don't recognize the fact that their performance is decreased because they feel alert," he said. "People who deprive themselves of sleep and drink alcohol may feel that they have no problems with tasks, but the results show differently."
Whitman said it was smarter for students who felt pressed for time to limit consistently their amount of sleep to six hours a night than to pull all-night
studv sessions.
"We see three times as many stress-related problems during finals," she said.
cally when people do not get enough sleep, Strother said. Increased stress can cause ulcers, heartburn and panic attacks
Cramming for sleep often has the same results of cramming for exams, he said.
"If students consistently decrease the amount of sleep they get and then try to use a couple of days over the weekend to catch up, it won't help a wholelot," Whitman said. "Come Monday morning, they are still going to feel tired."
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19. 1992
9
City plans street repairs
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence residents can expect to see more than $250,000 worth of street projects completed in 1992 if the Lawrence City Commission approves a funding resolution at its next meeting.
At last night's meeting, the commission declared Clinton Parkway a major trafficway, which is a designation that would allow the city to use bonds to pay for improvements to the street.
Dave Corliss, city management analyst, said that a trafficway was a primary street that carried a high volume of traffic.
"Clinton Parkway has never been designated as a trafficway," he said. "Yet, it carries a large number of cars, just like Tennessee Street, Ninth Street or Kasold (Drive)."
He said that four major improvements to trafficways and more than a dozen minor projects were planned for
1992. Although bonds would pay for the major improvements, the money for the minor projects would be paid by the city's half-cent gasoline sales tax.
The four proposed trafficway improvements are:
■ Tennessee Street, Ninth Street to 18th Street ($50,329).
Clinton Parkway, Kasold Drive to Crossgate Drive ($80,612).
Kentucky Street, Eighth Street to 11th Street ($60,702)
Nineteenth Street, Naismith Drive to Stewart Avenue ($3,023).
Corriss said the improvements would consist of scraping the top layer of pavement from the street and adding a new coat of asphalt.
He also said that $3,000 would be provided for 100 trees that would be planted along the streets.
"The roads are like structures," Corliss said. "They deteriorate with time and weather."
The commission will decide at next week's meeting whether to approve
the quarter-million dollar funding resolution, he said. Bids will be sent out if the resolution is passed.
In other business, the commission approved a study on the feasibility of public transportation in Lawrence. A $50,000 grant from the Federal Transportation Authority will pay for the study, said Price Banks, director of city planning.
This is not the first public transportation study conducted for the city.
He said the study, expected to begin in March, would be completed by October.
"There was a coordination study that was doneabout five years ago that looked at existing transit services and recommended mechanisms to coordinate things," Banks said. "Before that, there was a study in the mid-1970s that looked at existing needs. What this study will do is look at the unmet needs of public transportation and find feasible recommendations to meet those needs."
Fiscal woes pain state schools
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — State colleges and universities, faced with huge budget cuts from recession-wracked states, are raisingtions, givingpink slipsto professors and eliminating courses.
Nineteen states have cut allocations for colleges and universities this year, a report by the American Association of State Colleges and Universities shows. Of the states that didn't report cuts, nine say they expect cuts in the near future.
The 370,000 students in the 20-school California State University System — the nation's largest — pay 20 percent more than students in other systems in required state fees that go for special services such as registration and record-keeping. This compares with a 40 percent increase by the University of California system.
Students from other countries or states pay a higher tuition rate in addition to the fees.
Last fiscal year, the annual fee for full-time California State students was $52, but the amount increased to $1,108 this year, which ends June 30. Officials propose increasing the fees to $1,480 in fiscal 1992-93.
The City University of New York System, the nation's third largest with 200,000 students, is faced with a ream-
mended $500 tuition increase per student on July 1. In the fall of 1990, the tuition was $1,250 a year but was raised to $1,450 a year in the spring of 1991. This fiscal year, the tuition increased to $1,850 a year, said spokeswoman Rita Rodin.
"If the tuition increase goes through as recommended, our senior college students will be paying 88 percent more for their education in 1982-93 than they did in the fall of 1900," said Rodin, citing all the expenses of running the institution.
Rodin added that 72,000 CUNY students, representing about 40 percent of the total graduate enrollment, attend school part-time. The new budget proposes to cut $2.4 million in funds normally allocated to this group.
Tuition increases in states that sustained mid-year cuts averaged 14.4 percent, said the association report, while the average tuition increase in those states that did not suffer a mid-year budget cut last fiscal year was 6.9 percent.
The association represents more than 375 state colleges and universities and more than 30 systems of higher education nationwide. The institutions rely on state governments for 60 percent of their operating budget and are susceptible to the conditions of their states' economies and finances.
been Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Maryland, New York, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Wisconsin, Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Nevada.
"Tuftion continues to rise because of budget shortfalls, while state and federal student financial assistance fails to keep pace," said Appleberry. "If we're not careful, through policy default, the face of our debt is expanding radically and any of the positive movements toward renewal and reform will be lost."
George Mason University President George Johnson agreed.
"We have all suffered and we are all very much worried about what we are doing to our common future," he said. "We know that we are inflicting a lot of what we call stealth damage. The country as a whole is going to pay for its short-term expediency in terms of its ability to compete on global society."
Johnson said that George Mason experienced cuts amounting to 20 percent of Virginia's general-fund appropriation.
Suffering mid-year cuts so far have
"We have saved our faculty and our classrooms and have protected the integrity of instruction," said Johnson.
However, he said that 150 positions in support services had been cut.
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We at Pizza Shuttle refuse to resort to the unprofessional and negative advertising aimed at us in recent months. We do promise though to give you a great pizza at a great price.
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LIPPINGOT HALL
Kristen Petty/KANSAN
Touring the boulevard
One of KU's ambassador tour guides, Susan Hey (left), Fenton, Mo., sophomore, explains the history of Lippincott Hall to campus visitors Lauri Generaux (center), of Belleville, and her parents, Gene and Barb. Generaux, who is considering the University as one of her college choices, braved the cold, wet weather Monday afternoon to see the campus and find out more about the KU curriculum.
Rich get richer, the poor get poorer when Monopoly game imitates reality
The Associated Press
DuBOiS, Pa. — A sociology instructor found an easy way to teach his students that they can't live a Plaza Place lifestyle on a Baltic Avenue salary.
Thomas Hewitt had 50 students at Pennsylvania State University's DuBois campus play Monopoly — but instead of starting out evenly, a fifth of the class were given the handicap of being poor and another fifth the benefits of being rich.
"We found out what we already suspected — the rich get richer and the poor get poorer," said Douglas Versko, a freshman from Browdway, Pa.
"I was trying to make it somewhat more realistic," said Hewitt, who has used the game in class for three years. "I was thinking there ought to be something to illustrate that we don't start life even."
In the United States, he said, 20 percent of the people control 40 percent of the wealth and 20 percent splits 1 percent. The remainder divide the middle 59 percent.
Hewitt gave one player in each game $5,100, three players $2,500 and one player $150. In a regular Monopoly game, players start with $1,500 each.
Also, instead of rolling dice to determine the first player, the rich people first. All players could buy property immediately and begin building houses without first establishing a monopoly.
It it didn't take long for some to go broke. Lasted just one roll.
"Wedidn't have any safety netts — no public assistance and no welfare," Hewitt said, although participants in one game established a relief program for its poor player, who more than tripped her networth.
"When I saw this, I asked who did this. That was kind of remarkable," Hewitt said. "The player answered, "They took toy on me and gave me money.' They built a welfare system into their game."
The games also reached the point where crime did pay. Sversko, who started out poor, tried to snag a $100 bill from a neighbor when he ran out of money.
"Going to jail works," said Marcie Ott, a friend from Grampian. At least there, players didn't have to pay exorbitant rents, she said.
The rich people won all five classroom games, more than doubling their opening worth of $5,100. The others were in the red.
"If this game had gone on, the only people left would have been the rich people," Hewitt said.
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STUDENTS WITH KU BOOKSTORE RECEIPTS SEEKING THESE MEN
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Claim your bounty from our deputies (present your receipts for a rebate) at the Kansas Union store's jail house this week and shoot for the chance to receive free KU Sweatshirts and other consolation prizes. Every bounty hunter receives a prize and a discount coupon. KU I.D. required. Some restrictions apply.
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SPORTS
Loss to MU will focus 'Huskers, Williams says
By Lyle Niedens Kansan sportswriter
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams was less than thrilled with No. 9 Missouri's 87-61 blowout victory Monday night against Nebraska.
At his weekly news conference yesterday, Williams said Nebraska's loss two days before tonight's Kansas-Nebraska game in Lincoln, Neb., probably would make the Cornhuskers more focused.
"Today at practice, there's no doubt in my mind that Danny (Nebraska coach Danny Nee) will have their undivided attention," Williams said of the Nebraska players. "They're a competitive group of kids, and I'm sure they'll bounce back. I would have liked it a lot better if that game would have ended differently."
Williams said he hoped the Cornhuskers would remember the trouble
they had with Kansas' pressure defense in the two teams' first meeting this season in Allen Field House, which resulted in a 103-78 Kansas victory.
"I'm not counting on having the same kind of success up there that we did here because of our pressure, but that's the way we play," Williams said. "Hopefully in the back of their minds they'll be a little concerned about our pressure."
The Kansas defense has been getting consistently tougher as the conference season has progressed. In two games, the Jayhawks held Iowa State and Colorado to a combined 30 percent shooting from the floor.
"I think that the last four or five games, we've been playing better defensively and much better than we were earlier in the year," Williams said. "We've been consistent with our defensive effort.
"Our post players have stepped up
and done a much better job defensively. That has helped because we are able to even put a little more pressure on the perimeter because we know the other team is not just going to throw it inside and kill us."
One of those post players is center Eric Pauley, who shot 77 percent from the field in the last four games.
The Cornhuskers, 15-6 overall and 3-5 in the Big Eight, have lost three of five since their loss to Kansas Jan. 25. Nebraska has five players averaging in double figures, led by sophomore forward Eric Piatkowski, who is averaging 14.5 points a game but is shooting just 44 percent from the field.
The Jayhawks will be trying to improve on their last performance in Devaney Center, which occurred last March. In Kansas' final Big Eight game of 1991, the Cornhuskers beat the Jayhawks 85-75, costing Kansas an outright Eight championship.
(3) KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
Coach: Roy Williams
Record: 19-2, (7-1)
VS.
NEBRASKA CORNHUSKERS Coach: Danny Nee Record: 15-6, (3-5)
Game time: 7:05 tonight at Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Neb. It will be televised on channels 3 and 14 in Lawrence and broadcast on 105.9 KLZR.
Probable Starters
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
24-F Alonzo Jamison 6-6 Sr. 10.2 4.2
34-F Richard Scott 6-7 So. 10.2 4.4
51-C Eric Pauley 6-10 Jr. 8.5 3.0
23-G Rex Walters 6-4 Jr. 16.5 3.1
30-G Adonis Jordan 5-11 Jr. 13.5 3.8
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
21-F Carl Hayes 6-9 Sr. 11.4 5.2
00-F Dapreis Owens 6-8 Sr. 11.1 6.8
34-C Derrick Chandler 6-10 Jr. 12.4 8.1
12-G Jamar Johnson 5-11 So. 11.0 3.6
52/G/F Eric Piatowski 6-6 So. 14.5 6.9
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
ALEXANDRA MCDONALD
Olympic hopeful
Three-time All-American Barb Pranger takes a warm-up lap in practice. Pranger, who took the gold medals in the 100- and 200-meter butterfly at last week's Big Eight Conference Championships in Lincoln, Neb., was preparing yesterday for the Olympic trials coming in March.
At top of Big Eight, Jayhawks attack goals one day at a time
Kansan sportswriter
By Cody Holt
Kansas coach Marian Washington believes in taking games one at a time. Apparently she also attacks goals one at a time.
When the Jayhawks take on Nebraska at 7 tonight at Allen Field House, Washington and the Jayhawks will be focusing on winning their twentieth game of the season rather than taking another step toward winning the Big Eight Conference.
"Given all of our challenges this year, winning 20 games after having lost three starters would be a tremendous accomplishment," Washington said.
But with only four conference games remaining, three of which
Kansas will play at the field house, a conference championship would also seem to be prevalent in the minds of the first-place Javahawks.
"It's about four games too early for that," Washington said. "The only thing I'm trying to keep our focus on is taking one game at a time.
"If we do that, the goals will take care of themselves."
Nebraska is expected to make things difficult for Kansas tonight. The Huskers are in a tie for second place with Colorado, both with 7-3 conference records.
Nebraska boasts the league's leading scorer, Karen Jennings, Jennings, a 6-2-foot junior center, averages 25.3 points a game but scored only 14 points in the teams' first meeting, a 54-51 Kansas victory in Lincoln, Neb.
Washington said that slowing down Jennings would again be a concern for the Jayhaws.
Washington hopes that the crowd at the field house will also be prepared. When Kansas visited Nebraska on Jan. 25, 4,369 screaming Nebraskans greeted the team. Washington said that Kansas may not have the numbers in the stands, but they will have the message.
"With Nebraska we will have to play great defense," Washington said. "We will have to do an even better job against Karen because this is the second time she has seen us, and I'm sure she'll be prepared."
"The fans we have had all season have been very involved and enthusiastic," Washington said. "We may not have 4,000 people, but the ones we will
Women's basketball probable starters
Game time: 7 tonight in Allen Field House. The game will be broadcast on KJHK 90.7 FM, KMAJ 1440 AM and KHUM 95.7 FM.
Kansas 19-4, (8-2) Position Year Height PPG RNG
23 Tarriyl Johnson F Sr. 5-11 7.3 9.0
32 Danielle Shareef F F 5-10 8.8 6.0
30 Angela Aycock F Fr. 6-2 10.1 4.4
10 Jolo Witherspoon G Jr. 5-7 3.0 1.3
13 Kav Kay Hart G Sr. 5-7 9.8 3.6
BASKETBALL
Nebraska 17-6, (7-3)
42 Sue Hesch F Sr. 6-1 7.3 4.4
22 Rissa Taylor F Jr. 6-1 8.8 4.4
51 Karen Jennings C Jr. 6-2 25.3 9.5
20 Kim Yancey G Str. 5-6 5.2 1.8
24 Megan Yedsena G So. 5-8 11.0 3.4
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
have will really make themselves felt and heard."
The fans this year have something to vell about, too.
Kansas continues to lead the conference race despite being plagged by injuries. The Jayhawks also have a very good shot at gaining an at-large bid for the NCAA Championship Tournament, even if they fail to gain the guaranteed bid that goes to the Big Eight Tournament champion.
However, with such lofty achievements on the horizon, Washington still prefers to take things one game at a time.
"I just need to be able to feel after every game that we put our best effort
Unranked Kansas is optimistic
By Lyle Niedens Kansanessi
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's tennis team left today for a national championship in Louisville. Kv.
The underdog Jayhawks, the only unranked team in the tournament, will face No. 16 North Carolina in the first round at 8 a.m. tomorrow.
The USTA/ITCA National Indoor Championships are the indoor version of the NCAA outdoor championships, said Kansas coach Scott Perelman.
If the unseeded Jayhawks win, they will face the No. 2 seed and second-ranked Southern California in the second round at 4 p.m. If they lose, they will continue to play in the consolation round Friday.
Perelman said the Jayhawks, 7-3 for the season and coming off a 7-0 victory against Southern Methodist on Saturday, did not mind having the underdog role.
"From the standpoint of national perception, we have nothing to lose," he said. "If we win any matches, that will be iceing on the cake for us."
The Jayhawks, who have never won a first-round match at the National Indoors, qualified for the tournament last fall by winning the Region V qualifier for the National Indoors. That tournament consisted of the Jayhawks, Drake, Colorado and Nebraska.
Perelman said that a strong showing by the Jayhawks would help them if they did not qualify for one of the eight automatic spots in the NCAA championships in May.
If Kansas does not qualify automatically, they would have to hope for one 12 at-large berths. Victories at the National Indoors would weigh heavily in the Jayhawks' favor in the eyes of the selection committee. Perelman said.
Tomorrow, Kansas will go with the line-up of Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin, Carlos Fleming, Patrick Han, Rhain Buth and either Ian Goodman or Manny Ortiz at No.1 through No.6 singles respectively.
Kansas' doubles teams will be Garvin-Fleming at No. 1, Han-Buth at No.2 and Rangel-Roriz at No.3.
However, those doubles teams may not get a chance to play. Instead of the traditional match format of six singles and three doubles matches, with the winning team the first to score five points, the USTA has decided to go with an alternate format.
In the new format, doubles matches will only be played if the score after six singles matches between two teams is tied 3-3.
If the match is tied 3-all, doubles matches will consist of one set with the first team to win eight games declared the winner, rather than playing the best two out of three six-game sets.
As a result of the different format, which is being used to shorten matches, more emphasis will be placed on singles. That will help the Jayhawks, who have been inconsistent in doubles this year, Perelman said.
"It it's obviously to our benefit," he said of the format. "But I also think that with the caliber of competition, it will be to a lot of teams' benefit."
North Carolina may be one of those teams. The Tar Heels boast three ranked singles players, led by No. 9 Roland Tronqvist.
"They are a very similar team to us, in that their singles play has been more impressive than their doubles play." Perelman said. "I think it's a match that if we play well, we can win."
U.S. hockey team skates closer to gold medal game
The Associated Press
MERIBEL, France — Whether the U.S. hockey team is bullying its way through the Olympic tournament or just doing what it takes to win, it keeps driving closer to its goal
Sufflues and skirmishes marked another game but did not prevent the United States from beatning France 4-1 last night and moving within one victory of the gold medal
of golden glory.
HEAVENWILLOW
is, we win and people can say what ever they want," U.S. captain Clark Donatelli said. "U don't think we're a dirty team. We're a hard-working team."
"The bottom line
ALBERTVILLE 92
Some French players did not agree entirely.
"They didn't play dirty during the game except for five minutes at the end." Philippe Bozon said. "They
have to play physically to be successful."
The United States (5-0-1) advanced to Friday's semifinal against the winner of today's Finland-Unified Team game. The United States, assured of no worse than fourth place, are in the Olympic medal round for the first time since winning the 1980 gold medal.
With 1:42 to go in the game, the United States' Guy Gosselin and France's Antoine Richer got into a brief fight, but only minor penalties were assessed. Sticks and fists were swung at the benches cleared after the final horn, but order was restored after a few minutes and the teams participated in the traditional postgame handshake.
"I think the players were looking at each other (during the handshakes), wondering if fights were going to start again," Bozon said.
Teammate Dennis Perez said,
"Why did they do that at the end of the
game?"
The Americans just do what they'vegot to do, He迪ciaid.said.
Olympic medals count
Country G S B T
Germany 9 8 6 23
Unified Team* 7 4 6 17
Austria 4 6 7 17
Norway 7 5 4 16
Italy 3 4 3 10
France 3 5 1 9
Finland 3 1 3 7
U.S. 3 2 1 6
Japan 1 1 3 5
The Netherlands 0 1 2 3
Canada 1 0 1 2
Switzerland 1 0 1 2
China 0 2 0 2
Luxembourg 0 2 0 2
Czechoslovakia 0 0 2 2
Sweden 0 0 2 2
South Korea 0 1 0 1
* Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Olympic Games
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Skating start today
America's contingent is its strongest ever, featuring world champion Kristi Yamaguchi, who won her first national title last month; Nancy Kerrigan, the U.S. run-up and world bronze medalist; and Tonya Harding, 1991 U.S. champion and a silver medalist at last year's world championship competition.
ALBERTVILLE, France—The Winter Olympics are 11 days old, and what many consider the premier event is just beginning. Women's figure skating, an event in the United States has not won in 16 years, starts today with the original program.
OLYMPIC UPDATE
So who's the favorite? None of them
Japan's Midori Ito, the 1989 world champion who has been plagued by injuries and inconsistency ever since, is healthy and, apparently, bursting with confidence. If Ito hits all of her elements, including triple axels in the original program and free skate in the compulsory program, all three Americans will be a
"Ibelieve I will have thegoldmedal if everything works out in my free program," said Ito.
To judge from her practice sessions, it certainly is prepared.
"Midiari is a great skater and she does so many great jumps," Yamaguchi said. "I believe she will be ready for the Olympics."
disadvantage
U.S. skaterslips
ALBERTVILLE, France — For about 900 meters, Dan Jansen looked golden. Then his legs turned to lea
The gold went to Olaf Zinke of Germany, who won with a time of 1:14.85. Yoon-Man Kim of Korea, just one
After skating two blistering splits in the men's 1,000-meter speed skating Tuesday, Jansen slipped from contention and finished 26th.
Jansen had a time of 16:96 for the first 200 meters, the fastest of the day and 28-hundreds of a second faster than Zinke's split. At the 600-meter mark, his time of 44.63 was also the best of the day. His lap time was only 27.67.
Italian takes slalom
nundredth of a second behind at
1:14.86, took the sliver, and Yukinori
Miyabe of Japan won bronze with
1:14.92.
MERIBEL, France — If Deborah Campagnoni ever needed all of her toughness and technical precision, it was then.
French favorite Carole Merle, who has the women's record, posted the time to beat in the Olympic women's super giant slalom Tuesday. French fans roared with delight as 12 skiers tried and failed to top it. Then came Campagnoni, a 21-year-old Italian.
Germany's Katja Seizinger was third with a time of 1:23.19.
She finished in 1:21.22, beating Merle by 1.41 seconds.
"I am not disappointed," Merle said. "A silver medal is fantastic. Of course, I would have to thank her for disappointment." Germany's Kata Seizinger was
the medal sweep by Alpine nations gave them revenge for Saturday's downhill, a gold and silver finish for both Canada and the United States.
From the Associated Press
12
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
SPORTS
Mason: College athletics isn't sleazy
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Glen Mason figures college sports would not be nearly so misunderstood if more people had sons and daughters who were being recruited by major programs.
Speaking at Monday's NCAA college football forum, the Kansas coach said he had had parents of recruits remark to him at the end of the recruiting season that the whole process was not nearly as seedy as they had expected.
"They all have this idea of the sleazy guy smoking a cigar and hiding in a dark hallway giving guys money to
come to their school," Mason said. "But when they go through the process they say, 'Hey, these coaches are pretty good guys. We don't have any problems sending our son there.'"
Arkansas President Daniel Ferritor said there obviously were some current problems.
"But I don't think intercollegiate athletics is as bad off as everybody else does," Ferritor said. "We have some fine programs nationally. I think there is a need to legitimize college athletics because there are a lot of questions being asked."
Ferritor and several other panelists agreed that public perception was far
removed from reality in athletics.
"I don't think college athletics is rife with the kinds of problems that maybe some people on the street do," Ferritor said. "At least not the institutions I deal with. The public is convinced student-athetes never graduate, that student-atheltes experience a curriculum that's different from regular students. But I look at ours, and about 30 percent of our athletes are majoring in business, and about 30 percent in arts and science."
Mason said, "The problem is that perception is more important than the facts. Do we have problems? Yeah, but it seems like all the attention is
focused on the problems. We isolate on them. There are far more positive things happening in college athletics. It's not even close. But the perception is the other way."
The only dissenter from the prevalent point of view seemed to be Alabama coach Gene Stallings.
"I don't know many people that really don't have a pretty good image of college athletics," Stallings said.
"I don't know of anybody who has a bad feeling toward college athletics. They may be out there, I just don't come into contact with them."
SAA
PENTHESSIAN ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
KU Student Alumni Association
Meeting: 6:30 tonight. Alumni Center Bring $5 for dues. Wear your SAA shirt. Yearbook pictures will be taken
---
Open Sunday afternoons for your convenience! 1 to 5 p.m.
NewLocation!
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School: University of Kansas
Date: Wednesday February 19, 1992
Place: Burge Union Daisy Hall Room
Time: 7:00 p.m.
1 Call 1-800-428-1204 to register. You do not need to register to attend, but it would be appreciated.
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Classified Ads
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1:00-2:30 Walnut Room, 5th Floor, Kansas Union *REFRESHMENTS*
Dear Darryl, I hope you don't mind, but Louise and I don't. Your dinner. Your dinner in the fridges. Love Daryl.
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*New Analysis of Western Civilization makes ‘new sense of Western Civilization’ makes sense to use!’ Avail some of the resources available in this book.
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120 Announcements
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by headquarters
We're here because we care
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Womyn: "Let's dance" on February 21st, 8142 to 1P. MCCHEEK: Fairy Courts for $3
CHIFFREEN: 8647-7079
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support
units are available for education or KU
info. for confidential location.
INTERNATIONAL CAREERS CONFERENCE
Saturday, February 29, 1992
Form
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For more information contact:
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and Programs
108 Lippincott
864-4141
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Dear God, Dear stars, dear trees, dear sky, dear peoples. Dear Everything, Dear God. Come see The Color Purple at the Kansas Union onight at 7:00 p.m. or Saturday at 10:00 p.m.
Dear Student, don't let me down. Be at the Kansas University on Thursday, Feb. 26 from 9:30 a.m. for the Principle Counselor. Student Community Counselor attends the University at the High school counselor.
DOUGLAS COUNTY RAPE VICIM SUPPORT
SERVICE
Countermal assistance 48 hours per day
Countermal assistance at 14:30 or RU Headquarters
Countermal assistance at 14:30 or RU Headquarters
Feel confused, anxious, blue? Counseling can be difficult. Students rate:
Marybel Sheehan M, 884-7237
Marybel Sheehan M, 884-7237
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2348. Headquarters
How would you like to earn $1000 cash and win an VCR for one week's work? **WANTED:** Student organization, fraternity, sorority, call Marla i 800-9212-1211 or iAmy at 1213.
Gray & Leishman Peer Counseling. A friendly, under-
recoveries by counselor. Headquarters 811-249-2000
by counselor. Headquarters 811-249-2000
Students will wish to teach the fall semester GPCPs included in module 10. Please meet on Wednesday, February 19, at 4 o'p.m. m 103 Bailey Hall. This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary information is available at 117Bailey Hall.
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone you is- call 1419 MAP. Headquarters Counseling Center
Fraternities, Sororities, Clubs. Groups. Teams
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Hillel
Events of the Week
Friday, Feb. 21
Wednesday, Feb. 19
Israel/AIPAC meeting
7:00 pm Hillel House
Friday, Feb. 21
Shabbat Dinner
6:00 pm Hillel House
Reservations Mandatory
by Thurs. Feb. 20
For rides and more information call 864-3948
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130 Entertainment
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
With Cannish Corse and Gorguts Friday. February 21 at the OUTHUSE (4 miles East of Mass. on 15th St.) All ages - 5 p.m. Showtime - Get there early!
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under
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140 Lost-Found
MISSING: Kelly green canvas tote. Last spotted in Watson Library reference department on Saturday in May. Must be a licensed research project, 40 homework papers and tax documents. 612-849-3121. Heard available and no questions asked
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Assistant needed at chiropractic clinic and fitness center. Wareying hours: 8 a.m., 10 a.m., 10 p.m, call (342) 657-9900.
Attention College students. The Kansas Nat'l Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. The guard is required to see 8-12 hours. To see if you qualify, call De Witt 942-9290.
OVERSEAS JOBS $800-$200 mo summer. Yr-round. All Countries, all fields. Free. Info www.overseasjobs.com
Sales position - 34-50 hours per week. Must be available w/ Ways and Sundays. Apply at the Athelete Center.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
13
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys, grls/muslim camps. Teach, swim, canoeing, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, diving, swimming, yoga, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $10,000 more per week. Req. 1768, Mayape. 714, ILG 609-3464-7042
Catering Department, Kansas and Burge Union hiring caterers to work Thursday, February 20. 9a.m.-4p.m. Friday, February 21. 8a.m.-3p.m. Saturday, February 21. 9a.m.-4p.m. Friday, February 21. 8a.m.-3p.m. Satur
Coordinator for Student Senate Transportation Board needed. Responsible for administering day-to-day operations, preparing Board's budget and staff schedule, coordinating speaker/spokesperson and liaison to the general Public. Student monthly position. 20 hours wk. $400/month. Send resume to the Student Senate office. able for Summer 1992. Pick up application information from the Student Senate office. 40 Kansas University deadline: Wednesday, February 5, 8: p.m.
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EARN it to $0 a week and more part-time selling
*Be jayhawk Safe* condom Great opportunity
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SUMMER'92
Looking for a job that offers money ( $5,300+ ), travel, experience advancement, and challenge? Call now: 842-0924
Job opening to oversee rehab work. Hours needed
a.m. 8 a.m and m. 10 p.m - 10月. Office duties and
working with patients Tuesdays and Thursdays
a.m. 12 p.m and 12-10 p.m. Call between
a.m. 12 and 12 p.m. 794-9303
Naiarith Hall is looking for a responsible, mature
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Contact Juleia at 424-4880
need daycare Monday and Wednesday morning
7:30:10 0:01 for 3 month call 842-5598 after 5:00
Earn $5,000-$10,000 this summer painting houses in your home town. Final hiring for these positions are being held now! 1) Strictly Management 2) Artist or Designer (or both) All-Pro Student Painters Inc. 1-800-2-9444
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NEEDED: A degree or work experience in agriculture.
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**In agriculture:**
skilled trades, health-
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RECRUTTERS on your
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Summer internships - Average earnings $4,000.00
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college students for their summer sales program.
Top earnings $5,000.00 - $8,000.00 Gain valuable
experience in advertising and sales and publi-
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225 Professional Services
We're Looking For A FP New Men and Women! If you think we ve got what it takes, we drive have them. Applications will be available at Nassim Hall. Applications will be available at the front desk beginning EOE A/M/F/H.
Driver Education offered mid Wideast Driving School, serving K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
Driver Education offered mid Midwest Driving School, serving K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
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300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
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For Sale 1 student season basketball ticket Call
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1980, amd 85-168 before Noon, after p.m.
1986. Ford Ranger 4-wheel, automatic, Roll bar, chassis air conditioning. Many extras. 842-700-3700
1985 Toyota Corolla LILA cpw /automatic $2400, 842
0400 aflr m. or m. leave message
1987 Mercury Lynx Automatic A/C Cassette 4.
1985 Mercury Lynx Fixed condition.
78 Dodge Cult, Knows Well, Body Rough. $400. 749.
1324
360 Miscellaneous
Toy. Corailia GTS2 twin Cam- 85d.red.2d.5 pdp.,agp.
power sun roof, kit - custer.£3700 - 595.4715
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits. OMNITRITION
On TV's, VC&R's, jewelry showers, musical instrument
shows, MV/MM, AM/BMEX, Jayhawk Jewelry & Jewelry,
AM/FM.
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry,
rare coins, call Call David 841-2065.
A
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: 2 tickets to KU-MU Basketball game. $$
Call John, msg: 1-868-7260
HSUBSale2. DW, Balcony, Water Paid, Water
Avail; March 1-July 1, Nonpollent, Rent $90. +$82.
Avail; January 1-March 1, Nonpollent, Rent $60. +$52.
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Accessed from KU. On bus route. Fully furnished. Balcony. On-site management. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trash paid.账单 bill! 1741 W. 19th Calhoun St.
2. need student tickets for OSU-KU game - will pay $1 each. Call Andy 841-4470, leave message
405 For Rent
Wanted: Non-student basketball ticket for Kansas
vs. Missouri. March 8. Call Ken 841-4800.
Heatherwood Apartments, 1 and 3 bedrooms
at a low rate until the end of May.
On arrival 84-7547
1. 2.38Raptps, nearcamp, nopebs, availableJune 1st,Aug 14t 892.897
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus With dryer/wraver, microwave, ceiling fan, min-binches. Call 1st Management, Inc. Mgm., Fr-21, m-5 p.m. 749-1568
Real Estate
400s
DESPERATELY NEEDED: Person to sublease
table 841. Gas, cable paid. Rent NEGO-
PARTABLE 841.
Hillview Apts 85e lease signing bonus! & 2 bed
base on site. Hillsview 85e, pl. 3 beds plus
department. On-site suite. 85e, pl. 4 beds.
Plus 2 baths.
HOUSE: Nice 2 bedroom with attached garage.
HOTEL: 3 bedroom ceiling (fans, CA,
washer/dryer, fenced yard, No pets, references,
deposit $500 month 794-261.
Get a group! Restored 8bed 8bath fireplace, wood floors, W/D, w/north rear river, F1-NR (STAB2)
EQUAL HOUSING OPORTUNITY
合
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, gender, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K.U.
841-6254
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT?
CALL US FIRST
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Free Feb. Bnt. two bdt. ap $959 Ends July
31st on bus route C 749-8375.
14 MANY RULES
New location. In one room, 3 and 2 bedroom apartments. Wear dryers, microwaves, ceiling fans, mini-blinds. Call now for an appointment.
Mon, Fri, 2 p.m - 5 p.m. 749-1565
Looking for a place? *Coozy 2 bedroom apt. in the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July.* $95/month + utilities. Negotiable. Call 864-2669
Louisiana Place Apt. 1. Now leasing nice 28P Apt
Bare Beautiful 19% view of the city. Call
Corby 822 181/743.
New 28 LHR, close to campus. Available Now; All Appliances, $40/MO. Low utilities. Call t92 842-6563.
Naiush Hali is looking for a responsible, mature room and board. Contact Todd at contact.todd@yahoo.com
Now leasing for June & August. Nice 2 bedroom Apartments for $110 per month. Wide floor space, Pool, Excel maintenance and management. Quality at the best price in town. 844-6668. Spanish Crest Apartment
SHORT TERMLEASENSOW AVAILABLEonbti on
2 brpt, apl 21/2 brbtah townhouse.
Studio, Old West Lawrence, wood floors, Many Windows, Claw foot clu, sunroom, C/A Call 843
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688
843-7333
Naismith Place
- Aracasia i matkap *
* 18kk i kuius ruosu *
* 20kk i kuius ruosu *
* PC tablet PV/Pots *
* PC tablet PV/Pots *
* On-site management *
Order Number 11534
* 2kkh i E of oiva *
* 2kkh i E of oiva *
* XKs xBand s/ to 250k Ni Ct *
* XKs xBand s/ to 250k Ni Ct *
* Call for Appointment *
* Call for Appointment *
Sublease now one bedroom apt. 934 Mississippi.
Nice,窖近, close to campus. $225,004-4790.
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call 845-1232.
Boardwalk
1& 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Summer &
Fall Move-ins
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath homes.
**Sublease till May one bedroom apt. furnished, a*北C/ a*C free water and *c* water. No deposit, new kit & on bus rt., laundry, $265 monthly 913-843-6858
**Sublease avail - now - spacious, luxuries two bedroom apt. basic cable, dishwasher, pool, on bus, low utilities, weight room, good mgm 841-
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
Park25
4 stops on property 2 Laundry Rooms
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Volleyball Court
福寿堂
- On KU bus route--
4 steps on prope
- 2 Pools
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
842-1455
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
--checks payable to:
University Daily Kansas
191 Staffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 6045
SUNRISE VILLAGE
No Appt. Necessary
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc
841-5444
- Luxurious 2.3,& &
Bedroom TownHomes
• Garages; 2½ Baths
• Microwave Ovens
• Some with Fireplaces
• On KU Bus Route
• Swimming Pool and
Tennis Courts
841-8400
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
- Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
•New kitchens
•Carpet colors:
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
•2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
•Large bedrooms & closets
•Pool & volleyball
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
meadowbrook
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apts. to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
It's Time to Step Up To MEADOWBROOK
Save $$$ with each new deposit
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths,
close formless, furried. Furniture 749-6878.
Colony Woods Apartments
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
- Walk to K.U.
- *On Bus Route*
*Heated Pool*
*3 Hot Tubs*
- Exercise Room
Summer sublase 1 yr. old 2 BR spaces apt.
New dishwasher; Dishwoks; W/Dishkups; 2bilacies.
North Winds Apt. $350/month Call Mike or Monica 865-233, leave message.
Summer sublease, two bedroom apartment,
grand level, c. 4th, bldn. Ohio 819; after $90
per room.
Laundry Facilities
• Dishwasher
• Washing
- Microwaves
- Front door bus service
- Hey Juniors, Seniors, and GradStudents!! --- You can get rid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
- Dine Anytime meals
- Weeklymaid service
- Basketball Court
- Macintosh Computer Room
- Weekly maid service
- Basketball Court
Plus...
*Basketball Court
- Flexible Leasing
Location-Lifestyle
The Best Value
In Town
842-5111
open 7 days a week
Naismith Hall
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
430 Roommate Wanted
Non-smoking roommate needed ASAP for beautiful, spacious 3BTR townhouse. Gear, fireplace, washer/dryer hookup, near bus route $210/mo + 1/utilities. 843-0662
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR towhouse at Apple-
Dell, D.W, D/EW, all furnitures
HP #1496 84-6707
Female roommate wanted; nice, spacious central a/c & heat, DW, fireplace $210p. m 832-1978-916
M/F Roommate needed ASAP 3 bedroom townhouse, low utilities, low wages, required 865-5411
FEMALE roommate wanted to share 2BR, 2 bath. Microwave, pool; on bus route, water pit.
Roommate wanted to share two RP air 1 Bk.
Roommate wants $120 a month + 12 utilities.
FEBRUARY RENT FREE. Roommates wanted to share duplex in JPQ by LCCoom. 35 min from JFK. Fees apply. Call FREE LINERY. Will consider any special situation Call Mike at-143-6257 for details
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate needed immediately through July 1183
roommate required immediate through July 1183
neighborhood 624-969 Leave message
Roommate needed immediately! Low Rent 749-
3084
One female student for a furnished 53 Brown Street house on location in 178 St., parking parked near the building.
Centered Line
Classified rates are based on consent from the advertisers.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertise
Roommate wanted Furnished apartment near campus and downtown 1 / utility 1.04 / mo83.88-104.79
**Policy**
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $900 (no) 841-1281
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centers lines count as 7 words.
Prepaid Order Form Ads
Classified Information Mail-in Form
CLASSIFIED RATES
Not refund on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising
Purchase charge $41.00 per service charge
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classless device folders.
Found ads are for three days, no more than 15 words.
**Prepare Order Form:** Fill out the order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany ad, classified ads led to the U.S. government.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days
0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
105 personal 140 lion & found 305 for sale
110 business personales 265 help waved 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
120 entertainment 235 living services
Classifications
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___
Total days in paper___
Amount paid___
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Santa is driving two cars down a snowy road. He is carrying a large Christmas tree on his back. The trees are tall and have blue branches. There is a moon visible in the sky.
Sheep that pass in the night
14
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 19, 1992
Photographers Needed! Call Leanne at 864-4358
PIZZA SHUTTLE
HOT ON THE SPOT!
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Everyday
Two-Pers
1–Pizzas
2–Cupcakes
3–Danes
$9.00
Prime Time
Special
3–Pizzas
1–Topping
4–Danes
$11.50
Party
"10"
10–Pizzas
11–Topping
$30.00
842-1212
Photographers Needed! Call Leanne at 864-4358
PIZZA SHUTTLE
HOT ON THE SPOT!
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Everyday Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cakes
$9.00
Prime Time Special
3-Pizzas
1-Topping
4-Cakes
$11.50
Party "10"
10 Pizzas
10 Toppings
$30.00
842-1212
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
Uphold A KU Tradition--
Visit the Wagon Wheel Cafe
Lunch at the Wheel?
But of course.
$2 DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS $2
Monday- Hamburger and Fries
Tuesday- 3 Tacos
Wednesday- Taco Salad or Russian Salad
Thursday- Grilled Cheese and Fries
Friday- Cheeseburger and Fries
DINNER SPECIALS
Wednesday through Saturday
5:00-8:00· Cheeseburger and Fries
Everyday Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cakes
$9.00
Prime Time Special
3-Pizzas
1-Topping
4-Cakes
$11.50
Party "10"
10-Pizzes
1-Topping
$30.00
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
Uphold A KU Tradition--
Visit the Wagon Wheel Cafe
Lunch at the Wheel?
But of course.
$2 DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS $2
Monday- Hamburger and Fries
Tuesday- 3 Tacos
Wednesday- Taco Salad or Russian Salad
Thursday- Grilled Cheese and Fries
Friday- Cheeseburger and Fries
DINNER SPECIALS
Wednesday through Saturday
5:00-8:00- Cheeseburger and Fries
Visit the way
Lunch at the Wheel?
But of course.
AIDS fear doesn't hamper teen sex
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—Magic Johnson has made sexually active high school seniors more worried about AIDS, but not enough to change their sex habits, according to a survey released by an educational publishing organization yesterday.
Educational Communications Inc. said it sent questionnaires to a sample of 3,000 "A" and "B" students among nearly 226,000 seniors listed in Who's Who Among American High School Students. The survey was conducted three weeks after Johnson, a former basketball star with the Los Angeles Lakers, announced that he had the HIV virus.
Of the 1,150 students who responded, 21 percent said they were worried or very worried about contracting the virus. In a similar survey before Johnson's announcement, the figure was 12 percent.
About 28 percent of the youngsters reported that they had engaged in sexual intercourse. And both before and after Johnson's announcement, 45 percent of the students in that group said they always used a condom.
"These alarming findings confirm our worst fears - high school students see themselves as invincible," said Paul Krouse, publisher of the student directory. "Unfortunately, it seems the message of the danger of AIDS will spread only with the number of young people who succumb to it."
However, in the latest survey, 42 percent of the sexually active students said they would continue to have sexual intercourse even if a condom was not available.
Eighty-two percent attended public schools.
The organization said 70 percent of the students responding were females.
The survey said one fourth of the respondents had not talked about AIDS with teachers after Johnson's announcement, and nearly 30 percent did not discuss AIDS at home.
Of the majority who said they have not had sex, more than half said they abstained because they were afraid of contracting the HIV virus. Other reasons, also given by more than half, were fear of getting pregnant, contracting other sexually transmitted diseases or facing disapproval of their parents.
Two thirds said they were not ready for sexual intercourse or they wanted to wait until marriage.
Teens talk about AIDS
Survey highlights of teens listed in the Who's Who Among American High School Students:
1,150 were surveyed; 70%
Those reporting they have had sexual intercourse
Said they will have sex even if a condom is not available
Before Magic Johnson said he was infected, believed their risk of getting AIDS was:
Impossible 19% 68%
Slight
Worried 11%
Very worried 1%
After Magic Johnson said he was infected, believed their risk of getting AIDS was:
Impossible 11%
Slight 68%
Worried 18%
Very worried 4%
SOURCE: Educational Communications
Demand for child prostitutes rises
The Associated Press
GENEVA — The fear of AIDS is driving some customers to demand much younger prostitutes, contributing to the global growth in the sale of children, the author of a U.N. report said yesterday.
Vitt Muntarbhorn, a law professor in Thailand, said in a telephone interview from Bangkok, that children of 9 or 10 frequently were taken across borders and then tricked or forced into prostitution.
"A multitude of children worldwide fall into this web of bondage, and the numbers are increasing daily," Muntarbourn said in his report for the U.N. Commission on Human Rights.
Customers often are indifferent to the children's plight, he said. "If they do care, it is usually for their own health."
In some areas customers are opting for "more and more for younger pros
titutes, particularly virgins, in the belief that they will protect themselves from the threat of AIDS," he said.
Many child prostitutes in India, Thailand and the Philippines have tested positive for the AIDS virus, he said. The World Health Organization has reported similar findings.
The sale of children is extensive but is difficult to measure because the abuses are "shielded by the cloak of a pervasive underworld," Muntarbhorn said.
He said the numbers of young prostitutes, up to the age of 17, were highest in Asia and Latin America, where millions of street children were lured into prostitution.
He said there also were reports of an increase in child prostitution in Africa, North America and Europe.
- Criminal elements wait in the wings to lure or trick many children
A frequent motive for selling children is to raise enough money to support the other children in a family, he said.
into prostitution," Muntarborn said, But he added that in some parts of the world it was parents who willingly or unwillingly sold their children into prostitution.
Boys increasingly are being used for prostitution, but girls are exploited first, partly because families in many societies favor boys, Muntarbhorn said.
France Bruce, program director of the Geneva-based International Catholic Child Bureau, said she found a close link between poverty and prostitution. In Chile, field workers reported few problems with child prostitution before 1980, but that it developed rapidly after Chile began encountering economic problems in the early 1980s, she said.
It can't do laundry or find you a date, but it can help you find more time for both.
The new Apple* Macintosh* Classic* II computer makes it easier for you to juggle classes, activities, projects, and term papers and still find time for what makes college life real life.
It's a complete and affordable Macintosh Classic system that's ready to help you get your work finished fast. It's a snap to set up and use. It has a powerful 68030 microprocessor, which means you can run even the most sophisticated applications with ease. And its internal Apple SuperDrive disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks—allowing you to
exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer.
Lingua de Calculación 14.553 tauta
And indeed there will be time to wonder:
Do lance?
and Do lance?
1.0 f min.
To wonder:
Do lance?
and Do lance?
1.0 f min.
Macintosh Classic II
In addition to its built-in capabilities, the Macintosh Classic II can be equipped with up to 10 megabytes of RAM, so you'll be able to run several applications at once and work with large amounts of data.
To put more time on your side, consider putting a Macintosh Classic II on your desk. See us for a demonstration today,and while you're in, be sure to ask us for details about the Apple Computer Loan. It'll be time well spent.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
- - - - -
Introducing the Macintosh Classic II
KU Bookstore Burge Union·Level2 864-5697
Macintosh.
The power to be your best at KU.
Apple
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.101.NO.99
1HURSDAY.FEBRUARY20,1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Lack of state support could drive another professor from KU
By Greg Farmer Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Another professor in the division of biological sciences is contemplating leaving the University of Kansas and will take federal grant funds with him if he goes, Chancellor Gene Budie said yesterday.
Budig and Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, explained KU's budget request to subcommittee House Appropriations Committee.
Budig was illustrating the need to increase faculty salaries when he said the professor could leave the University. Budig would not identify the professor.
"Two prominent faculty recently have announced their acceptance of employment at other institutions," he said. "Another, who has won significant federal grants, is on the verge of leaving. If he goes, the funds from those grants will go with him."
Michael Gaines, professor of biology, and Donald Robertson, professor of microbiology, announced last month that they would leave KU for positions at other universities in the fall. The professors cited a lack of state support as one of their reasons for leaving.
The University is concerned that the exodus of its best mid-career faculty will continue, Budig said.
He said one of the goals of the three-year Margin of Excellence, which was financed by the Legislature for only two of the three years, was to bring faculty salaries at KU to 100 percent of its peer institutions' faculty salaries.
"The year before the Margin began, KU salaries were at 88.6 percent of those of our peers," Budig said. "Our ratio improved to 92.1 percent in 1989-90. Unfortunately, we have slipped back to 88.8 percent, nearly where we stood before the Margin."
Shankel, who was a professor of microbiology and biochemistry before becoming the interim executive vice chancellor, said after the meeting that KU's best faculty members were being sought by other universities.
"I wish we could keep all of our best faculty members," he said. "I wish the Legislature would appropriate the money we need to pay our faculty competitive salaries. We will do all we can, but it is difficult when other institutions can offer them better compensation."
Shankel said he hoped the third professor would decide to stay at KU.
"We are still negotiating with him," he said.
"
"We've reached the point where the people in Topeka better start listening."
michael Gaines Professor of biology
However, the professor has expressed concern that the state was not giving sufficient support to higher education. Shankel said.
"He is concerned in the same way the other two professors were concerned," he said. "These are tough people to replace. These three people we are talking about are three of the University's very best."
Shankel said the University would have to replace Gaines and Robertson with younger, less experienced instructors and researchers.
"We can replace them and we will," he said. "But we won't be able to replace them with people of their quality and experience."
Gaines said yesterday he knew who the professor was but that he would not release his name. He said the professor's name was from federal grants with him if he left KU.
"This isn't a done deal, yet," Gaines said. "This professor may leave, and the University will suffer if he does. We've reached the point where the people in Topeka better start listening."
"People like me would have stayed at KU if the future looked better."
Gaines said he expected other faculty to leave the University if state support didn't improve.
"This is going to become very common," he said. "The state better take notice and do something, or higher education in Kansas is in serious jeopardy."
State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, said she and other state lawmakers hated to see good faculty leave.
"But we are doing a balancing act," she said. "There isn't any state government who doesn't believe professors are worth more. We especially need them if the reason they leave is they don't think we appreciate what they do."
More legislative action, Page 3
DUE PROCESS FOR ATLANTICS
JUST DUE IT!
DUE process
IT!
REFORM THE NCAA
DUE PROCESS FOR ATLANTICS
JUST DUE IT!
DUE process
IT!
REFORM THE NCAA
Carole Miller, left and Kyla Miller, both of Champaign, III., listen to testimony given by former Kansas basketball player Mike Maddox.
NCAA authority at risk
State Senate bill may affect nation
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - Discussion began yesterday about whether Kansas has the authority to change NCAA policy, and the outcome may decide a national issue about penalties the association can dish out.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee began two days of hearings about a bill that would regulate penalties handed down by the NCAA and require the organization to give due process to players and teams who are being penalized.
It also would ban penalties for a coach or player
Several other states have considered laws that would mandate due process for NCAA dealings. But Kansas is in a unique position to affect policy nationwide because the NCAA national headquarters are in Overland Park.
He testified about an amended version of a bill passed unanimously last session by the Senate.
"All we are interested in is making certain this organization complies with the U.S. Constitution,"
The amended bill would prohibit sanctions against a member college or university unless the NCAA could prove that a responsible administrator knowingly broke the rules.
who had not violated the rules.
NCAA
The original bill passed last year by the Senate mandates that due process be considered in all instances of the NGI.
schools, not just when punishment is involved. Both versions are being considered by the House
Winter said the NCAA's use of institutional penalties punished an entire school for the crimes
"They turn enforcement on its head when they ignore the individuals who are really guilty," he said.
Winter said the bill presented a difficult legal question about whether the state had authority over the national organization. But he said he thought that because the NCAA's headquarters is situated in Overland Park, it was subject to state law
"The state in which an institution is located can govern in reasonable fashion the way that organization deals with others." he said.
Kansas is among a growing number of states that are considering due process legislation controlling the NCAA's procedures within their states.
Nevada, Illinois and Nebraska have enacted
such laws, and Florida passed a similar law that will go into effect July 1.
California and South Carolina are considering the due process legislation.
Burton Brody, a law professor at the University of Colorado and a former faculty representative to the NCAA, told the committee that the Kansas legislation was critical because it could control the organization's dealings with any member institution, not just with Kansas institutions.
"Your authority comes from the fact that they do business in the state," he said. "You can set standards for doing business. You can control them anywhere in the country."
Others testifying in favor of the bill were former KU track coach Bob Timmons and former KU basketball player Maddox.
"I am not here to lambaste the NCAA," Maddox said. "I think they do a lot of great things for many people. ... I am not here to complain because the University of Kansas got placed on probation. It is to protect the student at athletes in the future."
Maddox was a member of the 1988-89 team that the NCAA banned from defending its national championship because of recruiting violations. He was also dismissed from left-brown left the University after the 1987-88 season.
"Eleven players and four coaches were punished for violations they did not commit," Maddox said. "There must be some way to penalize the guilty."
Campus police's annual report shows drop in KU's crime rate
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
The crime rate at the University of Kansas decreased by 18.2 percent from 1990 to 1991, according to KU police's annual report released yesterday.
Lt. John Mullens, KU police representative, said the could be attributed to several factors, including increased student efforts at guarding themselves and their property.
Not all crimes decreased. Six rapes were reported on campus last year, while there were no rapes reported in 1990, according to the report.
"All in all, I think there are people making a better effort to lock their doors," Mullens said. "It's really an individual effort."
Mullens said that although the department wanted the number of rapes to decrease, the fact that women were coming forward to report the crimes was a positive action.
Connie Burk, facilitator for Students Against Violence Against Womyn, said that women were raped every year and that it was significant that more women were reporting the crime.
Campus crime
"When no one reports rape, it shows people don't know what help is available." she said.
The number of people arrested for
The KU police department released its figures for last year's crime rates. Below are the number of cases reported in various categories, compared to the previous year:
Total number of crimes
1991 — 1,319 18%
1990 — 1,612
Theft and petty larceny
1991—550 16%
1990—652
Harassment by phone
1991 — 59
1990 — 150
61%
Source: KU police annual report
Michael Gler. Daily Kansas
1991—6
1990—0
Burglary
1991 — 248
1990 — 320
23%
drunken driving skyrocketed,
increasing 254.5 percent, from 11 in
190 to 39 in 1991, according to the
report.
Mullens said that officers were trained more intensely last year about what to look for in situations involving drunk drivers.
KU police reorganized their shift
schedules so that two of the department's three shifts work between 10:30 p.m. and 2 a.m., when drunk drives occurs more frequently.
Although theft is common, forced entry into rooms or buildings is not common, Mullens said. Only 14 of 550 thefts last year involved forced entry.
Theft and petty larceny were the most frequently reported crimes on campus, although 102 fewer thefts were reported last year than in 1990, according to the report.
Incidents of burglary, which include auto burglary, dropped 23 percent last year, according to the report. Crime continued to occur most often in campus parking lots.
MaryEllen Henderson, coordinator of KU on Wheels, said the bus service policy changed last year, requiring students to pay almost the full price for a replacement pass if the first pass was stolen.
Fewer KUIDs and KU on Wheels bus passes were reported stolen in 1991 than in past years.
"There have only been 8 to 10 stolen passes this year, whereas last year, they were in the hundreds," she said.
Two years ago, if students' passes were stolen, they could report the theft and buy a new pass for $7.50. Now, a student must purchase a replacement bus pass for $35, only $10 less than the original price of $45. Henderson said.
KANSAS
BASKETBALL
The No. 18 Jayhawks women's basketball team beat Nebraska 67-65 last night at Allen Field
last night at Allen Field
House, keeping sole poses-sion of first place in the Big Eight
Eight stacy Fruitt Conference
Conference.
Kansas was led by junior guard Stacy Truitt, who scored 18 points off the bench.
The No. 3 Kansas men's team lost in overtime to Nebraska 81-79 last night on a three-pointer at the buzzer.
Kansas battled back from a 15-point deficit, forcing the overtime.
Junior guard Adonis Jordan led the Jayhawks with 20 points.
Game stories, Page 9
Bush boosts campaign after victory in primary
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — After a panicky scramble on New Hampshire primary
cal strategists settled yesterday for the theme that an 18-point victory wasn't 'that bad after all.' The White House kept up its happy face even as Bush's victory margin
Bush's victory margin slipped to 16 points.
"Good, we still won," White House press secretary Martin Fitzwater joked as official results came in late yesterday, showing President Bush with a victory margin of 33 percent to 37 percent. Earlier, unofficial tails had put the spread at 58 to 40.
Pointing at Buchanan's numbers, Fitzwater said, "He fell way below 40. He only got 37."
To avert another close call, Bush abandoned his hands-off approach with challenger Patrick Buchanan. Breaking his silence about Buchanan, Bush complained that he had been hammered by "Pat" and the Democrats.
White House officials were rattled
Spurred by Buchanan's strong showing, Bush operatives charted an aggressive tour that will keep the president on the campaign trail most days through the Super Tuesday array of primaries and caucuses March 10.
"I'm not taking anything for granted," Bush said on a political trip to Tennessee. "I'm going to stay out here across this country — and I've been in tough fights before — roll up my sleeves and go after them."
Tuesday by fast-changing exit polls in New Hampshire that showed a much closer outcome than the eventual margin of 53 percent to 37 percent.
"I admit I was a little tense... with a couple of reports I heard there," the president said.
Stunned by the numbers, the White House groped for a response but was paralyzed for hours by indecision. Strategists debated whether to bring Bush before the press, or leave the job to either campaign chair Robert Teeter or press secretary Fitzwater.
In the end, they settled on a written statement by the president, acknowledging that the race had been closer than expected.
A new message was firmed up by the time Bush stepped off Air Force One in Knovville yesterday.
"Some of these congressmen with me today said, 'Hey, since when has an 18-point victory been considered anything other than a landslide?' " Bush said.
Teeter, Republican National Committee Chair Rich Bond and deputy campaign manager Mary Matalin took the same message to the morning shows on network television.
"Only the pundits and the losers try to take a win and make it a loss," Bond said.
Teeter said it was a very decisive victory.
Bush had appeared dispirited Tuesday as reports of the exit polls circulated throughout the White House.
"The exit polls were wrong all day." Matalin said. "They had us at 50-50 all day."
2
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
Today high: 60 low: 30
Two people were arrested about 11:30 p.m. Tuesday on charges of aggravated burglary, criminal damage to property and battery. The two men, who are not KU students, allegedly punched a KU graduate student several times and tried to take his backpack before driving away. KU police officers caught the man in a 1979
ON THE RECORD
Honda at 11th and Mississippi streets and took them to the Douglas County jail, KU police reported.
2000 block of Stratford Road, Lawrence police reported.
Three handguns, a video camera,
a 27-inch television, a diamond necklace,
40 silver quarters, eight gold coins and a knife, valued together at $4,545, were taken between 6:45 and 7:45 p.m. Tuesday from a home in the
A compact discplayer, 56compact discs, a portable radio, an amplifier and an equalizer, valued together at $1,140 were taken between 6:50 and 9 p.m. Tuesday from a home in the 1000 block of Alabama Street, Lawrence police reported.
The Office of Admissions will sponsor the Principal-Counselor-Student and Community College Conference at 9 a.m. today at the Kansas Union
OAKS - Non-Traditional Student Organization will have a luncheon meeting at11:30a.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union
ON CAMPUS
The Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at the Danforth Chapel.
Latin American Solidarity will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
The KU American Civil Liberties
Union will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Kansas Union.
**Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.**
- Poets Alive will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove G in the Kansas Union.
The Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
tation on U.S. Fish and Wildlife Contaminant Monitoring.
■ GLSOK will meet at 7:30tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union
- KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
The KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7.30tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
The Jayhawk Audubon Society will meet at 7:30 ontent at Lawrence Presbyterian Manor, 1429 Kasold Drive. George Allen will give a present.
The Men's Lacrosse Club will have a conditioning practice at 8:30 tonight at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30ton 130 Robinson Center.
Study says use of asthma drug triples death risk
BOSTON — People who overuse a common kind of inhaled drug used to relieve asthma attacks face a greatly increased risk of death, a study concludes.
The Associated Press
the researchers do not know whether the drugs, called beta agonists, are themselves to blame. But they said asthmatic nearly tripled their chance of death with each canister of the spray they use each month.
Beta agonists have been the primary drug used to treat asthma, but some doctors are now recommending that other drugs be used first and beta agonists reserved as a backup to relieve acute attacks.
The risk varies, depending on the specific kind of beta agonist taken.
The researchers said they thought that occasional use was probably safe, but heavy, long-term reliance was a substantial health risk.
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COLORADO Denver 57/29
KANSAS Lawrence 60/30
Dodge City Wichita 65/35
MISSOURI Kansas City 58/32 St. Louis 54/37
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 68/41
day outlook
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10/15 to 2
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Becoming
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SATURDAY
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Across the U.S.
Boston 49/28
Chicago 38/28
Dallas 69/47
Detroit 39/25
Houston 67/50
New York 48/32
Los Angeles 67/53
Philadelphia 45/29
San Francisco 61/50
Washington 53/35
50 60 55 47
40 35 34
30 30
Forecast by Jim Dafley, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
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Neither do we.
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Northwestern University Summer Session '92
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
CAMPUS / AREA
3
Finney's budget OK with Budig
KU administrators want more, though
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - Chancellor Gene Budig said yesterday that the University of Kansas was satisfied with Gov. Joan Finney's budget recommendations but would battle to get more.
Budig and Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, explained KU's budget request to subcommittee members from the House Appropriations Committee.
Budigsaid KU's request was modest compared to previous years and the University's needs.
"The Board of Regents directed that our 1993 budgets not include any new initiatives or programs but focus on current activities," he said.
Budig said he understood the state was facing a tight budget year.
"But we believe the state has the resources to protect the investment it has made in higher education, and, for the sake of its future, it must," he said.
"Thus, we hope that as the legislative session progresses, you and your colleagues will be able to make some changes to the governor's recommendations."
Budig said the University's top priority was to find the money to plan the rebuilding of Hoch Auditorium. He also said the Legislature needed to find a way to increase faculty salaries so KU could keep its best faculty.
Budig said he was happy the governor had recommended a 4 percent
"It will help us keep pace with this year's inflation and meet some of our most critical needs in library computing and equipment," he said.
Shankel said KU's financing for operating expenditures was 65 percent of its peer schools' funding for operating expenditures.
SUMMER CITY PARK
Kansas 1992 Legislature
--mended a 100-percent fee waiver for graduate teaching assistants.
"Businesses expect our students to be trained on modern equipment," he said. "Our equipment had not been modernized at a rate that keeps up with technology and that puts our students at a disadvantage."
Budig said he was pleased with the governor's recommendation to finance KU's 1993 enrollment adjustment, but that he was disappointed that the governor did not recommend money for the 1992 enrollment adjustment, which was not financed last year.
"Our enrollment is very stable, but we continue to experience a shifting of enrollment from lower-division undergraduate to more costly, upper-division undergraduate and graduate offerings," he said.
Budig and Shankal said they were pleased that the governor recommended a 100-percent fee waiver for graduate teaching assistants.
Budig the fee waiver was necessary for the University to remain compatible.
"We cannot compete effectively for those graduate students without a full fee waiver and increases in GTA salaries." he said.
Shankel said the fee waiver would help the University provide better undergraduate teachers.
"GTAs are teaching about 24 percent of our undergraduate credit hours," he said. "These people are faculty in training, and it's very important for us to attract the best young teachers."
Shankel said KU operated at 85 percent of the cost of its peers' operation costs, but the student credit hours that KU faculty members taught were 115 percent of those that their peers at similar institutions taught.
"We want you to think of us as a great investment," he said. "You really are getting a fantastic bargain."
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Against all odds
Dewey Jessep(left) of the Kickapoo reservation and Pete Fee of White Cloud rally behind Frank Wahwassuck (right), chair of the Kickapoo school board, as he voices his opposition to a bill that would outlaw
casino gambling in Kansas. More than 75 protesters gathered on the steps of the Statehouse in Topeka yesterday to show their dismay at the Senate's tentative approval of the bill.
Hoch rebuilding tops KU priority list
Kansan staff writer
By Greg Farmer
TOPEKA — Chancellor Gene Budig and Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, told a House of Representatives subcommittee yesterday that the university was of ten priority for the University of Kansas.
"It was an essential part of our academic mission."Budig said.
Budig and Shankel explained KU's budget request to subcommittee members from the House Appro-
portion.
Budig said the 64-year-old Hoch Auditorium, which was gutted by fire after it was struck by lightning June 15, served as more than KU's performing arts center.
"The Hoch fire destroyed 7 percent of our classroom space," he said. "Only through ingenuity and unprecedented cooperation have we been able to
accommodate in other facilities most of the classes scheduled for Hoch."
Budig said more than 950 students had been denied enrollment in the classes scheduled for Hoch because those classes had to be moved to smaller classrooms.
The University of Kansas and the Board of Regents had requested $1 million for fiscal year 1993 to plan the reconstruction of Hoch. After planning, $17 million will be needed for KU's plan to rebuild Hoch.
*Enrollment pressures are causing many departments to use large lecture classes to accommodate students.
Budig and Shankel said yesterday that they hoped the Legislature would consider the issue and appropriate the necessary money.
But Gov. Joan Finney did not recommend financing the planning of the Hoch project in her fiscal year 1993 budget pronosal.
"If this committee could find $1 million to appropriate to the University of Kansas for whatever use the University deemed appropriate, would you use that money to plan the rebuilding of Hoch?" Vancrum asked.
Rep. Bob Vancrum, R-Overland Park, said he was also frustrated by the Hoch situation.
"Hoch had become an important teaching building," Shankel said. "We need that space back, and we will do whatever we can to get it back."
Toi Willis, executive secretary for Student Senate, said Hoch Auditorium should be the University's top priority.
"We need legislative support for the rebuilding project, but we also need to go to the alumni," she said. "We need to tap into some of those outside funds, too."
Shankel said the Hoch project would be planned if $1 million were appropriated.
DerekNolen/KANSAN
Brod Rembemy, assistant city manager of Lawrence, is trying to help Rod Lawrence recruit more minorities to fill government positions.
City manager helps to recruit minorities
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
Rod Bremby sits in his fourth-floor office at City Hall and stares out at the Kansas River. But Bremby, assistant city manager, is remembering his childhood days along the banks of the Chattahoochee River in southern Alabama.
He lived there with his family amidst racial tensions that marked the South in the 1960s — days when races were separated by ignorance and more tangible reminders such as signs that read "Whites Only" and "Negroes Only."
"I went through the Jim Crow segregation," he said. "I was one of three Black kids who were the first to integrate into Western Heights Elementary School. That was 1967, 13 years after the Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of Education decision. I remember going through some very hostile times."
Eufaula, Ala., was not the only place where Bremby, the son of an army officer, experienced racism. He recalls the days of living in Arizona when a neighbor, in a fit of anger, called him "nigger"—or the days he lived in Germany when people would give him money just so they could touch his dark skin.
Now, he is working to battle racism in the Lawrence community and open up jobs for minorities.
"In terms of city organization, we are trying to recruit and retain qualified employees, not just certain people," Bremby said.
He said that when Lawrence police recently commissioned 22 new officers, the department filled half of those positions with minorities. Seven members of minority groups were recently hired by the Lawrence Fire Department, he said.
According to a report released in 1991, 15 percent of the city employees were members of a minority. Nine percent were African American.
City employees
Bremby, assistant city manager since 1990, said that the city would like to see more minorities working in civic jobs, but that all applicants had to be considered by the same standards.
A look at the ethnic makeup of the 543 full-time city employees.
white 84.7%
African American 9.4%
Hispanic 3.1%
Asiatic-Pacific Islander 1.3%
American Indian 1.5%
Source: Ray Hummert, city clerk
Bremy said the city's affirmative action program was a necessity if opportunities in the job sector were to stay open for minorities.
Black History Month
"I'm a believer in the affirmative action program," he said. "A lot of the beneficiaries of the affirmative action probably do not realize how it has affected them."
Some things make the recruitment difficult.
"Public administration does not have a high-rewarding salary," he said. "But it does have intrinsic rewards. I think some people are reluctant to enter government because they think that the people in government seek political gain. I don't have the tolerance for politics."
City government is a complex structure, Bremby said, and many people, including minorities, tend to keep away from working for city government because of the political structure.
Ray Hummert, city clerk, is responsible for hiring and firing city employees. He has the departments at City Hall should reflect the demographics of the community.
"You can go through the departments and some might be represented very well by minorities," he said. "Others might not be represented like they should be."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
OPINION
MARK FELLP Chicago Tribune
HIRE TAXI
TSOWA
Don't shoot the animals
Last night, I had the strangest dream. The whole world had gone mad, and all of society had turned into a population of big-game hunters.
I found myself standing at the doorway of an old, western-style saloon. The tables and bar were coated with dust. There was no one in the bar save a large, hairy man sitting at a table with me. I noticed a nooke mea I watched them. The man sat beside his beer then wiped his mustache on his sleeve, belching before he spoke.
"Well, son," he said in a graffu voice. "Looks like tomorrow you'll get to kill your first caterpillar! Ain't you excited?"
"Yes, Pai!" the boy exclaimed, smiling and staring wide-eye at an Uzi that was sitting on the table.
"But Pa! I'm afraid of deer!"
"Yes sir! Soon my boy will be shootin' rodents, an' birds, and maybe someday he'll snag hissef a deer!"
"But Doe! I'ungagedoofa dee!"
"Hey now, boy! Don't you worry. Them deer don't fight back. All va gotta do is walk up to it quiet-like and pull the trigger! They ain't got no brains like us, boy! And if they try to run, then where they gonna go? The woods is they're home! And once they got a bullet in their stomach, it don't matter anyhow!"
The boy nodded. The man up-ended his beer and emptied it into his mouth. I could see his eyes peering at me through the bottom of the glass. Suddenly, he slammed the glass on the table and frowned.
"Hey, who're you?"
I simply uttered, "Why?"
I simply uttered, "Why?" (Writhing)
"Why what?" Humm? "Well, why not?"
"I don't understand why. But you certainly
don't need to hunt to survive. Why do
you think you have the right to gun
David
CarusolI
Staff
columnist
P
down animals in their own homes?
definitely think they have just as much right to live on this earth as we do."
"Hey now! I don't hunt 'em for fun,
you know! Shoot! Only an idiot'd do
that! By me killin' them beasts, I'm
actually savin' 'em!"
"I don't understand, sir. Why?"
"Us hunters, we go for the biggest of the pack! And with the biggins out of the way, that means all the more food for the weaker ones!"
De-evolution was a ridiculous argument, but I decided to give him a chance "Why?"
"Hey, by us hunters killin' the beasts, it keeps 'em from gettin' too crowded, and dyn'in miserably! Remember when there was over five billion people on this here earth? Well, ever since those big boys wizened up and made killin' legal, we're down to a few million ... No one but hunters, and plenty of room for everyone! What could be better?"
Ah! So if one can control the animal population by hunting, then the same principle could apply to the problem of human overpopulation. But that doesn't make sense. In the real world, one isn't supposed to shoot one's neighbor. So why can one shoot animals? "Why?"
*And don'f toforget hunters' fees. With all that money comin' in, we try to make better some of the land those animals live on! That way they won't die before we blast 'em!Ya see how responsible us hunters are? We ravage the earth, but we try and clean up the mess, too!" The man leaned back, his chair creaking under the weight. He smiled contentedly, his bellybutton staring at me like an eye peeping over his belt buckle.
But hunters' fees don't make a difference. Animals were surviving and evolving for millions of years without money or human interference. I asked again, "Why?"
The man then leaned toward me and said, "Listen, huntin' is just the manly thing to do! It's in the gut!" He smacked his belly with his palm, causing his fat to roll like waves.
Yes, and hunting was in the gut of the Neanderthal, too. Call me an optimist, but I think that most humans have developed beyond being cavemen. But watching this man was like watching human evolution in reverse.
"Hey listen! Killin' is okay. I don't have to open my mind to all your confounded rationale and good sense! Hell, I'll just shoot ya!"
The man reached across the table and picked up the Uzi. He aimed it at me and fired for several minutes, spraying the entire saloon with bullets but missing me nonetheless. The last thing I remember before waking up was putting my arms over my head as the whole structure came crashing down on us.
I sprang up in bed and sighed, earnestly hoping that the hunters of the real world had better arguments for their actions.
David Caruso II is a Lake Waltana sophomore majoring in English and psychology.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
GTAs deserve the going rate
Graduate teaching assistants are unionizing to protest their problem of insufficient pay
The graduate teaching assistants at the University of Kansas play an instrumental role in the education of thousands of students. For years, they have been subjected to inferior pay and have lacked a complete fee waiver. These two circumstances have prevented KU from attaining the best graduate students as teachers. Now, the GTAs have an answer to their problem — a union.
For the past several months, many GTAs have started organizing a collective bargaining group to deal with issues concerning them. Efforts during the past several years finally resulted in Gov. Joan Finney's proposal this year to extend a complete fee waiver. This action, however, barely scrapes the surface of needs for the men and women who contribute so much to KU's educational opportunities.
Clearly, the prospect of teachers picketing
on Wescoe Beach for increased pay would be a sight many of us would rather avoid. However, without the strong bargaining position that a union could provide, the Board of Regents, the Legislature and the administration never will fully address the complex concerns of GTAs. It seems strange that it would require unionization of the GTAs to generate the same results that many other public state colleges and universities already provide.
No one wants to strike or take other punitive action less than the GTAs themselves. But their positions are jobs. They should not be asked to work for less than the going reasonable rate.
Nor should anyone question their motives for taking such action. GTAs care about their jobs or they would not be working in the first place.
If a few years of informal lobbying can create a 100-percent fee waiver, imagine what an organized body could accomplish. And if the quality of GTAs improves, the chance for enhanced education for everyone else increases.
Stephen Martino for the editorial board
Campus voice is far too quiet
Students should be unhappy about the ineffectiveness of ASK
at this crucial time
Students should be angry. Angry at the state's lack of commitment to higher education. And angry at the organization they give more than $32,000 a year to do something about it.
Associated Students of Kansas, the group that officially represents the KU student body in Topeka, has been virtually silent this year. Silent on issues that directly affect students such as the restoration of Hoch Auditorium and the lack of state financing for faculty salaries. In this most critical year for higher education in Kansas, the University of Kansas has lost an effective voice for student issues at the Capitol.
According to the job description of the co-director of ASK for campus issues, the director is supposed to maintain an effective organization on campus. This includes recruiting new members and presiding over an advisory board composed of representatives from every major group on campus.
That board has not met this year. In addition, ASK members have been critical of the directors' efforts at recruiting new member-
shipon campus. Clearly, this is a crucial component of their job. Informing and motivating students to support educational issues must be a primary goal of ASK.
To the group's credit, the annual lobby day took place in Topeka earlier this month. About 100 students made the trip to support higher education.
But as one local legislator asked, why aren't students doing more to protest the state's neglect of higher education?
ASK needs to provide the kind of leadership that motivates students to get involved in issues that affect them. This means that the leaders of ASK, Joe Cinalli and John Schwartz, must take a more visible role on campus. ASK also needs to look at new ways to address problems of poor state financing. For example, students in other states have taken their concerns directly to the legislature by staging s-iins at state capitols.
Numerous problems face higher education in Kansas. Students have a right to a voice in Topeka. Student Senate has seen fit to finance ASK and provide two salaried positions to lead the organization. The time has come for ASK to do its job and provide the kind of leadership that KU so desperately needs.
Chriss Moeeser fior the editorial board
Critis Moeeser fior the editorial board
Column shows sexism
After reading Eric Fliokosi's guest column in the Feb. 12 Kansan, I felt angry, offended and sad. How is it possible for a college-educated person, male or female, in 1992 to be so ignorant? Does Mr. Fliokosi really believe that women who fight for equal rights are "paranoid" and/or that they hate men? If so, he is sorely misinformed. Or could it be that he simply feels his position of privilege and alleged superiority slipping away as women and other minority groups slowly but surely gain ground in their fight against injustice?
Mr. Fiolkowski shows his blatant sexism at every turn. Perhaps by portraying all feminists as axe-carrying man bashers he hopes to make those women who aren't reject the term "feminist." Perhaps by slinging such zingers as "And what a muscular shoulder it is..." he hopes to make those of us who lack great physical strength feel like maybe we should just keep our mouths shut, "cause what could little-oleus do about this oppression stuff anyway? Or perhaps he just needed a place to vent.
Whatever the case, by portraying feminists as whining, paranoid "fillies" (the animal image serving to further illustrate his ignorance and hate), Mr. Fiołkowski either misses the point or wants to divert others from it. Does he even know the history of the February Sisters? The February Sisters were a courageous group of women who got fed up with the injustice and maltreatment to which they were subjected by the institution to which they gave large sums of money and did something about it. What they did is a tribute to women everywhere and proof that we can — and will — change things.
Jeannette Bonjour Lawrence graduate student
I wondered how to respond to Eric Flokiosk's Feb.12 mock "Firing Whine" interview with a "February Filly" who demonstrated for women's rights and carried her "man-axe" to her meeting of the "Coalition of Paranoid Womyn." This column contained no factual
Lettersto the editor
Proud to be a feminist
information; it appeared that its only purpose was to ridicule females and other women.
"Coalition of Paranoid Womyn?" Paranoid means having fears or concerns that are not grounded in reality Let's discuss reality. On the same day that Fioloski's column appeared, the KU Student Affairs Research Committee released the results of their study showing that at least 14 percent of all female KU students had been raped. According to FBI statistics, every 15 seconds, somewhere in America a woman is beaten by a man. American women are much poorer than men. Female college graduates earn about as much as male high school dropouts. I could continue this list. Obviously, concern about women's issues reflects reality, not paranoia.
Fiolekosi's column was an example of the current backlash against feminists and other women. Well, without the hard work of feminists, there would be no rape crisis centers or battered women shelters. It would still be perfectly legal for husbands to rape their wives and for bosses and teachers to sexually harass their employees and students. Businesses and
schools could still openly discriminate against women. But there is still a lot of work to be done. I am proud to be a feminist.
Charlene Muehlenhard Director Women's Studies Program
Don't impose opinions
Two recent events concerning abortion are the subject of this letter.
1. About a week ago, my girlfriend told a female friend of hers about her fervent support of abortion rights. The friend replied that abortion should not concern me because I would never have an abortion. Although that is true, the issue of abortion for me is less about the act itself than it is about rights. The moment a woman's right to control her body is taken from her, she needs to fear for my rights. Once the government can come women in that way, what's to stop it from other controls? And at that point, how can we be considered a free country?
2. A letter in *The University Daily Kansan* on Feb. 13 by Greg Gissner stated, "Pro-lifers
fight for the day when all people are treated as humans." Does treating people as humans include forcing one's opinion on others by proclaiming that abortions should be illegal? To me, it means understanding that one's opinion is not necessarily everyone's opinion. If you are against abortion, don't have one. But when you impose your beliefs on me, and I don't have your beliefs, you aren't treating me as a human.
Both events are egregious examples of the misconception of abortion in our culture. To say that I shouldn't have an opinion on abortion because of my gender is to look at abortion in a frighteningly narrow light. Control of one's body should concern all of us, not just women. Likewise, as a pro-choice advocate, I don't tell people that they have to have abortions, only that it should be a legal option. Mr. Gesser's desire to abolish that option because of his opinion strikes me as a desire for control, which I find totally unacceptable.
KANSANSTAFF
Nathan Oison Chicago graduate student
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, newsadviser
Editors
Editors
News... Mike Andrews
Editorial... Beth Randolph
Planning... Lara Gold
Campus... Eric Gorski/Rochelle Oleson
Sports... Eric Nelson
Photo... Julie Jacobson
Features... Debbie Myers
Graphics... Aimee Brainard/J Jeff Meesey
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr Bill Helfenberg
Regional sales mgr Richard hamburger
National sales mgr Scott Hannah
Co-op sales mgr Mejon Johnson
Production mgrs Kim Wallace
Marketing director Lisa Keeler
Marketing director Kim Claston
Creative总监 Leanne Linder
Classified marr Ko Chin
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name and title. The letter should be accompanied by the University of Kansas that must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stuart/Final Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
5
Late bloomers are Oscar winners
Most Oscar-winning movies were released in November and December. The past 15 winners' release months:
February
1970: "Patton"
5
1972:"The Godfather"
1977:"Annie Hall"
September
1980: "Ordinary People"
1981: "Chariots of Fire"
1984: "Amadeus"
October 1971: "The French Connection"
November
November
1975: "One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest"
1983: "Terms of Endearment"
1987: "The Last Emperor"
1990: "Dances with Wolves"
December
1973 "The Sting"
1974 "The Godfather, Part II"
1974 "Rocky"
1974 "The Deer Hunter"
1979 "Deer vs. Kramer"
1980 "Gandhi"
1985 "Out of Africa"
1986 "Platoon"
1988 "Rain Man"
1988 "Driving Miss Daisy"
This year's nominees
This year's nominees
(Month movie was released):
"Silence of the Lamb's" (Feb.)
"Terminator 2" (July)
"Beauty and the Beast" (Nov.)
"Bugsy" (Dec.)
"JK" (Dec.)
"The Prince of Tides" (Dec).
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
C.GAFFNEY, Knight - Ridder Tribune
Two coalition leaders announce plans to run for top Senate position
By Jay Williams Kansan staff writer
Two pairs of students have announced their candidacy in April's Student Senate presidential and vicepresidential elections.
Both groups made their intentions public following the first candidate workshop yesterday afternoon at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. The Student Senate Elections Commission sponsored the workshop.
The deadline to file for the presidential and vice-presidential elections is March4.
Brad Garlinghouse, head of Senate's University Affairs Committee, and Jean Winter, Lawrence senior, will run for student body president.
Lance Wright, social welfare senator, will run with Garlinghouse for vice president. Chris Stong, Wichita sophomore, will run with Winter. Neither have Senate experience.
Both groups said they would run as part of a coalition but had not named their coaltions as of yesterday.
Winter said her coalition included all types of KU students.
"There is a perception, a sense, that the same people are always in Senate," she said. "We want to see some people not normally involved get involved."
About 30 people have agreed to run as part of the coalition for the 64 available Senate seats, Winter said. The vacant coalition seats for Senate seats should be filled by next week.
"We should have a full ticket," she said. "I do not expect any difficulties."
Winter gained notoriety for writing a bill stating that an accused rapist's past sexual history could be used as evidence in a rape trial. State Sen Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, has agreed to sponsor the bill in the Kansas
"We want to see some people not normally involved get involved."
Jean Winter
Garlinghouse said he wanted to put Senate back in a role of leadership on campus.
Candidate for president of student senate
*Senate is a vehicle to make positive change,* he said.
The fact that not many coalitions have run in past years shows that students have lost some belief in what Senate can do. Garlinghouse said.
Legislature.
Garlinghouse said the most difficult seats to fill were graduate Senate seats.
He said his coalition had a list of 45 names of people he would ask to run for a Senate seat.
"Graduate students don't seem to get involved, even though I feel they should." he said.
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At the meeting, Chris Thomas, elections commissioner, said the apportionment of Senate seats had changed based on 20-day enrollment figures.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and graduate schools each gained one seat. Nunemaker, the name given to freshman and sophomore senators from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, lost two seats. All other apportionments remained the same.
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Flu epidemic is atypical this season
In Kansas, peak hit two months early
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
February is normally the month when health-care providers brace themselves for a flood of flu patients, but that has not been necessary this year.
Andrew Pelletier, epidemiologist for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said that this season the flu epidemic in Kansas seemed to have happened two months earlier than usual.
"Traditionally, late January and February are the peak times, but this year that has not been the case," he said. "We appear to have had a peak in very early November."
Pelletier said that many more Kansas residents were vaccinated against the flu this season than in the
past, but that he did not have specific numbers because most of the flu shots were given by private physicians who did not give statistics to the state health department.
"The fact that the outbreak started in November probably encouraged a lot of people to get flu shots," Pelletier said.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said Watkins treated its first seven flu patients since the beginning of the year Tuesday.
"This year has been the most bizarre flu season we've had in the past 10 years," he said. "We normally start seeing flu patients around Jan. 20 and it peaks on Feb. 1 and then dies out before spring break. This year, there was no flu after Christmas break until now."
Yokeck students often confused other illnesses for the flu. Flu symptoms include abrupt onset of fever, headache and severe muscle aches.
About 500 students got flu shots at
Watkins this fall, but that group was so small that Yockey does not attribute the drop in flu cases to the increase in vaccinations.
"We are not recommending flu shots anymore, because if you got one right now, the flu season would be over before the vaccine took effect," Yockey said.
The number of flu shots given this winter by the health department has been much greater than in past years.
Barbara Schnitker, director of nursing for the Douglas County Health Department, said she thought an increase in flu shots could be responsible for the decrease in flu cases in Douglas County.
Since October, the health department has injected 3,478 people with the flu vaccine, which is up from 2,639 shots given in 1990.
"The flu kind of seems to run its course, and we really haven't heard a whole lot about it lately," Schnitker said.
Spin your wheels
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INTERNATIONAL
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Japanese visitor killed in hotel
A Japanese university president who came to Boston to celebrate a sister-school agreement with a local college was shot and killed in his hotel room.
Iwao Matsuda, president of Chukyo University in Nagoya, Japan, was shot Tuesday night in his 16th-floor room at the Westin Hotel. His school and the University of Massachusetts-Boston were to formally seal their friendship yesterday.
Police said that Matsuda's wife had told investigators that she answered the door of their room and found a masked man forcing his way in. Matsuda was shot once in the lower back, police said.
Potchefstroom, S.A.
National Party candidate loses
President F. W, de Kleerk's National Party suffered an embarrassing defeat yesterday in a byelection considered a gauge of white support for his efforts to share power with Blacks.
Andries Beyers of the pro-apartheid Conservative Party defeated his National Party opponent, Thomas Kruger, by 2,140 votes out of more than 7,000 for a seat held by the Nationals since 1948.
The whites-only election in the Potchefstroom constituency of rural western Transvaal Province marked the second major defeat in the national Party in a parliamentary-election.
The by-election was required after the incumbent died last year.
From The Associated Press
Lebanese flee fighting zone
KAFRA, Lebanon - Thousands of civilians fled villages in southern Lebanon yesterday as Shiite militiam guerrillas and Israeli soldiers fired rockets and artillery shells at each other for a third straight day.
The Associated Press
There were no immediate deaths or injuries reported on the Lebanese side. Thirteen people in the town of Kiryat Shemona in northern Israel were treated for shock and injuries after one rocket attack.
The fighting, which followed a fatal attack on an Israeli army post and Israel's assassination of Hezbollah leader Abbas Musawi, fueled tension in the volatile region in advance of new Arab-Israeli peace talks in Washington.
Each round of talks, which are to resume Monday,
has been preceded by renewed violence in southern
Lebanon. Arabs have accused Israel of creating incidents in an effort to derail the talks, but the Palestinian delegation Syria, Jordan and Lebanon said that they planned to attend next week.
Still, Shiite and Israeli gunners blasted at each
rockets and howters from dazers to dusk
vesterday.
In New York, the U.N. Security Council yesterday appealed to all parties to the violence to exercise maximum restraint and enhance the Arab-Israeli peace process.
Guerrillas of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah used mobile launchers to fire a simultaneous discharge of rockets at Israel's Galilee panhandle and the Israeli-occupied security zone in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah, which opposes the peace talks, is trying to drive the Israelis from the security zone as well as exact revenge for Musawi's death.
Libvans fear Western wrath
ANALYSIS
The Associated Press
TRIPOLI, Libya — Earthen defense barriers have been bulldozed into place along the coast, and ships laden with food are anchored in the harbor. The once-bombed capital is nervous.
Nearly six years after U.S. warplanes bombed Tripoli and Banghazi, Libya's two biggest cities, Libyans still fear the United States. The nation is worried about possible new sanctions or even another attack because it is resisting Western demands for the surrender of two citizens accused in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Scotland in 1988.
gas tanks full, according to Western European diplomats speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.
The diplomats said that some military equipment was moved south, out of harm's way, and other material spread out to make it less of a target.
Diplomats said yesterday that the fear of an imminent U.S. attack faded by the end of November. But fear lingers, with the chief worry now how to forestall sanctions.
For a few hectic weeks in November, when indictments of the two men were announced in Washington and London, Libyan stockpiled food and kept their
The governments of France, Great Britain and the United States have indicated that there is support for an embargo likely to cover arms of arms and military equipment and a ban on commercial air travel to and from Lebya.
France wants to try four men, including a brother-in-law of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, for another jumbo jet bombing in 1989.
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"I wanted to know the type of questions the judge might ask, so I can be prepared," said Margaret Tretbar, first-year law student.
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
The court members come from Topeka once a year to the law school's courtroom, said Al Johnson, associate dean of law. The court will hear cases there again today.
He also said it was good for students to watch a lot of attorneys to get an idea of the different ways people get their ideas across.
Obermeier said it was difficult to be comfortable in front of the Kansas Court of Appeals.
The Kansas Court of Appeals heard both civil and criminal cases yesterday in front of aspiring lawyers from the KU School of Law.
Dallas Polen, first-year law student,
said, "I think the judge has seen a lot of
these cases and could make a decision
on more of the issues then through
what was presented."
"At some point, students will have to develop their own style," he said. "They should be comfortable with the way they present a case or advocate an issue."
"They may already have a tentative decision as far as what they think should happen with the case," he said.
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The judges said that unlike some judges, they liked to prepare for the cases by reviewing the cases thoroughly before they heard them. Attorneys said this made their job more difficult.
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
9
Last-second shot buries Javhawks
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
LINCOLN, Neb. — A sign posted on the inside of Nebraska's locker room door last night stated, "Dorothy says, 'send the Jayhawks back to the land of Zo.'"
With the help of Jamar Johnson, that is exactly what the Cornbusks did.
Johnson, a sophomore point guard, hit a fade-away three-pointer as the buzzer sounded in overtime, giving Nebraska an 81-79 upset victory over No. 3 Kansas last night.
But with Missouri's loss to Colorado in Boulder, Colo., last night, the Jayhawks kept a one-game lead in the Big Eight Conference race. Third-place Oklahoma State also lost.
"I didn't know if it was good," Johnson said of his shot off an inbound pass from Nebraska's Carl Hayes. "I couldn't see, but someone came from behind me, lifted me, and the crowd went crazy so I knew it went in."
The shot ended a game in which the
Jayhawks trailed most of regulation, and led most of overtime.
Kansas led 79-75 with 26 seconds left in overtime after a dunk by center Eric Pauley who was fouled on the play. Pauley missed a chance to put the Jayhawks up by five by five missing the ensuing free throw, but worse foul-line woes were ahead.
Nebraska's Chris Cresswell hit a 30-foot three-pointer to cut the lead to one, 79-78 with 20 seconds left. Cresswell then fouled Kansas point guard Adonis Jordan with 10 seconds left.
Jordan, a 74-percent free-throw shooter, missed both free-throw attempts, but forward Alonzo Jamison grabbed the rebound for Kansas and was immediately fouled.
But Jamison, too, missed both free throws, and Nebraska pushed the ball up the court where the 'Huskers called a timeout with 2.7 seconds left.
Nebraska with 1 second left.
After the timeout, Nebraska's first inbounds pass resulted in a struggle underneath the Cornhuskers' basket and the ball was ruled out of bounds to
After three timeouts, two by Kansas and one by Nebraska, the ball was passed inbounds to Johnson who hit the fade-away jumper to win the game.
Johnson said that the play was designed for sophomore forward Eric Piatkowski, not for him.
"I saw a hole in the zone and went to it." he said.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said of the shot, "I really thought we did a pretty good job defensively on the inbounds pass."
That was one of the few things that pleased Williams.
Williams said that the Jayhaws did not play well in any facet of the game
"From our point of view, I hope it sees one and those again." Willie O'Brien
The 'Hawks trailed by as many as 15 points in the first half and during one 10-minute stretch managed only two field-goals.
"We played like dogs for 35 minutes
and played great for 5 minutes," Williams said.
However, behind Jordan's 13 first-half points, Kansas trailed just 36-31 at halftime.
Kansas battled from behind the entire second half and did not catch the Cornhuskers until 15 seconds were left in regulation, when Jamison scored inside to tie the score at 68.
Jamison had a chance to win the game at the end of regulation. After stealing the ball from Johnson with 3 seconds left, Jamison went in for the break-away dunk before the buzzer sounded. However the shot was blocked by Nebraska forward Bruce Chubick.
Williams said that fools might have been committed on both ends of the court during the steal and break away.
Both teams shot miserably from the free-throw line. Nebraska hit just 11 of 24 for 45.8 percent and Kansas hit just 14 of 36 for 38.9 percent.
"Ours was a little bit better than a dead man's." Williams said of Kansas
free-throw shooting
Kansas guard Rex Walters, who scored 15 points but hit just 1 of 10 three-point attempts, said that Kansas was not prepared to face Nebraska.
"We were expecting a gift or something," Walters said. "We're starting to think that just because we wear a Kansas uniform, people are going to roll over for us. We didn't deserve to win.
Jordan, who led the Jayhawks with 20 points, also said that Kansas did not play well at all.
"You can't give a team a big lead on its own floor and expect to win," Jordan said. "Maybe at Allen Field House, but not here."
Williams said that the loss was tough to take.
"The ones that you have right in the palm of your hands and let slip away, those hurt the worst," he said. "But we'll bounce back."
Nebraska 81, No.3 Kansas 79, overtime
Player | Tgm/fga | tmf/fta | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 4-10 | 3-8 | 11 |
| Scott | 4-7 | 3-7 | 9 |
| Walters | 4-5 | 2-5 | 10 |
| Walters | 6-16 | 2-4 | 15 |
| Jordan | 6-16 | 5-9 | 20 |
| Jordan | 6-16 | 5-9 | 20 |
| Richey | 1-2 | 0-1 | 0 |
| Richey | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Woodberry | *4-8* | 1-4 | 10 |
| Woodberry | 1-4 | 1-4 | 10 |
| Gurley | 0-4 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Gurley | 0-4 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Joahmingh | 0-1 | 0-3 | 0 |
| Joahmingh | 1-10 | 0-3 | 2 |
| Total | 30-70 | 14-36 | 79 |
| BRAVES (BBA) | 10-24 |
| :--- | :--- |
| Hayes | 7-10 | 3-10 | 17 |
| Hughes | 0-2 | 1-10 | 0 |
| Hughes | 6-15 | 0-9 | 12 |
| Johnson | 7-14 | 0-2 | 16 |
| Paskiewicz | 4-13 | 1-2 | 10 |
| Sutcliffe | 3-4 | 1-2 | 10 |
| Oxens | 3-4 | 5-6 | 11 |
| Chubick | 3-4 | 5-6 | 8 |
| Chubick | 3-4 | 5-6 | 8 |
| Chubick | 32-85 | 11-24 | 11 |
Kansas women shred Cornhuskers
Hahnweite - Nebraska 36, K曼斯 34, Regulation -
Nebraska 68, K曼斯 68, 3 Point-goal - Gowanus 6,
0-1) Nebraska 68 (Hayes 0-1, Johnson 2-
0-1) Nebraska 68 (Hayes 0-1, Johnson 2-
0-1) Nebraska 59 (Jamison 5) Nebraska 52 (Chandler 15)
Assists - Nebraska 17 (Jamison 5) Nebraska 19
(Plinkowski voan - Chander) Total fouls -
Nebraska 19
Jayhawks force 28 turnovers
3v Codv Holt
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Marian Washington said it would take more than one player to beat the Jayhawks . . . and she was right.
Kansas defeated Nebraska 67-65 last night at Allen Field House despite a 30 point effort by Nebraska's junior center Karen Jennings.
"The main thing is one player shouldn't beat you," Washington said. "Our team did a good job shutting down the rest of their team."
Nebraska had only one other player in double figures, the guard Mason Williams.
Kansas relied on its defense, which was No. 2 in the nation this week, to cause 28 Nebraska turnovers. The KU defense has been holding opponents to 55.2 points a game.
"We talk about two things in every pregame pep talk," Washington said. "We want to play our kind of defense and run the floor."
Kansas did both, creating numerous fast-break baskets from turnovers and 15 steals.
Kansas 67, Nebraska 65
When Nebraska did shoot the ball, however, they made it count, hitting 48.9 percent from the field. Jennings led the charge with 12 of 15 shootings, including three of three behind the three-point arch.
Nebraska's hot shooting helped them close to within one point with 2:21 remaining in the game on a Jennings three-pointer.
Kansas went inside to senior forward Danielle Shareef, who scored and drew a foul from freshman guard Sauna Witherspoon. Shareef's free throw gave Kansas a 67-63 lead, and put the game out of reach for the Huskers.
"At the end of the game we had to concentrate on our poise," Shareef said. "It really came down to who wanted it most."
The Jayhawks were led by junior Guard Stacy Truitt who poured in 18
Player | fgm/fm| ftm/ft| tp
---|---|---|---
Collins | 0-2| 0-1| 4
O'Neill | 0-3| 0-4| 4
Jennings | 12-15| 3-4| 30
Yaduesta | 5-8| 1-3| 2
Russell | 2-7| 5-6| 9
Anderson | 2-7| 5-6| 9
Anderson | 0-2| 0-2| 0
Yancy | 2-4| 0-2| 4
S. Witherington | 3-1| 0-2| 6
Spartan | 23-4| 16-21| 35
**AYALES (20-4)**
Johnson 2-14 0-0 0-0 4
Jayne 6-13 0-0 0-12
Shareef 7-10 2-3 0-16
Shares 6-13 0-0 3-2 2
Hart 1-6 0-0 0-0 3
Heath 1-6 0-0 0-0 3
Truth 5-15 7-8 1-8 18
Slatter 5-15 7-8 1-8 17
Staline 27-65 11-13 12
Hattifeine - Karasan 30, Nebrakea 23, Point-golf 0.
Kerasan - Karasan 36, Nebrakea 29, Point-golf 0,
1. Kerasan - 12, Leite 1. Kite 14, Trail 1. 15,
fouled out - None Rebounds - Nebrakea 39 (Jennings)
13, Kemasan 28 (Ajout) 8, Assist 23, Trail 17.
Fouled out - None Rebounds - Nebrakea 39 (Jennings)
13, Kemasan 28 (Ajout) 8, Assist 23, Trail 17.
points off the bench, including seven of eight from the free-throw line. Shareef added 16 points and grabbed a game-high four steals. Senior forward Terrilyn Johnson also had four steals.
The freshman tandem of Angela Aycock and Alana Slatter continued to produce for the Jayhawks, each contributing 12 points. Aycock led the team in rebounds with eight.
Kansas, 20-4 overall and 9-2 in the Big Eight Conference, increased its stronghold on the conference standings with last night's victory. With only three conference games remaining, the Jayhawks have a one-game lead over Colorado, 8-3 in the conference. Colorado defeated Missouri 67-57 last night in Columbia. Nebraska slipped to third place, 7-4 in the conference, after last night's loss.
Washington said she was happy with Kansas' position at this point in the league.
"It's definitely not going to be easy," she said. "We have a chance to take care of our destiny, though."
Kansas
23
KU
Nebraska's Shawn Collins watches as Meggan Yedsena tries to get past Kansas forward Alana Slatter.
OLYMPICS UPDATE
Silver for American skier
The Associated Press
She tied Austria's Anita Wachter for second in 2:13.71.
MERIBEL, France — Diann Roffe, of Potsdam, N.Y., won the silver medal in the women's giant slalom yesterday.
Sweden's Pernilla Wiberg won the event becoming the first women's Olympic giant slalom champion.
Olympic medals count
OLYMPIC GAMES
Germany 10 8 6 24
Unified Team* 7 5 6 18
Austria 4 7 7 18
Norway 7 5 4 16
Italy 3 4 3 10
France 3 5 1 9
U.S. 3 3 1 7
Finnland 3 1 3 7
Japan 1 1 3 5
Canada 1 0 2 3
Sweden 1 0 2 3
The Netherlands 0 1 2 3
Switzerland 1 0 1 2
China 0 2 0 2
Luxembourg 0 2 0 2
Czechoslovakia 0 0 2 2
South Korea 0 1 0 1
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Jamison scores points for leadership
Kansas forward sparks Jayhawks,but without attracting national limelight
When Alonzo Jamison walks through Wescoe Hall, he heads in his direction. A big grin is often returned. Though the 6-foot-6 senior towers over most students$, he looks down on no one.
Unfortunately, the national media do not give the Jayhawk forward the same kind of respect.
After earning California junior college co-player of the year honors in 1988, Jamison gave the Big Eight Conference a glimpse of the future in 1990. Jamison became eligible to play for Kansas in the spring semester and made the most of the last 17 games. He dished out 26 assists, grabbed 34 rebounds and 12 steals. He also averaged five points a game, shooting 61 percent from the field.
However, people outside Lawrence paid the sophomore little heed. When Jamison followed through with a stellar 1991 season, he was rewarded by being named to the all-surprise team.
Jamison averaged 10 points and six rebounds a game. He recorded a team-high 80 steals and died for the team lead with 15 blocked shots. He also proved to be a truly unselfish player contributing 153 assists.
David Mitchell Staff columnist
Surprise?
In the post-Danny Manning era, sportswriters have erroneously named Kansas a team without a star. Jamison said that there are opinions of greater importance.
What he has done is contribute in every way possible. Heading into last night's game against Nebraska, he was leading the team in three categories: 15 blocked shots, 69 assists and 89 rebounds. He is first on the team and second in the conference with 59 steals.
"It doesn't matter as long as the coaches and my teammates know what I do," he said.
And yes, he can score. Jamison is averaging 10 points a game. He has hit double figures in 10 games, including two 20-point performances.
However, the big man's forte is still defense. Jamison possesses surprising quickness for his size, and is closing in on the Jayhawks all-time steal leaders. His 151 career-steal total ranks sixth, and he should move into fourth place before season's end. Cedric Hunter and Tony Guy are well within striking distance with 157 and 161 career thefts respectively.
Though steals may be something of an overlooked stat, the Jayhawks depend heavily on the fast break.
"A lot of people don't emphasize the defensive principles," Jamison said. "But our offense comes from our defense."
One of the keys in that defense-fueling offense has been Jamison. In the past two years, he has consistently drawn the assignment of guarding the opposition's most dangerous scoring threat. Last week, he held Colorado's Donnie Boyce to six points, far below his season average.
"If the coaches believe you can go out and contain the other team's top scorer, that's more than enough recognition for me." Jamison said.
The senior takes a lot of pride in his defensive achievements, and on a team loaded with scoring threats like Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan, Jamison can concentrate on the "it-
tle" things.
"I think anybody on this team could go elsewhere and score at least 16 points a game," he said. "It's a shame. If they were on other squads, they'd come in averaging 20 a game.
"We play more as a team than as individuals. When you think about Kansas, you don't think about one person. You think about the whole team."
Jamison contributes to his teammates' statistics averaging three
"I give up my shots for easier shots closer to the basket," he said. "That's our philosophy."
The senior has been nominated for the John Wooden Award, which recognizes the best player in college basketball. However, that honor usually goes to marque players — prolific scorers — like Manning.
It's too bad that sportswriters don't give awards for being a team player, leading by example or being a nice guy. Jamison would bring home the Triple Crown — and give the credit to his teammates.
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.
Jayhawk restores form prepares for NFL scouts
Kansan sportswriter
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportwriter
Christopher Perez had run the play so many times he could probably do it in his sleep.
But something went wrong on this play. A defensive player missed Sands and rolled into Perez's knee, resulting in a partial tear of the medial collateral ligament.
It was the five play of the Hula Bowl on Jan. 11, and as he had done all throughout his four-year career at Kansas, he was the lead blocker clearing the way for teammate Tony Sands.
"The injury looked a lot worse than it was," Perez said. "When it happened I jumped up. I knew I was on national TV and I didn't want my family looking at me laying on the field."
Perez, who was a four-year starter at offensive tackle for the Jayhawks, is ready to make a comeback of sorts as he prepares for the National Football League scouting combine workout in April. Perez said that he had not yet received a formal invitation, but scouts at the first scouting combine, Feb. 5-10, told him that he would be asked back.
Perez attended the combine in Indianapolis along with 451 other NFL hopefuls. Because of his injury, he was unable to participate in all of the drills. But he still impressed the scouts enough to be considered for a second invitation.
"The scouts told me to work on a few things like my overall strength," he said. "I'm not the strongest player in the world but I'm not the weakest by any means."
Perez said that scouts from the Green Bay Packers, Chicago Bears, Denver Broncos and New York Giants showed a lot of inter-
In preparing for his second chance at impressing those scouts, he said that his knee rehabilitation had helped him improve his overall leg strength.
"I've been doing a ridiculous amount of repetitions," he said of his workouts. "My legs are actually getting bigger." The guys on the team always made fun of my skinny legs."
Lynn Bott, sports trainer, said that Perez should feel no ill affects from his injury.
4
10
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
Women's center strives for quality, diverse events
Programs offer big help despite small following
By Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
Although the programs sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center are attended by only 15 people on average, workers there and students who participate say the number of students who attend is less important than the quality of the presentations.
"If you can reach even one person, you meet the goal in reaching people," said Sherrill Robinson, assistant director of the center. "Our concern is having programs that are helpful for those that choose to attend."
The center sponsors about 18 programs a semester.
"Regardless of options available, there will always be people who choose not to attend because of lack of time, or they think it's just another women's thing, or for no reason at all," she said. "Whether it is a program in the (Kansas) Union or on a floor at a residence hall that will always happen."
However, a few programs can attract from 50 to 100 people. Robinson said.
She said that hot topics often attracted more attendance at programs. For example, the program last semester about the Supreme Court had large attendance because of the Clarence Thomas hearings, Robinson said.
Programs about relationships also tend to bring in people, she said.
"Whether the program is about communication, intimate relationships or addictive relationships, people come," she said. "Beyond that it's what appeals to each individual."
"Maybe they're not reaching all 25,000 students but those attending that I know find them worthwhile and effective."
Jennifer Boyle, member of Women's Student Union, said that women involved in special interest groups attended programs more often than other women.
"As far as appeal to campus at large, certain discussions like self-defense are very popular," she said. "Issues that are very much a reality for all women such as self-defense or
Jennifer Boyle member of Women's Student Union
sexual harassment are gaining attention."
sexual harassment is a ginning attention. Boyle said that she knew many of the events had small attendance, but that did not reflect negatively on the content.
"Maybe they're not reaching all 25,000 students, but those attending that I know find them worthwhile and effective," she said.
Boyle said that she sometimes missed the
center's programs because of the amount of other activities happening at the same time.
Margaret Hu, coordinator of Amnesty International, said that lack of time often prevented women in organizations from attending.
"Some women become actively involved in women's issues and don't feel they have time to attend such programs as women in leadership or assertiveness training or discussions about women's issues," she said.
Sarah Gard, president of *Pannhellenic*, said that women in sororities used the programs and that the center helped educate women in sororites about sexual assault.
"They've helped us in a lot of ways," she said. "They do so much with the women in our organization, and we encourage women to use their resources. Each house has a delegate that works directly with them on the programs."
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A
Original Coffee Cup, Himalayan delivery areas and stores. Offer valid on Friday, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Daily offer only.
2 LARGE
$9.99
for Two
Pizzas
Godfather's
Pizza
King size
211 x 109 cm
EXPENSES
$1,959.99
Available Toppings: Pepperoni, Beef, Sausage, Bacon, Ham, Black Olive, Onion, Green Pepper, Mushroom, Tomato.
2 LARGE
CHOOSE FROM
SUPER PEPPERONI
Loaded with Pepperoni
CHEese
Sausage + Pepperoni
Orion + Green Pepper
Godfather's Pizza
Valid only at Godfather's
711 W. 2nd
EXPIRES
3/15/92
Godfather's
Pizza
Vitality of our
Favorite Cuisine
EXPIRES
11/8/92
FOR SALE
30 W. 46th ST. NEW YORK
Study Smart with Cliffs StudyWare
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OREAD
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--earlier!
Kansas Union Level 2
864-4431
53
FUJIAN
Net
★ NO.1 HAWK MERCHANDISE
★ KU sweatshirts & Tees (Exclusive colors and Designs)
★ KU fitted caps (exclusive designs)
(We will extend hours!)
★ KU button downs
★ FINAL FOUR MERCHANDISE . Nottoo far away
★ KU gift items
Greathours!
9:30-8 M,T,W,R
9:30-6 E SAT
12-5 Sun
MasterCard VISA*
MasterCard
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 MASSACHUSETTS
842-2992
--earlier!
XIV BRAZILIAN CARNAVAL
2023
Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts
22 February 1992, 8 pm-1:30 am
Cash prizes for best costumes
Tickets available at
SUA or Liberty Hall
$5 in advance
$6 at the door
Must be 21 or older
Sponsored by the Brazil-Portugal Association
100's
Classified Directory
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
200 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
YOUREYES ARE BEAUTIFUL. Wepassed on the stair at Robinson 180 m p. 2/17, smiled, sih! You waved from the bldcm. Me .short, black coat, (all, brown hair). Please write Box 20, Kansan.
Jimmy - I'm tired of waiting. Thelma and I skipped town. Call you when I get back. Maybe. Louise. Why was David T. Fired? He's the best teacher I've ever had! !
110 Bus. Personal
FORMAL WEAR
▯ ▯ ▯ ▯
Sales & Rental
Tux Shirts
Bow ties
Ladies dress gloves
Military bow ties
Tux sales & rental
And Much More!
The Clothing & Accessories for Men & Women + Costumes 928 Massachusetts
10 - 5:30 Mon-Sat Thurs til 8
843-0611
B. C.AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and accessory shops. 85% of VISA, Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes use of *Western Civ* makes sense to avail. *Australian Civilization* makes sense to avail.
SPRING BREAK
7 tans $20 10 tans
HAIR SALON CUT $10 PERM $39
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAI SALON
300's
NEW LOCATION
23rd & Ousdahl
(Albany Park)
841-6232
DOUGLASCOUNTYRAFE VICTIMSUPPORT
SERVICE
120 Announcements
Merchandise
SERVICE
Confidential assistant assistance to Headquarters
Counseling Center at 841-236 or RT Info Center if
needed.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friend, understand-
gay voice. Free, confidential referrals ( calls
returned by counselors). Headquarters 841-2345 or
KU info. 800-3600. Sponsored by GLSOK.
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
SUFFERINGFROMABORTION?
Write
Hears Restored
Be 954
Grinell Ks. 67738
Confidential Response will follow.
Suicide Intervention- If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is -call 814-2354 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
We're always open.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 814-2435. Headquarters
Fraternities, Sororities Clubs Groups Teams
- Absolutely No Investment!
NO BRAINER
FUNDRAISER
- Absolutely No Investment:
- Earn hundreds of dollars per week! $1,000 or more per week.
- After two weeks at 8:00 am & 5:00 pm.
CALL TODAY
1-800-669-7678
Hillel
Events of the Week
Wednesday, Feb. 19
israel/ALIPAC meeting
7:00 pm Hillel House
Friday, Feb. 21
Friday, Feb. 21
Shabbat Dinner
6:00 pm Hillel House
Reservations Mandatory
by Thursday. Feb. 20
For rides and more information call 864-3948
FEB
D
20
1962
John Glenn orbited the globe three times 30 years ago.
--but the Soviets had done it earlier!
89 months later, U.S. landed men on the moon.
Competition, challenge, and pride pushed U.S. priorities.
Our life choices show what we value by our priorities.
See you Sunday?
Lutheran Campus Ministry by students and for students
12040read 843-4948 Worship: 10:30 a.m.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
11
You're not alone! Gail Leishman, Biscuits support group. Tundras to a boardwalks or K U C.
Women: "Let'd dance" on February 21st at IPM
Women: "Let'd dance" on Fairylands for $3
CHEEP FREE: 646-979
Still Hot! SPRING BREAKS LAST CHANCE!
IVE GOT TO
CALL TODAY!
I DON'T WANT
TO BE STICK IN
LAWRENCE!
YOU ARE HERE TO SEE ME
DAYTONA BEACH $104
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $128
STEAMBOAT $122
PANAMA CITY BEACH $122
FORT LAUDERDale $136
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $119
MUSTANG ISLAND / PORT ARANSAS $128
11th Annual Celebration!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
--need daycare Monday and wednesday mornings
7:30-1:00 1:06 for morning call. Phone 842-5559 after 5:00
130 Entertainment
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
With Cairnhill Corner and Gorgors Friday, February 25th,
18:30-4:00. 19th to 22nd. 18:30-4:00. All ages 19 up. Showtime. Get the
tickets!
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under
across the bridge in Massachusetts. Call 802-6737.
BIG HEAD TODD & THE MONSTERS
FRIDAY FEBRURAY 21
2 FOR 1 WELLS
140 Lost-Found
HURRY Don’t Miss Out. SOUTH PADRE and
CANCUN SPRING BREAK of 12” Seven night
packages from $199. Lowest prices guaranteed.
Call Orion TODAY: 1-800-800-6505
LAST! Eagle Creek soft side aftiece Last seen in
Monday on Wednesday, Feb. 6th Sentimental mile.
Reward $500.
200s Employment
MISSING: Kelly green canvas tote. Last spotted in office, department office on curtain at closing. Please leave room for research project, 40 homework papers and tax information, 794-613. Reward available and no charge.
205 Help Wanted
Assistant needed at chaparral clinic and fitness
Assistant needed at chaparral clinic and fitness
Brantley Charge Clinic at 1848 Church St.
Charge Clinic at 1848 Church St.
Attention College students. The Kansas Nat'l Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. To see if you qualify, call De Witt 842-9290.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michi ganboys/girlssummer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, watershooting, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $100, more or less. Campsite: 1768 Inglewood, Nlea, IL 61066-464-244
Catering Department, Kansas and Burge Union hiring caterers to work Thursday, February 20, m. 9 a.m., friday, February 21 - 8 a.m., 3 p.m.
Monday, February 24 - 7 a.m., 12 o'clock, Tuesday,
Wednesday, February 25 - to work one more days, but must work the entire shift and follow dress code for caterers. Will pay cash the day following employment. Apply Kansas and Burge Union Personnel Office, 8th Level.
CITY OF LAWRENCE DEPUTY COURT/LEG
Clerical assistance to Clerk of Municipal Court Requires HS diploma or GD & demonstrated ability to work with public in person & by telephone. Prefer experience with computer data management.
Part-time position rest for filming & occasional data
work. Employer must accept GED - 850.0 per hour. Complete application by Tuesday, Feb. 25th at Admin. Services, 2nd floor,
City Hall, 614th Ave., Lawrence, KS 60044
Coordinator for Student Senate Transportation Board needed. Responsible for administering day-to-day operations, preparing Board's budget and action plans, providing training and liaison to the general public. Student monthly position in 20 hours w/knowl. $40/month for a summer position. Applicable for summer 1992. Pick up application information from the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Street, Wednesday, February 26. 5:00 p.m.
RUINE LUSES NOW HIRING *Students Needed!*
Sarn$2.00 + month / room
Crew Staff, Cruise Staff, Gift Shop, Tour
Guides, Waiter/Walizer, etc., Holiday, Summer
and Career Employment allowance. No experience
needed.
EARN up to $50 a week and more part-time selling
*Be Jaywalky condoms* *great opportunity*
*No minimum deposit required*
Emergency salesperson to work part-time in Dawson
Experience required. Call after
nails m.i 853-76710
nails u.s. m.i 853-76710
Hairport. Stylist or nail technician - part-time or full time call 842-1978
Help Wanted. Full, part-time help for midnight to 6AM and 6AM soon. Please apply to person in Phillips 64a 9th and Iowa. Must be neat, clean, and enjoy working with the public.
Job opening to oversee resta work. Hours need 6 a.m., 8 a.m and 5.30 p.m. . Office duties and working with patient Tuesdays and Thursdays 12.30 a.m., 12.30 p.m. to 12.30 b.m. Call between 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. 299-0130
Naimish Hall is looking for a responsible, mature individual to work 24 hours per week in exchange for a one-time salary.
Earn $2,000/$1,000 this summer painting houses in your home town. Final hiring for these positions are being held now! 1) Stricty Management 2) Art Studio Services 3) All-Pre Student Painting I. 8:00-9:00 a.m.
OVERSIA JASBS JOBS $2000-2000 summer, Yurter
JURTER JOBS $1500-1500 summer, Yurter
LOCA FI, JOX 821-K920 CORona Del Mar CA 89283
Sales position: 35-40 hours per week. Must be available at 9am and Sunday. Apply at the Athletic 9 to 14am or 9 to 14pm.
SPRING SHIP TO FLORIDA BEACHES FUN
IN THE SUN, 4/Rm. prices Daya149,
Pamana City $139, Kitch. Wrftr & Trans Available
CALL CMat! 809-423-5264
Summer internships. Average earnings $4,000.00
University Directories, the nation's largest publisher of campus telephone directories, hires over 150,000 students per year. Top earnings $5,000.00-$8,000.00. Gain valuable experience in advertising, sales and public relations. Top positions are for campus telephone directory. Positions also available in other university markets. Expense paid include bus commuting to campus and orientation students for challenging, well-paying summer job. Internships may be available. Interviews on February 27th at the university.
SWIMMING LESSONS MANAGER City of Eudora is taking applications for swimming lessoners manager. Applications are available at Eudora Hall B2 and Maina Eudora
POOL MANAGER - City of Eudora is taking applications for city pool manager. Applications are available at Eudora City Hall, 7th and Maine Eudora.
We're Looking For A Few Good Men and Women! If you are interested in learning of love that is loved to you apply for a Fall 92 residence at Narsimhith Hall. Applications will be available at the front desk beginning February 12 and are due by Friday, January 4.
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered mid-Mileage Driving
Training for 18 hours of training. (Economy,
obtainable, transportation provided). 841
Driver Education offered third Midwest Driving
license training. Transportation provided: 841
License obtainable, transportation provided: 841
FORMALWEAR rental
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.
843-6011
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses divorce. criminal & civil matters
DONALDG. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Government photos, passports, immigration
portfolios
J/B/AW, Call Toni Swetler 918-260-3454
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding &
student ID photos, student phone calls
latch: 841-1894
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 489-6828
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES - Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more.
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
927/1 Mass. 841-1071
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic and most other legal ma
and most other legal matters
- Free Consultation
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Reliable experienced woman wants to clean your house. Call Kimi AKB-9440
Tired of crowded tutoring sessions, high rates? Private French lessons | Callen Dr. Callen NA
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service E 12 E 9th Street 843
Tired of taking a mailer at buyback time? Get $5.
Tired of taking a mailer at buyback time?
Free details mailed: 1-800-225-TEXT (8389)
i-der Woman Word Processing. Farner editor
(i-der Woman Word Processing). Farner editor
and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of
the book.
Want to learn guitar, stinging blues, goodtime rock, insightful folk and theory too. Call Benito at 610-342-8967.
From Quinny typing to Mailing Entry List Maintenance Experience and Reliability call Louise at Maintenance Experience and Reliability call Louise at Maintenance Experience.
1-Spell service always included. 2-Bame day service available. 3-Grad. please welcome Caliby Manda's contact number.
Resumes and cover letters. Fast and affordable, competitive prices, over 80 formats laser printed. Ask about our Referral Discounts! MacResumes 766-3325
Tutor for Tutor 002 and Math 101 Flexible schedule $5.90 per hour. B32-2637, Dave
235 Typing Services
Word Perfect IBM Compatible Word Processing
Word Perfect Grichard Orchard Word, no calls
after p.m. 843-808-8761
PINK ALA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for success! Now! Call
1+ I: Typing/WP Letters, term papers, resumes,
864-427-4549 on 30 wkdays any weekends
Word Processing, accurate and affords
PINK A1A MODE an edge on the rest. Sched-
ing Word Processing word processing
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertation, resumes. Editing, composition, rush projects.
18" Schirmu Letour Luxe 18×securing touring bike,
Cannonaddle pack, bookkrack, very good condition.
Lightweight, water-resistant.
300s
Merchandise
300s
merchandise
For Sale 1 student season basketball ticket Call
749-600-800 offer cash, only
305 For Sale
X
199 diamond back apex, 20 inch, full done, well maintained, combatready, $300, $84-549.
386-25 MJ2 Spring Special computer, 4 MB RAM,
1.2 & 1.4 Lamp 130, MB Hard Drive, 14* Super
MB RAM, MB HAM, 101 keyboard, mintower case
MS-DOS 5.2, Serial mouse $14.95, bargain bytes
832-2472
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture books, children's toys, made quils, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbags, Penthouses, vintage clothing, books, carnival glazes, Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising materials, metalworking equipment, Doulton, museum collectables, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale furniture, fireplace inserts, floor lamp, wayfinder灯 QUARTRIL'S FLARE MARKET 811 New Hamphire. Open every Fri, Sat and Sun 10-5. For boot rental info 484-686-6131.
Attention Bands and DJs: Wired equipment for cheap. Peavey SB-2 and international speakers, Sub cabinets, Technique Turnables, M-7000 amp. Prices negotiable. Call Evan 841-9109.
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and sorters. $499.00 up on usage. Call Sylvia 1-800-825-0292.
State of Kansas Trade-in-ades. Excellent condition
seller. $200 and up based on usage. Call Saskia
seller. $199 and up based on usage. Call Saskia
Floor of your hotel COLD? 8seat room size CAR
used, used, $50 each, pad available, 760
720 evening
story idea? 864-4810
Mountain Bike. 1991 Trek 300, bought new in 1-31
stored inventory, $340, Kari 864-1100.
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Genuine ROLLERBLACK skates for the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are best. All models available. Many colors. 843-2214
SHARP Laptop Computer 4060 3/12 drive 5/14
Motorsport Modem Software Manual Expansion
482-8007 482-8008
340 Auto Sales
1970 Honda Accord Sport 4-door 3-speed / A/C 9-100
1970 Honda Accord Sport 4-door 3-speed / A/C 9-100
1970 Honda Accord LCA驶/p/automatic/A/C 9-100
1970 Honda Accord LCA驶/p/automatic/A/C 9-100
Mercury 10.4 cu. ft. Automatic 32-cyl. 4-megapixel 4-sec. instrument; 4-sec. package. 14-
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without
change in diet, eating habits, ORMNITRITION
and other changes.
On TV's, VCR's, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MC/AMEX. Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 1804 W #7, 794-1919
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
$$$$ Fast cost for used and broken Gold jewelry,
are coins, e. Call David 841-2065
rare cons, etc. Call DUJAN 841-206.
Need 2 student tickets for ODU-KU game - will pay
Need 2 student tickets for OSU-RTG game - will pay $1 each. Call Anny A484-7047 leave message.
Wanted: 2 tickets to KU-MU Basketball game. $$
Call John,晚...1286-8670
Wanted: Non-student basketball tickets for Kansas vs. Missouri. March 8. Call Ken 814-4800.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1. 2,3 BRapts, nearcampus, no pets, available June
1st, Aug 18#897-897
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments in a quiet, upscale kitchen. Laundry facilities. Swimming pool. On-site management. Heat, A/C, water and trashpan. Purchase code #'1541! ?194. Call Chrill
B1 BRSULEbase-DW, Balecony, Carport, Water Paid
826, 834, 719, July 31. No账款, PortRent $302
1644, 843, 749
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, origin, or an intention, to make any such limitation, or discrimination."
合
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
DESPERATELY NEEDED : Person to sublease part of bemp apl. gas, cable panl. NEGRO part of bemp apl. gas, cable panl. NEGRO
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment
Includes kitchen, bath, laundry room &
Management, Inc.
191 W. 3rd St. 3rd Floor
Prime. 90% down.
Furnished room for responsible female. Near K U
841-8254
Feb Free, Bent two. bd app. $95.00 Ends July
31st. on bus route. C吧 749-8475.
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Spacious 1,2 & 3 bedrooms
available for the mature
house. Includes covered parking,
winter pool, expensive insurance,
on bus route available.
2040 Heatherwood *843-4754*
is where the
Get a group? Restored 8 bed fireplace, wood floors, W/D, near riverfront 841-STA78 (7827).
Heatherwood Apartments - 1, 2 and 3 bedroom.
Now until the end of May. On bus route 843-4749.
The Boardwalk
Hillview Apts $15 lease signing bonus! • 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for $235/month. • On bus lines to Washoe and Idaho.
1& 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Summer &
Fall Move-ins
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
14. MAN/MAN/MAN/NT, Nt
New location. Washers/dryers, 3 bedrooms. ceiling fans. Washers/dryers, microwaves, ceiling fans. min-blinds. Call now for an appointment.
Mon-Fri. 2 p.m. -5 p.m. 749-1565
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT?
CALL US FIRST
HOUSE: Nice 2 bedrooms with attached garage,
hardwood, new vinyl, ceiling fans, CA,
washer/dryer, fenced yard, No pets, references.
sec. deposit $500 month 749-841.
Looking for a place? Copy 2 bedroom apt. in the West Hills库. Available now for sublease through July. $395/month + utilities. Negotiable security. Call 684-2669
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Louisiana Place Apts. Now leasing nice 2BH Apt.
Bordering Campton Beautiful view of the call. CW
Natsimeth Hall is looking for a responsible, mature individual to work 24 hours per week in exchange for being available on Friday evenings.
*edu Qest!* Great 2 BR apt. for Grad student or
*classroom* $335/mo + LOW utilities. Near Campus.
*current residents moving after 4 yrs.* Available in April, 841-2727
MORNING RIVER
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
- Garages; $2^{1/2}$ Baths
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
---
Sublease Studio Apartment, $296 per month. Call
843-1223.
Subbase Avail, now then May 31; 2 BR apt, water
pald; now 123,425.
new; now 123,425. with adoption for after, large IBH COLONY Woods, Water盆, 823-0746.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR,
apartments at
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
841-5444
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
Naismith Place
Park 25
Spacious 3 new bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688.
Studio, Old West Lawrence, wood floors, Many Windows, Claw foot tub, sunroom, A/C Call 888-247-1000
Sublease not one bed apartment at 924 Mississippi.
Nice, spacious. close to campus. bd92.804-8729
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio,1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom,21/2 bath
meadowbrook
Core Visit Meadowbrook Arts
kiosk win 0x100
kiosk win 0x102
* btk lub U buskey
* btk lub U buskey
* pad t/v table
* pad t/v table
* on-site management
* 18:15
On-site management
* 18:15
2 btk. E of Iowa
2 btk. E of Iowa
3 btk. S of Oklahoma
3 btk. S of Oklahoma
* btk. E of 250. Sr C
* btk. E of 250. Sr C
* Appointment
* 10-Med
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apts. to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
- 2 Pools
NOW AVAILABLE Studios and Two Bedrooms
4 stops on property
* 2 Laundry Rooms
- On KU bus route--
It's Time to Step Up To MEADOWBROOK
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
15th & Crestline 842-4200
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms, 2 baths close to campus, farmed. Call 149-876-0500.
- Volleyball Court
- On KU bus route--
Two bedroom apartment on bus route. W/D/
$450 month + utilities. Call after 3:50 p.m.
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
842-145-128
---
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students!! --- You can get rid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
- Front door bus service
Plus...
- Dine Anytime meals
- Macintosh Computer Room
Call now to reserve your room
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
1, 2, 3, 4 Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
- Pool & Volleyball
* Quit location
* Close to bus route
* Small pets OK with deposit
* Inexpensive gas heat
* Central air
2166 W.26th 843-6446
Open 10-5, M-F
THE FAR SIDE
SHORTTERMLEASENOWAVAILABLE onstudio,
2br. apt. and 3br. 212 bathtownhouse
TRAILRIDGE
8417331
Save $$$ with each new deposit
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
Colony Woods Apartments
Laundry Facilities
- Walk to K.U.
* On Bus Route
* Heated Pool
* 3 Hot Tubs
- Laundry Facility
- Dishwasher
- Microwaves
- Mini Blinds
- Water Paid
- Flexible Leasing
Location-Lifestyle The Best Value In Town 842-5111 open 7 days a week
430 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE roommate wants to share 2BIR, 2 bath
ap microwave, pool on bus route, water
pool on bus route.
2 roommates needed ASAP for near, 4BR, north Lawrence home. Male, non-smokers preferred. 2 baths, DW, W/D, Microwave $215.00 utilities. cable paid, Ivane B41-848-698
FEBRUARY RENT FREE. Roommates wanted to share duplex in拍业 JPCC, 35 min from KU/w car pool available 2 bdrms vacant. Free SENIOR social situation C|Maker M14 - 451-8279 for details
Female roommate wanted: nice, spacious, central a/ & heat, DW, fireplace $210 p.m. m82-1979 eve.
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-4631.
M/F Roommate needed ASAP 3 bedroom townhouse campus. $1500, low utilities, low rentals.
Non-smoking roommate needed ASAP for beautiful, spacious 3BR townhouse. Garage, fireplace, washer/dryer hookup, near bus route $210/mo. + 1/utilities. D43-0652
One female student for a furnished 5 Dharm. house located on 18th Street, Brooklyn, NY. Anytime 842-7678
ROOMMATE WANTED for townhouse at Apple
Street $449,841 847-676
Roommate wanted to share nice 2 bpt APT 1 from campus at 9.00 a.m + 1/2 utility. Call
Rosumia menecioned immunarily through
$18 *u* 14 *u* infections and $28 *u* 14 *u* infections.
Rosumia menecioned immunarily through
$18 *u* 14 *u* infections and $28 *u* infections.
Roommate wanted. Furnished apartment near
camp and downstairs 1/4 util. +$102/mo 83-65
67-20
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $200/mo. 841-1287.
Roommate needs. 2-bedroom - duplex. $150 + 1/2
Ultr. Close to Campus. 842-1126
Very nice 1. B.R. plus staircase loft apartment for summer, spring and for next year. $180/mo plus tax.
*The price is per room.*
By GARY LARSON
2.49
"Hey! So I made the wrong decision! . . . But you know, i really wasn't sure I wanted to swing on a star, carry moonbeams home in a jar!"
12
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 20, 1992
Jayhawk Bookstore
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By Jay Williams Kansan staff writer
Former Kansas football player repays 'debt'
Drue Jennings said he owed a debt of gratitude to the University of Kansas.
Couple donates $55,000 to KU
Jennings earned a football scholarship in 1964. Without that financial help, he said he might never have attended college.
To show his thanks, Jennings, head of Kansas City Power & Light Co. in Kansas City, Mo., has committed $55,000 to the University.
Most of the money will go toward the expansion of Parrott Athletic Center, said John Searfe, director of community development at University Endowment Association.
Jennings said alumni donations made Jennings' scholarship and education possible.
wife and myself with a fine education. That was important to my advancement."
"Had it not been for other KU alumni, I could have never had the chance," he said. "The University provided my
Because of the support, Jennings said, both he and his wife, Sue, decided to make the commitment to show their support of the University.
"I'm in a position now where I am enjoying some success, so I want to give something back." Jennings said
Jennings he asked about the University's greatest need for money.
"I was leaming toward something athletic." he said.
His wife also graduated from KU in 1968 with a degree in education.
Jennings is a member of the board of directors for the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation and the board of trustees for the Endowment Association.
back
Scarffe said $50,000 would go to the expansion project at Parrott.
Scarffe said athletic office space, locker rooms, training facilities and student-athlete study areas were areas scheduled for improvements.
The project includes the renovation of 3,600 square feet and the addition of 45,000 square feet, he said. Total cost of the project is estimated at $5 million.
Jennings graduated from KU in 1968 with a degree in education. He received a law degree from the University in 1972. He lettered on the 1967 Kansas football team as a defensive
Allen Field House, Anschutz Sports Pavilion and Parrott will be connected after the renovations are complete, he said.
THE HEBREW SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Jennings committed the rest of the money to the Chancellors Club. Chancellors Club members donate more than $1,000 a year to the University, Scarfe said.
He said the club primarily financed academic scholarships and programs.
How Islam Achieves the Peace of Mind and Heart For Its Followers
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents the following lecture to help promote better understanding of Islam among Non-Muslims. Other lectures will be announced after the month of Ramadan.
Natural Fiber Clothing
Muslim Students Association
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Introducing Islam to Non-Muslims
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GREATEST HITS
including
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Hard To Say/Leader Of The Band
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Sale ends 3/4/92
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including
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Sunny Side Of The Street/Vocation
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BEST VALUE SALE All Best Value CDs on sale $9.99 each and $4.99 each Cassette!
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841-0100
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including:
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Love's Recovery
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including:
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The Hunger/Wait On Love
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HARRY CONNICK, JR.
including:
On Green Dolphin Street/I Mean You/E
Sunny Side Of The Street/Vocation
DAN FOGELBERG
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including:
Missing You/Make Love Stay/Longer
Hard To Say/Leader Of The Band
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Feb.24,1992
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
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including
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For more information call: 841-9768 or 749-1638
WANTED
STUDENTS WITH KU BOOKSTORE RECEIPTS SEEKING THESE MEN
JACKSON
HAMILTON
Claim your bounty from our deputies (present your receipts for a rebate) at the Kansas Union store's jail house this week and shoot for the chance to receive free KU Sweatshirts and other consolation prizes. Every bounty hunter receives a prize and a discount coupon. KU I.D. required. Some restrictions apply.
REWARD
7% rebate on cash and check purchases from the Fall 1991 semester
Rebates on receipts from the Fall 1991 semester will be given until June 24, 1992
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that shares its profits with the KU students
OREAD
BROOKLYN
MARKETS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101, NO.100
ADVERTISING:864-4358
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY,FEBRUARY21,1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
W
Maryland
The boy is doing a handstand on the grass. He looks very relaxed and happy.
Playground on the Hill
Jana Perry, London freshman, turns Campanile Hill into a playground. Perry was studying yesterday afternoon, but she got distracted by the warm weather. Andy Kula, KU weather service forecaster, said yesterday's high temperature was 67 degrees, but today's high is only expected to reach 50 degrees, with cloudy skies and a chance for rain.
Panel of experts recommends ban on implants for breast enlargement
The Associated Press
BETHESDA, Md. — A panel of experts yesterday unanimously recommended severally restricting silicone gel implants for breast enlargement but allowed easy access for women needing reconstructive surgery.
Minutes later, an officer of Dow Corning, developer of the implants, said it may stop making them.
The implants had been linked to possible health risks, but panel members
If the Food and Drug Administration follows the panel's advice, implants would be allowed only for women who
Women who had breast implants because their breasts were deformed or were removed because of cancer make up about 15 percent the one million women who carry them.
have lost a breast to cancer or have a breast deformity, or for women in controlled clinical trials.
Through their questions and statements during the course of the hearings, the members of the panel showed more sympathy for women needing breast reconstruction than for those who just wanted bigger breasts.
The FDA plans to give its decision on the recommendation within 60 days.
member and a professor of plastic surgery at George Washington University, complained that drawing that kind was judgmental and paternalistic.
"A woman without breasts is a total woman just as a man who has gone bald and is without hair is a total man," Freedman said.
However, Rita Freedman, a voting member, said women should not jeopardize their votes.
The panel decided that the implants should not be relied on for a lifetime and that women who had them should be prepared for the possibility that the devices may have to be replaced.
Lawrence tap water passes city inspection
Complaints prompted Utility Department to check
By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
A rash of complaints about the look, smell and taste of Lawrence tap water prompted the Lawrence Utility Department to investigate, but findings indicate that the water is perfectly to drink.
The city receives complaints about the water throughout the year, but more than two a week is uncommon, said Debbie Van Saum, assistant director for the Utility Department.
Two weeks ago, however, the city received almost 35 calls from Lawrence residents. Van Saun said, "I was registered during a one-week period."
Van Saun said that it was difficult to determine exactly what caused water problems but that they usually were harmless.
"In the (water) industry, it is not uncommon to have taste or odor problems." she said.
The water is tested everyday and must meet strict government standards, Van Saun said.
Van Saun said that the time of year and natural conditions often determined the taste and odor of tap water. The utility department, however, anticipates and treats such problems accordingly, she said.
One treatment, which was used for the most recent problems, was to pump carbon into the water supply with chemical feeders. The department also uses alum and soda ash to soften the water, Van Saun said.
"In the (water) industry, it is not uncommon to have taste or odor problems." Debbie Van Saun assistant director for the Lawrence Utility Department
Greg Crawford, director of public information at the Department of Health and Environment in Topeka, said taste and odor problems usually were caused by two natural phenomena—decaying vegetation or algae.
Any system that draws its water from rivers or lakes must make sure the water tastes or smells good, in order to ensure that it is safe. Crawford said.
Lawrence receives its water from Clinton Lake, the Kaw River and a limited number of wells.
Assuring safety means keeping bacteria levels down. Crawford/us.
"Obviously, people's perceptions are based on how it tastes, how it looks and how it smells." he said.
Crawford said the utility department would have to notify the public of any violation of government and Environmental Protection Agency standards.
That has not happened in recent years, he said.
Stan Leo, assistant professor of biological sciences, who teaches classes on water quality, said plants and algae in Clinton Lake and the Kaw Har had been decaying since fall. He said an early spring could change that.
He also said problems with flavor and odor could occur between the treatment plant and the home. Such problems include cracked pines.
"That's the (homeowner's) responsibility to fix the system." Lobed said.
Loeb said the Clean Water Act required that drinking water keep contamination at a level that was safe for consumption.
Bottled water sometimes does not meet government safety standards although it may be softer or contain less minerals. Leeb said.
He said tap water always was tested.
"We definitely have water that is safe to drink, to bathe in and to wash your clothes in," Loeb said, but residents complain not elsewhere.
William Embry, Fairway junior, said, "It has always tasted pretty bad."
Embyr said the water tasted metallic.
Leigh Hedrick, Lawrence junior,
said that the water always tasted bad
and could cause illness.
"It's not as pure looking and good tasting as I'd like it to be," Hedrick said.
NCAA stands behind policy says members make the rules
Dick Schultz, NCAA executive director, told committee members the important issue was that the NCAA was a voluntary, private organization.
By Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writer
Speakers addressed the House Federal and State Affairs Committee and concluded two days of hearings about a bill that would regulate penalties handed down by the NCAA and require the organization to give due process to players and teams being penalized.
"The rules are made by the members," he said. "I can't believe that if the rules are so unfair as people would paint them, that they would not come to the next convention and change them."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said Wednesday his main goal was to prevent the NCAA from punishing an entire organization for violations committed by an individual or
TOPEKA - Representatives from the NCAA administration and its member institutions defended the organization's penalty system yesterday before a House committee, saying that membership was voluntary and that all members had a voice in shaming police.
NCAA
The bill requires that punishment be limited only to individuals who have committed a crime involved in the violations
small group of individuals.
"The NCAA is very sensitive to the innocent people in all cases," he said. "I have spent a lifetime dealing with young people. The last thing I would want ... to do something that is going to damage these young people."
Schultz defended the NCAA against the charge that it punished innocent athletes with institutional penalties.
Schultz said the NCAA had considered punishing individuals for their actions rather than an entire institution.
He said the membership preferred the institutional penalty policy because some institutions willingly would make individuals scapegoats.
Benjamin Civieli, former U.S. attorney general, told the committee that the proposed bill would destroy the NCAA's enforcement abilities. Civieli was part of the Lee Commission, formed in April 1991 by the NCAA to investigate procedures.
Bob Frederick, KU athletic director,
addressed the committee.
"I believe it is ill-advised and inappropriate for the Legislature of this state or for the federal government to become involved in the affairs of a volunteer association," he said. "We applaud the senator who originated this bill, Senator Winter, for his concern for intercollegiate athletics and student athletes. We simply believe the best way to govern the NCAA is from within."
The NCAA is simply the universities trying to establish, through rules and regulations that they jointly agree to, a level playing field. "he said,
Six Kansas institutions, including the University of Kansas, are among the NCAA's more than 800 members. All six submitted statements expressing opposition to the bill.
Judy Sweet, NCAA president, said the nationwide interest that state governments had taken in NCAA procedures came from misunderstanding.
Rock Chalk cast treats LHS, adjusts to accommodations
"You have gotten our attention," Sweet said. "As one representative of the membership, I can tell you we will work very hard to close the gap of misunderstanding about how the NCAA operates."
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
For the first time in 42 years, Rock Chalk Revue has found a new home.
The change inspired this year's Rock Chalk theme, "Changing Places," and prompted singers in the in-between red t-shirts that read "Up in suir bich."
KU students have sung, danced and acted on the stage in Hoch Auditorium since the variety show began. But in a June storm, lightning hit Hoch, challenging the Rock Chalk staff to find a new place to rehearse and perform.
Last night's performance at Lawrence High School was the final
Act Two included "Hold the Mold" by Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Phi Epsilon and "Dial Soap for Murder" by Gamma Gamma Delta and Lambda Chi Alpha.
The show revolves around the Hoch fire theme and simulates a telethon designed to raise to rebuild the building.
dress rehearsal and was performed for presence High School students and faculty.
Act One, which had three acts by greek organizations and two in-between acts, began with *Chang Ging*'s album *Kappa Kappa*. Kappa Kappa with FhiDelta Theta.
Proceeds from all six performances of the show, Feb. 21-23 and Feb. 27-29 will go to the United Way of Douglas County.
"Heavenly," by Gamma Phi Beta
and Phi Gamma Delta, and the Latest,
Greatest Show on Earth," by Earth.
They were in Beta and Beta Theta Pi
were also in Act One.
In-between acts featured KU students with musical talents, a student who imitated Ethel Merman and an 8mm black-and-white film called "Flaxton II."
Joan Witt, in-between acts director,
said participants spent many hours
rehearsing and performing for Rock
Chalk.
"It's more than a full-time job," Witt said.
Jeff Reynolds, executive assistant director, said the staff scheduled rehearsals at churches, dance studios and the Kansas Union Ballroom because of the Hoch fire.
However, Reynolds said he was pleased with the quality of the final dish.
"We had a good, solid run with a few mistakes, but we're ready to fire things up for opening night," he said.
FAN
Marnee Dietnch/KANSAN
Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Delta Theta perform their show, "Chan Ging's Place."
2
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
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The office of study abroad is taking applications for Study Abroad Minority Scholarships for the 1992-1993 school year. More information is available at 203 Lippincott Hall.
■ The Geography Department Colloquium will be at 3:30 p.m. today at 317 Lindley Hall. Diane Debinski will deliver a presentation called "Inventory and Monitoring of Biodiversity: An Assessment of Methods and a Case Study of Glacier National Park, Montana."
ON CAMPUS
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■ Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union
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Midnight Movies
Friday & Saturday $3.00
NEAN TARRANDON CELINA DAVIS
February 21,22,23
Cosponsored by Women's Student Union
Tickets $2.50,
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SUA Box Office.
864-SHOW
SUSAN SARANDON GEENA DAVIS
THELMA & LOUISE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday: 7:00 & 9:30
Saturday: 7:00 & 9:30
Sunday matinee: 2:00
THELMA & LOUISE
February
Cosponsored by
Women's Student
Union
SUSAN SARANDON GEENA DAVIS
THELMA
& LOUISE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The Brazil-Portugal Association will sponsor the Brazilian Carnival from 8 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. tomorrow at Liberty Hall, 640 Massachusetts St.
ON THE RECORD
A framed 1991 composite photograph, valued at $1,700, was taken between 2 and 6 a.m. Wednesday from the Alpha KappaLambda fraternity, 2021 Stewart Ave., Lawrence police reported. Kurt Bowman, president of the fraternity, said that members found the picture in several pieces in the yard and that he did not know how
The Lawrence Audubon Society will sponsor a behind-the-scenes tour of the Museum of Natural History at 10 a.m. tomorrow. The tour will be given by Rick Prum, who is the curator of birds at the museum.
MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL CO.
■ KU Small Business Development Center and the School of Business will sponsor "Women in Business: The Challenge to Grow," from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 2002 McDonald Drive.
much repairs would cost.
A car stereo and amplifier, valued together at $800, were taken between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 5-20 p.m. Wednesday from a KU student's 1988 Toyota truck, Lawrence police reported. The truck suffered about $500 in damage.
The University Dailly Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairfather-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, K6045.
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WEATHER
The Panasonic 1100 Series. Offering you so much and delivering it for so little.
NEBRASKA Omaha 39/21
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 48/28
KANSAS Lawrence 50/30
MISSOURI Kansas City 45/30 St. Louis 49/36
Dodge City Wichita 44/26
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 58/36
3-day outlook
WEATHER high: 50 low: 30
NEBRASKA Omaha 39/21
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 48/28
KANSAS Lawrence 50/30
MISSOURI Kansas City 45/30 St. Louis 49/36
Dodge City Wichita 44/26 50/29
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 58/36
3-day outlook
TODAY Overcast skies give a 40 percent chance of rain. FSE winds at 2 mph.
TOMORROW Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. ENE winds at 10-15 mph.
SUNDAY Partly cloudy. SE winds at 5-10 mph. Chance of late-day showers.
Across the U.S.
San Francisco 63/49
Phoenix 76/49
Padre Island 68/55
Atlanta 70/47
Ft. Lauderdale 80/72
Washington D.C. 59/36
Chicago 36/20
Minneapolis 26/12
Seattle 55/46
Salt Lake City 52/31
3-day outlook
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low: 30
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Forecast by Marc Kramer, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
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Attention
1024X
Omicron Delta Kappa
Juniors
National Leadership Honorary Join KU's leaders. Apply for Omicron Delta Kappa.
- Scholarship - Athletics - Creative and performing arts
- Candidates must have demonstrated superior leadership in one of the following areas:
- Scholarship - Athletics - Creative and performing arts
- Campus government, social, service, and religious activities
religious activities
- Journalism, speech, and the mass media
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN CHANCELLOR'S OFFICE
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN CHIANCELLO'S OFFICE Deadline is February 26
The University of Kansas Theatre Presents
Romeo & Juliet
By William Shakespeare
8:00 p.m. February 27, 28, and 29,1992
2:30 p.m. March 1, 1992
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; all seats reserved; public $7, KU students $3.50, senior citizens and other students $6; to charge by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee
CAMPUS/ AREA
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
3
AFRICANSTYLE
Cultural awareness inspires campus clothing trend
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan staff writer
KU students have different ways of expressing a connection to their ancestors, and some like Deba Briscoe do it with clothes and jewelry.
Briscoe, Topeka freshman, said the clothes she wore helped her to understand her African heritage.
"I like the jewelry and the clothes because I like to find out about our heritage," she
sad. Really, it's worn out where you come from, the history of it all."
Black History Month
FRED BACON
Briscoe, an African studies major said that her mother collected masks and statues from her grandfather's ancestors in the West Indies and West Africa.
Her mother also sews African hats and clothing for relatives and friends, Briscoe is a fine cook.
As cultural awareness increases, so does interest in African fashions and jewelry from Maicolm Xhats to beads. Some students wear them for fun, but others say the items are tools for learning about the African culture.
Jill Legler, manager of the Sunflower International Casbah. 803 Massachusetts St., said African clothing and accessories were among her most popular items.
"I think in general there is a renewed appreciation for things with African features," Legler said. "Everybody is buying them, not just African-Americans."
Legler said the most popular items were trade beads and cowry shells.
The trade beads, used for necklaces, were made in Europe and traded in Africa about 200 years ago for gold, ivory and slaves.
The cowry shells, which are glossy molusk shells, are used to make necklaces, belts, bracelets and earrings. Legger said the shell was a symbol of fertility and plenty.
Other popular accessories at the store are kente cloths and mud cloths. Both are woven in strips and can be stitched together to make bigger cloths and rues.
"Most all of our things are made authentically," she said. "We make sure that it's not African-like. An African woman who lives in New York makes some of the things."
Another current fashion trend is the Malcolm X hat started by director Spike Lee, who is making a movie about the slain civil rights activist whose hats are black with a large X on the front.
Giles Smith, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands,
senior, said the hats were trend but also
common.
*People who are knowledgeable will wear it to show they are truly in what Malcolm X
Smith said the hats served a purpose.
Crystal Henry, East St. Louis, III., senior, agreed the hats were trendy but said people who wore African-style clothing and accessories did it to express themselves.
"I think if people see the Malcolm X hats, they will try to find out about him," he said. "It's trendy in a positive way."
"It is a little trendy, and a lot of people see Spike Lee on 'Arsenio Hall' and start to wear it," she said. "I'm all for people wearing the clothing. It's freedom of expression."
At the Sunflower International Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St., Aaron Lucas holds a talking drum and models traditional African accessories, including a kente cloth strip from Ghana, a cowry shell necklace and millefee trade beads.
Marnee Dietnch/KANSAN
Couple shows how to fight back hard Model Mugging simulates realistic attack scenarios
By Annette Brill Special to the Kansan
He hissed profanity at her and smothered her with his hands.
The woman pretended to sleep, seemingly unaware of the man creeping toward her, until he suddenly forced himself upon her.
She freed herself with a forceful elbow jab to his head.
The room exploded with the spectators' deafening shouts as she continued to target her shots to her assailant's groin and eyes.
1
This simulated rape scenario was one of several presented by Cindy and John Chamberlin, instructors of Model Mugging of Kansas, at a Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas meeting last night.
"Model Mugging lets us take power into our own hands." Cindy Chamberlin told approximately 60 spectators at the demonstration. "We teach our students they can fight through the terror of sexual assaults."
The Model Mugging program uses realistic attack scenarios to teach students self-defense techniques. Instructors emphasize using lower-body strength because sexual assault victims usually end up on the ground.
A male instructor acts as the model mugger and wears a helmet the size of a beach ball and a heavy suit of protective padding.
John Chamberlin said the program was unique
Cindy Chamberlin, black shirt, kicks John Chamberlin to demonstrate a self-defense technique.
because it taught students to use full-force punches in the first class.
"This is down and dirty street fighting," he said.
John Chamberlin also said Model Mugging focused on preventing attacks by describing students as "peaceful warriors."
Cindy Chamberlin said students spent 25 percent of class time on self-discussion or talking about their
"Rape is a soft term for what actually goes on," Cindy Chamberlin said. "Often the victim thinks, 'What did I do?' The truth is, this should never happen to anybody."
She said that many students had been sexually assaulted and that they formed bonds by supporting each other.
According to FBI statistics, a woman is beaten, shipped, punched or raped every 18 seconds. Cindy Katz
She also said that one of three women and one of seven men would be sexually assaulted in their lifetime.
"We're not saying that you will be able to walk down a dark street and not be afraid at all," she said. "The fear won't be paralyzing, because you'll know how to move in that state."
Student reaction to the presentation was enthusiastic
Michael Hayes, Dallas sophomore, said the Model Mugging self defense demonstration was one of the most successful in the school.
"I think it's really important how they focus on the empowerment of women and also on women's emotions," she said.
Michael Danovsky, Minneapolis graduate student and Eric Barnhart, Lawrence resident, said they enjoyed the program but felt it should have included more men's issues.
Model Mugging will offer its third Lawrence class from March 7 to 21 at the LawrenceCommunity Center. The class consists of five sessions on Tuesdays and Saturdays and the cost is $395. Space in the class is still available.
Committee cancels admissions bill vote
By Greg Farmer Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — As Board of Regents staff recommended that Regents members quiet their support for a qualified admissions bill yesterday, the head of the Senate committee considering the bill said that he would not call for a vote until he knew the committee would pass it.
The Senate Education Committee conducted three days of hearings earlier this month on a bill that would enact admissions standards at Regents universities. The committee was scheduled to vote yesterday on bills it previously had heard.
The committee did not vote on the bill vesterday.
"The votes just aren't there," Harder said, "I don't have a vote on this bill (for) you."
Ted Ayres, the Regents legislative liaison, told Regents members and university presidents, including Chancellor Gene Budig, at yesterday's Regents meeting that their efforts were changing opinions on the qualified admissions issue.
"But I would like to suggest to the Board that members cease their efforts for this particular session."
Ayres said, "My sense is that this year is not the best time to push the issue.
The Regents should wait to see what the Legislature does with other education efforts.
Regent Rick Harman, who spoke on the Regents behalf at legislative hearings on the bill, said that he agreed with the recommendation.
"Westill feel very strongly that qualified admissions is necessary for our students to remain competitive," he said. "Our first priority has got to be the budgetary process. This is not the time to push the Legislature on qualified admissions. If we press on, we could jeopardize budgetary issues."
Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director, said that admissions standards could be added onto another bill this session.
*Qualified admissions may still come around.* Koplik said. "Be open to the idea presented in a different way."
The Regents also discussed the following legislative issues:
Ayres said that a bill had been introduced in the House of Representatives that would require the Board to have a curriculum for high school students.
The Regents voted to oppose part of a House bill that would abolish the Student Advisory Council. Sarah Scribner, head of the council, urged the Regents to oppose the bill. The bill has been introduced but is awaiting legislative action.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
OPINION
MARCH 2014 Chicago, Illinois
CLANTON
92
AN OLYMPIC MOMENT:
The Men's Uphill
How not to get a job
Now is about the time that graduating seniors should begin to contemplate interviewing for a real, honest to goodness job.
I've attempted to find a job that would support myself the same number of times I've flown to Jupiter on a space rocket made of cotton candy, but I still feel I have some important interview tips to offer based on the facts that: 1) I've held a job or two in my time, 2) I can make stuff up pretty well, and I don't see why I can't do that with interview tips too.
First, the interview preparation. To help you with this I've devised a handy checklist to make sure you've done everything that's required for your first interview.
-Helpless and mindless gurgling
Birth.
—Taking, or at least cognitive gurgling.
- Sixteen years of schooling. Gosh, did you ever stop to realize you've been going to school for 16 years — actually 17 with kindergarten? I hope that doesn't make you feel OLD. You have enough to worry about already without me telling you how OLD you are. Just because a tree I planted 17 years ago is now 50 FEET TALL doesn't mean you should feel the slightest bit OLD!
A piece of paper that says you've graduated from an institution of higher learning — which is just a fancy way to say you're graduating in many years under the influence of alcohol.
If you have accomplished every item above, you're prepared for the interview. See, you have nothing to worry about. (Except maybe how OLD you are. Sorry, couldn't resist.) Now that you're ready for the interview, there are a few things you must keep in mind during the interview.
Rich Bennett Staff columnist
First, remain calm. Just because
this interview could be the difference between making millions of dollars or living in a cardboard box licking the inside of soup cans, there is no reason to panic.
Secondly, meet everyone you can while you're at the interview, including the secretaries. College advisers repeat this time and time again, and it's usually for this reason that I slap them silly. But it is true. The more people you meet while interviewing, the better your chances are of being remembered. Then again, if you just want to be remembered you could set fire to the carpet.
Don't appear to be shifty. In other words, don't cross your legs, fidget, or use shifty words like "shifty." Touching your face, and certainly anything resembling a nosepick, is out of the question. Don't even try the snake move where it looks like you are going to pick your nose but then you just rub the outside.
Finally, be wary of trick questions. Your interviewer will undoubtedly ask enormously open-ended questions designed to see how fast you can think on your feet. Here is a quick guide to prepare you for those difficult questions:
A) Well, I'm energetic, hard-work-
ing, and I love working with people.
I feel I would use these attributes every
day that I work for you.
B) Who wants to know?
C) Don't play games with me (inter-
viewer's first name here, or better yet,
a nickname). It says right there on my
resume who I am.
2. What specific strengths do you feel you would bring to this job?
I am very personable, dependable, and I think fast on my feet.
C) I deal well with people and only kill when provoked.
A) I had an internship in a big city where I got a lot of hands-on practical experience.
B) I learned that if you drink a lot of water after a long night of drinking you won't be as hungover the next day.
3. What one experience during college will help you the most if you work here?
C) What do you mean, "If I work here?" You'd be a fool not to hire me, and once you do, I'll have your job inside of three months.
4. What are you looking for in the way of salary?
A) Oh, it's negotiable.
B) Money and a lot of it. We're talking six figures here, pal.
C) Well, that depends. How much do you make?
If you answered "B" or "C" to any of these questions, you have shown an excellent ability to think on your feet. And it's a good thing, because that's exactly where you'll be — on your feet and in the unemployment line.
When you finally do land a job, just remember how much this advice helped you. And in case you have trouble remembering, don't worry. If I'm unable to find a job, I'll make sure to remind you repeatedly in a cheap attempt for a handout.
Rich Bennett is an Overland Park senior majoring in journalism.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU buildings need insurance
In the tornado state of Kansas, faith in self-insured buildings is an idea gone with the wind.
Ask anyone what comes to mind when they hear the word "Kansas," and responses invariably will include "Dorothy," "Toto" and especially "tornadoes." Indeed, frightening, unusual weather does seem to be one of this state's biggest claims to fame. One would think anyone owning property here and not insuring it against such acts of nature would have at least one ear out of the water, so to speak. But 70 percent of the buildings on state university campuses in Kansas are not insured right now.
Regent Charles Hostetler has asked the Joint Committee on State Building Construction to give the Regents approval to purchase insurance for these buildings, a plan long overdue.
Some legislators hold the opinion that state buildings are self-insured. But, as those of us
on the University of Kansas can attest, that is certainly not the case with Hoch Auditorium. The state has not come up with the $18 million needed to rebuild the much-needed classroom space destroyed by lightning last summer. Nor is financing for total reconstruction planned for the near future.
Hosteller estimated that the total premium for insuring all structures valued above $100,000 would be between $750,000 and $1.2 million annually. This cost may seem prohibitive with all the financial difficulties the state currently is experiencing, but $18 million paid over a period of fifteen years is much easier to accept than the whole amount up front, as in the case of Hoch. And that is just one building.
Hostetler raises the question as to what would happen if a tornado wiped out more than one building on a campus. For all of us living in Kansas, that is not such a far-fetched question.
Kate Kelley for the editorial board
Books can combat ignorance
Banning controversial material from schools will not allow children to learn from our past
Banning books containing racial language and sexual innuendo from children who are old enough to understand the difference between right and wrong only keeps them ignorant.
In O'Fallon, Ill., a man with a sixth-grade daughter is trying to ban "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" from her classroom. Although the book contains racial language that is unacceptable today, children should be allowed to read it. A child should learn about these offensive words in school rather than on the streets.
gone through.
But reading these kinds of books in the classroom alone is not solving the problem. Instead, educators must provide their students with accompanying information about why this language was being used and what they can learn from it. If a teacher takes the time to explain why the words are intolerable in today's society, what the consequences of using the language are and how they pertained to our past, children would become more aware of the changes our world has
Banning books containing sexual innuendo also shelters children from reality. When it is time for them to start experimenting with sex, children must be aware of the consequences as well as knowledgeable about what they are doing to their bodies. Some may disagree and feel that sex should be taught at home. Unfortunately, this does not always happen. By educating children with books and classroom instruction, our children can be better informed individuals.
Today it is inevitable that most people will be exposed to some sort of sexual activity before marriage and even before high school. By banning books with foul language we are letting our children learn it off the streets. For parents who do educate their children about sex, the information taught in the classroom can only enhance the learning. Seeing people stricken with diseases, unwanted pregnancies and so on illustrates the need to educate our future adults.
Banning books that represent past and present behaviors will shelter our children from reality. We need to educate in order to fight ignorance.
Julie Eileen Litt for the editorial board
Editorials reflect the majority opinion of the University Daily Kansan editorial board. Opinions expressed in letters, cartoons and guest and staff columns are solely those of the author or artist. Views expressed in columns and cartoons are not necessarily shared by the Kansan.
Wise up, philosopher
Philosophy often has the reputation for being the enemy of common sense. Folks think of philosophers as "admirals in the Kansas Navy." Philosophers are the ones who can never make a decision because they are not sure anything really exists, or they can never be happy because everything exists and does nothing else.
Most of the ribbing that philosophy gets is undeserved. Philosophers are among the most even-keened, to-the-point, common-sensical people I've known. However, Eric Fliokoski, a KU senior majoring in philosophy, is an outstanding exception. Judging from his attempt at satire in the Feb. 12 Kansan, Flokoski is as informed by reality as Ronald Reagan, O. G. Carr, and Stephen Hawking. In Eastwood, Axel Rose and anyone else who is a legend in his own mind.
If Folkoski wants to satirize KU feminists
intelligently, he should find out what they actually say. To do that, he should listen to them and read them instead of fabricating them from his not-so-philosophical armchair.
Lawrence KU graduate
Lettersto the editor
Ticket policy is alright
First, the athletic director and his staff do not determine the student ticket allocation for Allen Field House. That determination is a matter of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board policy, which is now and has been for as long as anyone can remember, that 45 percent of the seating will be allocated to students. Further, to prevent erosion of that number, the KUAC Board two years ago adopted an additional stipulation that any student tickets not purchased in any year would be made available for sale to the faculty, staff and general public on a one-year, nonrenewable basis and returned to the student pool the following year.
In the Jan. 31, 1992, Kansan, an editorial entitled "Ticket policy slights students," contained several inaccurate statements which should be corrected.
Second, this year we sold 31 tickets less than last year and 331 more than two years ago (1989-90). The 31 ticket difference between this year and last year is primarily due to people who were not enrolled in at least seven hours, or who had dropped out of school at the time they picked up their tickets.
Third, the total number of seats made available to students this year is 7,187. This includes sports combo tickets sold, student athletes, marching band, basketball pep band and spirit squad. These 7,187 seats represent 49.9 percent of the seating capacity (15,643). In other words, students have 148 seats more than the standard 45-percent allocation.
Finally, to our knowledge, no other major
Division I basketball program in the country, which is in a sellout situation, has as high a percentage of seats allocated to students as we do. At Indiana, for example, students can only see every other game because of the limited number of tickets allotted to them.
The KUAC Board and Athletic Department are keenly aware that the enthusiasm that makes the field house the best place in the nation to play basketball originates with the students. This is reflected in the board's student ticket allocation policy.
Stephen Parker Chair, KUAC Board of Directors Letter hurts feminists
Kaufman expressed concern that I was speaking for all women. Yet she used broad generalizations and incorrect assumptions to get her point across.
I absolutely agree that all women are not the
same. However, there are many statistics that illustrate the patriarchal power structure of our society. Twenty-seven percent of college women have been victims of rape or attempted rape. Only 2 percent of the reported rapes result in a conviction. On the very day that Kaufman's letter appeared, a report was printed of a woman having been sodomized near her home.
Currently in two states, if a man forces a woman to have sex it is never rape if they are married. A man with a high school diploma will earn more than a woman with a college degree. There are only two women in the U.S. Senate. Finally, a woman has never held the positions of vice president or president of this country.
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
The fact that I was described as "living in a man-hating microcosm," and had sarcastic remarks made about my social life attests to the damaging stereotype of a feminist woman.
- Rebecca Pickens
- St. Louis senior
KANSAN STAFF
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
EDUCATION
News .. Mike Andrews
Editorial .. Beth Randolph
Planning .. Lara Gold
Campus .. Eric Gorski/Rochelle Oleson
Sports .. Eric Nelson
Photo .. Julie Jacobson
Features .. Debbie Meyers
Graphics .. Aimee Braunad/Jile Meewes
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
Campus sales mgr .. Bill Leibengood
Regional sales mgr .. Rich Harbisonberg
National sales mgr .. Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr .. Arne Johnson
Production mgrs .. Kim Wallace
Marketing director .. Lisa Keeler
Marketing director .. Kim Clintax
Course coordinator .. Leah Ward
Classified marr .. Kie Chin
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas should use a specific font for their letter(s).
Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photocopied.
*nin Kanana reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanana newroom, 111 Sauffer-Flint Hall.
Stick
OKAY, CLASS!
TIME TO DO SOME SERIOUS AEROBICS!
WHOOPS!
HANG ON A
SECOND!
I'LL BE
RIGHT
BACK...
ALMOST FORGOT my
LEG-WARMERS!
...
by David Rosenfield
I'LL BE RIGHT BACK...
ALMOST FORGOT MY
LEG-WARMERS!
ROCK - CHALK
ROCK - CHALK
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
5
CHANGINGPLACES
R·E·V·U·E
CHANGING PLACES
FEB 1992
THE CHALK REVIVAL OF KANSAS
ROCKCHALKREVUE1992!
ROCK · CHALK
R · F · V · I · P
On behalf of the women at Tri-Delta, congratulations and good luck to all of the participants of Rock Chalk,and special thanks to the men of Sig Ep for a great couple of months and a great show.
Break a Leg Rock Chalk Participants!
GOOD LUCK!! TO ALL GREEK MEMBERS PARTICIPATING IN ROCK CHALK!
Let's go to ROCK CHALK! Support the United Way!
*1992 Rock Chalk Revue Advisory Board
KU PANHELLENIC
Kappa Alpha Theta Congratulations and good luck to all the Greek members participating in Rock Chalk!
SPECIAL THANKS TO THE MEN
Jumping Bear
Sigma Delta Tau Congratulates all participants
OF THE BETA HOUSE!
Love, Thetas
The Men of $ \Sigma N $ would like to wish all the participants in Rock Chalk 1992 the best!
the Co
¡Hola! Good Luck to All the Contestants in the RockChalk Revue!!! Zeta Beta Tau
Good Luck and Congratulations to Everyone Participating in Rock Chalk
Alpha Chi Omega
Chi Omega
Congratulates and wishes best of luck to all 1992 Rock Chalk Participants
Best of Luck
to all in Rock Chalk From the women of Delta Gamma
Sailboat
LIFETIME SAFE
Congratulations and Best Wishes to all those who are participating in Rock Chalk Revue 1992! ПВФ&ДY
Congratulations
to everyone involved in Rock Chalk Revue 1992!
The women of AΓΔ are looking forward to "Changing Places" with the Men of AXA at the
"Night of the soap awards!"
---
The Men of TAU KAPPA EPSILON would like to congratulate all those participating in ROCK CHALK REVUE 1992 & BEST OF LUCK!
ROCK WITH CHALK!
+
GOOD LUCK
To those HEAVENLY FIJI'S...
Luv, the G-Phi's
The men of Sigma Phi Epsilon would like to say thanks to the women of Delta Delta Delta, and wish good luck to everyone in Rock Chalk 1992.
Sigma Phi Epsilon
FIJI ΓΦB
ΓΦB
$ \Delta \Delta \Delta $
Good Luck to All Rock Chalk Revue Participants. P.S.-Thanks Gamma Phi for all the SANDWICHES
Gamma Phi Beta- Working with you has been HEAVENLY
The FIJI'S
FIJI
The Women of Kappa Kappa Gamma Thank the Men of Phi Delta Theta
Good Luck to everyone participating!
For a great Rock Chalk 1992
Congratulations And Good Luck To All The Rock Chalk Participants!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
6
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
ENTERTAINMENT
HAPPENINGS
BARS
Benchmarks Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W. 23rd St.
Friday: Big Head Todd and the
Monsters, 10 p.m.-1.30 a.m.
cover charge: $2
Tuesday: The Samples
10 p.m.-1.30 a.m., cover charge: $2
Wednesday: Vixn/Cindy Mizelle,
10 p.m.-1.30 a.m.
Bogarts of Lawrence
611 Vermont St.
Saturday: The Parlor Plays: 9:30
p.m.-1. 30 a.m., cover charge: $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Friday: Sin City Disciples,
10.p.m-2.a.m, cover charge: $3
Saturday: Salty Iguanas with Steal
Mary, 10.p.m-2.a.m,
cover charge: $3
Monday: Open mike
9.30.p.m-2.a.m, no cover charge
Wednesday: Kill Whitey with
Course of Empire, 10.p.m-2.a.m,
cover charge: $3
Thursday: Which Doctor with
Camberwell Green, 10.p.m-2.a.m,
cover charge: $3
The Brass Apple
3300 W. 15th St.
Tuesday: Karaoke night
p.m. 1-30 a.m., no cover charge
Dos Hombres
815 New Hampshire
wEDnesday: Karaoke night
10 p.m., no cover charge
Flamingo Club
501 N. Ninth St.
Friday, Saturday: toppless
dancers, noon-1 a.m.
cover charge: $2 or a two-drink
minimum
Monday: Poetry Slam, 7 p.m.
cover charge: $2
Henry T's Bar & Grill
3520 W. Sixth St.
Thursday: Karake night
p.m.-2 a.m., no cover charge
The Jazhaws of Lawrence
9261.2/Massachusetts St.
Friday, Saturday: Homestead
Grays,10.p.m.-1:30 a.m.
cover charge: $3
Thursday: D. Alexander
10.p.-1:30 a.m., cover charge: $3
Johnny's Tavern
401 N. Second St.
Friday, Saturday: Faster Johnny,
9:30 p.m-2 a.m., cover charge:$1
The Power Plant
901 Mississippi St.
Friday, Sunday: alternative
music night
Riverside Bar and Grill
520 N. Third St.
Friday: Wood Band
p.m.-1 a.m., cover charge: $2
Shiloh
Shiloh
1003E. 23rd St.
Friday: Sandy Barket/Bad
Zephyr, 9p-1.m-a1.
cover charge: $3
Stress Dance lessons
7:45-8:45 p.m.
Band: Over Easy, 9p-1.m-a1.
cover charge: $3
The Yacht Club
530 Wisconsin St.
Tuesday: Karaoke night
p.m. 1-4, m. no, cover charge
ART EXHIBITIONS
Spencer Museum of Art
Saturday, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sunday, noon-5 p.m.
Beyond the Floating World,
Japanese Prints in the
Twentieth Century
runs through March 15
Mexican Retablo Painting:
The Art of Private Devotion
runs through March 8
Documenting the American Dream: FSA Photographs of the Great Depression runs through March 8
THEATER
Liberty Hall: 642 Massachusetts St.
Monday/Tuesday: New Direction
Series: Spalding Gray, 8 p.m.
tickets: $15-students
Crafton-Preyer Theatre Thursday: University Theatre Series: "Romeo and Juliet" 8p.m.
Lawrence Arts Center
200 w. 9th Street
Saturday: Performance Night
Series featuring Jim Krause and
Las Cuatro, 8 p.m., tickets: $2
DANCE
Saturday: Womyn's Dance
Douglas County Fairground
Buildings 1 and 2. 8 p.m.-12 a.m.
$3 donation
Musicians use experiences history to send messages
Rappers use rhetoric
During an age when many people face the threat of AIDS, Redhead Kingpin is preaching safe sex and abstinence.
Sure, he's not the only one, but his message is just a bit different.
Kingpin is not holding seminars or giving speeches to young people. He's rapping about it.
The theme of restraint and abstinence is apparent in his single "Nice & Slow" from his latest album. And Kingpin has even set up a safe-sex hotline for young people.
His rap is entertainment with a political twist
rap groups like Public Enemy and other hard-core rap acts, raps has taken on a political flavor. Message-oriented rap is providing young people with their own type of political rhetoric.
Harry Allen, director of relations for Public Enemy, said the popularity of speaking out about abuses of Public Enemy did, flub-tunted.
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"My idea is Public Enemy is popular because they talk about racism, and racism is the thing that is sexier than sex," he said. "The next greatest motivator of people, next to sex, is the practice of and reaction to racism."
Allen said political rap that dealt with racism was popular because there had been little progress in ending racism.
Public Enemy jumped into the political spotlight with the release of "Fear of a Black Planet" in 1990, an album which contains songs about racism in the movie industry, racist 911 emergency services and a fear of interracial relationships.
The political concerns of the group are driven home by such videos as "By the Time I Get to Arizona," which is about assassinating politicians who vote not to recognize the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
Robert Rowland, associate professor of communication,
practical political rap in his classes as examples of political rap.
"There is more to political rhetoric than public speeches by the president," he said. "Rap is an important way in which rhetoric functions for young people." More information can be obtained from MNFN@Cc.com.
"More young people watch Yo! MTV Raps than Csan."
Van-Don Rias, who is involved with four different rap groups in Topeka, said his groups usually focused on a particular message.
"Most people just rap about what they see every day," she says. "They are getting political and talking about Black life."
Brad Roosa, live music coordinator for Student Union Activities, is researching national acts for a rap show in April because he recognized rap's popularity.
Rooa said he wanted to attract rap groups to bring positive messages to the KU community.
"The new hard core is looking to bring people a message," he said. "Rap acts are usually socially conscious, but it is becoming more popular to send a serious message to the audience."
African Americans are music pioneers
From traditional African
music to blues to jazz,
African-American artists
have been the main
way for
changes in music.
JAZZ
Richard Wright, associate professor of music history, said that African Americans created and developed many musical styles.
"All other people have influenced music, but African Americans have definitely been the dominant influence," he said.
"There is evidence that
The influence of African-American music began with African slave spirituals. Nekta said.
The contrast between the happy and the melancholy continually appeared in African-American music, a tradition that is still evident in African-American music has this element as well.
"As African music is the source Americans look for, African-American music is the model for contemporary music in America," he said.
The blues formed and became the leading expression of the minds and probabilities of American people, he said.
Kwabena Nketia, professor of music and African studies, said that African music and African-American music had strong ties to each other.
on slave ships Africans mixed their traditions and formed music and dance," he said. "This probably means that in music which eventually developed into spirituals."
Harriet Ottenheimer,
director of American-Ethnic
studies in Kansas State
University, could be traced back to
African-American music began as a community art, then moved outside of the community and focused on entertainment. Eventually, the music became very popular to the public, Nketa said.
"Pressures from the public forced further developments of the music," Nketia said.
Stories by Shellv Solon / Illustration by Merri Hilvitz
African music.
She said there was a free flowing, ballad type of African music influenced that influenced the blues.
"It was not exactly the blues," she said. "However, the styles were there."
In her research, Ottenheimer said she saw evi-
nmental music in the 1880s in Midwestern river towns.
She said musicians came up from the South to the Mississippi Delta area, which included Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi. They combined their musical styles with European influences to create bimbed blues style back to the South.
but it became popular nationwide in 1920.
"The blues craze utilized the female singer who would either shout or sing the urban blues," she said.
Like blues, jazz was influenced by a style of traditional African music, but it was a style with syncopated and upbeat rhythms, Ottenheimer said.
Richard Wright said jazz evolved from the blues,
African-American gospel music, classical music, folk music and ragtime.
The high point for jazz was from the mid-1940s to the 1950s. Charlie Parker, a saxophonist from Kansas City, was the dominant figurer of Bob Dylan, Beoopa, Wright said.
"African Americans were the innovators of jazz," he said. "They dominated this era."
'What can I say? I'm not a wimp.' screenwriter says about her life
NEW YORK - Twenty years ago, Nora Ephron would not have been in this Upper West Side living room, all bleached wood and high ceilings, meeting a succession of writers with a fresh angle on a media darling.
The Associated Press
She built her career with wity, acerbic takes on everything from feminine hygiene sprays to Julie Nixon Elisenhower. But it's unlikely
Twenty years ago, Ephron would have been asking the questions, not answering them.
the young Nora Ephron was ever assigned a subject juicier than Nora Ephron at 50.
The adjective often used to describe her is "tough" in *as* "tough cookie." Ephron says it's because he lives on a farm, even when her life goes south.
"What can I say? I'm not a wimp," she says. "I'm one of those people who never had a lot of trouble standing up for myself. I speak you rarely regret说话 up for yourself. The sleepless nights are caused by what you keep inside."
Ephron is making her directorial debut with the new movie "This Is My Life," the story of the rise of a female stand-up comic from Queens who finds it hard to balance the needs of her two daughters. The sister, co-written by Ephron and his mother, Delia, stars Julie Kavner.
screenwriter.
It's the latest chapter in Ephron's high-profile career, which began at age 21 when she joined the New York Postas areporter. She later became a successful free-lance writer, Esquire columnist, essayist and Academy Award-nominated
"I've always had a problem with the victim stuff," says Ephron, who looks younger than her age and far pretier than in photographs.
Her personal life, which has included three marriages, has been fodder for her work — and for controversy. Her divorce from her second husband, Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein, was a messy humiliation that she turned into a best-selling book, "Heartburn," which later became a movie.
"When I was writing about women years ago, I could never relate to all that glorification of the victim. Turning Marilyn Monroe into a heroine. Who are we kidding?"
Ephron specializes in that kind of remark, which sounds brittle in print. It doesn't capture the light wt that shades all of her conversation.
"I'm a big believer in finding out who you are and then moving on," she says. "If you spend your life pointing fingers, then you get stuck."
INTERNATIONAL
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21. 1992
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEF'S
Washington
Bill could halt Haiti deportees
The House Judiciary Committee, ignoring a veto threat from the Bush administration, voted 21-12 yesterday to impose a six-month moratorium on returning Haitian boat people to their strife-torn country.
The vote to send the bill to the full House was generally along party lines.
The measure would bar further repatriations of more than 10,000 Haitians being detained at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. It would apply to those detained before Feb. 5.
Democrats argued that the State Department does not have enough information to justify its assertion that Haitians forced to return have not been persecuted by the military regime.
But Republicans argued that the bill only would encourage more Haitians to flee their homeland on rickety boats, which are intercepted by Coast Guard cutters in the Windward Passage between Haiti and Cuba.
In a letter to the committee, Attorney General William Barr said senior administration officials would recommend a veto by President Bush if Congress passes the bill.
United Nations
U.N. proposes peace forces
United Nations Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali yesterday proposed sending a 26,000-member peacekeeping mission to Cambodia. It would be the world body's largest and costliest operation to date.
The mission's objectives are to demobilize all factions in the Cambodian conflict and oversee the national elections slated for April 1993.
Cambodia's government and the three guerrilla groups opposing it signed an accord in October that called for a cease-fire and established an interim government. Since then, all sides have been pressing for the United Nations to hurry troops to their country.
Cambodia has been devastated by more than two decades of war. The last 13 years of the conflict pitted the Vietnamese-installed government against three rebel groups, including the Khmer Rouge, who savagely transformed Cambodian society during their 1975-78 rule.
The 15-nation Security Council was expected to vote on Boutros-Ghali's $2 billion plan next week.
Mexico City
Plan seeks to blow smog away
A three-day smog alert was lifted yesterday as a university scientist blasted a plan to blow away Mexico City's choking smog with giant fans.
Ecologists called for stronger measures against the pollution peril, and the government newspaper published official statistics showing that it will despite an ambitious anti-smog program.
El Nacional said 1991 was the worst year for pollution in Mexico City's history, with 192 days of smog — a level far above international safety standards. Many environmentalists expect 1992 to be even worse.
In one of the most dramatic signs of how dire the situation has become, city officials this week endorsed studies for a plan to build a series of 100 staircases in the Bay Area so that blast stagnant air out of the Valley of Mexico.
Baez said it would be inhuman for Mexico City to export its filty air outlying areas.
The smog alert was issued after ozone, the main component of smog in Mexico City, hit 310 points Tuesday on the government scale.
From The Associated Press
De Klerk announces apartheid referendum
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — President F. W. de Klerk stunned the nation yesterday by announcing a whites-only referendum on ending apartheid, and he promised to resign if the referendum is defeated.
The Associated Press
The move came a day after his ruling National Party lost its second special parliamentary election to the Conservative party, which wants to reinstate Hillary and create a separate homeland for whites.
The vote had been seen as a test of white support for political reforms that have been moving the country toward multiracial democracy.
Now de Klek will put the issue of apartheid to a whites-only vote.
"If I lose that referendum, I will resign," clearing the way for a whites-only general election, de Klerk told the Parliament.
"It a question of honor," he said at a later news conference.
D Klekd did not set a specific date for the referendum, but he indicated it could take place by the end of March.
His action was seen as an attempt to outmaneuver pro-apartheid forces while he still retains white support.
Polis say de Klerk is supported by a majority of whites. But the government's power base has been crumbling rapidly because of white unsease about the rapid pace of political change and ending apartheid, the policy of racial separation in a country of 5 million whites and 30 million Blacks.
if De klerk were to step down, his departure likely would throw political reform into chaos. De klerk
has been the driving force in dismantling apartheid and negotiating a nonracial constitution to give the vote and other political rights to the Black majority
The African National Congress, the main Black opposition group, and its allies denounced the referendum plan.
"A whites-only referendum is not only the hallmark of racism but also has the effect of delaying movement toward peace and justice for all our people," an ANC statement said.
The militant Pan Africanist Congress called de Klerk and his party "white supremacists who believe that our society can be transformed into a democracy only if the white minority approves of it."
The government clearly was stunned by its defeat Wednesday in the election to fill a parliamentary seat for Potchefstroom, a national Party stronghold with a similar vote to the Conservatives in November.
The Conservatives have been gaining strength among whites frightened by de Klerk's reforms, which are expected eventually to lead to a Black government. A recession, political violence and growing crime have intensified white fears.
De Kleerk predicted that he would win the referendum, which would require only a simple majority of
A government loss in a general election could bring the right-wing Conservatives to power. The Conservatives insist that whites and Blacks cannot live together as equals.
Before de Klerk's announcement, Finance Minister Barend Dplessia warned that South Africa would face renewed economic sanctions if whites tried to reinstate aparheid.
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The Associated Press
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TYRE, Lebanon — Israeli tanks and troops withdrew today from two villages they had invaded in search of vengeful Shiite Muslim guerrillas who had terrorized Northern Israel since the slaying of their leader five days earlier.
Timur Goksel, the representative for the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, said the Israelis retreated into their self-declared security zone in Southern Lebanon under cover of shellfire.
Yesterday, the Israeli force, backed by helicopter gunships, flattened U.N. barricades with a bulldozer and raced into the villages to hunt down Shiite Muslim guerrillas who had been rocketing Israel.
Two Israeli soldiers and four Shiite guerrillas were killed in the thrust at the Shiite villages of Yater and Kafra, and at least 33 people were injured.
Hundreds of Shiite militiamen from Iran-allied Hezbollah and its
U. N. peacekeepers tried to block the Israeli advance, and fistfights broke out before the Israeli soldiers plowed through and seized Yater and Kafra.
one-time Shiite rival, Amal, yesterday jammed Lebanon's coastal highway headed south toward the battlefront, their vehicles bristling with AK-47 assault rifles. Some wore headbands inscribed with the battle cry of "Allahu Akkar," GGod Great.
Others, mainly civilians,
packed belongings and fled north.
At least 10,000 Lebanese villagers
have fled since the fighting began.
Israel said it sent in the 36 tanks and three armored personnel carriers to locate Katyusha launchers and terrorist nests after three days of rocket attacks on Israel by guerrillas of the fundamentalist Hezbollah militia. Israeli gunners fired hundreds of 155mm howitzer rounds on valleys around Kafra and nearby Tibin, apparently to block guerrilla movements.
Yater and Kafra face the narrowest strip in Israel's self-proclaimed security zone, from which most of the 126 rockets fired since Monday were launched.
Goksel said peacekeeping positions manned by Finnish and Nepalese U.N. soldiers took directhits from I萨里shells.
an Israeli Merkava tank with an armor-piercing rocket.
"I'm very afraid," one peacekeeper, a Fijian, told an AP reporter from behind a sand-bagged position in Saddiqin. "I want to go home. Too much boomboom here. No good, no good."
An unconfirmed Amal report said its troops in Kafra destroyed
The latest round of fighting came after the killings of three Israeli soldiers at an Israeli army camp Saturday and the assassination of Hezbollah leader Sheik Abba Musawi in South Lebanon on Sunday.
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Sexual abuse victims ask for more time to report
By Gayle Osterberg
TOPEKA - Four child abuse survivors told lawmakers yesterday that victims of abuse need extra time to report the crime because the recovery process can be lengthy.
Kansan staff writer
The child abuse legislation would change the time period within which prosecution of a child abuse crime is allowed. The legislation would allow victims three years to report the crime, and the time period would not start until after the victim became aware of the abuse. Present Kansas law starts the period for prosecution at the time the abuse occurred.
The Senate Judiciary Committee began two days of hearings on a six-bill package dealing with sex offenders.
like peeling the skin off an onion, one layer of memory at a time. It is a very slow process. It is very painful.
Speakers suggested the three-year time period might not be long enough because of the emotional trauma and fear that victims encounter after they realize they have been abused.
Pat Miller, Seattles resident, said she had been sexually abused by her father and four brothers when the family lived in Kansas.
"I was not able to deal with these memories until I was an adult," she said. "Discovery is a process, much
"You don't want to believe it really happened because it is just too awful."
Miller said the healing process was what made the three-year time period important.
"It takes time to heal, to work through all the memories and to prepare for confrontation," she said.
Miller said that she had no way to bring her abusers to trial because current law limited the time period for reporting abuses crimes.
Survivors have the right to decide whether to take their abusers to court, she said, but under the current law, she doesn't have that choice.
All four victims said their abuse had had a long-term effect on their lives, both financially and emotionally.
Miller said she had suffered from alcoholism and insomnia because of the abuse.
Cindy Leibengood, who said she was sexually abused by her father for eight years, said she had suffered from allergies, arthritis, heart palpitations and migraine headaches.
*People around me think I am the
healthiest, most organized person they know," Leibengood said. "I have learned how to hide these things well, just as I have learned to hide what my father did to me."
Leibengood said that the abuse had influenced her entire life and that limitations on reporting the crimes should be removed.
In addition to the child abuse bill, the sex-offender package includes bills that would:
- Provide a process for evaluating sexually violent offenders who might repeat their crimes.
Provide for treatment of mentally ill persons who are likely to commit sex crimes.
Require supervision and treatment by mental health professionals for sex offenders.
Eliminate the spousal defense in certain crimes.
The sixth bill of the package is a proposal by KU student Jean Winter, Emporia senior, that has not been introduced.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who heads the committee, said hearings would continue today.
Israeli consul: Know history to understand Mideast strife
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
A representative from the Israeli consulate yesterday encouraged students not to make judgments about the Arab-Israeli conflict before studying it.
Ofra B-Yaaco, a consul for Israel in Chicago, spoke to an international relations class, a media and minorities class, and a propaganda and censorship class. KU Hillel sponsored her visit.
Ben-Yaacov said that media coverage of the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians could be unbalanced.
helpless, and the Israelis are the stronger, bigger Goliath."
"You can't judge only today," she said. "You can't judge without the background, which many young American people don't have."
"It's like David vs. Goliath," she said. "The Palestinians are seen as David who have no weapons and are
Ben-Yaacov said that people worldwide perceived the situation as a powerful Israel against the weaker Palestinians.
"We have to
achieve peace at our border like the U.S. has with Canada."
Ofra Ben-Yaacov consul for Israel in Chicago
Ben-Yaacov said that Israelis,however, wanted to work for peace.
"We have to achieve peace at our border like the U. S. has with Canada," she said. "We want to talk about withdrawal from the territories and making borders."
However, she said that the delegates were arrested because of involvement terrorist activities.
Israeli government recently arrested two delegates to the peace conference in the Middle East, the Israelis appeared not to want peace.
Ben-Yaacov said that because the
Ghassan El-Khatib, Lawrence sophomore, said that media coverage was not standing in the way of relations but that Israel was.
"Everyone is blaming each other for not working for peace," said El-Khatib, who is Palestinian. "We are all coming at this from different ways."
Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism, teaches courses in propaganda and censorship and in media and minorities.
He said that Israel was like any other country that was concerned about its image.
"In my class, we look at dominance vs. subordination," Adams said. "In Israel, Israel is dominant, and the Palestinians are in the minority. But in other places and in other ways, Jews are in the minority."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
SPORTS
Kansas to face K-State in Manhattan
'Cats expect challenge in Bramlage
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas State Wildcats will go into tomorrow's game against No. 3 Kansas coming off their biggest game of the season, a 64-55 come-from-behind victory at home against No. 23 Iowa State Wednesday night.
The victory, which improved the Wildcats' record to 13-9 overall and 3-6 in the Big Eight Conference, even spurred talk among the Wildcat players of a possible NCAA Tournament berth.
"We would have to win four out of our last five in the conference," Altman said of a possible tournament berth. "It's something I'm not concerned with."
But K-State coach Dana Altman is not ready to talk about March Madness just yet
After the game, Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton was taken to a Tulsa hospital, complaining of chest pains.
Doctors found a problem with one of Sutton's arteries, but they said the problem could be treated with medication. Oklahoma State associate sports information director Mike Strauss said the 55-year-old Sutton was expected to coach this weekend when the Cowboys travel to Missouri.
Altman is concerning himself first with the Jayhawks, who are coming off their most disappointing loss of the season, an 81-19 overtime setback Wednesday night at Nebraska. The loss dropped Kansas to 19-3.
Although K-State has had trouble on the road this season, including an 80-58 loss to Kansas in Allen Field House earlier this month, the Wildcats have played well at home, posting an 11-2 record in Bramlage Coliseum.
After second-place Missouri lost at Colorado on Wednesday, Kansas remained in sole possession of first place in the conference, with a 7-2 record. Third-place Oklahoma State also lost Wednesday night.
The Jayhawks benefited, though, from a wild night of upsets in the conifer
However, K-Statereently hashada tough time with Kansas in Manhattan. The Jayhawks never have lost in
KANSAS STATE WILDCATS
(3) KANSAS JAYHAWKS
VS.
Coach: Roy Williams Record:19-3, (7-2)
Coach: Dana Altman
Record: 13-9, (3-6)
Game time: 3 p.m. tomorrow at Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan. It will be televised on channels 9 and 13 in Lawrence and broadcast on 105.9 KLZR.
Probable Starters
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
24-F Alonzo Jamison 6-6 Sr. 10.3 4.3
34-F Richard Scott 6-7 So. 10.0 4.4
51-C Eric Pauley 6-10 Jr. 8.5 3.1
23-G Rex Walters 6-4 Jr. 16.5 3.2
30-G Adonis Jordan 5-11 Jr. 13.8 3.6
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
24-F Askia Jones 6-5 So. 14.8 3.9
22-F Wylie Howard 6-8 Sr. 11.3 7.3
21-G Vincent Jackson 6-4 Jr. 8.4 3.6
23-G Gaylen Nickerson 6-3 Jr. 10.8 4.0
05-G Marcus Ziegler 5-11 Sr. 4.6 1.8
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
Bramlage Coliseum, which opened in 1988, and have not lost in Manhattan since 1983.
At his weekly press conference Wednesday, Kansas coach Roy Williams told of a conversation he had with one of the players on the one Kansashas in Manhattan
"He said, 'You know you're going to lose there, you just don't know when.' Williams said. "That's really the feeling that you have."
Altman said that for K-State to win, the Wildcats would have to shoot around 50 percent, which is 7 percent higher than their season percentage.
"Kansas is solid defensively. They always have been," he said. "Against Kansas, we're going to have to shoot very well."
For the Jayhawks, the game will be a chance to forget Wednesday night's last-second loss to the Cornhuskers, though Williams said forgetting would be hard to do.
The game marked Kansas' second straight poor shooting performance on the road.
"This one will stick with me for a long time," Williams said after the game.
After shooting just 40 percent in a 64-56 loss at Oklahoma State two weeks ago, Kansas shot just 43 percent Wednesday night, including 5-22 for 23 percent from three-point-range. For the season, the Jayhawks are shooting 52 percent overall and 42 percent on three-point attempts.
Junior guard Rex Walters, who hit just 1-of-10 three-pointers against the Cornhuskers, said Kansas needed to learn to overcome poor shooting nights.
"Some nights your shot just doesn't go in," he said. "But you're supposed to do other things to make up for it."
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
EPSON
Kansas coach Rov Williams cannot hide his feelings about a referee's call at the Nebraska game on Wednesday
Peggy Woods/KANSAN
Kansas, Razorbacks to scrap in baseball
By Jerry Schmidt Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team will return to Arkansas this weekend hoping to come home with some better results.
After thrashing Arkansas-Little Rock on the road last Saturday 12-1, the Jayhawks lost to the Trojans on Sunday 8-3. Today, tomorrow and Sunday the Jayhawks will play Arkansas in Fayetteville with hopes of consistent play throughout the three-game series.
"We're going to respect this
"weeper a lot more than last
weekend," coach Dave Bingham
said. "We had the best day,
and didn't玩 like the day before."
The Razorbacks were 40-22 overall last season and 10-11 in their last season in the Southwest Conference. The 'Hogs will begin play in the Southeastern Conference this season. The SEC boasts the honor of having the last two College World Series champions, Georgia in 1990 and Louisiana State last year.
"Because we haven't seen a lot of these teams, we'll have to learn a new conference," Arkansas coach Norm DeBriyn said. "I felt the Southwest Conference was good, but the SEC could be a little better top to bottom."
DeBryn is in his 23rd year at Arkansas. He is is 17th on the all-time NCAA victory list. The Razorbacks are 3-1 this season. They beat Kansas State two out of three games last weekend and beat
Missouri Southern on Feb. 14. The 'Hogs have averaged more than 14 runs a game with a high of 19 runs in a 19-9 victory against K-State.
Second baseman Tim Thomas is eight for 12 with one home run and 12 RBI in the first four games and left fielder Jeff Houck is eight for 15 with four stolen bases.
DeBriynsaidhewas surprisedby his team's early season hitting success.
"I feel like once you get 20 to 25 games under your belts, you get a feel for hitting," he said. "It's a little early to tell."
"Our hitters worked on developing some confidence throughout the week," Bingham said. "We worked on hitting the ball up the middle and trying to gain some confidence." he said. "We can win whether we hit the ball or not with our defense and our pitching."
Kansas senior Curtis Schmidt will pitch today's game for Kansas. Schmidt gave up only one run in his first start of the season, striking out six hitters and walking one. Kansas junior Jimmy Walker will start tomorrow's game. Bingham said he was undecided on a starter for Sunday's game.
Kansas junior catcher Jeff Neimeier is four for eight this season with an RBI, and junior first baseman John Wuycheck has six RBI.
Bingham said he hoped his offense would return to the form he held in Saturday's game at Little Rock.
Jayhawks look down homestretch
Kansas staff report
Kansas defeated K-State 82-52 on Feb. 2 in Manhattan. The Jayhawks' defense smothered the Lady Cats in the teams' first meeting.
The No. 18 Kansas women's basketball team will begin the final week of Big Eight Conference play in a rival Kansas State game at 6 p.m. on Sunday, April 24.
Kansas' defense limited K-State to 34.7 percent shooting and allowed only one player to score in double figures — Guard Mary J Miller who had 11 points.
Kansas' offense was equally effective, hitting 5.1 percent from the field. Freshman forward Angela Aycock led the way with 22 points. Aycock was just one of four Jayhawks in double figures.
Kansas has dropped the last three games against K-State at the field house dating back to Jan. 30, 1988. K-State defeated Kansas 74-73 in overtime last year.
BASKETBALL
The Jayhawks, 20-over and 8-2 in the conference, are taking a one-game lead over Colorado, 16-8 overall and 8-3 in the conference, into the final three games of the season. Both teams will play two of their last three games at home. Kansas is undefeated, 11-0, at the field house. Colorado has a 9-2 record at home.
The Jayhawks will travel to Oklahoma on Wednesday and will return home Saturday, Feb. 29 for the season finale against Missouri. Earlier in season, Kansas defeated Oklahoma 75-56 but lost to Missouri 57-56 in Columbia.
Women's basketball probable starters
Game time: 2 p.m. Sunday in Allen Field House. The game will be broadcast on KJIK 90.7 FM.
Kansas 20-4, (9-2) Position Year Height PPG RPG
32 Danielle Shareef F Sr. 5-10 6.0
10 Jojo Witerspoon G Jr. 5-7 1.0 1.3
33 Kay Kay Hart G Sr. 5-7 9.8 3.6
23 Terrilyn Johnson F Fr. 5-11 7.3 9.0
30 Angela Avcock F Fr. 6-2 10.1 4.4
Kansas State 5-19, (2-9)
| Kansas State | 5-19, (2-9) |
| :--- | :--- |
| 13 Lymn Holzman | F | So. | 5-11 | 6.0 | 3.0 |
| 12 Leah Honeycutt | F | Jr. | 5-10 | 10.4 | 3.2 |
| 14 Jennifer Grebing | C | Sr. | 6-2 | 7.3 | 4.6 |
| 12 Mary Jo Miller | G | Sr. | 5-5 | 14.6 | 3.5 |
| 20 Gretchen Bertrand | G | So. | 5-9 | 6.0 | 2.1 |
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
Jayhawk swim meet will start in KC
Pranger said the meet was open to swimmers who were trying to make
By Chris Jenson
Kansan sportswriter
After helping the Kansas women's swimming and diving teams win their 13th Big Eight Championship in 18 years, three-time All-American senior Barb Pranger didn't spend much time celebrating.
The Jayhawks will take their new focus to Kansas City, Mo., tonight for the Jayhawk Invitational. The meet will be at Central High School because of a scheduling conflict at Robinson Natatorium.
*On the bus ride home after winning Eight Elegs, I started to focus on the O-100.
Coach Gary Kempf said four Kansas swimmers had qualified for the Olympic trials. They are Pranger and sophomores Krista Cordsen, Ronda Lusty and Scott Townsend. Four men and five women have qualified for the NCAA meet. They are Lusty, Pranger, Cordsen, senior Heather McRoberts, junior Aimee Brainard, sophomores Scott Townsend and Curtis Taylor, junior Robert Townsend and freshman Mark Bontrager.
Olympic-trial or NCAA-qualifying times. Pranger has qualified for the 100-yard butterfly in the Olympic Trials.
Kempf said he expected between 10 and 15 additional KU swimmers to attempt qualifying tonight.
"We have reached a point in our
season where we are more of an individual program," Kempf said.
Pranger said the team also would use the meet to improve relay times to have a better seeding at the NCAA championships.
With two weeks remaining before the United States Olympic Trials and a month before the NCAA Championships, Pranger said the team was continuing to fine tune at its practice sessions.
"We have worked so hard for so long that it should not be a problem for us to maintain our taper," she said. "Right now we just need to take things one step at a time."
Pranger said she was excited about swimming in the Olympic trials because they occurred only once
evervfouryears.
"The Olympic trials are completely different from the NCAA meet," she said. "The trials are more of an individual meet, and the NCAA's are more team-oriented."
Kansas has a talented team going to the NCAA meet, Pranger said. The women's 200 freestyle relay is ranked among the five best in the country. In the NCAA meet, relays are scored double, making them a key to scoring well overall.
For the team to do well overall, pranger said that all would have to do three things.
"This is where we have got to prove our rankings," she said.
The Kansas women are ranked 16th nationally; the men are 23rd.
Olympic medals count
OLYMPICS UPDATE
Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
Germany 10 9 6 25
Unified Team* 8 5 7 20
Austria 5 7 7 19
Norway 7 6 5 18
Italy 3 4 3 10
France 3 5 1 9
United States 3 4 1 8
Country Gold Silver Bronze Total'
OLYMPIC GAMES
ATHLETICS
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Yamaguchi to fire off seven triples in show
O O O O
ALBERTVILLE, France — Get ready for a barrage of triple lutzes, triple salchows, a couple of triple axes and an attempt at a quadruple. If you want to skate with this crowd, you have to be a triple threat.
Kristi Yamaguchi plans to fire off seven triples in her $4\frac{1}{2}$ minute free program tonight as she tries to
become the first American since 1976 to win the gold medal in women's figure skating at the Winter Olympics. Yamaguchi is in first place after Wednesday night's original program.
And just because Japan's Midori Ito, considered Yamaguchi's chief rival for the gold, shot herself in the foot with a fall on the triple lutz Wednesday does not mean Yamaguchi is easing up.
"The program will stay the same," said Christy Ness, Yamaguchi's.
coach. "We'll keep the same focus."
American gets silver in short-track skating
coach. "We'll keep the sametocus." The United States could finish with two medals. American Nancy Kerrigan is in second place.
ALBERTVILLE, France - Sylvie Daileg in world champion Canada to the gold in the women's 3,000-meter short-track speedskating relay yesterday with a time of 4 minutes.
The United States was second with 4.37.85, giving the Americans their eighth medal of the Winter Games.
36. 62 seconds.
The Unified Team, which got into the final when world record-holder China fell with 50 meters to go in its semifinal heat, took the bronze in
Medals were awarded in the sport for the first time in Olympic history. It was a demonstration sport in 1988.
■ From the Associated Press
10
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21, 1992
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The Kansas men's tennis team was unsuccessful in its attempt to become the first Jayhawk team ever to win a first-round match at the USTA/ITA National Indoor Championships, which began yesterday in Louisville, Ky.
No. 16 North Carolina defeated the Jayhawks in five of six singles matches. Under a new tournament format, doubles was not played because the Tar Heels were leading at the completion of singles play.
Men's tennis stumbles
The only Kansas victory in the tournament came at No. 3 singles, where junior Carlos Fleming defeated the No. 31-ranked singles player in the nation Woods. The Tar Heels that beat him in straight sets in the other five matches.
The loss dropped the Jayhawks to 7-4 this season and forced them into the
consolation round, where they will play for 17th place in the 20-team tournament. Kansas will play the loser of today's Duke-Harvard match at 9 a.m. tomorrow.
SPORTS BRIEFS
The Kansas women's tennis team also was in action this weekend. The Jayhawks left yesterday for the Arkansas Invitational.
The 3-0 'Hawks will play Southern Methodist today, Alabama tomorrow and Arkansas, the invitational's host, on Sunday.
'Hawks to run at K-State
The Kansas track and field teams will continue their preparation for the Big Eight Conference Championships tonight at the Kansas State Invitational in Manhattan. The meet will end on Saturday.
Coach Gary Schwartz said he would be taking 16 men and 20 women to the
meet. He said that although this was a large group of athletes, the meet is not a team competition.
"This meet is totally unlike a team situation," Schwartz said. "We are entering athletes on an individual basis depending on what the athletes need and where they are in their training."
"It depends on how they are feeling physically and mentally," he said. "Some are resting to get their minds and bodies ready."
The meet will feature teams from divisions I and II, as well as NAIA schools and junior colleges.
Schwartz said that some athletes would take the weekend off to rest for the coming Big Eight meet. He said the decision on whether to rest or compete was made on an individual basis.
From Staff Reports
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THOUGHT-PROVOKING!!! PROVOCATIVE!!! HILARIOUS!!! The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts New Directions Series Presents the
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8:00 P.M. MONDAY & TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24 & 25, 1992 LIBERTY HA11
KU student tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office, Liberty Hall, and the SAU Office; Kansas Union, all seating is general admission; student tickets are only $8; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard; call 913/684-3982
Monster in a Box [FEBRUARY 24]
[FEBRUARY 24]
Gray's 12th autobiographical monologue, it begins where Swimming to Cambodia left off. Don't miss Gray describing what happened as he tried to complete his first novel and "the dizziness that comes from too much possibility."
An Evening with Spalding Gray:
Conversation with the Audience"
served by the NCI Regional Services Authority free of charge.
New Orleans City Hall is located at 106th Street from the NCI Regional Services Authority building, 7520 N. Fourth Avenue.
Swimming to Cambodia February 20 (7 p.m., Woodruff Auditonum) and February 21 (8 p.m., Hashinger Hall). For more information, call 864-SHOW.
Get psyched to see Spalding Gray live!! The SUA Film Senes will present Gray's award-winning
[FEBRUARY 25]
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---
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11
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824-4754/after 30. wkds anytime wkends
From Quality Type to Mapping Last Entry Maintenance
From Last Entry Maintenance to Experience and Reliability Call Launce at
Experience and Reliability Call Launce at
laser or Dot Matrix printing with PCiles or laser of our PC Lab. Call Jul at 845-8011
or Dot Matrix printing with PCiles or laser of our PC Lab. Call Jul at 845-8011
K's Professional Word Processing, accurate and affordable, call after 1 p.m. 841-6345
PINK A LA MODE Get an edge on the rest. Scheduled for success! Now! Call 749-749-7499
Resumes and cover letters. Fast and affordable, competitive prices, over 80 formats laser printed Ask about our Referral Discounts! MacResumes 766-3325
Word Perfect HM compatible Word Processing
Inkjet Printer, near Orchard Corners, No calls
Word processing, applications, term papers,
disseerties, resume, Editing, composition, rush
preparations.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
18' Schiwum Letour Luteau 18x5peed touring bike,
Camomile pack, bookkrack, very good condition.
Bike with kickstand.
1990 diamond back apex, 20 inch, full deeon, well maintained, combatready, 841-549-846
Spring Special 1682.05 MH computer, 4 MB RAM,
1 & 2.1 I Floppy, 18 MB Hard Drive, "14"
Super 1682.05 MH RAM 101 keyboard, minitower case
MS 1542.05 MH RAM $1450, Bargain Bags
82-2477
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art, vintage and used furniture, picture frames, antique clothing, made quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbags, Penthouses, vintage clothing, books, carnival games, toys, doll clothes, antique items, clocks watches, desks, antiques, tools Royal buildup, masonry collectibles, complements furniture, vintage furniture.
imported porcelain figurines, and so much more stuff it will blow you away! QUANTRIL'S FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Friday, 9am-5pm. Phone 842-656-1826; mail us 842-656-1826; Visa and Mastercard welcome
Attention Bands and DJs: Wicked equipment for cheap Peavey SB-2 and international speakers, EV Sub cabinets, Technique Turntables, M 7000 price, Nice价保票: Call Evan841 81-909.
*no floor of your room COL3* a bugee room size CAR6*
*lights, light used*, $8 each, pad available
*24 hours
State of Kansas Trade Ins. Excellent condition
sockets, insulated with aluminum.
sorters, 50% and up and on usage. Call Sylvia
King for details.
Miracle Video - Adult movies from $9.95
Call 641-7504, 891-8033
For Sale: Cheap! Olympic Weight set w/bar. Like new.
Call John at 863-016-91
NITEBOOK computer, 386x50/20, ZM ram, 20M
HD mouse, software Steve. 842-935
SHARP Laptop Computer 6406 3/12 drive 3/14
port. SP-IPH Laptop Computer Manual Expansion
Mountain Bike, 1901 Trek 830, bought new on 1-31
21st stored in boxes, Karri 844-1100.
Genuine ROLLERBLADE skates at the GUARANTEE LOWEST PUNCHES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the best. All models available. Many colors. 832-214
one way ticket to Fort Launder baule Sunday
ch from KC 755 | B41-084-1012 between 8:30 a.m.
on Saturday.
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Two sets of student tickets for sale. Best offer. Call Jason 864-8254.
1976 Plymouth Volare V6, 2 DR, AM/FM, Auto,
clean runs great $700.00 ROA: 380.99
1979 Honda Accord, 4 door, 5 speed, A/C, 91,000 miles
Honda $1250 or best offer 865-2432
340 Auto Sales
1978 Jaguar, X16, beautiful car 34,900 miles, Kenwood Stereo system, $780 call for 814,347-434
865 Toyota Corolla LE ipc/automatic 2400, 842,
404 after p. m. or leave message.
1045 New
Jersey BJ's MC/Visa
IMPORTS
360 Miscellaneous
On TV's VCR's, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more We honor Visa/MAC/MEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1804 W 78, 1919-191
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits. OMNITTION
WHAT TO EAT FOR SPRING BREAK
843 VOLKSWAGEN 9494
24 Years of Experience
87 Mercury Lynx - Automatic, A/C; Cassette,
oasis, 86k. Excellent condition; $3300-8632
332
--or. Corolla GTS Twin Cam -85 red,2d, 5sp,acd.
ouw sun roof, salt truck -8370, 559-4175
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues - Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
370 Want to Buy
$15拿ch. Call Andy (844-747) leave message
*Wanted* 2 tickets to KUUM Basketball game $
*15拿ch.*
$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken gold jewelry,
rare coins, etc. Call David 841-206-1953
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments in a beautiful, Fully equipped kitchen. Laundry facilities. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trash pad (phone): 1734 198. Wish I call! 618 Call
1. 2, 3BR apcs, nearcamp.no pets, available June 1st, Aug 18 892-897
合
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, nationality, 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 advertisements in this newspaper are on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Artsy, 2 Bdrm, 3rd floor, floor floors, near campus
$504.91*STAR (7827)
Coyy, 1 Bdmr, wood floors, near campus $295.841
STAR (2927)
is where the
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Spacious 1,2 & 3 bedrooms
available for the mature
student. Now leasing for fail-
t. Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, club areas, cultures,
on bus route. Sunshine shelves available.
DESPERATELY NEEDED: Person to sublease part of 50bm rent. Gas cable应付 Rent NGKO part of 15bm rent.
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus. Swatier/driver, microwave, ceiling fan, min-blinds. Call ist Management, Inc. Mon-Fri 3 p.m -5 p.m 794-1566
2040 Heatherwood *543-4254*
树尖相撞
- Intuitive i2v service hapht.
* In-bus kiu hotel chapte.
* On-bus kiu hotel chapte.
* Audio kiu TV Prots.
* On-bus kiu TV Prots.
* On-bus management.
* On-bus management.
* 38kB, E of lower
38kB, S of lower
38kB, S of lower
38kB, S of lower
38kB, E of lower
38kB, E of lower
38kB, E of lower
38kB, E of lower
10:30-Mon, 10:25-Fri
Naismith Place
Free Feb. Bent. two bd. apt. $395 Ends July
31st. on bus route. C吧 799-4375.
Hillview Apts $9e lease signing bonus! 1 & 2床
base. On-site on route 81, 845-343 or 749-669.
On-site on route 81, 845-343 or 749-669.
HOTOWN - Nice 2 bedrooms with attached garage.
Warehouse/waiting room. Dry yard, NO pets, references.
Bachelor's deg. required.
G got a group? Restored 8bed 14 hath fireplace, wood
floor, W/D, w/R front, riverfront, N4R STAT (2007)
24TH & EDDINGHAM
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Heatherwood Apartments - 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments available now until the end of May. On
1, 2, 3, 4 Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
2166 W.26th 843-6446 Open 10-5,M-F
841-5444
- Inexpensive gas heat
- Central air
- Central air
- Small pets OK with deposit
No Appt. Necessary
FARMING TREE
new locations on campus. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom
apartments. Washer/dryers, microwaves, ceiling
ins, mini-bins. Call now for an appointment
on-Fri-2 p.m.-5 p.m. 749-1556
Looking for a place? Cory 2 bedroom apt. in the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July. $835/month + utilities. Negotiable security Call 864-2669
Park25
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath
Park25
- 2 Pools
- On KU bus route-
- On KU bus route---
A stone on property
- 4 stops on property 2 Laundry Room
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
842 1455
--the apartments.
Louisiana Place Apt. 9. Now leasing nice 2BIR Apt.
Bordering Campus Beautiful view of the city, Call
(314) 555-6872
Need Quiz? Great 2 BR apt. for Grad student or
$335/mo + LOW utilities. Pole. Near campus.
Current residents moving after 4 yrs. Available in
April, 841-2722.
meadowbrook
Copa Visit Meadowbrook Arts
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1,2, & 3 Bedroom apts, to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
It's Time to Step Up To MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Sublease Studio Apartment, $250 per month. Call 843-1232
Sublease. Avail now thru May 31, 2B apt, water, low loads, $800/mo - 49-5424
Save $$$ with each new deposit
Colony Woods Apartments
- On Bus Route
• Heated Pool
• 2 Hrs/day
- Walk to K.U.
- Heated Pool
• 3 Hot Tubs
SHORTTERMLEASELNSOW AVAILABLE.on studio. br. ap. and lt. bp. TRAILING
- Exercise Room
- Laundry Faciliti
* Dishwasher
* Microwaves
* Mini Blinds
* Water Paid
- Basketball Court
- Basketball Court
TRAILRIDGE
843-7333
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688.
Studio, Old Wash Lawrence, wood floors. Many
Windows. Claw foot tau, sunroom. A/C Call 861-359-7400.
Location-Lifestyle The West Value In Town 842-5111 open 7 days a week
Sublease one on one bedroom a 94 Mississippi
Nice, spacious, close to campus $250 802-847-48
http://www.1b.com/bedroom-a
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students!! --- You can getrid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
- Weekly maid service
- Flexible Leasing
- Front door bus service
- Dine Anytime meals
Call now to reserve your room.
Plus...
- Macintosh Computer Room
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 843-8559
Boardwalk
1& 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Summer &
Fall Move-ins
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
Sublease July with purchase for year after, large I BR,
Cold Woods, Water paid, 823 0749.
Two bedroom apartment on bus route WJD/
$400 month + utilities. Call after 5:30 p.m. (800) 267-7918.
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths,
close to campus, furnished. Call 749-3876.
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer sublease, twedroom apartment
ground level, c. g. afbandih 841.5797; after 5:00
m. afbandih 841.5797; before 5:00 m. afbandih 841.5797
2 roommates needed ASAP for newer, 4B,hr,
Lawrence home. Male, non-smokers preferred.
2 dresses, DW, W/D, Microwave. $215 00 utilities,
cable pailed Ivan 841-4699
One female student for a furnished 3D Brown house location on bus route. W/D, pool, parking lot.
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-4631.
ROOMMATE MAY FORTE for townhome at Apple
& Woods W/D, D/W, PF, all amenities
824 715-6470
Non-smoking roommate needed ASAP for beauty,
hair and makeup. Must have washer/dry hookup, near bus route $16/mo.
Wash clothes daily, keep windows closed.
FEBUARY RENT FREE - Roommates wanted to share dip in XP by JCCC. 3 min from Kwar pc pool available. 2 bdrms vacant. FREE room. Special situation. Call Mike at 1-451-6257for details
Roommate wanted to share nice 2 BR apt. Ibk from campus $450 a month + 1/2 utilities.
- Policy
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Roommate needed immediately through July. $183
in-house housing & amenities great
neighborhood 8-20 miles away
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $200/mo. 841-1257
Roommate needed. 2bedroom - duplex. $150 + 1/2
1114 Class AAAA. 849-1196
Very nice 1-BR plus staircase loft apartment for spring, summer, and/or next year $180/mo plus tax.
Blind box ad:s, please add $4.00 service charge
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Words in BAG $R$ are count as 4 words
Centric lines are count as 7 words
No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising
Warranties valid until 04/26/19.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
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No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Tearstabs are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Foundaids are for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will be delivered. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the university Daily Kanna.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1Day 2-3Days 4-5Days 10Days
0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
105 personal
104 training personnel
102 training personnel
102 announcements
102 announcements
102 presentation
140 host & host
139 for sale
139 for sale
225 professional service
226 million+luxury
226 million+luxury
Classifications
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(phone number published only if included below)
Please email me your order box
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University Daily Kansas
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 60045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
what the? Not only has the forest been clear-cut, but the mountains are gone
Environmental disasters in a flea's world
12
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 21. 1992
Muslim Students Association
Introducing Islam to Non-Muslims
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents the following lecture to help promote better understanding of Islam among Non-Muslims. Other lectures will be announced after the month of Ramadan.
How Islam Achieves the Peace of Mind and Heart For Its Followers
PLACE
PARLOR A
Kansas Union
KU
Lawrence
TIME
7:30 PM
Monday
Feb. 24,1992
---
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC For more information call: 841-9768 or 749-1638
DOMINO'S PIZZA NOBODY KNOWS LIKE DOMINO'S How You Like Pizza At Home.
N. of 15th
841-8002
832 Iowa
Hours:
Mon.- Thurs. 4.p.m.- 1 a.m.
Fri.- Sat. 11a.m.- 2 a.m.
Sun. 11a.m.- 1 a.m.
S. of 15th
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd
MasterCard
We Accept:
VISA
, Checks
$0.25 service charge
SHUTTLE BUSTER VALUE MENU
FREE DELIVERY!
No Coupon Needed
Just Ask For Shuttle Buster Number.
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Each with cheese & 1 Topping
For just.
One - 10" Pizza,
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Three · 10" Pizzas, each w/ cheese & 1 topping for just.
Ten - 10" Pizzas, each w/ cheese & 1 topping for just.
$8.98 Free Delivery
$27.98 Free Delivery
All Shuttle Busters are limited time offers and are not valid w/other coupons
All Shuttle Busters' EXTRA TOPPINGS are $0.47 per topping
per pizza
$$$$$$$$$$
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GUARANTEED HIT! IF YOU DON'T LIKE THIS RECORDING WE WILL EXCHANGE IT FOR ANOTHER!
$699 Cassette
$1099 CD
1403 W. 23RD ST.
842-7173
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CORROSION OF CONFORMITY BLIND
INCLUDES: DANCE OF THE DEAD & VOTE WITH A BULLET
Sale ends 3/18/92
The medical community is not exempt from homophobia, Gladden said.
"It's almost like cancer was in the beginning," he said. "As the disease ages and as we get farther into the AIDS epidemic, I think that will change."
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY
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GUARANTEED HIT IF YOU DON'T LIVE THIS RECORDING, WELL EXCHANGE IT FOR ANOTHER!
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Sale ends 3/18/92
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
"I think society as a whole is homophobic," he said, "Some of the medical community is homophobic. It is proportionate to what society feels."
Hysteria, stigmas hurt fight against AIDS, speaker says
'Carnaval' to celebrate Brazil's Mardi Gras with dance tonight
By Katherine Manweiler Kansan staff writer
Stigmas and fears about AIDS need to be destroyed so people can put energy into fighting the disease, a speaker told about 60 people at a Pre-Med Club meeting last night in the Kansas Union.
The speaker, Tim Gladden, office manager for the Good Samaritan Project in the Kansas City area, learned that he had the HIV virus in August 1989. Gladden said people affected by AIDS had to fight homophobia as well as the disease.
It is Carnaval, the Mardi Gras festival of Brazil, and it is coming to Lawrence tomorrow night.
Krystyn Riddle, Overland Park senior, said she hoped to work as a volunteer for the Good Samaritan project for a year before entering medical school.
By Val Huber
"I think the medical community is willing to do full battle with this disease," Riddle said. "It is completely elusive right now."
The Good Samaritan Project is the largest AIDS service organization in the Kansas City area. The organization has 11 staff members and serves more than 700 clients who have been affected by AIDS.
"AIDS has taught me how to really look at my life and live it one day at a time," he said. "I'm not guaranteed tomorrow. No one in this room is guaranteed tomorrow. The only difference is that I'm constantly reminded about the fact that I'm going to die someday."
Special to the Kansan
Magic Johnson's decision to go public has helped encourage acceptance and education about AIDS, Gladden said.
Sequined, brightly painted and feathered bodies sway to the samba rhythm in the old opera house. Crepepaper streamers and brightly colored parrots decorate the hall.
"The more AIDS has a face, the more people are going to get involved," he said. "AIDS has been a disease of numbers, and now it has a face."
Todd Clayman, president of the Pre-Med Club, said people who considered medical careers needed to take a holistic view of AIDS to deal with the disease effectively.
Gladden said it angered him to see Johnson portrayed as the fortunate special victim of the disease.
"As far as I'm concerned, it doesn't matter who you are," he said. "Everybody with AIDS is just as special."
Dealing with the disease has taught Gladden to take a positive approach to life, he said.
"If these people do become doctors, there is no doubt that they're going to run into patients with the disease," Clavman said.
The Brazil-Portugal Association, a KU student-community group, is sponsoring its 14th annual Carnival, held at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
The party, which sold out the 550-person capacity hall last year, brings together diverse groups from the Lawrence community as well as people from the surrounding area.
"I think it is kind of unique around here," said Katia Silva, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, graduate student and one of the organizers of the party.
Party-goers will dance to traditional samba music, as well as frevo, a style of music from northeastern
Brazil. Frevo comes from the Portuguese word "ferver," which means "toheat."
The association also plans a cost contest with prizes in four categories: best male, best female, best couple and best overall.
Silva said the Portuguese introduced the celebration, which preceded
The term "carnaval" is derived from a Latin phrase meaning, "no more meat."
What makes Carnaval different from other Mardi Gras celebrations is that it has been modified by ethnic groups in Brazil such as the African Youbata tribe, Silva said.
"You really get lost in the holiday," he said. "It's almost as popular as soccer."
Beginning tomorrow and ending Tuesday night, Carnival in Brazil is celebrated at private and public parties and in the streets.
Iani Moreno, San Salvador, El Salvador, graduate student who studied in Brazil, said the festival brought people together.
*Everybody goes home only to change their clothes and then go back
Each school votes on its colors,
dance song and Brazilian theme, Silva
shows.
"Some themes are historical," she said. "1988 was the 100-year anniversary of the abolition of slavery, so many schools chose that as their theme. Other themes have to do with people deal with their day-to-day problems."
Silva said a festival highlight was a demonstration by neighborhood samba schools.
Tickets for Carnaval are $5 in advance or $6 at the door and can be purchased at the Student Union Activities office, the department of Spanish and Portuguese or Liberty Hall. Because alcohol will be served, tickets will be sold only to those 21 years old or older.
WANTED STUDENTS WITH KU BOOKSTORE RECEIPTS SEEKING THESE MEN
LAFESON
JACKSON
HAMILTON
Claim your bounty from our deputies (present your receipts for a rebate) at the Kansas Union store's jail house this week and shoot for the chance to receive free KU Sweatshirts and other consolation prizes. Every bounty hunter receives a prize and a discount coupon. KU I.D, required. Some restrictions apply.
REWARD
7% rebate on cash and check purchases from the Fall 1991 semester
Rebates on receipts from the Fall 1991 semester will be given until June 24, 1992
KU
KU
BOOKSTONE
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that shares its profits with the KU students
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.101
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, FEBRUARY24, 1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Subcommittee recommends $1 million for Hoch
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
Money to plan the rebuilding of Hoch Auditorium was inserted back into the Board of Regents budget Friday, but Chancellor Gene Budig and other KU administrators said Saturday the battle for the money was far from win.
As part of its recommendations for the Regents budget, a House Appropriations subcommittee voted Friday to include $1 million for planning the rebuilding of Hoch, which was gutted by fire June 15.
Gov. Joan Finney did not recommend in her budget proposal that the
Budig said he was pleased with the subcommittee's action.
planning be financed.
"It proves that the Hoch issue is very much alive," he said. "More and more legislative leaders are convinced that something meaningful must be done in this session."
Jon Josserand, KU's legislative liaison, said the Legislature was treating the issue as a top priority.
"They took this action in an unusual circumstance," he said. "They didn't even have to consider Hoch at that time. We weren't discussing capital improvements.
"We still have a long way to go on this issue, and we would expect that the issue will not go through without hitting some hurdles. But at least we are seeing lawmakers recognize a need."
State Rep. Bob Vancum, R-Overland Park, made the motion to include the money in the subcommittee's recommendations, said State Rep. George Teagarden, D-LaCyge.
"I think we all felt that it was the responsibility to do." Teagarden said. "We think that it's the state's responsibility to replace Hoch."
State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, RNeodesha, said she voted against
"The money is just not there," she said. "I don't think I can support any increases in the budgets when we don't know where the money will come from."
putting the $1 million back into the Regents budget.
Teagarden said the subcommittee's recommendation on Hoch was subject to review by the State Building Commission.
"It's routine for us toask for the opinion of the commission on capital improvement projects," Teagarden said.
He heads the House Appropriations
Committee and is a member of the commission, which comprises three senators and three representatives.
The Appropriations Committee is not bound by the recommendation of the Building Commission but will consider it carefully. Teagarden said.
After the House Appropriations Committee considers the recommendations of the subcommittee and the commission, the full committee will vote to make recommendations to the House of Representatives.
In other business Friday, the sub-
committee:
concurred with Gov. Joan
Finney's salary-increase recommendations, which included a 2.5-percent merit increase for classified and unclassified Regents employees.
■ concurred with the governor's recommendation for a 100-percent fee waiver for graduate teaching assistants.
■ recommended that Regents universities receive the average of their enrollment adjustment for the last two years. The subcommittee's action would increase the governor's recommendations for KU by more than $200,000.
A.
With 30 hours leftbefore the game, Katie Cook, Salina freshman, triesto keep herselfdryyesterday.
Die-hard fans sacrifice warm beds for best seats
By Greg Farmer Kansan staff writer
Katie Cook huddled yesterday within the walls of her nylon home.
Rain drops hitting the walls created an echo that kept rhythm with the muffled melodies of the women's basketball pep band.
As the Kansas women beat Kansas State 67-49 yesterday at Allen Field House, Cook and 10fans of the Kansas men's team listened from their tents to the cheers that came from within.
Cook and the others anticipated the yells and screams that would be heard tonight if the Kansas men, who could move up to No.1 in the Associated Press poll released today, defeat the Oklahoma Sooner ESPN.
"This is great," said Cook, Salina freshman. "We can sit outside Allen Field House and imagine being inside. That place is going to rock."
"We watched that game here in the tent," Cook said. "We just about decided to go home, but we stayed. I don't know why. Maybe we're a little nuts, but we love KU basketball."
Some of the people have worked out an informal shift schedule so they can attend classes.
Cook and the others have been camping outside the field house since Wednesday, the night the Kansas men to nebraska on Jamar Johnson's last-second, three-point basket.
Cook said she and her friends wanted the best seats possible.
"ESPN is going to be here, and they always aim those cameras up into the stands behind the goal," he said. "Getting good seats and getting on television are the biggest goals."
Jake Powell, Salina freshman, said the best seats were behind the goal at the north end of the gym.
"Greg Ostertag came by the other day," Powell said. "He said we were nuts. But he said that was OK. We may be nuts, but Kansas basketball deserves us. We're die-hard KU fans."
"After tonight's game, we'll come out here and go to sleep," he said.
"Next Monday is Oklahoma State on ESPN. That's only one week away."
"We have cords and they let us plug them in inside Allen," he said. "We have cable TV, Nintendo and electric blankets. We're living pretty good, but it still gets kind of cold."
Powell said some of the players came by and talked to the campers before practices.
Powell said the tents would stay up during tonight's game.
what about Missouri on March 7?
"We'll be out here for four years," Powell said. "We're only freshmen.
We'll be around awhile."
Powell said the campers waited in comfort.
What about Missouri on March 8?
See related stories. Page 8
After a week in which Kansas lost at Nebraska in overtime and escaped Manhattan with a 54-52 victory, the Jayhawks may lose their No. 3 ranking in The Associated Press men's basketball poll.
KU Jayhawks prime for TV
Kansanstaffreport
The Jahawks will take their ranking into tonight's nationally televised game against Oklahoma at Allen Field to up-off is set for 8:38 p.m. and the game can be seen on ESPN
Nine of the top 10 teams in the poll, which will be released today, were defeated last week. No. 1 Duke (20-2), which has held the top spot all season, lost to Wake Forest 72-68 yesterday. No. 2 UCLA (21-2) lost Saturday to Notre Dame 84-71.
The 'Hawks (20-3) may be ranked higher this week.
Kansas point guard Adonis Jordan said the Jayhawks would be ready for the Sooners.
KU computer department should be cut, report says
"We have to be ready to play," Jordan said. "It's Oklahoma, it's on ESPN — who wouldn't be ready to play?"
By Ranjit Arab
Kansanstaff writer
A confidential report conducted in the computer science department by outside consultants suggested that the entire department be eliminated and two rivals be removed, a professor said yesterday.
Zamir Bavel, professor of computer science, said the report, which was sent anonymously to the Lawrence Journal-World, suggested that he and department head William Bulgren be removed from the department because of their history of conflict.
Bavel said some of the findings of the report were that:
Research productivity was low.
Grant activity was low.
The department had handled personnel matters poorly including inviting inferior candidates for interviews last year when there was a strong market.
According to the six-page report conducted by Clayton Lewis, professor of computer science at the University of Colorado, and William Kubitz, professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, classes currently in the computer science department should be redistributed between the math and computer engineering departments, Bavel said.
He said James Muyksen, dean of liberal arts and sciences, commissioned Lewis and Kubitz to conduct an objective report in response to faculty complaints.
They interviewed every faculty member in the department for about 30 minutes within a 24-hour period in December, he said.
Bavel said he and Bulgren were the only professors mentioned by name in the report.
Bulgren was appointed by the former CLAS dean in 1983 as acting head of the department.
Bavel said he thought Bulgren did not represent the faculty in the department because he was not elected by faculty members.
The same year Bulgren was appointed, the bylaws for selecting faculty applicants were discontinued, Bavel said.
"I made up my mind when he was appointed that the University wanted a dictator," he said.
However, Bulgren said the bylaws were discontinued because they were too cumbersome. He questioned Bavel's motives.
"It sounds like he is desiring to be chairman of the department," Bulgren said. "He has not communicated through me. He has communicated through the press, but he has done this sort of thing in the past."
Although Buigren said he could not comment on the details of the confidential report, he said that it cited several positive points within the department.
Because the report was conducted in a 24-hour period by two people unaware of the department's past, it was not completely correct, Bulgren said.
Aside from a need for more research and papers published by full professors, Bulgren said he was pleased with the department's performance.
"I think we are producing some good students at the undergraduate and master's levels," he said.
Muyskens said the suggestions of the report were only options for solving the department's problems.
He said that he was taking to faculty members as well as graduate and undergraduate students about the fate of the department.
No decision will be made until all discussion is completed. Muvksen said.
"Whether we follow their advice or not depends on the discussions we have right now," he said.
The option to discontinue the department is not a matter of money, Muyskens said.
He said he was frustrated the confidential report had been leaked to a reporter at the Lawrence Journal World.
"The report gave us some strong advice, and it should have been kept within the faculty where all the options could have been discussed," Muyskens said.
Ailing Kansas health care
Physician shortage results in underserved counties
Editor's note: This is the first of two stories about the shortage of rural health care in Kansas. The Legislature is considering a bill that would require the University of Kansas Medical Center to graduate more family practitioners in Kansas or lose some state financing.
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
There is no substitute for being happy with your doctor.
That is the philosophy of Dean Lasser, the only pediatrician in Atchison.
THE FIRST MEMORIAL EXAMINATION
He has been in the town of 10,600 since August 1990,and he fears for the future.
Atchison is served by seven family practitioners, and two are approaching retirement age, making a difficult situation worse.
The only pediatrician in Atchison, Dean Lasseter, treats about 25 children a day
"This community has a huge need," Lasseter said.
But Atchison, which is about 40 miles north of Lawrence, is better off than communities that do not have any doctors. Some have one family practitioner who serves thousands of residents in surrounding areas.
Hospitals in western Kansas may be forced to close if they cannot recruit new doctors to replace their aging, overworked staffs.
The most recent figures available, compiled from a study completed in 1990 by the University of Kansas Medical Center, show that of Kansas' 105 counties, 13 are underserved and 51 are critically underserved.
The study defined a critically underserved area as a county with one full-time, primary-care practitioner per 3,000 residents. Primary-care physicians include those in family and genital diseases, pediatrics and internal medicine.
60 percent of the state's counties do not have adequate access to the most basic health care.
What this means to Kansans is that
Don Babcick, senior vice president at Weatherby Health Care, a physician placement service in Norwalk, Conn., said medical school graduates typically remained in the regions
where they came from.
In a recent survey of 3,000 students who had just completed their residencies, Weatherby found that Kansas ranked among the 10 least popular states for physicians to practice.
Continued on Page 5
2
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
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The University of Kansas Academic Computing Services is sponsoring seminars for faculty, staff and students. "Introduction to SAS: Part 2" will be at 7 tonight at the PC Lab. "Introduction to SPSS" will be offered at 7 tomorrow night at the Computer Center Auditorium.
ON CAMPUS
Cancer Support Group will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove C in the Kansas Union.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information session about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today at 406 Wescoe Hall. An information session about studying in French-speaking countries will be at 4 p.m. today at the French Department Library.
The Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 today and Wednesday at 207 Robinson Center.
Jack Winerock, director of piano,
will perform music by a blind slave
who composed music during the Civil
War at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Douthart
Scholarship Hall.
The KU Coalition of the Lawrence Alliance will meet at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow at 64 Twente Hall.
ENIRONS will meet at 6 p.m. wednesday at the Walnut Room in
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the conferen- Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
■ Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. Friday at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
Tsongas, Brown vie for victory in Maine
The Associated Press
Tsongas and Brown alternated in holding the lead as the long count was tallied from 665 precincts around the state.
PORTLAND, Maine — Upstart Jerry Brown and Paul Tsongas battled for victory in Maine's caucuses yesterday in a surprisingly close race that reflected the unpredictable campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Win or lose, the results were a blow to Tsongas, who is struggling to maintain the momentum he gained with his victory in New Hampshire's primary on Tuesday.
An uncommitted state of delegates, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton and the rest of the field followed.
And win or lose, the results were a triumph for Brown, who finished last among the five major contenders in New Hampshire and has been derided as a gadfly making a hopeless quest for the nomination.
Brown campaigned energetically throughout the state for five straight days, reaching out to disaffected voters and opponents of nuclear power.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60444 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60 Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint-Lawrence, Ken 66045
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Spring Break Watch
San Francisco 65/41
Phoenix 73/49
Padre Island 66/49
Atlanta 72/51
Fort Lauderdale 83/67
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Seattle 56/42
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Spring Break Watch
San Francisco 65/41
Phoenix 73/49
Padre Island 66/49
Atlanta 72/51
Fort Lauderdale 83/67
Washington D.C. 50/38
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3-day outlook
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
CAMPUS / AREA
3
KU faculty venture outside their fields
Temporary change of departments adds depth to teachers' knowledge
By Ranjit Arab Kansan staff writer
As members of a faculty reading group, Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, and Peter Schanck, director of the law library, discovered that they shared an interest in postmodern thought.
The two finally will have a chance to work together on the subject next spring in the law school.
Hanson is one of two professors chosen for an intra-University professorship.
Carol Prentice, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the professorship allowed KU professional in departments outside their fields.
The professorship was established in 1979 by a grant from the Exxon Corporation. It originally was created for professors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. But when the grant expired, it was continued by the University of Kansas Endowment Association and offered to professors throughout the University. Prentice said.
"The goal is to increase interdisciplinary activities," she said. "It also allows professors to explore newareas as well as refresh and inspire their teaching."
Prentice said the two recipients would be relieved of their teaching duties next spring while they studied in other departments. Their departments will receive small stipends to hire teaching assistants for the semester.
While in the law school, Hanson said he would teach a seminar with Schanck on recent theories that combine law and social sciences.
"This professorship gives faculty members in different disciplines with similar interests the chance to get together and explore those interests together." Hanson said.
Schanck said the collaboration would be difficult without the professorship because it would have caused an overload of courses for Hanson.
However, because of the professorship, Hanson will be in the law school full time and have an office there, Schanck said.
He said Hanson would not be the only one acquiring new insights from the professorship.
He said he planned to study Greek in the department of classics.
"I expect to gain a lot through his considerable knowledge of social problems."
Richard Hardin, professor of English, was the other recipient of the intra-University professorship.
Hardin said he wanted to read the original Greek version of the novel "Daffines and Chieo," which was the first work by a masterful plains he taught in his courses.
While in the department of classics, Hardin said he also would guest-lecture for the Greek and Roman Mythology class and attend a course about Roman historians.
The professorship will give him deeper insight into the courses he teaches. Hardin said.
"I will feel a lot more confident about my scholarship and my knowledge of the texts I am teaching once I have a better understanding of the Greek language," he said.
Business program focuses on women entrepreneurs
Kansan staff writer
By Janet Rorholm
The University of Kansas school of business sponsored a conference this weekend that focused on women as entrepreneurs.
Fran Raglin, winner of the 1991 Avon Woman Enterprise Award and president of a travel service in Cincinnati, said women wanted to be respected and be competitors.
Raglin was a guest speaker at "The Challenge to Grow," a conference on women and business.
The Small Business Development Center, an outreach program of the KU school of business, sponsored the conference Saturday at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive. About 80 people attended, some of whom had their own businesses or
were contemplating starting one.
Topics at the conference ranged from knowing a business to exploring financing
Shirley Davis, Lawrence graduate student, said she planned to start a museum.
"I have no sense of what it takes to open a business," she said.
Davis said there was a thrust to make music therapy more marketable because so many people could benefit from it.
"I'm the type of person to go with the flow," she said. "But now I realize that is no longer enough. I need to open my own doors."
Becky Kasenberg, business graduate student, and her mother, Elizabeth Kasenberg, said they were considering going into the antique business together.
The two attended the conference to get an overview of what that might entail and to see what they would need to do.
Dee Ann DeRoin, physician at Watkins Health Center, said she attended the conference because working for federal or state programs had isolated her from the business side of medicine.
DeRino said there was an increasing segment of the population that could not afford the basics in health care. She said it was difficult for her to require those people to pay for her services and so she had shunned private practice.
But because she might move into an administrative position sometime in the future, she wanted to learn basic business concepts.
TOMMY BROWN
Julie Dietrich, Wichita senior, (right) jousts Michalene Kloster, Kansas City, Mo., in the American Gladiators tour tryouts Saturday.
KU student chosen for competition during American Gladiators tryouts
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
The line of American Gladiato hopefuls was about 1,500 strong and stretched around the parking lot into the street.
Seven of the hopefuls were members of the KU women's rowing team who wanted to see if they were Gladiator material.
The tryouts Saturday at the All American Indoor Sports Inc. building in Lenexa were for a national tour that will not be televised. The competitors have a chance to win prizes, and are eligible for a spot on the "American Gladiators" television show.
Julie Dietrich, Wichita senior and crew member, said she was on a mission to prove something.
And she did.
Dietrich was one of four women chosen to compete March 10 at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo. Four men and two men's and women's alternates also were chosen.
Tami Odell, women's crew captain, tried out during winter break in Oklahoma City.
At the tryouts, women were required to do 30 push-ups in one minute. They had to maintain a flat back, touch the floor with their chests, and fully extend their arms at the end of each push-up.
"I only did 12 push-ups out of 30 last time," said Odell, Norman, Okla., junior.
she completed about 20 saturday.
*I'm seriously going to keep doing this until I make it past the pushups, "Odell said.
The men were required to do 50 finger-tip push-ups in one minute, also maintaining a flat back, coming within a palm's thickness of the floor and fully extending their arms at the end of the push-up.
Stacey Neren, tryout coordinator for the American Gladiators tour, said about 80 percent of men and 50 percent of women were eliminated during the push-ups.
"Everyone out there in line thinks they can do 50 finger-tip push-ups." Neren said. "They wouldn't be out here if they didn't."
Ditrich, who is 5 feet 8 inches and weighs 135 pounds, was the only woman of the seven KU rowing team members that completed the push-ups.
After completing the push-ups, Dietrich had to run 40 yards in 5.5 seconds, go 10 feet hanging from a hand-bicycle attached to a beam
and do 10 chin-ups in one minute.
The men had to run 49 yards in 4.8 seconds, go 10 feet on the hand-bicycle and do 18 wide-grip, behind-the-shoulders pull-ups in one minute.
Dietrich had some trouble with the chin-ups. She couldn't do any.
Because there were few women, Dietrich advanced to powerball and joust despite not completing any chin-ups.
Powerball, which has the same rules for men and women, requires a person to try to put a soccer ball in a trash-can shaped goal, while opponents try to block the goal. Contestants are required to play 30 seconds on both defense and offense.
In the joust, two competitors stand on separate pedestals and try to knock each other down in 30 seconds with staffs that are padded on each end and look like giant cotton swabs.
After a short interview, Gladiator officials chose Dietrich for the tour.
Dietrich knocked her opponent off the pedestal.
She said she was surprised and nervous about the competition.
"I have to go up against those Gladiator women, and they're going to pulverize me," she said.
Enrollment figures respond to University planning
Undergraduate numbers remain stable number of graduate students increases
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
Ten-year KU enrollment figures show a trend that was encouraged by the University administration.
Undergraduate student enrollment is leveling off while the number of graduate students has grown since 1987.
After undergraduate enrollment jumped by almost 1,500 students from 1985 to 1987, it has leveled off to a number slightly lower than the peak enrollment of 19.407 undergraduates in 1987.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, in a report he gave to the University Senate Executive Committee Friday said that it had been difficult to handle such a large influx of undergraduate students.
"It was felt then that we ought to stabilize undergraduate enrollment and try to develop graduate enrollment," Amber said.
After the 1897 enrollment peak, the University decided it needed to develop some control that would enable it to better predict the number of incoming students.
He said that many of the graduate programs had the capacity to grow and accept new students without additional resources, whereas the majority of undergraduate programs were saturated and had no room to expand.
"We're still in a position where
growth is valued," he said. "We can't afford to let it drop, but we want it to level off."
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said that after 1987 the University implemented an enrollment stability plan that has been successful in leveling off undergraduate enrollment.
The stability plan included an early application deadline for in-state students and an even earlier one for out-of-state students along with higher admission standards.
"It's basically a lack-of-resource problem. We are maxed out at the undergraduate level while some of the graduate programs still have capacity that they could utilize." Shankel said.
Ambler, in speaking with candidates for vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service.
"We can't afford to let it drop,but we want it to level off."
David Ambler vice chancellor for student affairs
has been asking them what their attitudes are about central planning.
"We have to be more deliberate in our planning for graduate growth," he said. "The office of research and graduate studies needs to take a look at
what programs can grow without significant increases in operational costs.
"We must systematically go through and find graduate programs that are able to handle more and give them incentives to take more students," he said.
Ambler said that the increase in graduate enrollment could not be easily explained, but that he was glad that it had increased.
Shankel said the primary reason for the rise in graduate enrollment was that more and more students were realizing that graduate degrees could lead to success.
Howard Mossberg, interim vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said, "We have tried to manage the enrollment so we can meet the needs of the students we have."
1981 16,782
1987 19,407 1991 19,366
1981 5,323
1987 5,112
1991 5,802
'81 '83 '85 '87 '89 '91
Undergraduate enrollment Graduate enrollment
Source: Division of Student Affairs
Graduate student numbers have increased since 1987. After a jump in undergraduates from 1985 to 1987, enrollment has grown and diversity has been trying to stabilize undergraduate levels.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
OPINION
LIFEIN HELL
©1992
BY MAIT
GROENING
BINKY'S GUIDE TO LOVE
IF YOU DON'T DO OUT IN MY MEMO, DO YOU WISH SOMEONE WHO LOVED?
NO REFUNDS
CHAPTER VII:
THE WEIRD WORLD OF AMBIVALENCE
LOVE SECRET #10: BABY TAKES BETWEEN LOVERS CAN BE SWEET, BUT KNOW WHERE TO DRAW THE LINE.
DO WOO WOO ME AS WOMIN AS I WUV WOO?
WES I WOO MY WIIDLE GAGA GOOGA JOOBBA GOOGA DOUBBA GOOGA WHIMLE TUNKLE GOODER DOOKLE MOMMY
AMBIVALENCE IS THAT BRAIN IN A TAFFY PULLING MACHINE SENSATION YOU GET WHEN SEIZED BY SIMULTANEOUS AND CONTRADICTORY FEELINGS (EACH AS ATTRACTION AND REPulsion) TOWARD A PERSON (who is probably GRIPped BY THE SAME DESIRE TO SAY OR DO TWO OPPOSITE THINGS). IT'S PART OF THE FUN OF BEING HUMAN, AND IF YOU'RE REALLY LUCKY, YOU CAN FIND someone to SHARE YOUR MUTUAL AMBIVALENCE WITH FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE!
MMM. CUTE.
RUN FOR IT!
URGE TO FONDLE
DIVE!! DIVE!!
MMM KIND OF CUTE IN A REPULSIVE SORT OF WAY
STEER CLEAR!
SOMEWHAT CHARMING
VAGUELY BABOONLIKE
CARNAL DESIRE.
I'LL CALL YOU.
VAMOOSE!!
NICE OVERBITE.
SHE'S OUT TO TRAP ME.
REMINDS ME OF MY EX.
PLEASEANT TINGLING BELOW THE WAIST.
SUDDEN VRGE TO MOVE TO NEW ZEALAND.
DEFINITELY HUSBAND MATERIAL
FIG. 2. A PERFECT MATCH
Semantic battle is useless
I've decided to start a new organization on campus — for men only. The name of this new group is Boys Against Ridiculous females, or BARF.
Because these are politically correct times, BARF's first action will be to boycott all products from the Hershey Foods Corporation. You see, BARF is concerned that the company is giving womyn preferential treatment over men. It is actually the HERSHE-V name that is problematic.
BARF is a reasonable organization. We at BARF recognize that multiple production runs are costly. We don't expect the company to produce HIME-y bars in order to balance the gender inconsistency. What BARF proposes, however, is that the company merely drop the "r" in its name. The new HE-SHE-y Foods Corporation could stand at the forefront of the move toward a politically correct society!
A
Andrew Hodges
Guest columnist
I would hope that by now you realize I am being facetic to prove a point. There can be a place in our society for political correctness — to a point. For example, when referring to a law enforcement official, it is fine to use a gender non-specific term such as police officer. If there is some reason that the gender of the police officer is relevant, then feel free to use policeman or policewoman. It is sensible to make distinctions among these words because the exchange of ideas and information becomes clearer.
But the use of words such as womyn (women), herstory (history) and Herspanic (Hispanic) is as ridiculous as my Hershey example. What's the point? Women are not going to gain any respect through such childishness. They will gain the attention and respect that they deserve through praiseworthy actions, not through twisted words.
Women deserve the same rights and opportunities as men. But the goal of equality of the sexes will only be reached through respect and understanding on both sides of the issue. Let's quit splitting hairs over semantics. Aberrations of the English language in the name of political correctness do nothing to bring the sexes together, but everything to tear them apart.
- Andrew Hodges is a Mulvane junior majoring in journalism.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
December grads get cheated
Those who finish in winter lack ceremonial recognition that others receive in May
Almost two months ago, 484 KU students were denied a graduation ceremony simply because there is no planned commencement for students who graduate in December.
Commencement is a time for students to rejoice after long years of studying hard to earn a degree. Family members and friends travel from all over the country to see the big day. It is an opportunity for most KU students to pat themselves on the back by celebrating with their classmates.
But December graduates have only two undesirable options if they choose to participate in the ceremony.
First, they can walk down the Hill in May before they actually graduate. This defeats the whole purpose of the ceremony. Participating in commencement even though the student has one semester left of school does
not create the same effect. They still are KU students who will be faced with homework and examinations after three short months of summer vacation.
The second option is to wait until the following May. This solves the first problem but presents another. After students receive their degrees, chances are they will work, go back to school or travel. The following May is five months into the future. Graduates' lives will be drastically different. Commencement will lose some meaning between December and May because of the transition from college to the real world.
Other schools have December commencement ceremonies, and it is time for KU to go with the flow. Although walking down the Hill would not be an option in December, Allen Field House would be the ideal place to have a December commencement.
December graduates deserve a celebration.
Rock Chalk beats challenges
Julie Eileen Litt for the editorial board
Move to Lawrence High eats profits from the revue,but students find independence
Economics definitely will play a role in the 1992 Rock Chalk Revue. Supply and demand have caused the revue to sell out for the Feb. 29 performance; the other five performances are expected to sell out as well.
In previous years, there were three performances at Hoch Auditorium. This year, six shows will be performed. The last three shows will be Feb. 27-29 at Lawrence High School.
The proceeds from the will go to the United Way of Douglas County. But the Revue will not be able to make as much money from this year's ticket sales as it has in the past. Auditorium seated a total of 9,300 people for
three performances. Lawrence High School will seat only a total of 6,000 people for six performances.
Although having Rock Chalk at Lawrence High will decrease the amount of proceeds the revue collects, the move has given the revue more independence. This year's revue is being run by about 300 KU students. Fraternities and sororites can get community service points from participating in the Revue.
It is good that KU students put forth an effort each year to help out those in need, even though it took a little more work than in previous years to make everything happen. The participants should be commended for putting together the show in a new environment. It is hoped that this annual event will continue in the future, even if there are more obstacles to overcome.
Tiffany Lasha Hurt for the editorial board
Editorials reflect the majority opinion of the University Daily Kansan editorial board. Opinions expressed in letters, cartoons and guest and staff columns are solely those of the author or artist. Views expressed in columns and cartoons are not necessarily shared by the Kansan
Members of the editorial board are: Alexander Bloemhof, Jim Brown, J.R. Clairborne, Mark Coatney, Amy Francis, Tiffany Harness, Tiffany Lasha Hurt, Kate Kelley, Julie Eileen Lit, Stephen Martino, David Mitchell, Chris Moeser, Beth Randolph, Martin Scherstuhl, Juliane Wasson, Frank Williams and Zarher Zercher.
Column was bad satire
Just today I read Eric Fliokoski's guest column from the Feb. 12 Kansan "Womyn push interests too far at Multiversity." The experience leaves me wondering why you considered it worth printing at all. Not only is the piece snide, childish and deliberately insulting rather than informative or argumentative, but its satirical attack is foolish to the point of inanity. Behind its smirking exaggerations lie equally silly implications and gross generalizations. While virtually any subject can benefit from intelligent challenge and from humor, your printing of such an ad feminism attack under the guise of humor does no more than release the writer's bile — and even validate it. That's a shame.
■ Haskell Springer
Professor of English
Editorial weakens KU
Higher education is in trouble in Kansas. The commitment of the Legislature has waned. Students need to be a vocal, active force in Topkena. He should not be allowed to Chris Moeser notes in his editorial of Feb. 20.
Lettersto the editor
The Associated Students of Kansas has not been a dynamic force on campus this year. Moeser is right, but he does not explain why ASK has been remiss. All of his criticisms are directed at the campus, not the state department of ASK. David Hull, who resigned his position in January, was responsible for assembling and overseeing the Advisory Board and cultivating a campus presence for the organization. Hull neglected both duties. Moeser's criticism would more accurately be directed at Hull. Joe Cinalli was the state director of the organization until very recently. Moeser's praise of Lobby Day can rightly be directed at Cinalli and his new co-director, John Schwartz. Condemning ASK on the basis of the unmet responsibilities of one individual is irresponsible and misleading.
Moeser does not only condemn, but suggests alternatives — normally a laudable addition to an editorial. However, the only alternative found in the editorial is a reference to "sitting in" in the Statehouse. ASK is a lobbying organization that uses its mental in the enactment of important laws like the Kansas Landlord Tenant Act, and programs like the YES program precisely because
we rationally and professionally approach the Legislature. Such a suggestion that ignores ASK's mission coupled with the inaccuracies above serve to discredit Moeser's editorial.
During a period characterized by a lack of legislative support for higher education in Topeka and around the state, it only further weakens KU's position when editorialists make uninformed, unsophisticated attacks upon the best voice the University has in state government -ASK.
Chris Pace
Salina senior
Opinions differ on war
Mr Caruso: I am writing in reply to your column titled "Advertisements glorify warfare's obvious horror," printed in the Feb. 11 issue of the Kansas
Many of the things you have to say I agree with — that war is horrible, that war is gruesome, and that people die in war. But I must disagree with you concerning your belief that "most of us didn't use the death and maiming of 100,000 people) a second thought." I respect
your right to an opinion, but please refrain from
commenting for me on what I decide to think about
The death of so many people is a tragedy, and I consider them to be more than statistics. However, when considering these deaths remember that many of these same Iraqi soldiers who died were killed after they themselves had executed, tortured and maimed citizens of Kuwait
— whose country the Iraqis had aggressively entered.
Concerning your comment that "officers are only small, expendable wheels in a giant bureaucracy designed to destroy." I think that perhaps you should read your own column and remember that these officers are also individual people — not just statistics.
Sean Kentch
Topeka senior
War is never justified
When I saw David Caruso's Feb. 11 column "Advertisements glorify warfare's obvious horror," I instantly knew what the public's response would be. Caruso's respondents up to this point have been rational and politic. But I see flaws in some of their arguments.
Dong Deadly acknowledges that yes, war is horrible, and we'd all like to live in a world of consumate peace, but sometimes war is an inevitable reality. Labeling something "inveitable" doesn't make it excusable. Killing people is never justified.
So in keeping with my philosophy, we wouldn't have fought Desert Storm. What then? Saddam Hussein wreaks havoc on the lives of Kuwaitis. This is bad. Shouldn't we do something? One good slap welcomes another, right? The natural human inclination is to slap back. Except that with today's technology, you can use it to generate a generation for a generation. Maybe turning the other cheek is a more prudent international policy.
At the same time, though, I realize that wars like the Revolutionary War are directly responsible for the freedom I enjoy today. Am I being hypocritical to revel in the results of a 200-year-old war but criticize a one-year-old war? Yes. So I'll resolve my internal conflict right here. We shouldn't have had the Revolutionary War. Long live the King!
KANSANSTAFF
Kansas City, Mo., freshman
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News Mike Andrews
Editorial Beth Randolph
Planning Lara Gold
Campus Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olson
Sports Eric Nelson
Photo Julie Jacobson
Features Debbie Myers
Graphics Aimee Braindan/J Jeff麦瑟
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr ..Bill Leibengoord
Regional sales mgr ..Rich Harsbarger
National sales mgr ..Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr ..Ame Johnson
Production mgrs ..Kim Wallace
Lia Keeler
Marketing director ..Kim Claxton
Creative director ..Leah Koehler
Classified mgr ..Kip Chin
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
Rusinase Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pho-
The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Stuart-Flint Hall.
Stick
Hi, I'm TAKING A SURVEY: DO YOU AVOID EMOTIONAL COMMITMENTS WITH WOMEN?
I DO.
MALE
by David Rosenfield
Hi, I'm TAKING A SURVEY: DO YOU AVOID EMOTIONAL COMMITMENTS WITH WOMEN?
I DO.
DO YOU AVOID SAYING CERTAIN THINGS IN THE PRESENCE OF WOMEN?
I DO.
WHAT IS SOMETHING YOU WOULD AVOID SAYING IN THE PRESENCE OF A WOMAN?
"I DO."
DO YOU AVOID SAYING CERTAIN THINGS IN THE PRESENCE OF WOMEN?
I DO.
MALE
WHAT IS SOMETHING YOU WOULD AVOID SAYING IN THE PRESENCE OF A WOMAN?
"I DO."
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
5
TOM SCHWARTZ
bull's
wild
bell's UP
Christine McFartand / KANSAN
Sinking
Troy Chckley, Lawrence senior, pulls Kaci Love, Lawrence resident, from the grip of a man-made quicksand pit in Learned Hall. The engineering department opened its doors to the public Friday and Saturday and exhibited student projects.
Physician shortage hits rural Kansas
Continued from Page 1
"It is very rare for someone from either coast to want to go to the Midwest." Babchick said. "If they have come from any kind of urban area, the chances that they are going to go to a rural area is unlikely."
State Sen. Roy Ehrlich, R-Hoisington, heads the Senate Committee on Public Health and Welfare.
"We are losing doctors quite rapidly in rural areas," he said. "The people of Kansas living in inwarded areas are asking, 'How come?'
Many think there is no simple answer.
State Rep. Fred Gatlin, R-Atwood, is a member of the Joint Committee on Health Care. Gatlin said he thought physicians were more interested in specialty areas than in primary care.
"Traditionally, patients went to a family practitioner first, then to a specialist if that was necessary," he said. "Now, we have a situation where the number of specialists exceeds the number of general practitioners."
Lorene Valentine, director of rural health and education services at the Med Center's Wichita branch, said the isolation of a small town, as well as the
"When you practice alone, there is no one to cover for you and no way to get away," Valentine said.
probability of a solo practice, also discouraged physicians.
Malpractice insurance is another consideration, she said. Kansas is one of only a few states that require physicians to carry malpractice insurance.
Chip Wheelen of the Kansas Medical Society said he thought federal policy governing Medicare payments was a bigger problem.
Because rural areas have a proportionally greater elderly population than urban areas, this is another financial burden for doctors in rural communities, he said.
The agency reimburses new doctors
who work well-established physicians.
hssr.
Meanwhile, many lawmakers are looking to the Med Center for answers.
Ehrlich said, "The people in rural areas are crying to the University for help. The University is spending too much on specialty areas rather than general practice. The people of Kansas living in underserved areas are asking, 'Why?' and the only one that can answer that is the University of Kansas."
The Med Center has tried some programs to direct students toward prima-
A study conducted in 1990 by the University of Kansas Medical Center shows that more than half of Kansas' 105 counties have inadequate primary care services. The majority of the underserved counties are rural areas.
41 counties not underserved (one physician for up to 1,482 people)
13 counties underserved (one physician for 1,483-2,695 people)
51 counties critically underserved (one physician for more than 2,695 people)
Health care shortage
Atchison County
Kansas City
Topeka
Lawrence
Wichita
Source: University of Kansas Medical Center
Jeff Meesey. Daily Kanson
Lasseter is one of 35 students selected each year to receive a Kansas Medical Scholarship from the Med Center. The program pays tuition in return for service in an underserved rural community after completion of residency.
rv care in rural communities.
Lasseter said that after seven years of school and residency, going into family practice in a rural area, which
requires long hours and less pay, was not attractive. Most students instead opted to practice in specialty areas.
"Every doctor has a little bit of the missionary in them," he said. "But when you put them in the pressure cooker of the first two years of medical school ... you see (the students who had planned on practicing in a rural areas) dropping like flies."
Report cites release of radiation in Idaho
Energy Department's lab may have emitted dangerous doses
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Workers at an eastern Idaho nuclear engineering laboratory and people living nearby have been exposed to excessive doses of radiation, the General Accounting Office said in a report released yesterday.
GAO said the findings were based on an analysis of 115 known radiopic-
ation releases to the atmosphere from the Energy Department's Idaho National Engineering Laboratory and data on annual exposure.
It said two of the episodic releases would have exceeded present radiation protection standards for the public although they did not exceed the standards in effect at the time.
GAO also said 240 workers received
annual doses higher than the current exposure limits but not higher than those in effect from 1951 to 1958. It said these were the most recent data available.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, who heads the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, requested the report, saying the Energy Department had never conducted a study of all workers at the site to determine the health risks.
"I certainly hope this report will open some eyes and get such a study under way," Glenn said.
He said he would discuss the report with Energy Department officials at a hearing tomorrow and ask why so little attention had been paid to the people affected by these government experiments.
The primary function of the laboratory, which was opened in 1949, is to build, test and operate nuclear reactors and support facilities.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
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Nintendo contest relieves hall residents from studies
A group of Oliver Hall residents gathered around a large-screen television yesterday afternoon in the main lobby to watch and participate in what could be KU's first-ever organized Super Nintendo tournament.
He said that he had played video games almost his entire life, but that the afternoon's competition made him a little tired.
"I think it's great, especially if you love video games, like I do," said Matthew Marcus, Overland Park freshman.
"My eyes were hypnotized by the screen," said Marcus, who placed second in the tournament.
By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
He said the Super Nintendo game system, which was used in the competition, was more difficult than the original Nintendo game system because of the
Some of the 10 residents who participated said they thought the tournament was a good break from the college routine.
"You have to get to think a lot about what to push at what time," he said.
One of the organizers, Steve Kolbe, Omaha, Neb, senior, said 14 residents signed up for the competition.
"It's a chance to play these games, because they're really expensive to buy." he said.
Hastings, where Kolbe rented the games, donated 15 video rentals for prizes, he said.
He said he chose games that would lend themselves to a tournament such as F-Zero, a racing game, and Super MarioLand.
The event, organized by three resident assistants at Oliver, was financed by hall funds.
Kolbe also purchased a $25 Hastings gift certificate for the first prize.
Vince Fernandez, Prairie Village freshman, said he competed to take a break from studying.
additional buttons on the control panels.
Kolbe said he randomly paired the contestants into brackets for the tournament, which consisted of four rounds.
he said.
Every contestant received a test run and three official runs around the race track in F-Zero in the first two rounds, and 20 minutes of Super MarioLand in the third and final rounds, he said.
Kolbe said scores were determined by the best of three laptimes in F-Zero and the 40 minutes of Super Mari-Oland.
"Your thumbs start to hurt," he said.
The 10 contestants who showed up played for an about hour each, he said.
Kolbe said the contestants had "Nintendo thumb" by the end of the tournament.
"Your thumbs start to hurt," he said. Kolbe said he hoped the tournament idea caught on at other residence halls.
"It's hard to find a place that rents,"
Local artists contribute talents to Habitat for Humanity show
Fernandez won first prize.
By Andy Taylor
"Ultimately, I'd like to get other hallas interested and take the hall champions and let them play it off," he said.
Kansan staff writer
HOT STUFF COOL SAVINGS
Nathan Berg cuddled the double bass as if he were buttoning a snowsuit on a toddler.
While his fingerszipped up and down the instrument's strings, his father, Chuck Berg, KU director of theatre and film studies, played a snapple, improvised tune on the saxophone.
The father-and-son jazz duo kicked off Lawrence Habitat for Humanity's third annual benefit variety show, Homefest '92. The show raised more than $6,000 for the local chapter Friday night at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Money from the program will be used to finish construction of the Habitat for Humanity's house at 820 Indiana St., said John Gingerich, president of the Lawrence chapter.
He said a demand for affordable housing existed in the community.
NEW
"I attended three events during
"It was kind of a luxury," said Nathan Berg, a Lawrence junior who has been playing jazz double bass since fifth grade. "The sound travels well in Liberty Hall, and playing with my father in front of a hometown crowd is a real treat."
Sequeira Costa, a Cordelia B. Murphy distinguished professor of piano just completed a two-week performance tour of Europe, played music from Rachmaninoff.
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Singers and dancers from Haskell Indian Junior College performed tribal dances, a Manhattan quartet sang '50s bee-bop songs and the Sweet Adeline quartet from Topeka harmonized verses from Gerschwin.
Besides jazz music the audience listened to everything from "The Barber of Seville" opera to barbershop quartets.
"I think we had good talent, and people are actually catching on to what we do." he said.
Norman Paige, professor of voice,
music and dance, and his wife, Inci
Bashar-Paige, sang concerted numbers
from Rossini.
2 Locations East on 23rd at Barker 622 W.12th Street 865-5060
"All our performers live locally, but many are known throughout this area, many are known regionally and some are known worldwide," she said.
CAMPUS OUTLET
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Patty McGrew, coordinator for
Homefest '92, said the variety show provided a glimpse of area talent.
Fitted Hats $14.99 Come in and see our assortment of new baseball hats!
Craig Jacobs, secretary for the local chapter, said that the variety show was the largest single fund-raiser in the year and that the chapter's other funds came from donations.
"We are like neighbors in an old-fashioned barn raising," he said. "We help each other out. We give a hand up instead of a handout."
Homeless Awareness Week," he said.
"And the need is obvious."
Gingerich also said that the house on Indiana Street would be the sixth finished by the Lawrence organization.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
INTERNATIONAL
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS
Moscow
Communists rally in Moscow
In the most violent unrest in Moscow since the Soviet Union's demise, thousands of pro-communist demonstrators rallied yesterday, clashing with police and pelting them with near-worthless kopeck coins. At least 30 people were reported injured.
"Down with the Russian government!' shouted some protesters. Waving red Soviet flags, protesters tried to break through police lines to a bar on the street. A sound of a ban on gatherings in the city center.
Several police officers were knocked down, and demonstrators' faces were bloodied by police with trunches. One protester tried to detemted police officer in the head with a flag pole.
At one point, angry demonstrators pelted police with thousands of kopeck coins to protest hardship they blamed on Russian leader Boris Yeltsin's economic reforms.
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Iraqi opposition leaders convene
Fifteen key Iraqi opposition leaders, reportedly including former army officers, met yesterday to reseek a united front capable of toppling Saddam Hussein.
Until now, all efforts to oust the Iraqi leader have failed because of the disparate agendas of opposition groups, which range from communists to Islamic fundamentalists. They are variously backed by Syria and Iran.
Significantly, the closed-door session at Riyadh's Conference Palace was the first officially sanctioned by Saudi authorities since last year's war.
London
Group accuses armies of poaching
The armies of South Africa and Zimbabwe are involved in the illegal smuggling of ivory and the poaching of endangered elephants, a conservation group charged yesterday.
The Environmental Investigation Agency, a private London-based organization, accused the governments of both nations of ignoring the women's involvement in the slaughter of elephants.
The agency expressed hope that the report would undermine attempts by South Africa and Zimbabwe to overturn the worldwide ban on ivory trading at a meeting in Japan March 2.
The report alleges members of the South African Defense Force ran a major ivory-smuggling operation out of Angola and setup another operation in Darfur. The reports come from elephants shot by Mozambican rebels.
The report also claims soldiers from Zimbabwe's National Army killed elephants in their own country and in Mozambique and murdered several people, including an officer who threatened to expose their activities.
From The Associated Press
Israel, Arabs cease fire; Shiites vow to reattack
BEIRUT — Arabs and Israelis held their fire in southern Lebanon yesterday for the first time in a week, and about 200 Shiite guerrillas left the battle zone as more villagers trickled back to wrecked homes.
The Associated Press
But on the eve of a new round of Middle East peace talks in Washington, Shiite Muslim leaders told 20,000 followers rallying in Beirut that attacks on Israel had to continue.
"The only way to achieve a lasting peace in the Middle East is the return of all the Jewish occupiers to the lands from which they originally came," said Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, the new leader of the pro-Iranian Hezbollah movement, which seeks the eradication of Israel and expulsion of Jews.
Nasrallah spoke at a rally called to mourn Hisbab Musawi, the Hezellhail leader whose assassination by Israelis a week ago helped trigger the violence. Children in the crowd held pictures of Musawi and his 5-year-old son, Hassan, who also was killed in the ambush.
Hezbollah fighters sought revenge by firing rockets into northern Israel and the Israeli-occupied security zone in southern Lebanon. Israel retaliated with howitzer barrages and a brief foray through U.N. lines to occupy the two Shiite villages Kafra and Yater just north of the zone. Fighting tapered off on Saturday.
Sheik Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, spiritual
mentor of the fundamentalist Hezbollah, told the Beirut crowd that the attacks on Israel steered the Arab nation in the right direction.
In Jerusalem, meanwhile, a pipe bomb exploded at a bus stop and wounded one person, police reported. Army radio said the blast seemingly was a terrorist attack.
Israeli negotiators left yesterday for Washington for the fourth round of peace talks, accompanied by dozens of security guards and reporters.
Hezbollah's calls for violence the day before the resumption of peace talks were at odds with efforts to defuse tensions in southern Lebanon, where the fighting killed six and wounded 37 last week.
Lebanon's Higher Defense Council, made up of senior army and police commanders, said Hezbollah and the other Shiite militia, the Syrian-backed Amal, agreed Saturday to stop rocket attacks against Israel and its security zone.
Some of the 10,000 villagers who fled the fighting trickled back through heavy rains to assess the damage to their homes. The first ventured home Saturday.
Many houses were ruined by shell explosions in Kafra and Yater.
Israel's chief of staff, Ehud Barak, expressed hope Saturday that the confrontation was winding down. But he said the guerrillas would pay a high price if they launched any more rocket attacks.
Mideast peace talks resume
The United Nations' top peacekeeping official, Marrack Goulding, was expected in Beirut today.
Negotiations to continue despite recent fighting in Lebanon
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Putting aside several explosive distractions, Israeli and Arab negotiators were poised yesterday to resume Middle East peace talks under the supervision of a increasingly restless Bush administration.
The fact that Israel, Syria, Palestinian Arabs, Lebanon and Jordan all agreed to send their delegations here indicated a joint commitment to keep it even though their talks have been inexplicable.
Officials of Ben Gurion International Airport, near Tel Aviv, said the Israeli delegation left for Washington on a chartered air force jet yesterday. Even this information was given on the condition of anonymity.
Beirut Leb. Syria Med. Sea Damascus Miles Jerusalem Amman Jordan Iran Map area Saudi Arabia Israel Egypt Miles
The parties also decided not to be sidelocked by a flare up of fighting in southern Lebanon, a squabble over Israel's detention of two Palestinian negotiators and Israel's difficult negotiations with the Bush administration over its request for help in borrowing $10 billion to absorb refugees.
Yesterday, a small pipe bomb exploded at a bus stop in a Jewish area of Jerusalem, injuring one person. Fifteen Arabs were rounded up for questioning, police representative Anat Granit said.
Shiite Muslim guerrillas withdrew about 200 of their fighters from the tense Israeli border area after halting rocket attacks against Israel and its security zone in south Lebanon. An estimated 800 guerrilla remains in border villages that have been the scene of several days of fighting.
An Israeli army representative said soldiers shot and killed two Palestinians in separate confrontations Saturday in the occupied lands.
Secretary of State James Baker, a low-key monitor, may be ready to play a more assertive role in the round that opens in Washington today provided the Palestinians flesh out their proposal for local self-rule and the Israelis provide a detailed response.
Baker, in a recent message to Faisal Husseini, a senior Palestinian adviser, said he would like to bridge the two sides. But Martin Indyk, executive director of The Washington Institute, a private research group, suggested on Friday that the time was not right.
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KU student tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office, Liberty Hall, and the SUA Office, Kansas Union, all seating is general admission; student tickets are only $8, to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
SPORTS
Kansas slips past 'Cats at the buzzer
Woodberry rises to occasion
By Lyle Niedens Kansan sportswriter
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams said he thought that Kansas guard Steve Woodberry was not aggressive in the first half of No. 3 Kansas' game Saturday at Kansas State.
Fortunately for the Jayhawks, Woodberry was aggressive enough when he had to be.
The 6-foot-4 sophomore buried a 15-foot jumper as the second-half buzzer sounded, giving the Jayhawks a 54-52 victory. The triumph was Kansas' fifth straight against the Wildcats and ninth consecutive in Manhattan.
"Steve Woodberry in the second half I thought was unbelievable," Williams said. "I chewed his tail out at halftime — I chewed a few of them — but I probably say I chewed Steve more than I did anybody else because he wasn't being aggressive at all. He wasn't looking for his shot. He wasn't getting involved."
Williams said that changed in the second half.
"He was phenomenal on the backboards," he said of Woodberry, who came off the bench to lead the 'Hawks with 11 rebounds.
"Steve made a heckuva an athletic play," Williams said of the final shot. "They did a very good job defensive-ly."
"I just went up and knocked it in," Woodberry said.
Woodberry the Jayhawks were looking inside first but that he had no idea what was going on.
The shot salvaged a poor shooting game for Kansas. The Jawhaws shot a season-low 31.5 percent from the field. However, one of Kansas' problems in recent games — free throw shooting — became a plus for the Jawhaws on Saturday. Kansas hit 15-of-27.
21 from the line, compared to 1-of-7 for K-State.
The game marked a new attendance record, 13,762, at K-State's Bramlage Coliseum. After the game, a few fans threw objects at Kansas players as they were heading to the locker room. Kansas center David Johanning received a gash in his forehead that required stitches and guard Greg Gurlev also was hit with an object.
"I was a little disappointed by the crowd," Williams said. "I don't think that has a place in college athletics."
Kansas sophomore Richard Scott and guard Rex Walters, who led the Jayhawks with 18 points, both approached the K-State student section after the game.
"I just told them, 'What do you think about that,'" Walters said. "I don't think they were the classiest bunch. Some of the things they said I don't appreciate at all."
KANSAS54, KANSASST.52
| player | fgnfga | fmnfta | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 0.3 | 1.3 | 1 |
| Scott | 3.6 | 5.8 | 1 |
| Watters | 2.4 | 8.2 | 16 |
| Watters | 5.16 | 1.4 | 18 |
| Jordan | 2.10 | 2.2 | 7 |
| McPherson | 2.4 | 0.0 | 4 |
| Davis | 3.4 | 0.0 | 6 |
| Ockertag | 0.1 | 0.0 | 0 |
| Haggerty | 0.1 | 0.0 | 0 |
| Johanning | 0.1 | 0.0 | 0 |
| Guelty | 0.1 | 0.0 | 1 |
| Total | 0.0 | 1.2 | 54 |
| Total | 17.54 | 15.21 | 14 |
KANSAS ST. (13-10)
Bryant 8-15 0-1 19
Jackson 4-10 1-6 10
Howard 3-5 0-0 6
Nickerson 1-4 0-0 2
Zeigler 0-2 0-0 0
Rehger 0-1 0-0 0
Rogers 9-9 0-0 15
Collier 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 21-47 1-7 52
Hattinske - Kia, S18. Kansas, J23. 5-point
Hartman - Kia, S18. Kansas, J23. 5-point
Woodbury 1 - Q10. Oleyl, K11. Kansas, J19. Horn
bison 5 - Jonker, J9. Jackson 1 (J2igeil 0). Fired
howard - Ribbonside, K13. Wisconsin (Wcbr)
3 - Johnson, J13. Wisconsin (Wcbr)
(Jamison 4), Kia, S18. (J2igeil 0). Total hours
4 - Kansas, K14. Kansas, J16. Technical, J1
-August 7, 1637
OKLAHOMA SOONERS
(3) KANSAS JAYHAWKS
VS.
Coach: Roy Williams Record: 20-3, (8-2)
Coach: Billy Tubbs Record: 17-6, (5-5)
Game time: 8:38 tonight at Allen Field House. It will be televised on ESPN, Channel 18 in Lawrence, and can be heard on 1059 KLZR
Probable Starters
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
24-F Alonzo Jamison 6-6 Sr. 9.9 4.4
34-F Richard Scott 6-7 So. 10.1 4.3
51-C Eric Pauley 6-10 Jr. 8.4 3.1
23-G Rex Walters 6-4 Jr. 16.5 3.2
30-G Adonis Jordan 5-11 Jr. 13.5 3.6
KANSAS STATE KANSAS STATE
Player/Position Height Year PPG RPG
31-F Damon Patterson 6-8 Sr. 20.4 8.6
32-F Jeff Webster 6-8 So. 14.4 6.3
40-C Bryan Sallier 6-8 Jr. 15.0 8.9
20-G Brent Price 6-1 Sr. 19.9 3.9
03-G Terry Evans 6-5 Jr. 9.2 3.2
Steve Woodberry's last-second, game-winning shot sparked a celebration from the Kansas bench. The Jayhawks won the game 54-52.
KU women close in on Big Eight title
By Cody Holt
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
By Seby Hick
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team moved one step closer to the Big Eight Conference championship by defeating Kansas State 67-49 yesterday at Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks, 21-4 overall and 10-2 in conference play, have a one game lead over Colorado, 17-8, 9-3, with two Big Eight games remaining for each team.
The Jayhawks have not won the conference title since 1987, when they shared it with K-State and Missouri. Their last outright championship was in 1981.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that although the Jayhawks were close to a conference championship, the season was far from over.
"We still have to take care of things
one game at a time, starting with Oklahoma. These last two games could make us or break us."
"It's real clear that we're close to the title," she said. "But they (the Jayhawks) know exactly what I'm going to say tomorrow in practice."
About 2,500 fans, the largest home attendance of the season, filled the field house to witness the Jayhawks' second victory of the season against K-State. It was their first victory against the Wildcats in Lawrence since Jan. 30, 1988.
It was also the last home meeting for the seniors against their intrastate
Washington said it was an emotional game for the team.
"I usually don't talk about things like last home games." she said. "But I did for this one. I knew it was going to be emotional. I just tried to prepare them for that."
With the score tied at 19, the Jayhawks went on a 13-1 run to propel them to a 34-25 halftime lead. Kansas never trailed in the second half.
Senior guard Kay Kay Hart led the Jayhawks with 14 points. Senior forward Terrilyn Johnson led the game with 12 rebounds and also had a career-high five blocked shots.
"We still have to take care of things one game at a time,
starting with Oklahoma."
Marian Washington Kansas women's basketball coach
Kansas' defense limited K-State to 46 shots in the game and allowed only one player to score in double figures, senior guard Mary Jo Miller who was the game's high scorer with 16 points.
KANSAS 67, KANSAS ST.49
| | tgn/fa | ftm/fa | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: |
| player | 1.2 | 0.0 | 2 |
| Holzman | 1.2 | 0.0 | 4 |
| Honeycunt | 2.8 | 4.7 | 8 |
| Grabbing | 2.7 | 1.2 | 4 |
| Marshall | 3.1-1 | 9.1-1 | 16 |
| Maylan | 3.9 | 0.0 | 8 |
| Grattan | 1.2 | 0.0 | 2 |
| Grattan | 1.2 | 0.0 | 2 |
| Berthard | 2.5 | 0.0 | 5 |
| Totals | 14-46 | 17-26 | 49 |
KANASB (21-4)
Aycock 2-6 4-4 8
Brock 1-8 4-4 8
Shareef 4-11 2-2 10
Hart 8-6 2-2 14
McCormick 5-1 2-1 10
Truitt 5-10 0-2 11
Slatter 3-10 0-2 12
Kids 4-10 0-1 6
Municy 0-3 0-1 0
Municky 0-3 0-1 0
Totals 24-61 12-16 67
Hyperklinik - Karasmani Kastase 34 × Karasmani 3 × Pirozenthal (Karasmani 15 × Masjid Youssef). Die Hyperklinik ist eine Einheit der Hülle mit 4 × Körper und 10 × Körper (10 × Körper für Fußball und 4 × Körper für Boxen) auf 10 × Körper (
OLYMPIC WRAP-UP
Olympic power shifts
ALBERTVILLE, France — A dynasty died in one sense and renewed itself in another as the Winter Olympics ended yesterday with an affirmation of a new world order in sports as in politics.
For the first time in 24 years, and only the second time since the Soviet Union entered the Winter Games in 1956, the former Soviet republics did not win either the most golds or overall medals.
But the best team in hockey is still Soviet Union, Russia United Team
Germany, unified in more than name only, is the new sports super-eroy.
Equipe Unifife, as it was called in Albertville, beat Canada 3-1 for the last medal of the XVI Winter Olympics Games — and the eighth gold in 10 Olympics for a team from the Soviet Union or Russia.
"There can be no end of the Russian ice hockey era," said Coach Viktor Tikhonov, a gray-haired man in a gray suit and brown shoes who got tossed in the air five times like a cheerleader by his young players after the game.
It was quite a contrast to the stiff, controlled Soviet teams of old. New freedoms and young players combined to produce unrestrained joy.
"I feel great, it's wonderful," said Alexei Kovalev, who turned 19 today.
For the ninth time in these Games, the medal presentation was accompanied by the raising of the fivering Olympic banner instead of a national flag, and the playing of the Olympic theme instead of a country's anthem.
"I was singing the old Soviet anthem to myself," said Viacheslav Bykov, the captain and center who capped the victory with a slapshot. "I was thinking the future is Russian."
"As I've said for the last week, I'm not in the vindication business, I'm in the coaching business," Peterson said after a narrow semifinal defeat to the eventual-champion Unified Team.
MERIBEL, France — The U.S. hockey team missed a medal, but it won some other, equally important things.
But the U.S. could be prouder this time, when a 5-1 start made possible a fourth-place finish — three notches better than the showing of Peterson's 1988 team. This year they battled for third place before taking. They lost Saturday's zameel.
U. S. hockey falls short
Respect. Exposure. And, yes, even though coach Dave Peterson will not admit it. vindication.
"I'm proud of my team," he said. "I was proud of my team in '88."
"We can walk out of here with a good feeling. In 1988, we walked out
It was a special tournament for the Unified Team, its first following the collapse of the Soviet Union. It beat Canada 3-1 in the final game and has won four of its six matches (including three straight) one silver and one bronze in its 10 Olympics.
with a bad feeling," team captain Clark Donatelli said. "We were one game away from playing for the gold medal. If we excited a few younger kids, got them to play hockey for Team USA someday, it was all worth it."
Canada won its first medal since 1968.
U. S. ski team excels
MERIBEL, France — A pair of silver medals in women's Alpine skiing. More top-five finishes than any nation except Austria.
The U.S. women's ski team enjoyed the Albertville Games immensely. And Coach Paul Major has a simple message for the rest of the ski world: You ain't seen nothing yet.
"We've got a real solid program now," Major said, who forecasted greater success for American women in the World Championships next year and the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway.
Olympic silver medals for Hilary Lindh in downhill and Diann Roffe in giant slalom were the highlights for the Americans in the Alpine events.
Olympic medals count
Olympic Games
Country G S B T
Germany 10 10 6 26
Unified Team* 9 6 8 23
Austria 6 7 8 21
Norway 9 6 5 20
Italy 4 6 4 14
U.S. **5** **4** **2** **11**
France 3 5 1 9
Finland 3 1 3 7
Canada 2 3 2 7
Japan 1 2 4 7
South Korea 2 1 1 4
The Netherlands 1 1 2 4
Sweden 1 0 3 4
Switzerland 1 0 2 3
China 0 3 0 3
Czechoslovakia 0 0 3 3
Luxembourg 0 2 0 2
New Zealand 0 1 0 1
North Korea 0 0 1 1
Spain 0 0 1 1
- Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Kansas track team posts strong effort
By Chris Jenson
Venison poetwriter
Despite using only a partial roster, the Kansas track and field teams posted a strong showing this weekend at the Kansas State Open in Manhattan.
"Overall, I was very encouraged with our performance." Coach Gary Schwartz said. "We had a number of people who had season and personal records."
The Jayhawks used a limited roster to rest some athletes for the coming Big Eight Conference Championship. Schwartz said the athletes decided to compete on a personal basis, depending on where they were in their training and how they were feeling mentally.
In the 200 meters, Shafer led a group of four Jayhawks who finished in the top four places with less than five-tenths of a second separating them.
The women were led by Natasha Shafer, who had first-place finishes in both the 200 meters with a time of 25.19 and in the 55 meters with a time of 7.18.
The meet, which was not scored,
was an opportunity for the participating
athletes to fine-tune their events
for the conference championships
which will take place at Anschutz
Sports Pavilion beginning Friday.
"I was looking for improvement and a positive attitude, and I feel that I got that," Schwartz said. "People seem to be coming on, and this is the time when we want our people to peal."
Other winners for the women were Helena Hafstrom, who won the 1,000 meters in 2:58.3, and Erin Howerton, who won the 600 meters in 1:27.30.
Marybeth Labosky, who finished second in the high jump, said the team was pleased with its performance.
"The meet was exactly what we wanted it to be," she said. "Those who competed sharpened things up, so I think it served its purpose."
Sophomore Jayson Lavender led the way for the men winning the pole vault after recovering from a pulled hamstring earlier in the season. Lavender vaulted 16. 10 in. Brandon Blain finished in a three-way tie for second in the pole vault with a vault of 16. 5 in.
Dan Waters also a performed well for Kansas, finishing second in the 800 meters with a time of 1:52.45.
Labosky said their recent success had the team feeling positive about the Big Eight Championships.
"The team is really optimistic," she said. "It is a time where everybody feels like this is our chance. Everybody is anxious to show the other teams what we have. I think a lot of teams will be surprised."
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
9
Kansas pitching downs 'Hogs
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Three Kansas pitchers combined on a one-hitter to lead the Jayhawkto 4-1 victory over Arkansas yesterday in Fayetteville, Ark.
Kansas, now 3-2, also won Saturday's game 7-4 after Arkansas claimed the series opener Friday, 13-5.
"Both are good wins for our pro coach Dave Bingham said. I'm ready."
Freshman Dan Rude, making his first collegiate start Sunday, pitched four and 1/3 innings, walking five hitters and striking out three. Rude gave up the Razorback's lone hit and run.
Sophomore David Meyer took the mound with one out in the fifth inning and pitched three and 2/3 innings for the win. Sophomore Chris Corn shut the Razorbacks out in the ninth inning for the save.
Sophomore Darryl Monroe was 2- for-4 and hit his first home run of the season in the win.
Arkansas, 4.3, had been averaging more than 14 runs a game until Kansas held the 'Hogs to an average of six runs a game during the three-game series.
Kansas had a scare during Friday's game when senior pitcher Curtis Schmidt injured his right shoulder while diving for a ground ball. His injury status will be known later this week.
On Saturday, Jimmy Walker held the Razorbacks to two runs and five hits in five and 1/3 innings. Junior Tom Stewart relieved Walker with one out in the sixth inning with Arkansas threatening to score.
"I was a little nervous as you might expect coming in in that situation," Stewart said. "But I love those situational that's what baseball is all about."
Stewart earned a save after pitching three and 2/3 innings, giving up two runs and three hits, while striking out three.
Junior designated hitter Kent Mahon was 3-for-4 with a run batted in and Jeff Niemeier was 2-for-4 with three RBI.
The victory improved Kansas' record to 9-4 overall and 2-2 versus ranked opponents.
Friday, the Jayhawks pounded Duke 5-1. No. 1 singles player Rafael Rangel, ranked No. 50 in the country, defeated the Blue Devils' David Hall, ranked No. 46, 6-3, 6-3. At No. 3 singles, Kansas's Carlos Fleming stayed hot with a 6-3, 7-6 victory against Duke's Chris Pressley.
Saturday, the 'Hawks wrapped up 17th place as they defeated the Game-cocks 3- in doubles to win the match. Under the tournament format, doubles was only played if the score after six singles matches was tied 3-1.
The Kansas women's tennis team also played this weekend at the Arkansas Invitational. Friday night, the Kansas women defeated Southern Methodist 5-2, and Saturday, they beat Alabama 5-4. They finished the weekend with a 5-4 victory against Arkansas on Sunday.
KU golf coach resions
SPORTS BRIEFS
Kansas women's golf coach Sarah Johnson announced her resignation Friday in order to pursue other career opportunities. She had been the women's coach for one year.
After losing 5-1 to North Carolina in the opening round of the USTA/ITCA National Indoor Tennis Championships, the Kansas men's tennis team rebounded with victories against No. 18 Duke and No. 14 South Carolina to capture 17th place in the tournament.
Tennis teams succeed
Johnson coached the Jayhawks to a fourth place finish in last year's Big
The Kansas swim team failed to qualify additional swimmers for the United States Olympic Trials or the NCAA Championships this past weekend at the Jayhawk Invitational Time in the Northern High School in Kansas City Mo.
Brad Demo, who served as coach of the women's team from 1988-90, will replace Johnson on an interim basis in spring. Jerry Waugh will assist Demo.
The Jayhawks defeated swimmers in the basketball, with the men winning 12-11. PZiPaule
Kansas opens its season March 9-10 at the Utah Dixie Classic in St. George, Utah.
Although no one qualified for either meet, several swimmers made provisional qualifying times for the NCAA championships.
Eight Conference Tournament.
Junior Zhawn Stevens set a new school record in the 200-meter breaststroke with his provisional qualifying time of 1:59.4. Senior Robert Sturman also provisionally qualified and set a new school record with a time of 1:48.3 in the 200-meter butterfly.
The men's 400-meter freestyle relay team of Scott Townsend, Mark Bontrager, Curtis Taylor and Tom Rosinski qualified winning time for the NCAA meet.
Swimmers set records
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said that making provisional qualifying times meant a waiting game for those swimmers. The swimmers with the fastest provisional qualifying times will be taken to fill available spaces at the
NCAA meet.
Kempf said invitations to the NCAA Championships would be handed out after the Olympic Trials, which are scheduled to end March 6.
"For me to coach next year is not the important issue," Tarkanian said. "The important issue is to find out what happened."
U. S. District Judge Scott Wright issued a permanent injunction last month allowing Coleman to stay in school and on the basketball court.
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The University of Missouri announced plans Friday to appeal a federal judge's order to block the opening of baskets in the basket-player jersey.
The withdrawn came 10 days before Tarkanian was scheduled to step down after 19 seasons with the Runnin' and withdrawn 12th nationally with a 24-2 record.
UNLV president Robert Maxson
would resignation
would not be considered
MU to appeal order
Tark annuls resignation
LAS VEGAS — UNLV coach Jerry Tarkanian, troubled by accusations against his basketball program, said last night that he was rescinding the resignation he submitted last June.
Wright said Coleman's rights were violated when the university suspended him for his role in a scheme to steal money from the university bookstore by cashing phony receipts.
From staff and wire reports
2111Kasold 843-4300
PASS THE WORD
JAYHAWK FANS!
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Show the nation that Phog's Faithful is second to none .. Wear your "Sixth Man / Beware of the Phog" t-shirt proudly for the BIG MONDAY OU game ... Available only at the Allen Fieldhouse ticket office for just $422 (XXL-$522) to all KU vs.OU ticket holders! Get yours today!! (Shirts are also available to those without tickets for $1020)
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EUROPE IN TRANSITION
A Summer Program on Europe West and East June 10-July 29,1992
Enhance Your Future This Summer - Taught in English -
Riga
- Taught in English -
(1)
DiS Denmark's International Study Program
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
333
SUMMER COURSE OFFERINGS FOR KU CREDIT:
SUMMER COURSE OFFERIN
* The European Community
* European Security Issues
* East-West Business Relations
REDIT:
* Modern Scandinavian Art and Architecture
* Nordic Mythology
* Danish Language
Informational meeting - Wednesday, February 26 207 Fraser, 3:00-4:30 p.m.
DIS also offers fall and spring semesters in Humanities and Social Sciences, International Business, and Architecture and Design. Come by the KU Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, for more information.
S.O.S.
Save Our (Team) Spirit!
A wise-cracking young woman once said, "A basketball is round, but who cares? The Pub is 'round the corner!'
She had an attitude problem. But we changed that with a little positive reinforcement. We took her to a KU basketball game. Now she camps outside of Allen Field House every night before every home game. She found the true meaning of team spirit at that KU game, and she hasn't been the same since.
Because KU has the best, most volatile tradition of basketball in the country, it was no surprise when she quit hanging out at the Pub during the home games. Not only did she gain
new insight into the word victory, but team spirit boiled in her heart for the first time, as she read her complimentary Jayhawk Basketball Poster Series
Collection poste that described for her what she'd been wondering the whole season: Who the
Whooosh!
men were behind the uniforms and who the opponents were that KU fans were so fired up, ready and willing to watch (as they lost to the best team in the country).
Of course she had heard that MU and KU were rivals ever since the civil war, but she had no idea what the rest of the teams were all about. Now she is learning.
The Poster Series is her instructor. She's coming along just fine. Fans say she'll be a true, blue KU
basketball guru in no time.
BY THE WAY, KU fans,
thanks for con-
vining your near-
uncontrollable urges to land your posters, kamikaze style on the floor of Allen Field House. Without everyone's support, the posters would have been lost, not only from your hands, but from the hands of everyone in future home games.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Keep supporting our team and waving those posters, but don't lose 'em, abuse 'em, or even bruise 'em.
10
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
Pro-choice forces battle Ireland's abortion ban
The Associated Press
DUBLIN, Ireland — A 14-year-old girl's fight to have an abortion abroad has become a battle between the largely Roman Catholic island's traditions and the wider, free horizons of Europe.
The girl's case, which will be heard by the Supreme Court today, has revived calls for a new constitutional referendum on abortion. It also has many people soul-searching in this staunchly religious country.
"It itime we had a rethink on Irish society," said Rita Burtenshaw, director of Dublin's Well Women Clinic, which cannot provide information or counseling about abortion under Irish laws banning the procedure.
For Dublin liberals, who see themselves as citizens of Europe, the "rethink" would encompass abortion, divorce, contraception, sex education and the acceptance of a Northern Ireland ruled by Britain, where Irish women usually go for abortions.
But in the western and rural hinterlands, social change already may be coming too quickly for the people and their church. About 90 percent of Irish are Catholic, and the country is arguably the most religious in Europe.
The case of the unidentified 14-year-old girl could hardly be more dramatic. The girl says she was raped by the father of a friend, after two years of sexual abuse.
Since Ireland has the most restrictive abortion law in Europe - permitting only a "morning-after" pill that terminates pregnancies in the first 72 hours - her family sought an abortion in Britain.
About 4,000 women travel to Britain for abortions every year.
Before leaving for Britain, the teenager's family contacted police to ask whether they should preserve fetal tissue for possible prosecution of the alleged rapist. Police passed the information on to legal authorities.
While in Britain, a family member called home and was advised by the girl's brother that Attorney General Harry Whelehan had issued an injunction banning the abortion. His decision was affirmed this week by the High Court.
"I do not believe that the people of this country want, or deserve, a situation of nods and winks in the application of the time Minister Albert Reynolds has said.
Even if the Supreme Court decides
next week on the family's appeal, the larger dispute may continue.
Opposition politicians called for a new referendum on abortion. The procedure was banned under the constitution in a bitterly fought referendum in 1982.
On Saturday, rock star Sinead O'Connor led 5,000 people on a march through the streets of Dublin to protest the government's order.
*If we made the law then we can change the law," she said.
Conversation about the teenager's case fills Dublin's taxis, coffee houses and pubs, and has been the only topic for a week on radio and television talk shows.
The country's santi-abortion lobby has not been silent about the 14-year-old's case.
Dr. Mary Lucey, president of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children and a leading force in banning abortion information, said the teenager should put her baby up for adoption if she doesn't want it.
The Rev. Brian McKevitt, a Dominican priest in Cork, told the BBC that an abortion would only add to the violent abuse that has already been done to the woman.
TAROTA DE MADRID
Christine McFarland/KANSAN
Joker's wild
AnnFolley, dressed in a joker costume, dances to Sambamusic with Javier Ortiz looking over her shoulder Saturday night at the 14th-annual Carnival at Liberty Hall.
Migrant farm workers face health risks
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The country's migrant farm workers have no guaranteed minimum wage, work in fields sprayed with pesticides and may lack access to drinking water, toilet and hand-washing facilities on the job, congressional investigators say.
As a result, the country's hired farm workers and their children may face serious health hazards, said the report by the General Accounting Office, the GAO's first look at the plight of migrant workers nationwide since 1973.
Rep. Edward Roybal, chairman of the House Select Committee on Aging, said the report showed that the country's migrant and seasonal farm workers lacked basic federal and legal protections guaranteed to other workers.
"The GAO report documents a number of alarming conditions affecting the daily lives of the nation's migrant and seasonal farm workers," said Roybal, D-Calif., who was scheduled to release the report yesterday.
"It is unconscionable that we allow second-class conditions to exist for such an important sector of our population."
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
strategy for success
LSAT
GMAT
GRE
843-3131
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays Monster Draws $1.25 Tuesdays & Thursdays $1.50 Wells
The Big 6 Sports Club ELDRIDGE HOTEL LOWER LEVEL
-
CAD Workstation
AUVA 386/33
- 386 (33 MHz) Processor
AUVA
- Super VGA Monitor & Card (1Mb)
- 3.5" & 5.25" Floppy Drive
- Intel Math Co-Processor
- 101 Key Keyboard
- 101 Key Keyboard
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
- Windows 3.
- Mouse
486/33 also available
- Mouse
ONLY
$2,489
Free parking in rear of store Open M-F 10-4pm - Sat. 10:5
813 MASS DOWNTOWL LAWRENCE 843-7584
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER
Interviewing? Spectators has the professional clothing
Come view our 10 min. video: Job Interview : Maximize your impression through appearance."
Have vou discovered
710 Mass. 843-1773
PECTATOR'S
The Castle Tea Room
843-1151
The Athlete's Foot
Callahead for reservations.
poetry slams
at the fabulous Flamingo
poetry slams
February 24
March 16, 30
April 13, 27
Grand Slam May 11
all slams will begin at 7:30(ish) p.m.
Grand Slam May 11
all slams will begin at 7:30(ish) p.m.
The Panasonic 1100 Series. Offering you so much and delivering it for so little.
Panasonic MX100 MX200 MX300
The Panasonic 1100 series of dot matrina prints for home or office offers advanced capabilities at a price that within reach
KM-TP1241; KM-TP123 and KM-TP1180 are some of the fastest printers in their class with speeds up to 300 cps. They also feature
- Multiple built-in fonts with excellent print quality
- Multiple paper paths, push/pull tractor, perf cut, paper parking, and more.
The Panasonic 1100 Series, offering you so much and delivery is for your little
- Panasonic the ZE S7 * 'operator panel' the KX-P1241/4 also features a 16 character model with commands in plain text.
Panasonic Office Automation
- Rugged, durable design backed by a 2-year limited warranty.
MICROTECH Computers
2329 Iowa, Dickinson Plaza
841-9513
University Directories
The Nation's Largest Publisher of Campus Telephone Directories
100 Europa Drive
Suite 330
P.O. Box 8830
Chapet HILL, NC 27511
1-919-968-0225
1-840-753-5566
MONEY!
100's
**Announcements**
105 Personal
110 Business
111 Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost N Found
Friday, February 27
---
Sign-up:
EXPERIENCE!
4,000 Average Earnings for the Ten Weeks Period. Opportunity for a Profitable Stock.
Employment
Make the transition into the business world selling yellow page advertising for your campus telephone directory or for other campus directories nationwide.
Five Day Expense-Paid Sales Training Program in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Train with 200 other college students from across the country.
Interviewing on Campus: Friday, February 27
Gain Valuable Experience in Sales, Advertising, Marketing and Public Relations.
Placement Center
TRAINING!
Classified Directory
OPPORTUNITY!
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
with coupon
Why was David T. Fired? He's the best teacher I've ever had!
120 Announcements
Clip this MANAGER'S ad SPECIAL
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. B.C. computer to classicized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and accessory store. B.C. VISA, MasterCard or Discover cards are accepted.
YOUREYES ARE BEAUTIFUL We passed on the stair at Robinson 10:38 p. m / 217:55, smiled hi. You waved from the balcony. Me: short, black hair, tall, brown hair. Please write box 20, Kansan.
LUNCH
BUFFET
11:30 - 1:30 Mon-Fri
12:00 - 2:00 Sat
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Civilization. It makes sense to use *Auzil* and *Ozark*.
SNAPPER 21 is here, and it sure took long enough! "A time to remember. Dormite, Glove Ape, Shroomer, lifting the, bibs the NOT), Sammer, 10th floor, cheese keg on fifth floor the S, girls n, bath, kids in your bed (NOT) Three different girls in 3 different Houses, Girls that were hot, but now are NOT. Bart. Part on Dude. Always Remember you get by (or high) with a little help from your friends.
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MAZZIOS PIZZA
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Expiration Date 3-9, 92
2630 Iowa • 843-1474
MiddleMaster/CustiAmerica
400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
DOUGLAS COUNTY RAPE VICTIM SUPPORT
SERVICE
Confidential assistance 24 hours call Headquarters
Counseling Center at 841-263 or KR Info Center if
needed.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 814-2145. Headquarters
& Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friend, under-
secretary of the Society for Women's
work and return to counselors). Headquarters 814-3240
(phone), P.O. Box 7519, New York, NY 10026.
PREPAREING FOR EXAMS workshop. Wednesday, February 26, 7 p.m., 9:40 am. Wescrose. Free time management, concentration, memory and memory technique. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
READ THIS! The Read for Comprehension and
Recall test, 30 minutes, 3:39-5:39 p.m. Six hours of instruction. Register
and pay $19 materials by f.5 p.m., Wednesday.
February 26, in the Student Assistance Center, 183
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
Condominiens for Spring Break
$28 per person / night / off beach
$25 per person / day / back from
person 1.400-822-812
READ THIS!
Reading for Comprehension & Sneed
Thursdays, February 27,
March 5 and 19
(six hours of instruction)
Register and pay $19 materials fe
by 5 p.m. on Wednesday,
February 26
in 133 Strong Hall
The Student Assistance Center
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support
information and access to guardians or K U
info for confidential details.
TESTY?
TEST 1:
Preparing for Exams
Workshop
Learn time management,
review & memory techniques
test-taking strategies
Wednesday, February 26.
7-9 p.m.
4025 Wescoe
offered by the Student Assistance Center
1
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is who - call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
11
JON'S NOTES.
Jon's Notes, new to KU
offers professionally
taken lecture notes:
Helping Good Students
become
Great Students!
Jon's Notes is located in the Jayhawk Bookstore For a List of Classes Call: 841-1737 M-F 9:30-5:00
Homesharing . looking for solutions to your housing needs . you may be just for you. Shared housing is available in partnership, and personal security. Call O.M.E. MH for more information. You can call 800-562-3714 either Tuesday or Thursday from 9 to 12 p.m.
130 Entertainment
Free Party room at Johnny's & Tavern U & Under
the bridge on Massachusetts. Call 643-707-8172.
CANCIN SPRING BREAK of "921" Seven night package
from $106. Lowest price guaranteed
(921) 550-6980.
140 Lost-Found
LOST. Eagle Creek soft side attachment. Last seen in September. Fayetteville, Feb. 16. Sentimental value. Reward #865-2619.
MISSING Kelly green canvass tote. Last spotted in Watson Library reference department on Saturday January 16, 2013. Research project. 40 homework paper and tax documents. 48-433. Reward a valid and no questions asked
200s
205 Help Wanted
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn hundreds weekly
staffed envelopes at home. Local businesses will
provide all materials. Send SASET Homeimaling
and Dax 01242. Olathe KS66082. IMate response.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michi
ganboys/girls/summer camps. Teach, swimming,
canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics,
camping, climbing, horseback riding, cam-
ping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also
kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1,086 or more
plus R&D. Merge Seaeco 1753 Maple, IL 61069
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Clerical assistance to Clerk of Municipal Court Requires HS diploma or GD& E demonstration ability to work with public in person by t耳 phone. Prefer experience with computer data
Part-time position respite for filling & occasional data entry in Municipal Court. Requires hs grad or equivalent. Job offered on Tuesday, Feb. 25th at adm. Services, 2nd floor, Bassett Hall, Mass., Lawrence KS 60044 M/F/D /P
Control Desk Operator, Jawbail, Fridays 5p m.
am. $4.25 per hour. Must be 21 years old.
Cupid and rules of bowling, be self-motivated and
deliverable. Prove ability to status. Apply Kansas and Burger Union Press.
Email: jawbail@kansas.edu
Coordinator for Student Senate Transportation Board and Responsible for administering any work of the Senate on service contracts, and serving as Board's spokeneposition and to the general public. Student Senate members.
Appointment time. 4/1/92 - 4/3/93 Must be available for Summer 1992. Pick up application information from the Student Senate office, 40 Kansas Avenue, deadline Wednesday, February 28, 5:00 p.m.
New Opportunity
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Earn $2,000 + 1 month at Workplace in Mexico.
Apply online at www.cruseline.com. Guides, Waiter/Waitser, etc., Holiday, Summer and Career Employment available. No experience required.
Need extra cash? Earn $1000 weekly processing mail at in store your spare time. It works! Send SASE. Erickson, 3421 M St. NW, Suite 1308, Washington, DC 20079.
Hairport Stylist or nail technician - part time or full time call 842-1978
O V O E R S A S A J O B S $ 900-2000 m suitumer Y r W
O V E R S A S A J O B S $ 900-2000 m suitumer Y r W
Earn $ 5,000-$10,000 this summer painting houses in town. Final hiring for these positions are being held now! 1) Strictly Management 2) Artist (Master's Degree or equivalent) All-Pre Student Painters Inc. 1:800-2-
Spend the summer in the Catskill Min. of NY. Receive a meaningful mentorship from a faculty member for personal and developmental disabilities. Positions are available for Counselors, Psychologists, Cabin Leaders, and others who are encouraged to certify those who are majoring or considering all health fields. Season dates: June 12 at August 21st. Allowance will be on campus Mar. 19 for interviews. Sign up in Placement Center, Call Camp
SWIMMING LESSONS MANAGER City of
lessons manager Applications are available at
lessonsmanager.com
POOL MANAGER - City of Eudora is taking applications for city pool manager. Applications are available at Eudora City Hall, 7th and Maine Eudora.
WANTED: Knowledgeable tutor for MATH 647.
Call 865-2951.
225 Professional Services
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding & portrait. Instant ID photo student calls care
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 451-6878
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES - Consultations formatting, typewriting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
971.2 Mass. 844-1071
Reliable experienced woman wants to clean your house. Call Nina 814-3640.
Tired of crowded tutoring sessions, high rates? Pride in French lessons. **Flicca** Call Deenna 683
DUI/TRAFFIC
• Criminal Defense • Fake ID's
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
Attorney
Form of Prosecutor
16 East 13th 749-008
Driver Education offered mid Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 81749.
School Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
16 East 13th Attorney 842-1133
TRAFFIC-BUFS
Fake ID'& alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Government photos, passports, immigration,
portfolios
/B&W/ Call Tom Sevilla 798-1611
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law DWI/Traffic
- 823 Missouri 843-4023
Tutor for Matr 002 and Matr 101. Flexible schedule
$5.00 per hour. B32-2857, Dave
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 842-363, days or evenings.
For Laser or Do MC Labry printing on your PC-laser
rent of our PC Labry. Call Julie at 841-0011
or 632-5979 for more information.
From Quality Tying to Mailing List Entry Maintenance/Production, and Personalized PC Training* For Experience and Reliability call Louse at 843-402 with your ideas.
K5 Professional Word Processing, accurate and affordable, callafter k 198, m 84-6343
PINK A LA MODE GO an edge on the screen. Sch-eded your appointment for success! Now 'Call' MONOWA
Resumes and cover letters. Fast and affordable,
competitive prices, over 80 formats laser printed.
Ask about our Referral Discounts! MacResumes
766-3325
Word Perfect HM Compatible Word Processing Intl Primer, nor Orchardorchard, No calls to WordsPerfect.
Word processing, applications, term papers,
dissections, resumes. Editing, composition, rush
work. Mail correspondence.
Merchandise
300s
305 For Sale
18. Schwimm Leturat Lauge 18 x 340 touring bike, Cannondale pack, backpack, very good condition.
9. Schwimm Leturat Lauge 18 x 340 touring bike, very good condition.
190 diamond back apex, 20 inch, full depth, well maintained, combat ready, $300, $841-549.
**Spring Special 2019** 385 iMZ computer, 4 MB RAM,
1.2 & 1.4 Floppy, 10 MB Hard Drive, **14* Super
VGA w/ MIR RAM**, 101 keyboard, minicase note
2.0 & 2.5 Serial mouse, $149.00, Bargain Bays
832-2472
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art anew and used furniture, picture frames, vintage toys, made quilts, primitives, comic books, Playboards, Penthomes, vintage clothing, books, carnival glaze. Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising plaques. Maxfield Parish, insulators, wholesale boxes. Duction, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale boxes. Duction, military collectibles, country furniture, stuff it will blow you away! QUANTRILT S'FLEA MARKET 811. New Hampshire, open every Fri, 9am-7pm, call 1-800-242-3666 or mail 811-442-6666 Via Mastercard welcome
Attention Band and DJs. Wicked equipment for
attention in dance. Technique Tauroca M-1000
EVA Salt catches. Technique Tauroca M-7000
State of Kuala Lumpur Trade in. Excellent condition.
Furnished, furnished, furnished up and based on usage. Call Sylvia
$490
Dynaco 80-watt watt, PAT-Y preamp, sonsy
sonye, $125.00 Star XN 1000 printer, hardy
hardy
Floor of your room COLD* 8 large room size CAR
room, for $63 each, paid availability. 700-720 evening
FOR SALE Imagewriter Printer. Practically
new $20.00/request 1-288-3580
For Sale. Cheap! Olympic weight set w/bar. Like new.
Call John at 865-0116
For Sale Men's & Kids Ski Boots Ft. a Size 9tensis
shoes Gray, good condition, $40 Call Howard 749-813-6248
Guitar & Amp Sale. 20-25% off, Hayes House of
Music 944 Mass. 842-5138.
New Orleans, March Grass. Plane ticket Feb 27-
March 18 daggers@nola.com #641814A
NOTEBOOK computer, 3686x25), ZM ram, 20M
HD mouse, software. Steve. 842-9835
One way ticket to Fort Lauderdale Sunday March 8th from KC17 $41.64-81.54 between 3am and 10am.
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
SHARP Laptop Computer 6048 x 3/12 drive 3/14
Modern Software Manual Expand-
pack 6428 x 3/12 drive 3/14
Genuine ROLLERBLAKE skates at the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the best. All models available. Many colors. 843-2121
Two sets of student tickets for sale. Best offer. Call Jason 864-8255.
340 AutoSales
Student basketball tickets: KU vs OSU, OSU
separately at their inbest offer. 848-9827.
1975 Jaguar, XJ6, beautiful car 34,900 miles. Ken-
Wilson Systemo, $780 call ed. at 811-434-7147.
360 Miscellaneous
1976 Plymouth Volunteer V6, 2 DR, AM/FM, Auto,
clean runs great $700 OBO, 749-3099
1989 Mercury Lacrosse, A/C, Cassette, 4
doors, 686. Excellent - commercial; $3300-853-523
**DVD:**
Doing research on teacher misconduct. Seeking interviews with students who believe they have been mistreated.
On TV, VCSR, vcsr jewelry, stereo, music instruction.
On TV, VCSR, vcsr jewelry, stereo, music instruction.
VCSR/MC/Jayawak J. Jayawak J. Jewelry,
VCSR/MC/Jayawak J. Jayawak J. Jewelry,
MODEL SOUTS. California's most prestigious modeling agency seeks scouts to find the next supermodel. Great money for students who have an "e" for beauty for 1-800-831-9992.
1985 Toyota Corolla LE.ACE ps/automatic $2400, 842,
040 after 8p; m or leave message
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
Toy Coralia GTS iwm Cam-85 red,2d 5,spc. adp.
roopan roof. lp wall-£3700 -cruelty 599 -4715
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits! OMNITRITION
Bring up your old cards and collect them. Buy any from a few cards to complete collection of your old cards.
Basketball Ticket to O.S.U. and M. u.guests ON Student Inquiries Tickets: 865-8751 (Kourtnet)
BASEBALL CARDS/SPORTS MEMORABILIA
need ropes for SPRUNG BEAK?
370 Want to Buy
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry
rare coins, etc. Call David M41-2065.
Need 2 student tickets for OSU-KU game - will pay $1 each. Call Andy 844-747, leave message.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1. 2,38 BRAPs, near campus, no pets, available June
1st. Aug 18, 892-897
会
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 or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Boardwalk
1& 2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Summer &
Fall Move-ins
1 bedroom basement apartment, close to KU and downtown, $250 per month; $200 rent, rent includes $600 a month.
524 Frontier 842-4444
WATER WHEELS
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
SUNRISE VILLAGE
- Luxurious 2,3,& 4 Bedroom Town Homes
• Garages; $2\frac{1}{2}$ Baths
• Microwave Ovens
• Some with Fireplaces
• On KU Bus Route
• Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
--perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2-bedroom apartments. Across from KU, on Bus route 8. Equipped kitchen, laundry facilities, Swimming pool. Cash advances, trash pad, Cheap bills! 741 W. Knight Call: Chris
--perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
Park25
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath townhomes.
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
- Volleyball Court
- Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
840-762-5111
- On KU bus route-perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
- 4 stops on property 2 Laundry Rooms
- 2 Pools
South Pointe APARTMENTS
Artsy, 2 Bdrm, 3rd floor, floor floors, near campus $380149*STAR (7827)
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
• 2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
• Large bedrooms & closets
• Pool & volleyball
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
- Carpet colors:
Naismith Place
You'll Be Surprised!
- Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
DESPERATELY NEEDED) Person to know
part of ID, Gau, gas cable, rent NEGO-
DID (841-1537 841-1537
Coy, I. Bdrm; wood floors, near campus $255 841-
STAR (7827)
- Invoice Package*
* Invoice to KUKU Route*
* Invoice to PC Tarek Park*
* Invoice to PCD Park*
* Invoice to Osteo管理 Park*
* Invoice to Management Park*
252k. E.f. of Waizan
252k. E.f. of Waizan
35 k. S. Ouest Park
35 k. S. Ouest Park
/* Ink: 250 Sr. C. Ci
Ink: 250 Sr. C. Ci
Appointment 10/14/2016
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
Covici Victorian one bedroom, available March 18,
convenient to KU and Downtown. $35/mo./ Built in bookhelves, stained glass, garage available.
842-6834
AVAILABLE NOW 2 New Bedroom Apartment
furniture. New furniture, new
fan, mini-binds. Call 1st Management, Inc.
or www.bedroomfurniture.com
Feb. Reb. Fmt. Two bd. app. $95.00 Ends July 31st. On bus.route. T497-3457.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Beachrooms & Apartments. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments available now until the end of May On
*G get a group!* Restored 8 bed 4th airfloor, wood floors, W/D, w/P room front, 841-RST (7827)
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
841-5444
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
Hillview Apts $15 lease signing signings 1 & 2 bedroom apartments ($25 & $35 plus bus. deposit) on Apt. 8912 at 204 W. 7th St.
HOUSE. Nice 2 bedrooms with attached garage, hardwoods, new vinyl ceiling, fans, CA. washer/dryer, fenced yard, No pets, references; deposit $800/month 794-6914.
meadowbrook
Come Visit Meadowbrook Apts.
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of
and have a wide variety of
studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom
units to choose from.
studios,1,2,& 3 Bedroom apts. to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5 Sun 1-4
Close to Campus and on KU
It's Time to Step Up To
15th & Crestline 842-4200
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT?
CALL US FIRST
MANAGEMENT ING
New locations on campus. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Washer/dryers, microwaves, ceiling fans, mini-binders. Call now for an appointment. Mon-Fri. 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 749-1568
MEADOWBROOK
Looking for a place? Cory 2 bedroom apt. in the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July. $950/month + utilities. Negotiable. Call 804-2669.
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students!! --- You can get rid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
Louisiana Place Apts. Now leasing nice RB2 Apts on beautiful Beautiful view of the city. CALL DORALE 871-254-9063
Need Quet? Great 2 HR apt. for Grad student or
capsule; $635/mo + LOW utilities. Pool near campus.
Current residents moving after 4 yrs. Available in
April, 841-2727.
- Macintosh Computer Room
Save $$$ with each new deposit
- Dine Anytime meals
- Weekly maid service
- Front door bus service
SHORTTERMLEASSESNOAVAILABLEonstu
b2 brpt.ai bpr
TRALKRULE
843-7333
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
Plus...
- Exercise Room
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Call now to reserve your room.
Naismith Hall
Colony Woods Apartments
- On Bus Route
• Heated Pool
• 3 Hot Tubs
- Laundry Facilities
• Dishwasher
• Microwaves
• MiniBlinds
• Water Paid
- Basketball Court
- Flexible Leasing
Location-Lifestyle The Best Value In Town 842-5111 open 7 days a week
is where the
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Spacious 1,2 & 3 bedrooms
available for the mature
student. Now leasing for full.
Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, inexpensive utilities,
on bus route. Summer subleases available
2040 Heatherwood 843-7454
Sublease July with option for year after, large 1 BR,
Colony Woods, Water paid, 823-0749
Spacious new 3 bedroom near campus. $750 per month. Call 842-7688.
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms 2 baths,
summer furnished, campshed CJ 729.3876
Summer sublease, two bedroom apartment,
Summer sublease, a, 28th and 41st, after $50
841-3469
430 Roommate Wanted
Two bedroom apartments on bus route W/D
$450 monthly + utilities (Call after 3:00 p.m. for
inquiries).
- Policy
FEBRUARY RENT FREE. Roommates wanted to share duplex in JP by OCCJ. 30 min from KU/war pool available. 2 berms vacant. FREE Animal care special situation. Call Mike at 1-451-6279 for details.
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call 443-1232
Very nice 1 bed, apart from kk and Kasol, KU house
very nice 1 bed, apart from kk and Kasol, KU house
2-1092.宽8m,深6m,地面再修4m.
water closet,
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-631-61
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2 roommates needed ASAP for newer. 4 BR, north
Lawrence home. Male, non-smokers preferred. 2
baths, DW, W/D, Microwave $215.00-utilities,
cable pad, cable pad 841-4698
Offer potential for a business-oriented
company that offers financial support to
the university's $10 million loan
treatment基金 (usually 84,720,
tenor 3) and such assistance (84,720,
tenor 3).
Roommate wanted to share two B2 appt. 1 BkR
roommate required 90 month + 12 utilities. Daycare
dance 12 weeks
ROOMMATE WANTED for towhome at Apple-
Dale, W.D., DW, FF, all amenities
841.964 - 847.660
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $200/mo. 841-1287
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Words set in **BOLD** AGE **A** 50 & ABOUTS
Words set in **CAPS** AGE **B** BOLD FACE *count* as 5 words
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in BoldCAPS count as 2 words
bloomneed needed 2-bedroom -mupes $150 + 172
Ull. Cue to sell: $846
Seller's phone number: (304) 559-3000
Roammate needed immediately through July $200
+ 1/3 utilities. Townhouse and amenities great.
New listing.
Very nice 1:RM plus staircase left apartment
Very spring, and夏or less than $180/mo plus
Stairs. No balcony. $240/mo.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
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No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising
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Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1Day 2-3Days 4-5Days 10Days
0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
Classifications
105 personal
105 personal
140 field & found
305 for sale
120 personal
120 personal
225 professional service
360 miscellaneous
105 personal
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Name___ Phone
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ordered new box
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dake checks payable to:
in university Dialy Kansan
19 Staffauer-Flint Hall
awrence,KS 60454
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
HAVE YOU SEEN ME?
12
University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 24, 1992
Yugoslavian republic may secede
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — About 15,000 people demonstrated in the capital of Montenegro yesterday to demand that their tiny Yugoslav republic join four others in seeking independence.
The governments of Montenegro and Serbia are the only two of Yugoslavia's six republics that have stayed in the disintegrating federation
Meanwhile, three people died in isolated military clashes, two days after the U.N. Security Council agreed to send 14,000 peacekeepers to monitor a shaky cease-fire in Croatia.
Germany's foreign minister, meanwhile, visited Slovenia for the first time since the European Community recognized it and Croatia as
independent states Jan. 15. He called for both to be admitted to international organizations and to strengthen ties with the EC.
In Titograd, Montenegrins who want independence marched a day after the republic's legislature of Serbia and union with the much larger Serbia.
Growing support for independence in Montenegro apparently spurred the lawmakers to schedule a quick referendum on the plan for March 1.
Opposition leaders at the rally denounced the plan as unconstitutional and illegal, Montenegri TV reported. They also argued the tiny state of 830,000 people would be dominated by Serbia with its 5.8 million population.
A nearby counter-demonstration organized by the ruling Democratic
Party of Socialists drew about 300 people, the report said.
Bosnia-Hercegovina, a republic with a tense ethnic mix of Slavic Muslims, Orthodox Serbs and Roman Catholic Croats, is holding a referendum on independence next weekend. The vote is being boycotted by ethnic Serbs.
Serbs in Croatia took up arms to challenge Croatia's move to secede June 25. Up to 10,000 people died in the war pitting Croats against the Serb-dominated Yugoslav army and Serb irregulars, butuffighting has generally stopped since a U.N.-mediated truce took effect Jan. 3.
The first U.N. troops are expected to arrive in about two weeks.
The peacekeepers will be deployed
enclaves in Croatia. The Vugloslav
enclaves in Croatia.
army is to withdraw and all paramilitary forces are to disarm and disband.
Croatia hopes to restore its authority to those areas, about a third of its territory. But ethnic Serbs, who make about 12 percent of the republic's people, say they will not be part of an independent Croatia because they fear ethnic persecution.
German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher arrived in Slovenia's capital, Ljubljana, a day after visiting Croatia.
After talks with his Slovenian counterpart, Dimitrij Rupel, Gensher said Slovenia and Croatia should be admitted into the United Nations, the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and other international groups.
Study reveals faults in gulf war operation
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A Pentagon study revealed that allied forces during the Persian Gulf War bombed Iraq's civilian infrastructure far more heavily than intended, a newspaper reported.
According to a draft study, there was a breakdown in communicating targeting guidelines to some air units that ultimately relied on outdated guidance in selecting targets, the New York Times reported yesterday.
The study also showed that allied forces used unsecured radio equipment, enabling the Iraqis to eavesdrop and track downed pilots and that intelligence and mine-sweeping operations were less effective than thought, the newspaper said.
The chief strategy behind the air campaign was to main Iraq's com-
mand.
doing long-term damage to the country's civilian infrastructure.
The raids, however, did enormous damage to power plants, causing the shutdown of sewage treatment and water purification plants, and slowed medical services after the war, the Times said.
The report reached these conclusions, according to the newspaper:
Only 10 percent of the bombs used in the guulf war were so-called smart bombs. Many targets were hit by conventional bombs.
The Iraqis were better equipped to lay mines than the United States was to clear them out. Two American ships were seriously damaged by mines.
- Intelligence was not shared in a timely fashion. For instance, aerial photos of Iraqi targets did not reach the ground troops assigned to attack them.
Have You Claimed Your Reward?
WASHINGTON
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Receipts from the Fall 1991 Semester are eligible for a rebate until June 24, 1992. KU.I.D. required. Some restrictions apply.
THE MAYOR OF NEW YORK
KU KU BOOKSTORIES
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
OREAD
BOOKSHELF
CAMP CHI
NOBODY MAKES MORE
OUT OF SUMMER
STAFF WANTED
Co-ed overnight camp of the Jewish Community Centers of Chicago, Located in the Wisconsin Dells.
Positions Available: Counselors, Specialists in Waterskiing, Sports Swimming, Art, Tennis Photography, Ropes Course, Nurses, Etc.
Campus interviewing February 26, 1992.
Call for an interview at the University Placement Center ph. # 864-362 or contact Harrell Wittenstein at (708) 272-2301.
THE HEART OF JESUS
I
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing
Muslim Students Association
Introducing Islam to Non-Muslims
How Islam Achieves the Peace of Mind and Heart For Its Followers
PLACE
PARLOR A
Kansas Union
KU
Lawrence
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents the following lecture to help promote better understanding of Islam among Non-Muslims. Other lectures will be announced after the month of Ramadan.
WAY
TIME
7:30 PM
Monday
Feb. 24, 1992
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC For more information call: 841-9768 or 749-1638
The Return of
For more information call SUA 864-3477
Tickets Available:
Students:
Tuesday, February 25
Must Present KUID
Limit two tickets per ID
General Public:
Wednesday, February 26
Limit two tickets per person
Robin Morgan
Friday, February 28,1992 - 8 p.m Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas Free Admission·Ticket Required·Limited Seating
On February 2,1972,noted feminist, Robin Morgan spoke to an overflow crowd at the Kansas Union where women publicly voiced their dissatisfactions. Two days later,20-30 women known as the February Sisters,occupied the East Asian Studies building and presented the KU administration with a list of demands.
Now, twenty years later, Robin Morgan, currently editor of Ms. magazine, returns to the University of Kansas to discuss the progress of the women's movement.
Sponsored by:
Student Senate
History Department
Women's Student Union
Comparative Literature
Community Mercantile
Sociology Department
Adventure Bookstore
Panhellenic Council
theatre and Film Department
Women's Studies Department
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
All tickets available at SUA Box Office, Level 4 Kansas Union
NED'S MANIA—GET IT AT KIEF'S.
GOD FODDER
NED'S ATOMIC DUSTBIN
GOD FODDER
includes:
HAPPY
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GREY CELL GREEN
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UNTIL YOU FIND OUT
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$1097
NED'S ATOMIC DUSTBIN
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HAPPY NIL YOUR TELEVISION
GREY CELL GREEN CUT UP
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and introducing, the Ned's video...
Only $8^{88*}
NOTHING
IS COOL
VHS HI-FI
*Take an additional $1.00 off the purchase of the Ned's Atomic Dustbin video with any purchase of a cassette or CD.
KIEF'S CD's/TAPES
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
CD's & TAPES ~ AUDIO/VIDEO ~ CAR STEREO
913 • 842 • 1544 913 • 842 • 1811 913 • 842 • 1438
VOL.101.NO.105
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1992
(USPS 650-640)
United at church
Black History Month
NEWS:864-4810
10
African Americans bring power of religion to KU
Christine McFartand/KANSAN
Janine Colter, of the St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church, leads Jeffrey Colter, 5 (front), Jermella Newman, 6, Dominic Ross, 7, Maurio Perry, 8, and LaTasha Hall, 10, in the traditional hymn "Glory, Glory Hallelujah."
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
The little white church sits next to the railroad tracks.
The 126-year-old wooden building shakes when a train passes by, but the congregation does not notice.
Instead, the worshipers at St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church, at Seventh and Maple streets, continue with their service. They listen to Pastor Sylvia Harris speak about the importance of responsibility, and then they unite their voices in song.
As at St. James, faith and unity are important concepts, traditionally held in church services.
The Rev. Andrew Smith of the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church, 1648 Vermont St., said the strong bonds of faith and unity originated in the era of slavery when worship was forbidden.
"The strength of the unity is because of the religion, he said. "Hundreds of years ago, black people forced their knees for praying in the fields."
Smith said being denied the oppor-
tunity to work made the resolve to wish
him well.
"When worship day rolled around, the worshipers put on their finest clothes," he said. "The Black church became the center for all social and cultural endeavors of a Black man."
Today, much of the churches' unity revolves around children and family.
Harris said that every fourth Sunday at her church, young children took an active role in the service. The children sit in the front of the church, read from the Bible and sing songs. Their involvement has two purposes.
"Not only is it a vehicle to train the children but also to make them part of the total worship," she said.
The Rev. William Dulin, head of the Black Ministers Fellowship, said youth programs were an important part of services at his church.
"The whole church is family-oriented." he said.
The Rev. Leo Barbee of the Victory Baptist Church, said many college students worshiped at Victory Baptist to continue the worship that began at home.
Barbee said the church encouraged student participation through its surrogate program, where an adult member of the church acts as the student's surrogate parent.
"The idea is to help them feel wel come," he said.
Barbee said the program,which started 16 years ago, was a success.
"The parents of the students have been grateful to have somebody interested in taking care of their child's spiritual needs," he said. "It has been a real blessing with us and the students."
Cinzia Byrd, Kansas City, Kan., junior, who is a member of the Victory Baptist Church,said that she did not attend any services in Lawrence her freshman year because she could not find a church like the one she attended in Kansas City.
Although it is not like her church at home, she definitely feels at home at her church in Lawrence, she said.
She started to attend church in Lawrence as a sophomore because she thought it was an important part
"Once I was learning about Christianity, there was no way I could turn away from it," she said
of her upbringing.
EPA says pollution, racial link is unclear
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Is the culprit environmental racism or just poverty? The Environmental Protection Agency is grappling over whether minorities are being unfairly victimized by pollution, and whether the agency should offer them special protection.
A long-awaited report by an EPA task force said yesterday that although there was a clear cause for concern about the exposure of many minorities to pollution, its effect on the health of minorities was less clear.
The report did not single out race as a deciding factor and suggested that more often the issue may be one of poverty. Although it said that closer attention should be given to environmental equity, the study maintained that the agency's risk-assessment procedures were not in themselves biased against certain income or racial groups.
Nevertheless, the task force urged the EPA to pay closer attention to environmental equity in writing and enforcing pollution-control regulations. It also called for more studies to determine a clearer link, if there is one, between pollution and race.
The report said a community that was surrounded by multiple sources of air pollution, waste treatment facilities and landfills and had lead-based paint in the residences was clearly a community that faced higher than average potential environmental risks.
EPA Administrator William Reilly had asked for the task force study amid growing concern among mainstream civil rights organizations about the relationship of race and pollution.
But the findings were not likely to be embraced by civil rights leaders, nor by minority activists who for years have accused the EPA of ignoring the plight of blacks, Hispanics and American Indians who often live near toxic waste sites or breath the country's most polluted air.
"There is, in fact, massive environmental inequity based upon racial discrimination in environmental policy making at the federal, regional, state and local levels," said Benjamin Chavis, executive director of the United Church of Christ's Commission for Racial Justice.
He said there was little in the EPA report that showed a change in attitude, saying it did not address the multiple effects of environmental racism on people of color communities throughout the United States.
Raises, pay disputes force schism in computer science
Department head explains inequities
y Ranjit Arab
Kansan staff writer
The head of computer science at the University of Kansas defended the department yesterday after a confidential report called for his removal, the removal of a chief combatant and the elimination of the department.
William Bulgren, head of the department, said the conflict between he and Zamir Bavel, professor of computer science, stemmed from salary disputes.
Although Bavel complained about salaries, Bulgren said the professors in the department were some of the highest paid in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
However, Bavel said the problem existed with merit raises, not just salaryfigures.
Bavel, who has been with the department since it began in 1968, said he never received a raise based on merit that was equivalent to the average rate established by the department.
He said he received his only major raise when he considered accepting a position as endowed chair of the company department at Notre Dame University.
"You have to take this out of consideration," Bavel said, "because this was not a merit raise."
recruits higher salaries than existing faculty.
Bulgren said the inequity was inevitable because the department wanted to attract good applicants in a competitive field.
Because salaries in the computer science department are considerably higher than other departments, it is advisable to study the salary adjustment, Bulgreen said.
"There is a lot of demand for computer science graduates across the U.S.," he said. "We are competing against industries. That is not always the case in other departments."
Bavel said the department offered
Because of the discontinuity of the Margin of Excellence program, it is difficult to bring current faculty salaries to competitive market fig- be said.
James Muyskens, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said salary inequities were common in departments throughout the University.
He said he talked to several graduate students in the department and planned to talk with undergraduates.
"I would anticipate that we will be making some crucial decisions this semester that would go into effect next fall." Murskens said.
Muyksens said he had not spoken with Bavel and Bulgen together.
Salary rivalries
Muyksen said no decision had been made about the department's fate.
"We have certainly encouraged that," he said. "Many of the graduate students are eager to get these people together to talk about the situation."
Full Professors
60,000
40,000
Comp. Biology History Psychology
0
Salary Invales Computer science salaries are higher than other departments in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Here's how they stack
Associate Professors
Associate Professors
60,000
50,000
40,000
30,000
Comp Biology History Psychology
0
Assistant Professors
Assistant Professors
50,000
40,000
30,000
Comp. Biology History Psychology
0
Source University budget documents
Almeo Brainard,
Daily Kansan
Ailing Kansas health care KU may be held responsible for problem
Editor's note: This is the first of two stories about the shortage of rural health care in Kansas. The Legislature is considering a bill that would require the University of Kansas Medical Center to graduate more family practitioners in Kansas or lose some state financing.
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
The state lacks basic health care in many rural areas, and the question of the University of Kansas Medical Center's responsibility is now being raised.
Family practice fluctuations
Dean Lasseter, a Med Center graduate from Olathe, is the only pediatrician in Atchison, a town of 10,600. He is among those who think the state's shortage of rural primary-care physicians is a problem that extends far beyond the Med Center.
The interest in family practice for University of Kansas Medical Center graduates has varied over the past five years. Lawmakers hope that new legislation will increase the number of family practice students in the state.
"To blame the KU Med Center is to be very short-sighted," he said. "The state of Kansas has a real problem getting doctors in these areas, and it's more than KU encouraging them to go elsewhere."
But lawmakers seem to disagree.
KU Med enrollment total graduate residents family practice residents
1987 744 180 40
1988 722 184 30
1989 703 182 30
1990 737 143 13
1991 710 187 44
"The Med Center is financed by the taxamakers." Ehrlich said. "We want
"If the University had been turning out students and providing incentive, there would be no need for this bill," said State Sen. Roy Ehrlich, R-Hoiseington, head of the Senate Committee on Public Health and Welfare.
Source: Office of Institutional Research and
faming at the KU Med Center
Almee Brainard, Daily Kansan
The academy is a state branch of a
the University to take care of Kansans."
The bill was introduced by the Joint Committee on Health Care Decisions for the 1990s after reviewing recommendations offered by the Kansas Academy of Family Physicians.
The Med Center would be affected by a bill that would require the number of graduates selecting a primary-care residency to increase by 5 percent each year. If the Med Center did not meet the requirement, its funds would be cut by 10 percent for the following year.
national organization that has its headquarters in Kansas City, Mo.
"My main concern was that, not atypically, the Med Center has become much more interested in promoting specialties rather than primary care," said State Rep. Fred Gatin, R-Atwood, a committee member.
D. Kay Clawson, Med Center executive vice chancellor, said the university did not push students into specialty areas.
"The university, I think, encourages them very much to select places to
Continued on Page 14
2
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25. 1992
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The KU Coalition of the Lawrence Alliance will meet at 8:30 a.m. today at 64 Twente Hall.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information session about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today at 406 Wescoe. An information session about studying in French-speaking countries will be at 4 p.m. today at the French Department Library
The Graduate Student Council will sponsor a reception for Judthrent Trend, candidate for vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, at 5 p.m. today at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union.
- Students Against Hunger will win the Oread Repair in the Kansas League
The University of Kansas ANIME
meet at 6 p.m. on today at 315 Art and
Design Center, 402 N. Michigan St.
**Amnesty International will meet**
at Amnesty at Alcove B in the
KauaiUnion.
The Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlor A in the Kansas
Union.
The Human Services Committee of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor the discussion "The Future on the Hill: The Financial Crisis of Educational Funding," at 7 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
The Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the BurgeUnion.
Academic Computing Services will sponsor the seminar, "Introduction to SPSS," at 7 tonight at the Computer Center Auditorium.
The Chess Club will meet at 7 to meet at Alcove I in the Kansas Union
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas Support Group will meet at 8 tonight. Call Headquarters at 841-2345 or the University Information Center at 864-3506 for the location of the meeting.
Black Student Union will sponsor a speech by Mary Francis Berny, in honor of Black History Month, at 8:30 tonight at the Kansas University Ballroom.
Cleaver's expenses to be audited
Kansas City Star reported.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mayor Emanuel Cleaver has asked an accounting firm to audit his travel records after aides discovered records that showed payment delays and the use of a city credit card for personal reasons, according to a newspaper report.
The Associated Press
Files showed that the mayor's office charged a City Hall American Express card $1,151 for five airline flights unrelated to city business, the Star reported.
Cleaver aides Luther Washington and Kevin Smith recently examined records of 34 trips Cleaver has taken since he took office in April 1991. The
As a result, Cleaver asked the accounting firm of Deloitte & Touche to audit his travel records and recommend changes in office procedures.
Creative took some of the blame.
"Ultimately, as the mayor, I have to assume responsibility. And I will, and I have," Cleaver said.
Today high: 47 low: 29
Cleaver took some of the blame.
WEATHER
NEBRASKA Omaha 41/24 Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 52/27
KANSAS Lawrence 47/29 St Louis 47/29
Douglas City 52/29 Wichita 54/30
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 56/34
3-day outlook
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
NEBRASKA
Omaha
41/24
COLORADO
Denver
52/27
KANSAS
Lawrence
47/29
Dodge City
52/29
Wichita
54/30
MISSOURI
Kansas City
48/30
St. Louis
47/29
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
56/34
3-day outlook
TODAY
Some morning clouds, but otherwise clear
North winds at 10-15 mph.
TOMORROW
Sunny with NW winds at 5-10 mph.
THURSDAY
Partly cloudy, with WNW winds at 5-10 mph.
Spring Break Watch
San Francisco
65/44
Phoenix
75/47
Padre Island
55/42
Atlanta
69/54
Fort Lauderdale
82/71
Washington D.C.
56/42
Chicago
38/25
Minneapolis
32/19
Seattle
60/40
Salt Lake City
47/30
Forecast by Marc Kramer; KU Weather Service. 864-3300
ON THE RECORD
A former KU football player was hit by an orange flatbed pickup truck at 1:45 a.m. Friday at the intersection of 14th and Ohio Streets. The pickup truck did not stop. The man was treated and released at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
A plastic explosive placed on a KU student's porch exploded when he tried to pick it up at 2:08 a.m. Saturday in the 1300 block of Kentucky. He experienced numbness in his hands and a burn on his leg. He was treated and released at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, according to Lawrence police.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
CAMPUS/AREA
3
Stressed-out KU students check into Watkins
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Stress is a constant for college students, but the number of students complaining of stress-related symptoms at Watkins Memorial Health Center this month has doubled, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
"This year, for some reason we started seeing severe stress-related problems three weeks into the semester," he said. "That's very unusual."
"It seems like more people are
aware of their stress or interested in getting help for their stress."
Unmanaged stress can cause health problems such as upper respiratory infections, ulcers, fatigue, insomnia or depression. Yockey said the use of alcohol could increase stress-related illnesses because it inhibited white blood cells, making the body more vulnerable to infection.
whelmed, a change in appetite, stomach problems and diarrhea.
Not everyone needs to see a doctor for stress, but if physical symptoms appear, it is important not to ignore them, he said. Symptoms include: fatigue, depression, feeling over-
"When (stress) starts interfering with your ability to get your work done, you need to see a doctor," Yocke said.
He said stress-related ailments rarely had long-term effects, but they often affected a student's ability to meet the expectations of classes and other responsibilities such as jobs and extra-curricular activities.
"The worst problem is what you accomplish with your schoolwork," Yockey said. "It's a vicious cycle. The
He said students often did not realize that they needed to lighten their schedules until it was too late.
more fatigued you get, the less you get done."
In the two weeks before finals, 15 to 20 students come to Watkins every day wanting letters of medical verification to drop classes. Yockey said.
Joyce Davidson, staff therapist at counseling and psychological services at Watkins, asked therapists saw about 150 students each week, and stress was
"It's a very frequent complaint."
Davidson said. "It tends to increase as the semester goes on and we're hitting a period of time of peak usage."
There is a waiting list to use the service, but Davidson said students always had access to a therapist in emergency or crisis situations.
She said students could deal with stress more effectively by balancing negative and positive attitudes.
"Very often, from the emotional side, students need greater skill at focusing on a variety of thinking patterns instead of concentrating on the negative," she said.
Davidson said students could think about positive aspects of their lives such as friendships or passing a test.
*The small things make a difference," she said.
Candyce Waitley, health educator at Watkins, said more than five students each week came to the health education department for information on stress management.
"One of the first things students need to do prioritize," Waittie said. "They need to be rational and realistic in their approach. There are only so many hours in a day."
A man in a plaid shirt and a knit hat is carving a stone with a hammer. The background is blurred, but it appears to be an indoor setting.
Julie Denesha/KANSAN
Gently pounding a copper wine glass into shape, Bill Carmen, Warrensburg, Mo., senior, works on a project for his hollowear class. He said he got a little ambitious on his latest artistic endeavor. Carmen almost has completed his degree in metalsmithing, which he will add to his degrees in drawing and painting.
Metal work
Hillel says KU decrease in incidents bucks trend
Anti-Semitism rises elsewhere
Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
The number of anti-Semitic incidents reported on college campuses have nearly doubled in four years, but a KU Jewish organization says that anti-Semitic events at the University of Kansas have decreased in the past two years.
The Anti-Defemalism League of B'nai B'rith in Omaha, Neb., said in its annual report that 101 anti-Semitic incidents were reported at 60 college campuses in 1991. It reported that 23 campuses experienced more than one incident.
The number of incidents has almost doubled since 1988, according to the report.
The league based its report on incidents that were reported by campuses or Jewish campus organizations. The incidents were directed at institutions, groups and individuals.
Daveen Litwin, director of KU HilieL, said there had been no anti-Semitic incidents reported to her this semester, but that students reported many significant incidents in 1988 and 1989.
Anti-Semitism on the rise
A number of anti-Semitic events followed the Ku Klux Klan's visit to the University in 1988, she said.
The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith in Omaha, Neb., collected the following statistics based on reports of anti-Semitic incidents on college campuses:
| | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Number of Incidents | 54 | 69 | 95 | 101 |
| Number of campuses filing reports | 38 | 51 | 57 | 60 |
These include incidents such as vandalism, threats, verbal harassment and physical assaults reported to ADL by campuses or campus organizations.
Source Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith
Hillel documented 10 anti-Semitic incidents at KU and in Lawrence in 1988, eight in 1989, six in 1990 and four in 1991.
"It it seemed to start here with words and magnified to actions," Litwin said. "When anti-Semitism was tolerated at one level, it allowed other levels to occur."
She said the incidents were less intense than they had been a couple of years before.
"It is a relief that the organization can now concentrate on other things besides the constant presence of these incidents," Litwin said.
Incidents reported to Hillel included threatenment phone calls and swastikasandanti-Jewish messages being drawn on doors, hallways or buildings.
"For whatever reason, students are more likely to talk about the incidents with us first than go to other places," she said. "But we only report incidents that have been reported to the police or those that individuals agree to have included in the report."
John Mullens, KU police representative, said the most recent incident at KU to be documented by KU police included anti-Semitic messages written on doors and in hallways in November 1989 at Oliver Hall.
Mail-in payments due early August
Deadline for financial aid nears
Kansanstaffreport
Time is running out for students who need all the help that the Office of Student Financial Aid can give them.
Because of the new mail-in fee payment, it is more critical than ever for students to apply for financial aid by the end of the week.
Although March 1 is not the last day to apply for aid, applications received by this date will be given top consideration for financial aid awards.
With the mail-in fee payment system, enrolled students will receive a tuition bill by mid-July that will be due by the first week of August. Financial aid awards already will be subtracted from the bills.
Diane Del Buono, director of student financial aid, said it was critical that students apply early this year because of the earlier fee payment date.
"The sooner you apply and begin the
"The sooner you apply and begin the application process, the more likely you will get the money when you need it."
Diane Del Buono Director of student financial aid
application process, the more likely you will get the money when you need it." she said.
Because of the path an application follows, even those received early take six to eight weeks to process. But it could take as long as two to four months if problems arise.
Del Buono said that external factors slowed down the process. At least 30 percent of the applications must go through a verification check by the
"Some of the federal funding we receive is limited, and once it is allocated there is no more to give," Del Buono said. "Those who apply early are more likely to receive the aid they need."
She said that the office received 12,000 to 13,000 applications for the last school year. Of these applications, 9,400 students received a total of $4.4 million.
The office offers a new application this year that is free and easier to complete.
federal processing center.
The old application, which cost $6.75 to process, still will be used if students want to apply for a State of Kansas or a Kansas Minority scholarship.
The new application is offered due to a federal law that entitles students to complete federal aid forms for free.
Addison Parker, Topeka junior, said that he had sent the new application a couple of weeks earlier.
"I always get it in mid-February or March because you have a better chance of getting more money the earlier you apply," Parker said.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
OPINION
WHAT'S THAT?
OH,THAT'S JUST PAT. HE'S PROBABLY TREED SOME SQUIRREL...
YAP YAP YAP
Parking plan ignores problems of students
What is the greatest robbery ever planned, attempted or accomplished? Knocking off a Brinks Armored Car? don't think so.
Raiding the Fort Knox Gold Reserve? No, because it would be almost impossible to pull off, and it would destroy the national economy (as if it weren't in very bad shape anyway). Besides, there aren't that many places where you can actually spend gold, especially without attracting attention.
Yellow zone parking permits?
We have a winner. The prize is a $50
year-long yellow zone park sticker
that will do you almost no good after
8:30 a.m.
All seriousness aside, the parking permits this year are simply not worth the money. It does no good to have a yellow zone permit when the only space available is at the north end of Memorial Stadium or across the street from Naismith Hall. Or when someone with a red or blue permit parks in a yellow lot. But then I guess those permits are oversold too. The Parking Department is out to make money. And it has a great system: The department sells more permits than spaces available, then tickets people at outrageous rates for all but parking meter infractions. This works especially when student spaces are taken away without any warning, such as when part of Lot 62 east of the Computer Center was switched to red zone parking last semester. Some penalties
P. S. Kumar
Patrick G.
Brungardt
Staff
columnist
should be harsh, such as the $50-penalty for blocking handicapped access parking or wheelchair ramps. But being charged $10 simply because the people at the Parking Department oversold the lot is a little too much.
Several years ago, Parking Department touted the new parking garage next to Allen Field House as a solution to many of the parking problems. About the only thing it really fixed was giving more alumni a nice, close parking place for basketball games. Otherwise, it is primarily red-zone parking with a few yellow slots, and only has any real effect for people in Green, Learned and Murphy Halls. It didn't increase student parking spaces, nor did it get students closer to class.
Because of all these problems, a new bird has appeared on campus the last several years. This creature is known as the Parking Vulture; it spends its time circling through parking lots waiting for someone to drive away and open up a parking space. Then usually three or four vultures dash for that spot. Last month, I out-vulturied another desperate vulture in Lot 62. As the other vulture drove past me looking in
vain for another spot, he flipped me a one-finger salute. I can't say that I really blame him because spaces are so few that people park on the grass bordering the lot just to make it to class.
The parking garage and current Parking Department plan was ill-conceived. Although the garage may look nice and allow more alumni parking, it only helps a small portion of the University community. Indeed, it is sign of a deeper problem of the University's attitude of caring more for graduate research projects than the majority of undergraduate students who come here for an education and without whom the University wouldn't exist. And if the garage were really supposed to help the majority of students, then it would have been built either in the "O-Zone" of Robinson Gymnasium or in Lot 91, the "X-Lot" right next to Spencer Museum of Art. This location would allow many more students to get closer to campus, with less time worrying about getting to class and more time actually in the classroom. But this would also prevent the Parking Department from making money on all those infraction tickets. And when our "beloved" Gov. Joan Finney is calling for cuts in the Regents budget, we just cannot have the Parking Department not making any money, can we?
Patrick G. Brungardt is a Fort Leavenworth senior majoring in political science.
THE UNIVERSITYDAILY KANSAN
Don't cut capital gains tax
Democrat Paul Tsongas should wisen up and not follow Bush's lead to decrease the tax
What frightens Democrats most about Paul Tsongas is his imprudent belief, like the president's, that a cut should be made in the capital gains tax. Where did he go wrong?
Since his election, President Bush has fought unsuccessfully to lower the capital gains tax rate. Tsongas, a Democratic front-runner supporting the cut, adds legitimacy to the argument for a lower rate, one made by many Republicans and few Democrats.
Whether Tsonga continues to do well in the primary race, his advocacy for "the other side" weakens the Democrats' argument.
At 28 percent, the top tax rate on capital gains is about where it should be: on par with the tax rates on labor. There is a balance. Taxing capital less than labor upsets the balance and is reminiscent of the years before the 1986 Tax Reform Act, when the labor tax rate topped out at about 50 percent, when the capital gains tax rate reached 20 percent, and when tax shelters built by masters of subterfuge and detail pervaded the nation.
Tinkering with the balance invites irresponsible investment. This is why the president should call off his request to halve the capital gains tax, and why Jerry Brown should quit espousing a reduction in the income tax to 13 to 14 percent. These two ideas are really quite similar.
Everyone admits a capital gains tax cut is unfair. Those making $200,000 a year would reap $12,500 more under the Bush plan. And supporting a cut because the occasional middle-income taxpayer profits from selling capital — a home, bonds or stock — follows the same logic as baking a cake to lick the beaters; therewards go elsewhere.
A growth package this is not. Japan manages to thrive with a capital gains tax rate higher than our own. Their income tax rates are higher, too. If the U.S. government can afford to bestow a tax cut — a dubious prospect in itself — on the rich, it should be able to spend smartly, too. A real growth package — investment in education or the infrastructure — would be a start. Wake up, Mr. Tsongas.
Martin Scherstuhl for the editorial board
Drive needs marrow donors
Minorities are sought, and registration for a tissue match is as easy as giving blood
Today, students will have the opportunity to give someone the gift of life. Zeta Phi Beta Sorority is sponsoring the Bone Marrow Registry Drive along with the American Red Cross and the National Bone Marrow Donor Program from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Since the first successful bone marrow transplant in 1968, leukemia patients' longterm survival rate has been 30 percent to 80 percent, depending on the stage of the disease. This compares to a maximum survival rate of 15 percent without a transplant.
The unique tissue characteristics of an individual's bone marrow are inherited. When no matching donor is found within the family, chances of the best match are found from someone of the same racial background.
However, the chances of finding a match in tissue typing, which is the drive's objective, currently are one in 20,000, said Tonya Brown, the Kansas minority recruiter coordinator for the National Marrow Donor Program. The odds are worse for minorities. Out of 500,000 donors on the national registry, African Americans and Hispanic Americans make up only 3 percent each, and American Indians compose a mere 0.7 percent.
The procedure student donors will experience is similar to having blood drawn. Two tablespoons of blood and consent to be entered on the registry is all that is needed for today's stage of the drive. The bone marrow transplant would not occur until anywhere from three months to four years after the blood is drawn, depending on the results of extensive blood testing. The transplant would not happen without the consent of the donor.
The goal of the Bone Marrow Donor Drive is to register at least 200 minority students, African Americans in particular, out of all donors.
The idea of bringing the drive to the University of Kansas came from a program about leukemia patients and the difficulty in finding bone marrow donors. Kansas State University has sponsored similar drives in the past with great turnouts. KU students have the chance to do even better.
J. R. Clairborne for the the editorial board
Straits Times, Singapore, on Iraq:
International perspectives
Reports claim that he has allocated $30 million to the Central Intelligence Agency to undertake covert action against Saddam.
President George Bush would be ill-advised to try to recapture the historical opportunity he missed a year ago when he called for a halt to the allied forces' advance into Iraq, allowing Saddam Hussein to remain in power in Baghdad.
But like it or not, to engineer his downfall is not playing by the book, and the importance of the world's sole superpower playing by the book at a time when a New World Order is being shaped cannot be overestimated.
Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo, on the U.S. presidential election;
The most important issue in the (U.S.) election campaigns this year is not a diplomatic question but a domestic one, especially the economy that shows signs of an increasingly serious slump.
It is common knowledge in the United States that, devoid of prospects of tomorrow becoming better than today and hope and a sense of
security for the people, especially of the middle class, which will be richer in the years to come, there are no new American dreams nor is there faith in new frontiers.
The reality is harsh. According to an announcement by the U.S. government, 91,000 people lost their jobs in January and the employment rate stays as high as 7.1 percent.
Such an atmosphere provided ample opportunities to use the slogan "America First" by (Pat) Buchanan and others and hard-line Democratic contenders playing on the frustration of U.S. voters. These isolationist positions are also a national mood lamenting the decline of the United States and yearning for return to a big-power status.
But can the United States really live with isolationist policies? Isolationist economic policies will hurt first and foremost the United States and its people.
All we do is try to understand the unique and paradoxical events in (the republic of) Russia: disaster without a loss on the battlefield, misery against the background of enormous natural resources, international charity for a nation that still possesses one of the two largest nuclear arsenals in history.
- La Repubblica, Rome, on Western aid to Russia;*
We are seeing another fuse burn in (Boris) Yeltsin's Russia; it is no longer hunger, the harshness of winter, but the humiliation of Russians.
For the demagogyogue of the strong men lying in ambush, it is a fuse that could be even more useful than any lit thus far.
Gulf Daily News, Manama, Bahrain, in raid raid killing Abbas Musawi;
Israel's assassination of Hezbollah leader Sheikh Abas Musawi predictably has torn open a hornet's nest of hatred and revenge in south Lebanon. And attacks by Israeli and SLA artillerymen quickly and ominously prompted the Lebanese army's heavy guns to join the battle.
It all adds disturbingly to the rising cycle of Mideast violence in recent days and seriously threatens resumption of peace talks in Washington.
This time Israel has gone too far in an operation plainly orchestrated to cause massive political disruption as part of its stated objective of wining out Hezbollah strongholds.
Musawi's killing also saddly marks a dramatic end to any attempts to negotiate an Israeli Hebollahl prisoner swap as part of the U.N. campaign for a comprehensive end to the hostage crisis.
western embassies in Beirut now will be prime targets for attacks by pre-Iranian militants, and groups operating under Hezbollah's umbrella may well resume kiddings.
The situation is fast developing into another tragic mess that soon may run out of control.
**Arab News, Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, on AIDS:**
The latest figures from the World Health Organization on the spread of AIDS make horrifying reading.
Like everything else, people are subjected to the whims of the passing interest and fashion. A few years ago, the press was awash in what many considered AIDS hysteria. One could not look anywhere without dire and dark warnings of the horrors of AIDS plague hitting us in the
Non-governmental agencies and persons should be enlisted by Third World governments in their fight against AIDS. Bureaucracy and red tape should not delay such programs.
face. Today, with bold and imaginative campaigns in the West having slowed the spread of the disease there, people temporarily have decided to forget about AIDS. But that is a big mistake, especially for the Third World, where the syndrome is unfortunately booming.
Time is of the essence. Most governments have set up AIDS prevention committees, whose task it is to coordinate and launch national anti-AIDS programs. Leaders of Third World nations openly and publicly should head such efforts to send a clear message that they mean business and to help take away much of the stigma attached to those afflicted with AIDS.
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
The Third World cannot afford to ignore AIDS. Three million women alone have the AIDS virus in Africa. We cannot hide any longer behind the excuse of social restraint. If we don't act now it will be too late. The warnings must be heeded NOW.
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News ... Mike Andrews
Editorial ... Beth Randolph
Planning ... Lara Gold
Planning ... Eric Gorski/Rockefeller
Sports ... Eric Nelson
Photo ... Julie Jacobson
Features ... Debbie Myers
Graphics ... Aimee Brainard/Jeff Meesey
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAY STEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ..Bill Leibengaud
Regional sales mgr ..Richard Hamburger
National sales mgr ..Scott Hannah
Co-op sales mgr ..Ame Johnson
Production mgrs ..Kim Wallace
Production mgrs ..Lisa Keeler
Marketing director ..Kim Clauton
Lead customer ..Leah McCarthy
Classified mgr ..Kip Chin
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name, title, department, and school affiliation with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pho-
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THE SUPREME COURT
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
5
Trial not just judge claims
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court said yesterday that it would decide whether federal courts had the power to second-guess the Senate on the ouster of Walter Nixon, a criminally convicted federal judge, from his lifetime job.
The justices, granting an appeal by Nixon, agreed to say whether the former judge from Mississippi could challenge his impeachment proceedings. A decision is expected in 1993.
Nixon contends his ouster was unconstitutional because a special Senate committee, not the full Senate, served as his principal judge and jury.
Prior to his impeachment in the House and ouster by the Senate, Judge Nixon was convicted of perjury in 1980 for lying to a grand jury about his talks with a prosecutor in a marijuana-smuggling case.
Nixon, a federal trial judge, was accused of asking a local district attorney to stop the prosecution of a man whose father helped enrich Nixon through investments.
While serving more than a year in prison for perjury, Nixon continued to collect his $85,000 annual salary. He believed that he wanted to return to the bench.
The House impeached, or formally charged, Nixon in May 1989, and six months later the Senate found he had testified falsely to a grand jury. It stripped him of his judgement.
Nixon said that in his Senate trial
most senators were unable to evaluate directly the credibility of witnesses.
But the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia threw out his suit last July.
"We refuse to embark on setting limits for the procedures the Senate may choose for the trial of impeachments," the appeals court said. "The Constitution excludes us."
Returning from a four-week recess, the high court issued orders in nearly 600 cases. In other matters, the court:
Refused, by an 8- vote, to stop the government's forced return of Haitian refugees.
Rejected an attempt to force a Japanese company, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. to give up its ownership and motion picture distributor, MCA Inc.
Refused to free the Union Bank of Switzerland from having to divulge confidential customer records at its Panama branch to U.S. officials investigating alleged tax violations.
■ Agreed to decide in a Texas case whether people who win a symbolic $1 in damages for violations of their civil rights must also those they sue to pay their legal fees.
Let stand a ruling in a Pennsylvania case that said people did not have privacy rights over information they divulge in a police report.
Turned aside claims of slavery and refused in an Indiana case to tell states to pay inmates at mental institutions for work they are forced to do.
Rejected, in a case from Utah, a Bush administration appeal aimed at giving police more power to search for illegal drugs and other contraband when motorists are stopped for traffic violations.
Exiled Haitian president to return amid opposition
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Although the Supreme Court refused yesterday to halt the return of Haitian refugees, Haiti's politicians reached an agreement for the eventual return of exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
The high court's 8-1 ruling upholding the Bush administration's program to forcibly return Haitian refugees shifts the issue to Congress, where it will be debated in emergency legislation to temporarily halt the return of the Haitians.
The political settlement reached late Sunday in Washington between Aristide and his rivals in Haiti's National Assembly would set up a consensus government before the president's return to power.
The deal set no date for Aristide's return.
It called for the appointment of moderate communist leader Rene Theodore as interim prime minister.
It was unclear whether the accord would be honored by the Haitian military, which deposed Aristide in a Sept. 30 coup that brought down the first democratically elected government in the Caribbean nation's history.
In Port-au-Prince, the Commu-
mist Party's second-ranked official, Max Bourjolley, said the army had accepted the agreement. But Foreign Relations Minister Jean-Robert Simonise said there was strong opposition to Aristide's return and the consensus government would not be easy to set up.
A knowledgeable diplomatic source said that Haiti's top military commander, Gen. Raoul Cedras, was satisfied with the package that contains a general amnesty and acceptance of all parliamentary actions since Aristide was forced into exile.
The amnesty provision did not apply to criminal acts, and it was unclear whether Aristide agreed to give amnesty to officers who plotted his overthrow, said sources familiar with the deal.
Democratic leaders in the House have put the Haitian repatriation issue on a fast track, scheduling a vote Wednesday on a measure to impose a six-month moratorium on forced returns.
More than 6,200 Haitians trying to escape their country have been repatriated since the coup, according to figures compiled by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. An additional 7,400 remain at the U.S. Navy base in Guanantamo Bay, Cuba, awaiting return, and 5,155 have been allowed to apply for political asylum.
Justice optimistic despite prostate cancer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens has prostate cancer but will continue working and is expected to recover fully, a court representative said yesterday.
Stevens, 71, one of the conservative court's most liberal members, was appointed by President Gerald Ford in 1975.
"Justice Stevens is expected to continue to participate fully in all cases to come before the court during and after his radiation treatment and to make a full recovery without any residual effects," said court representative Toni House in a prepared statement.
She said he had begun treatment at Georgetown University Hospital.
Stevens participated in the three hours of oral arguments the court heard yesterday and was expected to participate in today's public session as well.
One other current and tworetired Supreme Court justices have had prostate problems, which is not uncommon in elderly men.
Justice Harry Black-
PETER BURKE
mun, at 83 the court's oldest member, has suffered from recurring cancer of the prostate, and was treated for it most recently in 1987. No further problems have been reported.
Retired Justices William Brennan and Lewis Powell also received medical treatment for prostate problems.
John Paul Stevens
Stevens is known to court watchers as the justice who wears the bow tie.
He is described by legal scholars as a maverick, wild card and even an intellectual gadfly. But they also use words such as brilliance and integrity in describing his attributes.
Stevens, who underwent open heart surgery in 1974, has been in apparent good health in recent years. He is an avid tennis player.
He and his wife routinely commute between Washington and Fort Lauderdale, Fla., where they own a condominium.
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6
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
LIFE
The making of a monster
By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer
Spalding Gray showed a sellout crowd at Liberty Hall last night exactly why his latest autobiography is called Monster In a Mail.
On the stage, on a small desk, a cardboard box contained Gray's monster, a 1,900-page manuscript of his first novel, "Impossible Vacation."
"It's due to come out... two years ago." Gray said.
"Monster In A Box," Gray's 13th monologue, deals with the interruptions he faced during the three months he has been trying to write the book.
Spalding Grav performs "Monster In A Box."
Brewster, an autobiographical character Gray invented for "Impossible Vacation," travels from Rhode Island to Bali with his
dead mother's money and struggles to cope with his mother's suicide along the way.
"It's about a man who can't write
a book about a man who can't take a vacation." Grays said
Gray always managed to complicate things when he went with someone else. He could never manage to take one successfully, he said.
"I like to create my own hells before the real one can get to me," he said.
One hot. still morn
Gray said moving to Los Angeles from New York City was "very difficult." He added more ways than one.
ing as Gray sat down at his writing table to work on his man, an earthquake interrupted his work, he said. As the house shook, he ran
screaming out to the yard in his underwear, only to see the rest of the neighbors in their yards, also wearing their underwear.
His film, "Swimming to Cambodia," also interrupted the work on his book, even though the film was finished.
Gray said he gained weight from all the "idea lunches" that Hollywood film agents treated him to in the 1970s, and he could produce another film.
Gray said being part of a 36-member fact-finding mission to Nicaragua to document the effects of labels' actions was also distractive.
Sadness and grief surrounded the mothers of the Nicaraguan heroes, some the mothers of children who had been cut up in so many pieces the mothers could not find them all, Gray said.
AIDS hysteria diverted Gray from his work when his girlfriend thought she had an AIDS-related infection, which turned out to be a spider bite.
Christmas gave Gray another reason to abandon his work - he decided he wanted to answer calls on a suicide hot line.
"All the world's a hospital, and you are either a patient or a nurse," he said.
Other distractions included Gray's interviews in California with people who said they had visited space ships, including a woman who sais she had been picked up by a flying saucer and a man who said he had an extraterrestrial creature in his stomach.
*How therapeutic it is to surround yourself with people weirder than yourselves.* he said.
A festival of American films in
Moscow included "Swimming to Cambodia" and Gray went and enjoyed Russia, although the writer came home he got lost after the first showing.
As his monologue came to a close, Gray said he had considered condensing "Impossible Vacation" into a short story about how all the events of his life made him feel.
But he looked at the thick manuscript and softly laughed as the stage lights went down.
Chris Stong, Wichita sophomore, said he had been interested in Gray's work for four or five years, and that his own role had seen Gray's live performance.
"I love his work," Stong said. "like the films better. It is a controlled aspect, like being up on stage with him."
Hard to Swallow
Baseball players adjust to tobacco ban
By Jerry Schmidt Kansas staff writer
David Soult had to give up a traditional baseball pastime in order to play for the Kansas baseball team.
Soul, an infielder and pitcher who uses tobacco, has mixed feelings about a rule in the Big Eight Conference that bans the use of tobacco during conference baseball games.
"I think it is a good rule for the long run." Sault said. "They are looking after the players, but personally I don't like it because I dip. I guess it is more from the fans' point of view because it's gross."
The NCAA passed a rule that prohibits use of tobacco during championship play for players, coaches and umpies, although there is no rule banning it during the regular season.
Uryasz said the rule was designed to break the connection between tobacco and baseball.
"We got the ban but it wasn't easy," Frank Uryasz, director of sports sciences for the NCAA. "There was a feeling that tobacco is a social drug and the NCAA shouldn't get involved."
"Our head and neck experts said we must break the tie between chewing tobacco and baseball." Urysz said. "Nicotine may be the most addictive drug. It is legal but it has negative health consequences."
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said before the health hazards of tobacco were exposed, tobacco companies used to give their products to teams to
distribute to their players. Bingham said he had never distributed the products to his players while at Kansas.
The possibility of mouth cancer and the increased awareness of health hazards have helped deter people from using tobacco, Bingham said. He especially sees this in his current players and recruits.
"We have one tobacco user on our team," said Bingham, a tobacco user. "It's a change of times."
Since the rule has been in effect for NCAA championship play, Uryasz said feedback had been on the positive side.
"Now we need to work on compliance," he said. "We hate to have a player kicked out of the College World Series, but they've had enough warnings to comply."
Uryass said that with the increased popularity of college baseball, many people felt a change was needed.
"We started to see more letters from parents who thought that the idea of collegiate baseball players being role models didn't fit in with spitting tobacco."
Kansas player Soult said he used to have a difficult time with the rule but said it had been easier lately to curb his desires. He said the rule may curb tobacco use during the season, but he feels players will return to the habit after college baseball.
"If a guy is going to dip, he'll dip," he said. "After he gets out of school and goes on he'd dip in the pros."
Students are tickets to theaters' success
Varsity
DANA CARVEY IN WAYNES WORLD PG3
DANA CARVEY IN WAYNES WORLD PG3
RACE BRAMAS
FILM STUDIO
Sales at local theaters are increasing despite a national downward trend.
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
Movie ticket sales may have dropped at theaters nationwide, but ticket sales in Lawrence are the exception to that rule.
Like other college towns, Lawrence has not felt the impact of the recession in the ways that other U.S. cities have.
Rance Blann, city manager for Cinema Twin Theatres, Hillcrest Theatres and the Varsity Theatre, said that based on figures from November 1991 until now, business was up 30 percent from the same time period the year before.
He said that the movie industry in Lawrence was far from hurting because of the steady enrollment of KU students, the theaters' life line.
"Lawrence is one of the best show towns in the country," he said. "We're a college town in our own little pocket."
The national box office gross for ticket sales in 1991 fell 4.4 percent last year to $4.8 billion, the Motion Picture Association of America said.
But the MP AA reported a rise in the average national ticket price from $ 7.45 in 1990 to $ 8.49 in 1991, which helped offset the financial damage that low ticket sales caused box offices.
Blann said that although six months ago ticket prices for Crown Cinema Theatres rose 25 cents to $4.75, they had remained at $4.50 for
five years.
"Lawrence ticket prices are still among the cheapest in the country," he said.
Wally Kneef, national representative for Blockbuster Video, said the home entertainment industry influenced theater attendance, especially during difficult economic times.
"The video and movie industries create a demand for each other." Kneef said. "If you have a family, it's easier to bring a movie home than to spend $20 to $25 at a theater."
Theater manager Blann said that although many complained that videos hurt movie ticket sales, he thinks the video business enhances his business.
"Because people are renting, they are talking about and discussing movies and movie quality more than they used to," Blann said. "It makes people realize that there are a lot of interesting movies out there."
"If anything, interest and conversation about movies is up. This isn't going to hurt my business."
Jeff Johnston, manager of the Liberty Hall Theatre, said that business had been steady during the last year with no lag in ticket sales.
He attributed the drop in national ticket sales to a lack of high-quality films in commercial theaters.
People are tired of seeing bad sequels and the same type of film over and over again, he said.
"I think people are tired of getting a crappy product. They want high-quality films," Johnston said.
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It can't do laundry or find you a date, but it can help you find more time for both.
The new Apple* Macintosh* Classic* II computer makes it easier for you to juggle classes, activities, projects, and term papers—and still find time for what makes college life real life.
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INTERNATIONAL
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFSA
Nicosia, Cyprus
Newspaper warns of terrorism
A hard-line Iranian newspaper said yesterday that Israel's killing of a Shiite Muslim leader proved the release of Western hostages last year was a mistake and raised the prospect of a renewed round of kidnapping.
It was difficult to assess how much of a threat meant for the estimated 3,000 U.S. citizens and businessmen.
The warning in the daily newspaper Salam, founded by a political leader of the U.S. Embassy hostage siege, cited recent infighting that has forced the Governing Mafias led by President Hashemi Rafsanjani.
The Tehran Times, yesterday said that the taking of hostages in Lebanon was undesirable, and that it would give the Israelis a justification for their crimes.
Guerrillas hiding by Israeli zone
In Beirut, a U.N. envoy arrived today for talks with officials on rising Arab Israeli tensions and bloodshed, including last week's bombings in the city and Hebbolah rocket attacks on northern Israel.
Hundreds of Muslim guerrillas in southern Lebanon have put on civilian clothes and hidden their weapons in an apparent effort to remain close to Israel's self-proclaimed security zone, police said today.
Beirut
About 1,000 guerrillas raced south last week to confront the Israeli incursion in the villages of Hagar and Nabi Yehud.
About 800 guerrillas appear to be making plans to stay in the area and blend in with the population, said police, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
749-5122
The opposition Democratic Convention won mayoral races in Bucharest and other major cities, election officials said yesterday.
Bucharest, Romania
Democrats win mayoral races
The Democratic Convention, a union of 14 formerly fractured opposition parties, has long charged that the ruling National Salvation Union is a Communist elite and is not committed to democracy.
The Front's popularity was harmed by economic hardships that have persisted since the fall of communism in 1989. In two years, prices have risen fivefold, leaving wages far behind, and 350,000 Romanians have lost their jobs.
Sunday's balloting was the second round of voting in Romania's first free local elections in five decades.
From The Associated Press
Baker issues ultimatum on Israeli settlements
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State James Baker said yesterday he had given Israel a choice: stop settlements in occupied Arab land or forfeit $10 billion in loan guarantees. The ultimatum raised Arab hopes and Israeli nerviness as a fourth round of Mideast peace talks began.
The Associated Press
Baker testified on Capitol Hill as separate sets of talks began across town at the State Department between Israel and a Palestinian-Jordanian team, between Israel and Syria and between Israel and Lebanon.
one issue of the guarantees, which Israel needs so it can borrow money to absorb 350,000 Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union, has overshadowed the peace talks since they were launched in October under U.S. aupies.
Israel objects to links between the guarantees, which it regards as aiding a humanitarian cause, and Jewish settlements in the predominantly Arab West Bank and Gaza Strip. The United States, however, views the guarantees as leverage for stopping the settlements which if deems harmful to prospects for an Arab-Israeli peace.
Hanan Ashrawi, Palestinian representative at the peace talks, said Bakery's remarks constituted a
glimmer of hope that the United States understands the severity of the continued Jewish settlements.
However, Israeli negotiator Yosef Ben-Aharon, a senior aide to Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, said Israel would not capitulate on the settlements and would not write off the loan guarantees.
Baker said he had offered up to $2 billion a year in guarantees over five years if Israel would halt settlement work in lands it occupied by the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Housing Minister Ariel Sharon said Israel had begun 2,000 housing units this year and would soon start another 1,000. And Shamir told Jewish settlers he would defy Washington rather than stop settlement construction even for a day, an Israeli newspaper reported.
Baker said the United States had offered to allow completion of housing units under construction on Jan. 1, 1992, but with a penalty reducing the guarantees by any amount spent on completing those units.
If it determined new settlement work was going on after the guarantees go forward, the United States should have the right to terminate any provision for absorption assistance at that point, he said.
But the United States probably would not seek to reclaim money already loaned as a result of earlier guarantees, he added.
LASTINC IMPRESSIONS
Consignment Boutique
THE MALLS
WASHINGTON - A human rights group said yesterday that witness interviews, documents and exhultations of victims' bodies show evidence that Iraq was guilty of mass killings of Iraqi Kurds. Kurdish leaders have said the executions number 180,000.
Aryeh Neier, executive director of Human Rights Watch, said his group had access to tons of official documents captured from Iraqis in a Kurdish uprising after the Gulf War in March, 1991.
Middle East Watch, a division of Human Rights Watch, based its conclusions on a report by a team of observers, including two forensic anthropologists specializing in uncovering atrocities, who visited Iraqi Kurdistan in December.
The U.N. special human-rights investigator for Iraq, former Dutch Foreign Minister Max Van Der Stoel, who was in Iraq after the Middle East Watch team, issued a report in Geneva last week saying Iraqi human rights violations were without parallel since the Nazi atrocities of World War II.
Human rights organization says Iraq tortured and killed Kurds
"If our findings in only one small area of the region hold true for other areas, then substantial evidence exists to support the proposition that Iraq has committed crimes against humanity in Kurdistan," the report said. That charge was used in the Nuremberg Tribunal after World War II to convict Germans of war crimes.
Neier said the documents captured from intelligence offices and offices of the ruling Baath Party showed the Iraqis kept voluminous records of their treatment of the Kurds including execution lists, and videotapes of torture sessions.
The Associated Press
"The international community, and particularly the United Nations, has a moral responsibility to help
He said he assumed the incriminating records were kept by officials as a means of advancement within the Iraqi bureaucracy.
Neier said that after the Iran-Iraq war ended in 1988, the Iraqis "turned their attention with a vengeance against the Kurds" who had been fighting for autonomy in Iraq for 50 years.
He said that in addition to the thousands of documented executions, 4,000 villages were razed, some villages were attacked with poisonous gas and "many tens of thousands" of Kurds were forcibly relocated from their homes and are missing.
23rd& Louisiana
WASHING MACHINE
SNEDEGER & SONCOINLAUNDRY
- Always Attended
• Machines Cleaned
After Each use
• Bundle laundry
Drop off available
• Quiet
7 a.m.-8 p.m. Mon - Fri.
7 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat & Sun.
12th & Connecticut
842-8833
Wash your clothes at Snedeger & Sons and for a limited time get $50^{\circ}$ worth of FREE drying!
coupon must be presented to receive service.
VINX
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WED. FEB. 26TH
AT
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INX
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"Opening act VINX, completely captivated
the (Los Angeles) crowd"
STING
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$1.00 DOUBLE DRAWS
VINX $1.00 DOUBLE DRAWS
WANTED STUDENTS WITH KU BOOKSTORE RECEIPTS SEEKING THESE MEN
JACKSON
HAMILTON
KU Bookstore receipts (designated Period No.90) should be taken to the Customer Service counters at the KU Bookstores in the Kansas or Burge Unions until June 30,1992. Student I.D.is required to claim reward.
7% rebate on cash and check purchases from the Fall 1991 semester
REWARD
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that shares its profits with the KU students
KU
KU
BOOKSTONES
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
Hey you Night Prowlers...
UPS has late night shifts available for loaders and unloaders.
Earn $8 an hour as a loader/unloader at UPS on the late night shift from 11 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., Mon. thru Fri.
Sign up at the Placement Center at the Burge Union.
Interviews will be held on Campus Wed. Feb. 26th
The Best Choice for a Part-time Job.
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8
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
Housing answers gripe
Officials explain plans for parking
By Erik Bauer Kansan staff writer
Sara Kraus still is afraid to walk from her car to Douthart Scholarship Hall at night.
But after a meeting at the women's hall with two student housing officials, Kraus, Waukesha, Wis., senior, said she thought that future scholarship hall residents would not have to worry as much about safety.
Kraus and other scholarship hall women residents wrote a letter to student housing and University officials more than a week ago. The letter addressed the problems of parking, lighting and safety in scholarship hall areas.
Jim Wilkins, assistant director of student housing, and Dennis Enslinger, program assistant for student housing, spoke to more than half the residents in Douthart Hall on Thursday evening about plans for
improving lighting and parking.
Wilkins said part of the problem was a lack of communication between the housing department and scholarship hall residents.
He said student housing concerned itself with such issues every day, but it often did not communicate its efforts to the students.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said plans to improve lighting and parking already existed and were not a result of the letter sent by Kraus and the Douthart residents.
"I think that it came as a surprise to them," he said. "We need to be more diligent in the communication of going to be happening in the future."
Stoner said student housing was working with facilities planning and other University officials to provide the scholarship hall area with more lighting and parking.
The construction of Amini Hall has forced University officials to zone new parking spaces for scholarship hall residents. Residents recently contended that the number of spaces was inadequate.
The lighting project, which will cost
37 spaces:
Scholarship hall parking
27 spaces:
lost due to Amini construction.
Located in alley between Ohio and the Hudson River from 13th to 14th streets.
Source: Kansan Research
zoned during construction.
Located on Louisiana street between 12th and 13th streets.
20 spaces:
about $140,000, will provide the area with at least 21 new street lights, four of which will be on Louisiana Street, he said.
Stoner said a new gravel parking lot at 13th and Louisiana streets also would be completed in the fall.
Almee Brainard, Daily Kansan
arship hall residents had been added in the last two years.
"It's never enough," he said. "It'll be a better ratio than what they have now."
He said 54 parking spaces for schol-
He said 54 percent of scholarship hall residents applied for parking permits this school year.
The Associated Press
General Motors announcement of plant closings stuns workers
YPSILANTI, Mich. — The mood at General Motors' Willow Run assembly plant was light as workers gathered yesterday to hear whether they, or workers at a rival plant, would keep their jobs.
But joking and laughter turned to shock and apprehension when GM Chairman Robert Stempel announced plans to close the plant in this suburb west of Detroit and move production to Arlington, Texas.
Stempel said in December that one of the two plants would be closed, but Willow Run workers thought they had the upper hand as Stempel began his announcement on closed-circuit television.
Many workers walked out while Stempel was still outlining GM's plans.
"They're hurt. They're shocked.
They can't believe they lost it," said22
year worker Leo Laurin. "Most of us got kids in school. You don't know where you'll be next year."
"Why are we turning Michigan into a ghost town?" asked James Bell of Detroit, who has worked at Willow Run for 16 years.
Willow Run workers said they were disappointed that the company apparently overlooked changes they had made to cut costs and increase efficiency.
"They dangled the cheese in front of us and when we reached out for it, they yanked it away," Laurin said.
A GM representation also announced they would close their minivan in North Tarrytown, dealing a blow to 3,500 workers there.
"I'm devastated, I can't believe it," said Donald Martino, president of the United Auto Workers Local 664. "Once they close here, this town will become a ghost town."
Paradise Café & Bakery
Paradise
Café & Bakery
Open Early
Breakfast Specialties
728 Massachusetts • 842 5199
Why didn't it happen
carchecked???
Spring Break OR Car Break
Don's Auto Center 920 E.11th·841-4833
SUMMER PLACEMENT VOLUNTEER FAIR (U.S. and International) Tuesday,Feb.25,1:30-4:30 pm Wednesday,Feb.26,1:30-4:30 pm at ECM Center(1 block north of Union)
Information on organizations offering 1 week to 3 months placement (longer in some positions). Compensation varies from volunteer paying all expenses to stipend, food, travel allowance, insurance provided.
AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE
AMERICAN JEWISH SERVICE
AMIGOS DES LAS AMERICA
APSNICA TECHNICAL VOLUNTEERS IN NICARAGUA)
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CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN VOLUNTEERS
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HABITAT FOR HUMANITY
HEIFERPROJECT (SELF - DEVELOPMENT)
JUBILEE PARTNERS (SERVICES FOR OPPRESSED)
LOS NINOS (MEXICAN BORDER)
LUTHERAN VOLUNTEER CORPS
PEACE BRIGADE
QUEST (INNERCITY)
ST. LOUIS SUMMER (COMM. SERVICE)
SCIENCE FOR NICARAGUA
SIoux INDIANS YMCA
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
VOLUMTEERS IN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION
WHITE MEMORIAL CAMP (KANSAS)
And over 200 other positions Sponsored by Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian, Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ)
ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PIZZA
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
2-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
$600
Just ask for the #1 Special
842-1212
Additional single
topping pizza - $3^{00}
Additional toppings .50¢
A "no coupon" special
DELIVERY HOURS
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MON-THUR FRI-SAT SUNDAY
Open at 11am everyday Dine-in available We accept checks!
We at Pizza Shuttle refuse to resort to the unprofessional and negative advertising aimed at us in recent months. We do promise though to give you a great pizza at a great price. Thanks, John, Karen & Crew
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SOON TO BE OPEN 24 HOURS To accommodate you for Spring Break.
The Return of
Robin Morgan
On February 2,1972,noted feminist, Robin Morgan spoke to an overflow crowd at the Kansas Union, where women publicly voiced their dissatisfactions. Two days later,20-30 women known as the February Sisters,occupied the East Asian Studies building and presented the KU administration with a list of demands.
Now, twenty years later, Robin Morgan, currently editor of Ms. magazine, returns to the University of Kansas to discuss the progress of the women's movement.
Friday, February 28,1992 - 8 p.m Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas Free Admission·Ticket Required·Limited Seating
Sponsored by:
Student Senate
Tickets Available:
Students:
Tuesday, February 25
Must Present KUID
Limit two tickets per ID
General Public:
Wednesday, February 26
Limit two tickets per person
History Department Women's Student Union Comparative Literature Community Mercantile Sociology Department Adventure Bookstore Panhellenic Council Theatre and Film Department Women's Studies Department
For more information call SUA 864-3477
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
IN THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
All tickets available at SUA Box Office, Level 4 Kansas Union
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
9
Potential grad students get advice
Program focuses on minorities
By Brady Prauser Special to the Kansan
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is planning a mentor program this spring designed to encourage KU minority students to enter graduate school.
The Dean's Scholars Program, which is scheduled to begin in late March, will match eligible students with faculty members in the college. The mentors, in turn, will assist the students in preparation for graduate school.
"The idea is to expose the student to as much graduate experience as possible early on in their educational career," said Rocio Munoz-Dunbar, program coordinator.
One said the program expected to start with about 29 participants. Sixteen applications have already been received.
Last semester, 373 of the 7,234 KU graduate students were minorities, according to enrollment figures.
Munoz-Dunbar said that all mentors would not necessarily be minorities.
"Because of the relatively few minority faculty members in the college, most mentors will not be minorities themselves," she said.
Participants are assigned a faculty member from the department of the college that they are considering entering. Mentors may be instructors of either undergraduate or graduate courses in the college.
Faculty members serve as mentors on a volunteer basis and were trained in several workshops conducted by Munoz-Dunbar last year.
Students also can select their former instructors to be their mentors.
Munoz-Dunbar spoke about the program earlier this month with various campus minority groups including the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization, the Native American Student Association and Black Men of Today.
"We hope to show the students that yes, they can make it in graduate school," she said. "We really care about getting them there, and we want to make that journey from here to there as easy as possible."
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences and program director, said a variety of activities were planned to acquaint students not only with their mentors, but also with other program participants.
Some of the events scheduled after spring break include a non-alcoholic cocktail party with mentors, students and their parents, plus bi-monthly brown-bag lunches with minority fae-
ulty speakers and various speakers from Lawrence.
"We're hoping that the mentor relationship will meet on a regular basis and do more than just standard advising," McCluskey-Fawcett said. "We want the participants to get the skills they need to apply for graduate school."
Suzanne Racine, president of Hispanic-American Leadership Organization, said the group was interested in the Dean's Scholars Program.
"There aren't as many Hispanic Americans going on to graduate school as there should be," she said. "Without people pushing them and being role models, sometimes they don't realize it's an opportunity for them."
The program is open to minority students who are sophomores or juniors in the college and have at least a 2.5 grade point average. Applications are due March 1.
Fireball falls on Oregon; experts say it's a meteor
The Associated Press
COOSBAY, Ore. — A fireball fell from the sky early yesterday, creating a sonic boom and trailing sparks that were noticed for hundreds of miles.
The object was seen along a 200-mile stretch of coast from Reed-sport to Mendocino, Calif. It also was seen from several ships and as far inland as Klamath Falls, about 125 miles from the coast.
"It was astounding," said Tony Adams of Coos Bay, who was awakened by the object's fall shortly after midnight Pacific time.
"I thought it was a plane falling at first, it was so bright," Adams said. "It was bright white, then it got yellowish, then a red kind of
glow, then it like broke apart and faded off."
A Coos Bay police officer who saw the fireball thought it had fallen south of the city, but couldn't find it, said dispatcher Michelle Kirby.
Author notes that know what the object was, but speculated that it could have been a meteor.
Dick Pugh, a member of the Smithsonian Institution network that gathers fireball reports, said the object probably hit the atmosphere at 40 times the speed of sound, creating a sonic boom that shook people's houses.
Pugh, a high school science teacher in Portland, said there were generally one or two similar reports a year.
ONE DAY ONLY!
Wednesday, February 26
$29.99 PER SET
Fully-Lined Jog Suits
Save an additional $10 off
our everyday low price!
(S-M-L) VALUE $75-79
Limit 3 per customer
$2999 PER SET
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our everyday low price!
(S-M-L) VALUE $75-79
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SPECIAL STORE HOURS:
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 7AM-10PM
ONE DAY ONLY! Wednesday, February 26
9$
99
ATHENTICO
FORENZA ™
PLUS
Denim Jeans
$29 off $5 off our everyday low price!
(Misses 2-14) VALUE $32-34 Limit 3 per customer
A FAMOUS SPECIALTY STORE LABEL!
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ONE DAY ONLY! Wednesday, February 26
$9
Ribbed Tees
Save $3 off our everyday low price!
(Misses S-M-L) VALUE $28
ATMENTICO
FORENZA
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ONE DAY ONLY! Wednesday, February 26
$9
99
Pleated Twill Shorts
Save $3 off our lowest early price!
(Misses 2-14) VALUE $39
A FAMOUS SPECIALTY STORE LABEL!
PRICE Up. 2. yoU & OTHERS
LOWER EVERYDAY
$799
LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE
$999 SAVE 50%
100% Cotton
V-Neck Tees
(Misses S-M-L)
VALUE $20
LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE
ATHMETICO
FORENZA
ASSESS OR SERVICED
$1099
Hunters Run
Four-Button Shoulder Rayon Shirts
(S-M-L) VALUE $25
LOWER EVERYDAY PRICE
$14^{99}$ - $17^{99}$
Good Fellows & OTHERS
Belted Roll-up Shorts (Junior 3-13) VALUE $25-30
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$3999 Fully-Lined Rayon-Blend Suits
(Misses 6-14) VALUE $120
WE'VE GOT SOMETHING TO TELL YOU!
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You've told us what you love most about our stores... the combination of low prices, great quality and super selection. So we've taken what you like and made it even better!
1. LOWER EVERYDAY PRICES!
2. MORE FOR MISSES
We've always offered a great selection of career and casual fashions for Misses, but NOW THE EVENING has a large selection of famous misses labels. Our stores get shipments of the latest styles every week... so shop often!
AS ALWAYS YOU'LL FIND...
3. FIRST-QUALITY ONLY:
You want the best quality your fashion dollars can buy and we have it! Our stores always carry ONLY FIRST QUALITY merchandise from brand names you can trust. No seconds. No irregulars. Quality you can depend on EVERY DAY!
2. MORE FOR MISSES!
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4. THE LATEST STYLES FOR JUNIORS!
Get the hottest junior looks at the coolest prices.
Always a large selection of the newest styles from famous junior labels!
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SOUTHERN HILLS MALL 1601 W. 23rd St, B41-0182. HOURS: M-Fri, 10am-9pm; Sat, 10am-8pm; Sun, 12:30pm-5:30pm.
Advertised styles are representative of stock and occasionally specific styles may not be available. Layaway/Exchange.
LIMITED TIME SPECIALS AVAILABLE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
VISA
PERSONAL CHECKS
PERSONAL CHECKS
FASHION GAL
GAL
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
A
Rings Fixed Fast!
749-4333
King Cummings
(nevermeyer)
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Athlete's The Foot
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
MDM. BOVARY 7:00 ONLY
642 LIBERTY HALL 749-1912 Mass
Madame Borary
PROSPERO'S BOOKS 9:30 ONLY
"ASTONISHING!" Bob Campbell NEWHOUSE NEWSPAERS
]
John Galgadget in After Graves is
PROSPERO'S BOOKS
Dickinson 841-8600
2339 IOWA 51
Dickinson
STOP. OR MY MOM
WILL SHOOT (PG-13)
(*5*15); 7:20; 9:15
GRAND CANYON (R)
(*4*50); 7:15; 9:45
JFK (R)
(*4*15); 7:45
RADIOFLYER (PG-13)
(*4*20); 7:00; 9:20
FINAL ANALYSIS (R)
(*4*45); 7:25; 9:50
FRIED GREEN TOMATOES (PG-13)
(*4*35); 7:05; 9:35
Will still offer students the $3.50
price at all evening shows.
Prime-Timer Show (/)/Senior Citizen Anytime
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
Wayne's World(PG-13) 530 730 930
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
Hand hirth pick the Caigler(R) 50.0/1.53 710
Beauty of the Beeetle (R) 5.15/1.75 1090
Hook(PG) 5.15
Prince of Tides(R) 8.10
J.F.K.(PG-13) 5.00 8.15
Medicine Man(PG-13) 5.15/1.75 920
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 841-5191
Great Mouse Detective(G) 5:15 720
Bugsy(R) 8:30
Shining Through(R) 5:00 8:00
Shining Through(R) 5:00 8:00
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
10
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
SPORTS
Late-game run beats Sooners
Pauley scores a career-high 23
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams could not resist the urge to turn a little prophetic last night after the Jayhawks defeated Oklahoma 84-65.
"We played tentative in the first half," Williams said, "but I don't think you'll see that from this team the rest of the season."
The No. 3 Jayhawks exploded for 39 points in the last 9:33 of the second half after falling behind for the first time, 46-45, with 12:23 in the game.
Kansas guard Rex Walters triggered the scoring run with two driving layups, and the Jayhawks outscored the Sooners 23-8 over the next six minutes, taking control of the game in the process.
Williams said the Kansas defense played well throughout the game and was one of the best in the league.
"For 35 minutes, they were an average team," Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs said of the Jayhawks. "In the last five minutes, they were as good as any team could be."
Kansas held the Sooners, who lead the nation with a 97.1 points-per-game average, to a season-low 23 points in the first half on 32 percent shooting.
The Jayhawks also did an excellent job defensively on Oklahoma center Bryan Sallier, Williams said.
The 6-foot-8 Sallier, who is averaging 15 points a game and scored 29 against the Jayhawks in Kansas' victory against the Sooners last month, scored just one point in 31 minutes of action and shot 0-for-6 from the field.
"We paid more attention to Salier than the last time we played them," Williams said. "We had a lot more help down front, Alonzo (Jamison) played incredible on defense. And I thought Eric (Paulev) did a great job also."
Pauley, a 6-10 center, scored a career-high 23 points and grabbed 12 rebounds in addition to helping out defensively with Salieri.
"The last couple of games I wasn't concentrating," Pauley said. "I wanted to concentrate on my defense tonight. When you do your job on defense, good things happen on offense."
As for his scoring outburst, Pauley credited his teammates with getting him the ball.
"Everybody gave me very good advice," he said. "They find you open, the door to you. You like it."
Although Sallier was shut down, the Jayhawks had to withstand an outstanding second half by Oklahoma point guard Terry Evans, who scored a game-high 25 points, 22 of which came after halftime, including six three-pointers.
However, Kansas point guard Adonis Jordan countered Evans with 22 points, five assists and just two turnovers. He also hit 5-of-6 from three point range.
"For us to be a good team, we have to win games like this," Jordan said.
Courtside:
The Kansas junior varsity also won lastnight, defeating PrattCommunity College 93-70. Blake Wiechbrot led the 'Hawks with 28 points. Donnie Braun had seven rebounds and Trey Meyer had eight assists. The j.v. will face Independence Community College at 7:30 tomorrow at Allen Field House.
KANSA21(21-3)
player fgm/fa gft/ta tp
1 Gary 1-3 4-7 6
Scott 3-4 0-5 6
Paulley 11-17 1-1 23
Walters 6-15 4-5 18
Brown 6-10 5-8 22
Woodbury 1-7 0-2 0
Davis 2-3 1-4 5
Richey 0.1 1-0 0
Hathen 0.0 0-0 0
Johanning 0.0 0-0 0
Czplimski 0.0 1-1 0
Odalski 1-1 10-2 8
Total 31-12 15-32 84
KANSAS 84. OKLAHOMA 65
ORLAKHAIM(17-7)
Patterson 7.16 5.8 10
Webster 1.3 2.6 4
Baker 0.6 1.3 1
Evans 1.6 1.3 2
Price 3.11 2.2 9
Hamilton 2.4 2.5 7
Yaneth 0.4 0.1 0
Vair 0.4 0.0 0
Totals 20-54 17-29 65
Hattinen - Kansas 21, Kokhoma 23, 3-Frontal.
Kokhoma 8-1 B (10) Patterson 1 E (6) Price 9.65
Kokhoma 8-1 B (10) Patterson 1 E (6) Price 9.65
Walter 2-4, Jordan 5-6, Woodbury 0-5, Foiled.
Ritamori - Rebounds (Kokhoma) 30, Kokhoma (Pat)
12 (Price 6) Kokhoma (Pat) 12 (Price 6)
Kansas 20, Jiamsen, Walter, Jergen
total 5. Total kicks, Kokhoma 23, Kokhoma 23
KANSAS
51
OKLAHOMA
40
OKLAHOMA
31
Junior center Eric Paule grips the goal as he goes for a dunk in the Kansas victory against Oklahoma.
Top recruit attends first Kansas game
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswrite
Darrin Hancock got his first look at the "Pho6" last night.
"It a great atmosphere with some great traditions," Hancock said. "I'm looking forward to playing here next year."
Hancock, a 6-foot-6 forward at Garden City Community College, attended his first game at Allen Field House in Alabama 84-61 in front of a sell-out crowd.
Hancock signed a letter of intent during the fall to spend his final two seasons of eligibility as a Kansas Jayhawk. He is recognized as one of the top junior college recruits in the nation.
Although last night's game was the main feature on ESPN'S Big Monday, Hancock said he would have to get used to the national spotlight.
It seems appropriate that Hancock would get his first taste of Jayhawk basketball on a night that featured several Kansas highlight-film slam
Hancock has a history of thrilling crowds with his high-flying dunks.
He was the Slam Dunk Champion of the 1990 McDonald's High School All-American game after his senior year at Griffin High School in Georgia.
Hancock signed with the University of Nevada-Las Vegas out of high school, but because of academic rea- tion, he will coach for coach Carey at Garden City.
However, before Hancock can concentrate on his first season as a Jayhawk, he has some unfinished business as a Bronchuster.
Hancock has led the team to a 23-5 record this season and a second-place seed in the junior college post-season regional tournament.
When it comes time for Hancock to make his debut as a Jayhawk, he said he would be ready.
"We run basically the same offense at Garden City," he said. "It shouldn't be too tough for me to make the transition.
"I hope and expect some good things next year from the team and myself."
Big 8 coaches shoot for postseason
Bv Chris Jenson
Kansan sportswriter
Many analysts have speculated that
Although the race for the Big Eight Conference title may now be a two team show, do not tell the other six teams. They do not want to know.
"Conference games are always competitive," Kansas State coach Dana Altman said during a Big Eight coaches teleconference yesterday. "This is a very competitive conference."
Kansas, 8-2, leads the conference followed by Missouri 7-3.
However, with the top four teams in the league losing to the bottom four last week the parity in the league is more evident than ever.
The Big Eight remains the only conference nationally with all of its members having records above .500. The Atlantic Coast Conference is the only conference to have all its members with winning records at the end of a season, which it accomplished during the 1978, 1984 and 1985 seasons.
the big Eight could send most of its teams to the NCAA tournament. Kansas coach Roy Williams said that all eight teams had a legitimate shot at post-season play.
"It would not surprise me if we got six teams into the tournament," he said. "I think all eight of our teams are top ones. I definitely think that our eight are in the top eight nationally."
The Big Eight has had six of its ten teams ranked in the Associated Press.
Sutton, whose team has lost four in a row, said that most teams experienced a down time, but playing in
The NCAA tournament selects a field of 64 teams for its tournament and the National Invitational Tournament selects 32.
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said that the competition at the end of the season would be fierce.
"Maybe it is more competitive down the stretch because everybody wants to ensure a spot in post-season play," he said. "It is amazing how many quality teams this league has."
Iowa State hurt its chances of getting an invitation to the NCAA tournament by dropping games to Kansas State and Nebraska last week. The losses cost the Cyclones their Top 25 ranking.
a league like the Big Eight made that time costly.
"The season is so long and when you play in a league as tough as ours, it is hard to play that hard every night," he said. "We put a lot of emphasis on winning the preseason NIT. Maybe we shouldn't have done that."
Around the Big Eight:
With two weeks remaining before the Big Eight tournament, the final games become crucial to those teams on the bubble for tournament bids.
Nebraska began last week with a whipping at the hands of Missouri, but bounced back to defeat No. 3 Kansas and then No. 21 Iowa State. The victories gave the Cornhuskers its first national ranking of the season. They are ranked 25th in this week's Associated Press poll.
Nebraska's Jamar Johnson was named the Big Eight's Player of the Week. The sophomore guard shot the buzer-beater that defeated the Jayhawks last Wednesday. Johnson had 33 points, 11 assists, 8 rebounds and 2 steals in the 'Husker' upsets of Kansas and Iowa State.
Nebraska coach Danny Nee had only praise for Johnson.
Oklahoma State forward Byron Houston is day-to-day, according to Cowboycoach Eddie Sulton. Houston sprained an ankle last week against Oklahoma and did not play Sunday against Missouri.
Sutton is recovering well from a heart problem that began after the Cowboys lost to Oklahoma on Wednesday.
"Jamar should be considered for Big Eight Newcomer of the Year." Nebraska coach Danny Nee said. "I know Kansas has Rex Walters but Jamar is the heart and soul of our team."
Top 25 AP Polls
Here are the top 25 teams in The Associated Press 1991-92 college basketball poll (records through Feb. 23 in parentheses), and last week's rankings:
Previous Women
1. Duke (21-2) 1. Virginia (24-1) 1
2. Indiana (20-4) 7. Tennessee (22-2) 2
3. **Kansas** (20-3) 3. Maryland (22-3) 4
4. UCLA (21-2) 2. Mississippi (24-1) 5
5. Arizona (20-4) 5. Stanford (21-2) 6
6. Missouri (19-4) 6. Iowa (21-2) 7
8. UNLV (24-2) 12. Stephen Austin (22-2) 3
8. Ohio St. (17-5) 6. Indiana (24-1) 8
8. Arkansas (20-6) 10. Pern St. (18-6) 11
10. North Carolina (18-5) 4. SW Missouri St. (21-2) 12
11. Kentucky (20-5) 11. Vanderbilt (18-6) 10
12. Michigan St. (18-5) 11. Hawaii (18-3) 13
13. Southern Cal. (19-4) 15. West Virginia (21-2) 15
14. Oklahoma St. (21-5) 8. Purdue (16-6) 9
15. Tulane (19-3) 18. George Washington (18-4) 14
16. Alabama (20-6) 14. W. Kentucky (18-6) 17
17. Michigan (17-6) 20. **Kansas** (21-4) 28
18. Georgetown (17-6) 25. Texas Tech (20-4) 10
19. Cincinnati (20-4) 19. Clemson (19-8) 29
20. St. John's (16-7) 24. Alabama (20-5) 22
21. DePaul (18-6) 24. Houston (18-5) 21
22. Virginia St. (18-8) 16. Wisconsin (18-5) 24
(te) Syruece (16-7) 17. Washington (15-8) 16
24. Connecticut (17-6) 21. Texas (17-7) 25
25. Nebraska (17-6) — 25. North Carolina (19-6)
Previous
Missouri ADretires
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri athletic director Dick Tamburo, saying he wanted to end the negativism, "the scuttlebutch and what you hear on the street," announced his retirement yesterday, effective when his contract expires June 30.
SPORTS BRIEFS
"In considering the handling of the extension of my contract, I feel my effectiveness has been diminished by circumstances beyond my control, and in thinking of the University of Chicago, which will be there, will be taking the opportunity provided by the university for early retirement."
University of Missouri president George Russell has offered a package of special incentives for early retiree education in a sweeping series of budget reforms.
"I said when I was hired that I'd work until retirement, and that's what I'm doing." Tamburo said in a statement.
Woody Cozad, a board of Curators member, said the panel had not discussed Tamburo's contract nor pressured him to retire.
Tamburo said the Board of Curators had not indicated whether they would accept him.
Oklahoma State made the offer to lessen any penalty the NCAA might impose on the program for infractions cited in a 39-page letter of inquiry, the newspaper said. The letter details about 25 allegations of wrongdoing.
But Coxad acknowledged continuity within the athletic department would be an issue. The problem of continuity "is something we will want to fix," he said. "But under the circumstances, I don't know if this is the time to fix it."
STILLWATER, Okla. — A published report says the NCAA has rejected Oklahoma State's offer not to wrestle for team points at NCAA and other tournaments in return for leniency in the NCAA's investigation of its program.
In the wake of Tamburo's announcement, basketball coach Norm Stewart criticized the team for its inconsistency.
Cowbovs negotiate
An Oklahoma State athletic department spokesperson, however, said yesterday that no decision had been made on the university's offer.
Sources within the athletic department say the NCAA sent Gerald Lodge, Oklahoma State faculty representative to the Cowboys to wrestle for team points.
Switzer trial begins
AUSTIN, Tex. — Preliminary motions were heard yesterday in a reporter's $30 million lawsuit against former Oklahoma University football coach Barry Switzer.
Jack Taylor Jr., a former reporter for the now-defunct Dallas Times Herald, has accused Switzer of libel, slander and invasion of privacy stemming from accusations made by the former Sooner coach in his autobiography "Bootlegger's Boy."
Jury selection in the trial before State District Judge Joe Hart is set to start tomorrow and take twodays. The trial will last from three to six weeks.
Former football starter begins new job as KU assistant coach
In the book, Switzer links Taylor, who had written investigative stories on the coach and the Sooner football team, with a scheme to plant drugs on an Oklahoma football player after the 1988 Orange Bowl game.
Switzer's attorneys say that Taylor is a public official, and to prove he was libeled he must show Switzer knew the allegations were false but published them anyway.
By Jerry Schmidt
Kansan sportswriter
Scott Imwale will be on the field, as usual, when the Kansas football team begins spring practice March 30. But instead of donning the pads, the former co-captain will tote a whistle.
After starting 24 games in the last three seasons, Imwalle will become a student assistant coach for the Jayhawks.
He suffered a career-ending neck injury in the ninth game last season against Nebraska.
feeling back in his arms and shoulders.
"I wanted to stay in the program and help out," the foot-2, 265-pound junior from Vandalia, Ohio, said. "I wanted to stay involved. We're going to have a good team, but it will be tough, I'll want to get out there."
He said it took six hours to get the
Although Inwala escaped permanent damage from the collision, he did
Imwalle went down in the second quarter of the Nebraska game after colliding with a linebacker.
"I hit the guy and the burner shot down my spine," he said. "I was really scared. I wanted to get up but couldn't."
W h e n
condition common among football players called Brachial Plexus Syndrome, which is a temporary paralysis of the arm and back duetotraumatic injury.
Scott Imwalle
Rott said Imwalle had problems
He said many players wear neck collts to help prevent the burners.
1970
Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine, said the sensation went away after a brief time and the player is able to continue.
Brachial Plexus occurs, a burning sensation is felt down the arm and shoulders after making hard contact. In football terms it is called a burner or a stinger.
before with the burners and rest had eased the condition, but the risk of a more serious injury was too high if Iwalle returned.
"What it came down to was the risk involved. It's a collision sport."
Offensive coordinator Pat Ruel said
Imwalle would be missed on the field
but would be a strong influence as a
student assistant.
he had a strong work ethic and it paid off for him," he said. "He has the respect of the players and coaches."
Imwalle said the day-to-day activities he had been used to as an active player were changed when his playing days were finished.
"It's weird now," he said. "I'm on my own program and I'm not used to not hearing someone get on me and push me. The coaches are still there but they don't concentrate on you."
If his duties as student assistant go well, Imwalle said he might try coaching.
"I'm going to do it this year and see how it goes," he said. "Then maybe I'll get into it."
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
11
Production up report quotes
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration's multibillion-dollar strategy to curb Latin American cocaine production has failed to stem the tide of illegal drug shipments to this country, a congressional report said yesterday.
The report, issued by the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary crime subcommittee, said that there was no evidence that any street dealers missed any sales because of a shortage of cocaine, despite the 700 percent increase in government spending over the last decade to stop drug imports.
The study was issued by Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., the panel's chairman, as President Bush prepared to join five Latin American presidents tomorrow in San Antonio to discuss further efforts to curb
cocaine traffic.
Efforts to eradicate coca leaf-growing in Peru, Colombia and Bolivia have failed to prevent an increase in cocaine production and shipment to this country, the report said.
Once primarily restricted to Colombia, coca processing is now suspected in six other nations. "Substantial numbers of labs are found in nine countries and believed to exist in four others," the report said.
The number of countries cited as transshipment points has increased from 11 to 25, the report said.
Since Bush attended the last drug summit two years ago in Cartagena, Colombia, the expansion of the drug trade throughout South and Central America has proceeded apace, the report said.
*Venezuela has become a significant coca grower, while refining labs
The report cited the administration's own estimates that production increased from 836 metric tons in 1989 to 970 metric tons last year.
have been established in Ecuador, Chile, Brazil and Venezuela," the reportsaid.
The administration, which set a goal of reducing cucumber production 10 to 50 percent in its 1989 drug strategy, did not include a target in the plan it released last month, the report noted.
However, Bush contended recently that the U.S. is winning the drug war. Since 1989, federal spending on drug control has almost doubled to more than $12 billion.
The administration contends that cocaine use is down 35 percent since 1988 and that, among adolescents, the decline is 63 percent. During the same time frame, it says, the percentage of students who approve cocaine use has dropped by 47 percent.
Crackdowns by the Drug Enforcement Administration on smuggling into Florida has only forced drug traffickers to shift their routes through Mexico, the report said.
EL PASO, Texas — Federal officers assault border residents and immigrants, sexually harass them and violate their civil rights, and seldom are investigated or disciplined, an immigration group said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Report says officials abuse residents, immigrants along Mexican border
The American Friends Service Committee, in a report scheduled for release today, said that it had documented more than 1,200 cases of abuse that occurred on the border between 1989 and 1991.
In conjunction with the report's release, the committee plans to urge changes in the investigation, complaint and training procedures of the U.S. Customs and Immigration and Naturalization services and ask for the creation of a civilian oversight panel.
Maria Jimenez, Houston director
of the committee's Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project, said that foreigners were not the only ones affected by policies such as U.S. Attorney General William Barr's plan to beef up enforcement on the border.
Jimenez said the fact that 17.9 percent of the border abuse victims were U.S. citizens told them that all parts of the community were affected.
She said that the report was more critical than two previous reports on border abuse by the committee.
Messages left by The Associated Press with the INS in Washington and U.S. Customs Service in Houston were not immediately returned.
One case cited by the committee was that of Rafaela Rivera, a U.S. citizen who says a customs inspector twisted her arm in a scuffle during a
routine inspection as she and her husband returned from Mexico Feb. 8.
The inspector said that he was kicked, but Rivera said that he grabbed her when she asked why he washing his car trunk with a hammer used to find concealed compartments.
Customs said it did not investigate the case because Rivera never filed a formal complaint. Rivera's attorney said that she planned to sue.
Jose Moreno, director of the El Paso Catholic Diocese's Migrant and Refugee Services, cited the 1987 case of a man who drowned in the Rio Grande when border Patrol agents yanked a rope guiding his makeshift raft.
A federal investigation found no negligence but the family was awarded $210,000 in civil damages.
Ronkin's New LSAT Premium Program: The Best Way To Prepare For The LSAT
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EUROPE IN TRANSITION
A Summer Program on Europe West and East June 10-July 29,1992
Enhance Your Future This Summer
- Taught in English -
- 1a.
DiS Denmark's International Study Program
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
:::
14
SUMMER COURSE OFFERINGS FOR KU CREDIT:
SUMMER COURSE OFFERIN
* The European Community
* European Security Issues
* East-West Business Relations
REDIT
* Modern Scandinavian Art and Architecture
* Nordic Mythology
* Danish Language
Informational meeting - Wednesday, February 26 207 Fraser,3:00-4:30 p.m.
DIS also offers fall and spring semesters in Humanities and Social Sciences, International Business, and Architecture and Design. Come by the KU Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, for more information.
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SERVICE OF REMEMBRANCE
PERSIAN GULF WAR-1991 at ECM Center (1204 Oread) Thursday, February 27, 7:30 pm
We remember...
- the 374 American fatalities $ ^{*} $ and all those who died or suffered losses from coalition members and neighbor states
----the thousands of Iraqi and Kuwaiti casualties
---- the hundreds of health and human service workers who served in the Gulf
- - the millions of children who experienced fear and continue to be victims of anxiety, loss, illness, and death in all the nations affected by this war
- Figure includes 230 non-combat fatalities prior to and during the war
Sponsored by: ECM, Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren, Lutheran Campus Ministry, KU Hillel (Jewish Student Organization), Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship, Canterbury House (Episcopal Campus Ministry), St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, United Methodist Campus Ministry, American Baptist Campus Ministry, Southern Baptist Campus Ministries, VOICE
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
11
Billions fail to win drug war
Production up report quotes
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration's multibillion-dollar strategy to curb Latin American cocaine production has failed to stem the tide of illegal drug shipments to this country, a congressional report said yesterday.
The report, issued by the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary crime subcommittee, said that there was no evidence that any street dealers missed any sales because of a shortage of cocaine, despite the 700 percent increase in government spending over the last decade to stop drug imports.
The study was issued by Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., the panel's chairman, as President Bush prepared to join five Latin American presidents to tomorrow in San Antonio to discuss further efforts to curb
cocaine traffic.
Although Bush claims that the administration is winning the war on imported cocaine, the report said, "By any objective standard, the president's Andean Initiative has failed in several critical respects."
Efforts to eradicate coca leaf-growing in Peru, Colombia and Bolivia have failed to prevent an increase in cocaine production and shipment to this country, the report said.
Once primarily restricted to Colombia, coca processing is now suspected in six other nations. "Substantial numbers of labs are found in nine countries and believed to exist in four others," the report said.
The number of countries cited as transshipment points has increased from 11 to 25, the report said.
Since Bush attended the last drug summit two years ago in Cartagena, Colombia, the expansion of the drug trade throughout South and Central America has proceeded apace, the report said.
*Venezuela has become a significant coca grower, while refining labs
The report cited the administration's own estimates that production increased from 836 metric tons in 1989 to 970 metric tons last year.
have been established in Ecuador, Chile, Brazil and Venezuela," the reportsaid.
The administration, which set a goal of reducing cocaine production 10 to 50 percent in its 1989 drug strategy, did not include a target in the plan it released last month, the report noted.
However, Bush contended recently that the U.S. is winning the drug war. Since 1989, federal spending on drug use has almost doubled to more than $12 billion.
The administration contends that cocaine use is down 35 percent since 1988 and that, among adolescents, the decline is 63 percent. During the same time frame, it says, the percentage of students who approve cocaine use has dropped by 47 percent.
Crackdowns by the Drug Enforcement Administration on smuggling into Florida has only forced drug traffickers to shift their routes through Mexico, the report said.
The Associated Press
Report says officials abuse residents immigrants along Mexican border
EL PASO, Texas — Federal officers assault border residents and immigrants, sexually harass them and violate their civil rights, and seldom are investigated or disciplined, an immigration group said yesterday.
In conjunction with the report's release, the committee plans to urge changes in the investigation, complaint and training procedures of the U.S. Customs and Immigration and Naturalization services and ask for the creation of a civilian oversight panel.
The American Friends Service Committee, in a report scheduled for release today, said that it had documented more than 1,200 cases of abuse that occurred on the border between 1989 and 1991.
Maria Jimenez, Houston director
of the committee's Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project, said that foreigners were not the only ones affected by policies such as U.S. Attorney General William Barr's plan to beef up enforcement on the border.
Jimenez said the fact that 17 percent of the border abuse victims were U.S. citizens told them that all parts of the community were affected.
Messages left by the Associated Press with the INS in Washington and U.S. Customs Service in Houston were not immediately returned.
She said that the report was more critical than two previous reports on border abuse by the committee.
One case cited by the committee was that of Rafafa Rivera, a U.S. citizen who says a customers inspector twisted her arm in a scuffle during a
routine inspection as she and her husband returned from Mexico Feb. 8.
The inspector said that he was kicked, but Rivera said that he grabbed her when she asked why he washing his car trunk with a hammer used to find concealed compartments.
Customs said it did not investigate the case because Rivera never filed a formal complaint. Rivera's attorney said that she planned to sue.
Jose Moreno, director of the El Paso Catholic Diocese's Migrant and Refugee Services, cited the 1987 case of a man who drowned in the Rio Grande when Border Patrol agents yanked a rope guiding his makeshift raft.
A federal investigation found no negligence but the family was awarded $210,000 in civil damages.
Ronkin's New
LSAT Premium Program:
The Best Way To Prepare For The LSAT
If you're one of the nation's 95,000 applicants determined to get into an accredited law school, you know the competition
is tough. Since there are only 44,000 openings, a high score on the LSAT is crucial.
That's why Ronkin created the LSAT Premium Program which offers a choice of three varied levels of assistance. LSAT Preparation
- LSAT Preparation
Course Using the most recently updated curriculum, our 40-hour course stresses critical thinking, argument analy-
- LSAT Gold Package
In addition to the 40-hour LSAT course,
Ronkin's LSAT Gold Package includes
LSAT
PREMIUM
PROGRAM
THE BOMM
EXCITATIONAL GROUP
our two-day LSAT Intensive-Study Clinics offered immediately prior to LSAT examination dates. These clinics concentrate on Logical Reasoning and Logic Games. The Gold Package also includes our Law School Success Program which covers law school exam preparation, legal writing, legal research, and career planning.
sis and logical reasoning. Besides classroom time, our comprehensive LSAT course provides live tutorials, three diagnostic exams, three practice exams, a computer-based tutorial program, homework materials that include released LSATS, and a toll-free Dial-A-Teacher line. Two-day clinics, which are included in Ronkin's LSAT Gold and Platinum Packages, are also available for an additional fee.
- LSAT Platinum Package
This plan provides everything you'll need to get into law school and to be a success. Enroll and you'll receive our LSAT Preparation Course, LSAT Intensive-Study Clinics, Law School Success Program, plus our Law School Selection and Application Assistance Programs.
Lawrence
843-0800
So if you're looking for the best in LSAT and law school preparation programs, call The Ronkin Educational Group.
THE RONKIN EDUCATIONAL GROUP
We'll Make Sure You Make It!
LSAT•GMAT•GRE•MCAT
EUROPE IN TRANSITION
A Summer Program on Europe West and East June 10-July 29,1992
Enhance Your Future This Summer
- Taught in English -
DiS Denmark's International Study Program
333
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
SUMMER COURSE OFFERING
* The European Community
* European Security Issues
* East-West Business Relations
REMIT
*Modern Scandinavian Art and Architecture*
*Nordic Mythology*
*Danish Language*
Informational meeting - Wednesday, February 26 207 Fraser,3:00-4:30 p.m.
DIS also offers fall and spring semesters in Humanities and Social Sciences, International Business, and Architecture and Design. Come by the KU Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, for more information.
WE'VE MOVED!
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
for Driving
by BAUSCH & LOMB
928 Massachusetts
Available at
The Etc.
Shop
TM
Jayhawk Bookstore
at the top of Nassau Hill
JBS
Briti-Bus
Call for Special Charter Rates
Mon-Thurs • 843-3826
SUA
88
Cosponsored with
Malcolm X PG
7:00, Tuesday, Feb. 25
7:00, Wednesday, Feb. 26
1:00, Saturday, Feb. 29
864-SHOW
THE LAST
TEMPTATION
OF CHRIST R
7:00, Thursday, Feb. 27
4:00, Saturday, Feb. 29
plus
Friday, Feb. 28 at 7:30 & 10:00
at Hashinger Hall
Cosponsored
with
MU
Films are screened in Woodruff Auditorium
Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Box Office
HILARY LILLIARD THEATRE
ACU
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
PIZZA SHUTTLE HOT ON THE SPOT! "NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Everyday Two-Pers
2- Pizzas
2- Toppings
2- Garnishes
$9.00
Prime Time Special
3- Pizzas
1- Tooping
4- Garnishes
$11.50
Party "10"
10 Pizzas
1- Tooping
$30.00
842-1212
SERVICE OF REMEMBRANCE
PERSIANGULFWAR-1991
at ECM Center (1204 Oread) Thursday, February 27, 7:30 pm
We remember...
- the 374 American fatalities $ ^{*} $ and all those who died or suffered losses from coalition members and neighbor states
--- the thousands of Iraqi and Kuwaiti casualties
---- the hundreds of health and human service workers who served in the Gulf
-- the millions of children who experienced fear and continue to be victims of anxiety, loss, illness, and death in all the nations affected by this war
- Figure includes 230 non-combat fatalities prior to and during the war
Sponsored by: ECM, Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren, Lutheran Campus Ministry, KU Hillel (Jewish Student Organization), Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship, Canterbury House (Episcopal Campus Ministry), St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, United Methodist Campus Ministry, American Baptist Campus Ministry, Southern Baptist Campus Ministries, VOICE
12
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
Commission looks at panel efforts
Traffic woes are focus of dialogue
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
The last thing Mayor Bob Walters wants the Lawrence city commission to do is grab surveyor's levels and become traffic engineers.
"We are policy makers," Walters said. "And the budget drives policies."
The city commission forms laws and regulates budgets, and the city's traffic safety commission, an appointed board of nine local residents, makes traffic-related recommendations to the city commission.
The city commission met with the traffic safety commission yesterday to discuss similarities and differences
between the two groups.
Commissioners from both groups agreed more discussion was needed, but their duties should remain separate.
City Commissioner BobSchulte said the traffic safety commission served as a filter of information for the city commission.
"Each commission is not coming up with different solutions," he said.
Carl Thor, vice chairperson of the traffic safety commission and an assistant research engineer for KU's transportation center, said he wanted the safety commission to give more input into the city's larger projects.
Schulte also said the current traffic safety commission was composed in an unusual manner because five of the nine members were civil engineers.
"if there is a complaint that I have, it
that even though we talk about little
stuff like crosswalks and pedestrian signals, I wish we could give more input about larger traffic projects," he said.
But Chuck Miller, another traffic safety commissioner and civil engineer, said the traffic safety commission members did not have the economic responsibility to make policies.
"A big side of this issue is economics," he said. "We do not have some of the financial knowledge it takes to understand this."
George Williams, director of public works, said the traffic safety commission originally was created to discuss safety prevention issues.
"There was a time when the traffic safety commission looked only at traffic safety," he said. "We set safety routes near area schools and worked with the school's parent-teacher association."
The KU Energy Research Development Center soon will become the Mid-Continent Energy Research Center if U.S. Sen. Bob Dole has his way.
The U.S. Senate last week passed an energy bill that addressed nuclear energy, alternative fuels and other energy concerns. The bill awaits consideration from the U.S. House of Representatives and President George Bush.
As an amendment to the bill, Bill proposed that the University of Kansas' Energy Research Development center become the Mid-Continent Energy Research Center.
Dole said in a prepared statement
By Greg Farmer Kansan staff writer
Energy research to drain oil wells dry
that the center would be authorized by the federal government to research and develop methods to recover unknown reserves.
*Premature abandonment of oil wells results in the permanent loss of a scarce natural resource, and we use this available resource, 'beheaded'.
Dole said abandoned wells in the United States contained about 3.6 billion barrels of recoverable oil.
"The University of Kansas research center is uniquely qualified to develop methods of tapping that resource," he said.
Dole said stripper wells, which are wells that produce less than 10 barrels of oil a day, represented 74 percent of all wells in the United States.
It's expensive for operators to
maintain the low-production wells, he said. More than 5,000 stripper wells in Kansas have been abandoned in the last three years.
"The KU center has a nationally regarded program emphasizing technology transfer that will help us do more oil from these wells," Dole said.
Don Green, co-director of the KU Energy Research Center, said the center emphasized finding new ways to help small oil operators increase production.
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BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO SERVICE
- On Bus Route
- 2-3 Bedrooms
2111Kasold 843-4300
Complete Maintenance & Repair
On
• European and Japanese
Autos.
CALL 842-4320
545 Minnesota
(Across the street from Vista on 6th.)
European and Japanese Autos.
816 W. 24th St.
Behind Laird Noller Ford
Open Mon - Thurs8am - 6pm
Fri 8pm - Sat 9am - 1pm
Save lives by giving plasma:
$15 dollars for first donation !
MOTORISED ADULTS
- * * * * *
Lawrence Donor Center Help yourself by helping others
THIS OLD EARTH
David Blockstein
Towards a National Strategy for Conserving Biodiversity 2 March 1992, 8:00 pm, Woodruff Auditorium Free to Students, Faculty and Staff, and the Public
FREE Coffeefrom 11pm-close! Show KU I.D.
Amigos Jayhawk fans...
Amigos
$1.25
HOURS: Open daily at 10:30 am
Sun.,Mon.,Tues.: 10:30 am-1 am
Wed.,Thurs.: 10:30 am-2 am
Fri.,Sat.: 10:30-3 am 1819 W.23rd Lawrence,KS
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays Monster Draws
Tuesdays & Thursdays $1.50 Wells
The Big 6 Sports Club ELDRIDGE HOTEL LOWER LEVEL
IN STYLE
NATURALWAY
Get in Shape Workout Wear with 15% off
A
Natural Fiber Clothing
SPRING BREAK
A
Go Back swimwear to the 15% off Beach in Style
Or Early Spring
Go Out for Arrivals
Baryshnikov
820-822 Massachusetts
841-0100
a Night 15%-50%
on the Town
Think About It
KJHX 90.7
Tues. 7:00 Topic: Responsible Bar Owners?
JEALOUSY...INTRIGUE..
DETRAYAL PASSION!
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series in cooperation with Payless ShoeSource
BETRAYAL... PASSION!
IT'S NOT A SOAP OPERA...
IT'S NOT TWIN PEAKS ...
IT'S TOSA!
Presents the
New York City Opera National Company
TOSCA
in the New 1992 Touring Production of Puccini's Tragic Opera
A
Performed in Italian with English superlites (so you'll know what's going on!)
Bus tickets for KU students are available through the Murphy Hall Box Office; the reservation deadline for the 87 free student tickets (compliments of the Student Senate) is 5:00 p.m. Friday, February 28.
[Illustration of a knife with a black handle and silver blade.]
KU student tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved; KU student tickets are only $10 & $8.50; to charge tickets by phone; using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. Swarthout
Society, and the Kansas University Endowment Association
IT'S BETTER THAN M-TV1. THERE'S LUSTY
MELDRAMA...UNFORGETTABLE MUSIC…GORGEOUS
COSTUMES...DON'T MISS THE EXCITEMENT AS
AMERICA'S BEST YOUNG SINGERS BRING NEW LIFE
TO THIS TIMELESS CLASSIC OPERA.
8:00 P.M. MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1992
GEORGIA NEESE GRAY
PERFORMANCE HALL
TOPEKA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
1/2 Price for KU Students!!!
100's
Classified Directory
1/2
**Announcements**
105 Personal
110 Business
120 Personal
130 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
X
300's
100s Announcements
105 Personal
D. Turnbull??? Black-balled!!! Professional Jeal-
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
110 Bus. Personal
$*500'DAY IN YOUR MAIL BOX*) $\cdot$ $1$ +self
tampers (ampprox)
A S A P K P. O. P.
40248381 B 40248381 C
BACK IN STOCK Super Hot Rayan Signet Sunglasses. Black & gold @ The Etc. Shop 843-6611 B.C.AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop Classic to computerized. Shop body available. American motorcycle repair and accessory shop. Certified BMW, VISA, MasterCard & discover cards accepted
S.JON'S
NOTICE
Jon's Notes, new to KU,
offers professionally
taken lecture notes:
Jon's Notes is located in the
Helping Good Students become Great Students!
Jon's Notes is located in the
Jayhawk Bookstore
For a List of Classes Call:
811 737 E 93 50 30
Kennel Crest
Country Club for Pets
A boarding kennel with your pet in mind.
Bernese Mountain Dog
Now is the time to make reservations for Spring Break
*boarding dogs & cats
*heat & A/C
*heat & A/C
- individual inside outside runs
Located west on Highway 40 to
County Road 442 (Stull Road)
west on 442 2.3 miles.
(913)87-6920
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Call Today!
AIR CROSSING
AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
Malcolm, Bring friends to the Oread Room in the Kuala Lumpur 7:30 p.m. tonight. We'll talk about the history of the city and the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us think about the civilization that "new Analysis of Western Civilization" makes us thinking
Your chance for an exciting
BRYAN TRAVEL COLLEGE
---
career in the trave industry in just 17 weeks!
BROOK TRAVEL COLLEGE
Day classes - 17 weeks
Evening classes - 30 weeks
Call for a brochure!
1527 Fairlaun, Topeka
272-0889
1-800-255-3507
120 Announcements
DOUGLASCOUNTY RAPE VICTIMSUPPORT
CVWVW
Confidential assistance 24 hours to headquarters
Counselment Center at 82-128 or KU Intl Center If
you need help.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Gas & Leanish Peer Consulting. A friendly, under-
standing team of counselors, registered by counsellor, Headquarters 841-824 or 824-7305.
Homeraising . . . looking for solutions to your housing needs? This may be just for you. Shared housing, a shared ownership, and personal security. O叫M.O M.E. (4) or 4434 (4) either Tuesday. That from day 9 to 10 20
PREPAREING FOR EXAMS workshop. Wednesday, February 26. 7-9 p.m. 403 Wescott. Free time management, concentration, memory and attention. Presented by the Student Assistance Center
READ THIS! **Reading for Comprehension and Indicative Practice** 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Six hours of instruction. Register and pay $1 materials by f.5 p.m. Wednesday, February 26, in the Student Center 133
SOUTHADRE ISLAND
Condominiums for Spring Break
$25 per person per night / off beach
$25 per person per day on front
1-800-422-3121
1-800-422-3121
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is someone, call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass Headquarters Counseling Center
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support KU
You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support KU
TESTY?
Preparing for Exams Workshop
Learn time management,
review & memory techniques
test-taking strategies
Wednesday, February 26,
7-9 p.m.
4025 Wescoe
offered by the Student Assistance Center
READ THIS!
Reading for Comprehension & Speed
Thursdays, February 27.
March 5 and 19
(six hours of instruction)
The Student Assistance Center
130Entertainment
Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under
Across the bridge on Massachusetts. Call 817-687-4727
CANCIN SPRING BREAK of "92!" Seven night packages from $199. Lowest prices guaranteed!
140 Lost-Found
Found Female gray tabby cat at 24th and Ousdahl.
If yours, call 749-360.
MISSING: Kelly green canvas tote. Last spotted in Watson Library reference department on Saturday January 25, 2016. Research project, 40 homework papers and tax research project, 79-831. Reward available and no price.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25, 1992
13
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn hundreds weekly study envelopes at home. Local businesses will provide all materials. Send SASET to Homemaking Box 1821. Oakland OAKS 65062. immediate response.
Attention College students. The Kansas Nat'l Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. To see if you qualify, call De Witt 842-9293.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan girls/boy/summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterboarding, gymnastics, scuba diving, swimming, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1,060 or more per week. Claire Seereg, 736 Maple, IL 41009, 708-444-2444
Control Desk Operator, Jaybow. Fridays 6 p.m.
la m. $4.25 per hour. Must be 21 years old, have
previous experience in bowling center, know prin-
cipes and rules of bowling, be self-motivated and
have a strong commitment to student denti-
tion. Apply Kansas and Burge Union Person-
sions Office, Level 5, Building EOE
Coordinator for Student Senate Transportation Board needed. Responsible for administering day-to-day business, including service contracts, and serving as Board's spokesperson and liaison to the general Public Student monthly position. 20 hours wk, $400 monthly for Summer 1992. Pick application information from the Student Senate office. 40 Kansas Application deadline Wednesday, February 19th.
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING - Students Needed!
Flight Attendants, CarineBee, Carriage Staff, Gift Shop,
Tour Guides, Waiter/Waitress etc. Holiday, Summer,
and Career Employment available. No Experience
needed. Call 412-358-6000.
FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM
Fraternities, sororites, student clubs. Earn up to $100 in one week. Plus receive a $1000 bonus your self. And A FREE WATCH just for calling 1-890-932-0528. Ext 65.
Harperport Stylist or nail technician - part-time or full time call 842-1978
Need extra cash? Earn $100 weekly processing mail at in家 your spare time. It works! Send SASE. Erickson, 3421 M St. NW, Suite 1308, Washington, DC 20077
OVERSEAS JOBS 3000-2000 mo. Summer, Jr.
roundtable jobs All fields info. into
info files All fields info. into
Photographers needed. Self motivated and enthusiastic individuals apply in person or Picture Them.
health fields. Season dates. June 26 to August 21st.
Good Salary. Room & Board. and some travel
required. Sign up in Placement Center. Call
Jewish; i944; 413-2200
Spend the summer in the Catskill Mtn. of NY
Receive a meaningful summer experience working
in a residential camp for people with develop-
mental impairments, or as a Counselor,
Program Leaders, Cabin Leaders, and
Nurses. All students are encouraged to apply
especially those who are majoring or considering alied
careers.
SWIMMING LESSONS MANAGER (614) at
308-729-8800 or swimmings manager. Applications are available at
www.swimminglessons.com.
WANTED Knowledgeable tutor for MATH 647
Galerie 2001
225 Professional Services
POOL MANAGER. City of Edison is taking application
at Ederda City Hall 7th and Marine
at Ederda City Hall 7th and Marine
Driver Education offered mid Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
Driver Education offered five Midwest Driving
Schools. These schools offer optional training
obtainable, transportation provided 841
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
16 East 13th 842-1133
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to
your home or office. Studentrates. 842-2344
Government photo passports, immigration,
portfolios
/B&W call. Call Tern Swell 794-801-6352
Model Photography, Model Portfolio Wedding & portrait. Instant ID photos student contact calls
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
191-487-6887
DUI/TRAFFIC
- FREE Initial Consultation Elizabeth Leach
16 East 13th 749-0087
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
927/12 Mass. 841-1071
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law
823 Missouri 843-4023
and most other legal matters
Reliable experienced woman wants to clean you.
. Call Nina 841-3640.
Tired of crowded tutored sessions, highrates? *Private French lessons*. Callen *Callen*
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 842-2603 days or evenings.
1+ Typing/WF Letters, term papers, resumes,
682-474-854 or 50 wk days anytime wkends
Resumes and cover letters. Fast and affordable
recruiting materials to help you find the job.
Ask about our Referral Dataset. MacHuseens
and Resumes.
Hardware
Perfect IBM Compatibility Word Processing
Inkjet Printer, ear oreard Corners, no calls
Copier, hardcover, paper, booklet
Word processing, applications, term papers,
disseminates, resumes. Editing, composition, rush
processes. Word processing.
For Laser or Do Matrix printing of your PC files or rental of our device at 841-0311
National Services
From Quality Tying to Mailing List Entry Maintenance, Production, and Personalized PC Training. For Experience and Reliability call Louse at 843-402 with your ideas
Ks Professional Word Processing, accurate and
affordable, caller1: 841-6345
affordable, call after 1 p.m. 841-6953
PINK ALKA MODEL Get an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for success! Now! Call NOW! 749-1090
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1990 diamond back apex, 20 inch, full downe, well
maintained, combat ready, 3800-841-5496
**Spring Special** 385 28 MH computer, **4 MB RAM**, 1.2 & 1.4 Floppy, **10 MB Hard Drive**, **14* Super HDD**, **MH RAM**, 100 keyboard,令牌机 case MS-DOS 3.0, Serial mouse, $145.00, Bargain Bayes 822-127.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture framing, precints and costume jewellery, toys and comic books, Playboks, Penthouses, vintage clothing, books, carnival glass, Maxfield Parish, art deco advertising materials, art prints, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insurers, wholesale merchandise, souvenirs, stuff it will bow you away! QUANTRIL'S FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire, Open every Friday, Sat and Sun 12-5m. For boot rental for 148-646-3232
Attention Randa and D1a. Worked equipment for the AH-132. Technique Turneration M -7000 UV sub cathodes, Technique Turneration M -7000 UV sub cathodes.
Bicycle women's Schwimn 10 speed with Gen. set $809-541-1312
1990 Ford Mustang GT 5.0 eng. Allod all-power
Interior tint. Wint T1, $119.993-$141.332
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and sorters.
$49.00 and up on useage. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-025
Dynacop 80-watt amp, PAT-Y preampl, sony
Nikon 70mm Star X100 printer, hardy
$425.00
FOR SALE. Imagewriter Printer Practically
new $2,900 negotiable 1-268-3580
For Sale: Cheap! Olympic weight set w/har. Like new, Call John at 865-4065
For Sale, Men *Cairn Boots* RB. 49* a size 9tures
Shoes, Gray, good condition, 40* Fits Carey 749-
85*
Guitar & Amp Sale. 20.25% off, Hayes House of
Music 945. Mass. 842-5183
250ft water $600. $800 for work well. Call 814-2435
Miracle Video. Adult movies for sale. From $99.
New Orleans, Marsh Gras, Planned flare Feb. 27
New York, Lackawanna, Penn State, 86401414
NOTEBOOK computer, 386x80/20 RAM, 20 MD
硬盘, mouse software. Steve. 842395
Nature paper writers new biobrief WProc 64H +
Science paper writers 6400, 6400A, 6400B
One way ticket to Port Louisau Sunday March 4th from KC $175. Bk 841-0142 to 80 am a
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Genuine ROLLERBLADE skates for the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the best. All models available. Many colors. 843-2124
SHARP LAPTOP Computer 6408 x 3/12 drive 5 1/4
part SFF-1.0 Modern Software Manual Expand
part SFF-1.0
Student Basketball tickets. KU vs OSU. OSU
momentum support ticket offer. 802,877
Two sets of student tickets for sale. Best offer. Call Jasma 864-8255
340 AutoSales
1956 Plymouth V6, 2 LR, AM/FM, Auto,
clean,rmsGreat $0700,ROU 748-3999
1978 Jaguar, X16, beautiful car 34,900 miles. Kenwood Storage System. $798 callable at 814,437 414
Solar System ($186.00) annual at $490.00
188 Toyota Corolla LLE ps/cs automatic at $490.00
842 Honda Civic LX ps/cs automatic at $490.00
2040 after 89 m. or leave message.
1987 Mercury Lyra - Automatic, A/C, Cassette.
187 Mercury Lynx - Automatic / A/C, Cassette 4,
doors. 56k. Excellent condition. $300-852-5232
360 Miscellaneous
Doing research on teacher misconduct. Seeking interviews with students who believe they have misconduct.
lifestyle jewelry stores music instu-
mentals, camera rentals,
bakery Jawaykwax & Jewelry.
8409 4th St.
212-763-5222
BUV,SELL,LOANCASH
SUPPORT CLOTHING OPTIONAL RECREATION.
MARVEL
THE CHAPMAN
Desperately need 3- KU-MU tickets. Please call Dave or Linda at 1-492-5967
Basketball Tickets to S.U. U. M. u game!
Mackenzie ON-Student tickets! *ckl* 866-7521
*ckl*
Bring up:
24 books per child; five cents to complete collections
total paid dollar. 822-1871. Leave message
BASEBALL CARDSPORTS MEMORABILIA
CORNER BREAKS
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break within changing your eating habits. OMNITRITION
10-20-30
Buy • Sell • Trade
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues - Sat
405 For Rent
Wanted: one non-student B-Ball ticket for Kansas
vs. Missouri; B· March 8· Call L94 769-265
370 Want to Buy
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry,
rare coins. etc. Call David 841-2065.
400s
1 bedroom basement apartment, close to K. U. and downtown, $25 per month for rent, deposit required.
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing it & bedroom suite. In line with our business. Fully equipped kitchen. Laundry room. Playground. Pool on-site management. Heat, AC; water and trash pad. Champion孵屋! 1749 W. Church Call Chess
Real Estate
合
Artisy, 2 Bdrm, 3rd floor, floors near campus $350.841*STAR (7827)
Cory, 1. Bdmr, wood floors, near campus $295 841.
STAR (7827)
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, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informally advertised on this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment
in Westfield, NJ. Call 1-800-759-3456,
mim.binders.com. Call list Management
inc.
Available now Spacious 3 BDR Duplex fully equipaged room close to campus and airport.
Copie Victorian one bedroom, available March 18,
convenient to KU and Downsland. $355 m. Built in
bookshoes, stained glass, garage available
482-6384
DEPRESATELY NEEDED: Person to sublease
desperately need the gas. cable panel. Rent NEQG.
gas pipe.
Free Feb. Reb. two bd. apt. $95.00 Ends July.
Wet Infirmary Call: 429-3472
is where the
❤️
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
G got a group? Restored 8 bed 4 bath fireplace, wood floors, W/D, w/R near front BR17-3827 (STAB 3827)
Heatherwood Apartments 1. 2, and 3 bedroom.
Room A was built until the end of May. On route 843-4754
Heatherwood Valley Resort
Spacious 1.2 & 3 bedrooms
available for the mature
home. Two full baths.
Includes covered parking.
www.mining.net/inperception
available on business days.
2000 Heatherwood Valley
843-4754
Naismith Place
*BKA organiza'tahip:*
*BKB kursu buzak:
*BKB kontrol:
*CAB patl. TV/PIV:
*CAB patl. TV/PIV:
*Inbe. cehkut:
*Office of the Director,
Direc. K.K.
*286th. E. of Korea on
2nd to 54th St.
to 290th St.
*Call for Appointment:
*Phone: 3-877-555-1234
FOUSE: Nice 2 bedrooms with attached garage,
dwardwood, new vinyl, ceiling fans, CAM,
vasher/dryer, fenced yard. pnk, references,
deposit $000 month 749-6411
Hillview Apts $15 lease signing signings! & 2 bedroom apartments $23 & $30 plus deposit. On loan $80-$120 per month.
South Pointe APARTMENTS
EDDINGHAM
PLACE
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
No Appt. Necessary
apartments at an Affordable Price!!
New locations on campus: 1, 2; and 3 bedroom apartments. Washer(dryers, microwaves, ceiling fans, mini-bins). Call now for an appointment Mon-Fri. 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 749-1566
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
looking for a place? Copy 2 bedroom apt. in the Vest Hills Complex; Available now for sublease through July $398/month + utilities. Negotiable security. Call 864-2669
841-5444
- Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
•New kitchens
•Carpet colors:
Park25
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT
CALL US FIRST
MANAGEMENT INC
图
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
• 2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
• Large bedrooms & closets
• Pool & volleyball
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhouses for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath townhomes
- Volleyball Court
2166 W 26th 843-6446
- 2 Pools
- 4 stops on property
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
- On KU bus route--
4 stops on property
Louisiana Place Apts. Now leasing nice 28R ApT
property with beautiful view of the city. Call
Dorothy B228.
- 2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
SUNRISE VILLAGE
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
840 A45
SUNWATER RESOURCES CO., LTD.
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
842-1455
- Luxurious 2,3 & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
* Garages; 2½ Baths
* Microwave Ovens
* Some with Fireplaces
* On KU Bus Route
* Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
--is a great place to live.
Need Quest? Great 2 HR apt. for Grad student or
classroom $350+ LOW utilities. Pool, Near campus.
Current residents moving after 4 yrs. Available in
April. 841-2727
---
meadowbrook
Come Visit Meadowbrook Apts
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom ants, to choose from.
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
It's Time to Step Up To MEADOWBROOK
It's Time to Step Up To
SHORT TERM LEASES NOW AVAILABLE on studio, 2br apt, and 21bath townhouse
TRADIURLE
841-7233
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths,
close to campus, furnished. Call 749-896-786
"The Woods"
Sublease Studio Apartment, $295 per month. Call
843-1232
Save $$$ with each new deposit
Colony Woods Apartments
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
- Walk to K.U.
Place. Water paid, furnished. From March to August. Close to downtown & campus. Call 865-4386.
Sublease July withoption for year after, large 1 BR,
Cloyd Woods, Water paid, B23-0794
- On Bus Route
- Front door bus service
- Dine Anytime meals
*Front door bus service
- Heated Pool
* 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
- Laundry Facilities
* Dishwasher
* Microwaves
* Mini Blinds
* Water Paid
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and GradStudents!! ---- You can getrid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
- Weekly maid service
Basketball Court
- Macintosh Computer Room
Call now to reserve your room.
Plus...
Location-Lifestyle The Best Value In Town 842-5111 open 7 days a week
- Flexible Leasing
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Boardwalk
apartments
1&2 Bedroom apts.
Now Leasing for Summer &
Fall Move ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
430 Roommate Wanted
Summer sublease, two bedroom apartment,
ground level, a c, fifth floor. 841-7395; after 50
months.
Two bedroom apartment on bus route. W/D/
44th month + utilities. Call after 5:30 p.m (morning).
Very nice 1 bd. apart, near 9k and Kasilov. KU hus
runs $600 more very specious. Availabie 21-90-8.
Hold up the phone for more details.
2 roommates need ASAP for more, 4 bbr, NR
Lawrence home. Male, non-smokers preferred,
2 baths, DW, W/D, Microwave, $215.00 utilities,
cable付板, Javai 841-4698
Hurry. We need a roommate to share a townhouse on bus route B, 1/3, 1/12ths, $160/M². Flexible roommates.
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-631-631
FEBUARY RENT FREE - Roommates wanted to share duplex in OP by JCCC 30 min from KU w/car pool available 2 bdrms vacant. FREE Roommates wanted to socialize at Call Mike at 1-451-625 for details
ROOMMATE WANTed to townhouse at Applegate for March 1. W/D, DW,FP. all annuitations.
One female student for a furnished 5 Bldm. Room, located on the west side of parking lot. Anytime 842-753-8922.
- Policy
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to
campus BMO($00, 891-1287)
New-Roommate Matching Service. For the next 23 months it's 'free' after, that until...31 ($1). We check references, give you candidates who meet your requirements. Call Alisse Dialen at 854-326-9046.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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
Centered lines count as 7 words
Roommate needed immediately through by July 200
+ 1/3 utilities. Townhouse and amenities, great
room!
Summer roommate needed: quiet spacious apartment 3 story from campus. Owned furnished bedrooms.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
very nice 1.8R plus staircase left apartment for spring summer, and/or next year. $1800 plus tax. Call 914-232-6730.
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University Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
He's good but I think he's fakin it
Centaur rodeos
14
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, February 25. 1992
Med Center tries to draw students to rural medicine
Continued from Page 1
practice in Kansas that have a great need," he said.
Clawson said faculty members might encourage students to pursue their fields because they had found them rewarding.
But the bill has caused Med Center administrators to move quickly toward a solution to the problem.
Ehrich said he had scheduled a vote on the bill Wednesday but received a visit from the Med Center's associate budget director, Marlin Rein, who urged him to postpone the decision.
The letter requested that a vote on the bill be delayed until mid-March, when the academy and the Med Center hoped to introduce substitute recommendations.
"We have an ally in the Kansas Academy," said Rein, who has met with academy representatives twice.
Rein said that the University had studied new incentives for primary-care physicians for the past two months, but that the bill had created a receptive audience at the Statehouse.
Clawson also denied that the Med Center had begun investigating ways to influence students toward family practice as a result of the bill.
"To say we are doing all of this in response to a bill, although I know the sponsors would like to think so, is incorrect," he said.
But Clawson said some time frames had been stepped up in order to make recommendations in March.
"If that bill were passed, the university would lose a number of people looking for other positions," he said. "A lot of people at the University would be very unhappy."
The Med Center already has a number of programs in place to encourage students to enter primary care in rural areas.
Recipients of the Kansas Medical Scholarship have tuition paid in return for a period of service in a rural community.
Another program, the Rural Health Bridging Program, pairs physicians in primary-care residencies with communities. The community provides a stipend for physicians during their residences in exchange for service in the community.
Although lawmakers think these programs are not doing the job, Lasseter is not convinced that improving KU programs would wipe out the health care shortage.
"The problem is systemwide," he said. "It is not just the one institution."
Lasseter said he intended to remain in Atchison after the required payback period had expired.
But he said that unless the state came up with financial incentives for rural practice, it could not expect young doctors to choose the same path he had.
"I look at this community, and it's hard to turn away," he said. "Whenever I consider these offers, it is very difficult because I believe in what I'm doing here. But at the same time, when you are raising a family, you can't help but be tempted."
Father Peter
Derek Nolen / KANSAN
been a sassetter, Atchison pediatrician, chose to practice in a rural community after graduating from the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Sonogram expert testifies in fraud trial
The Associated Press
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Five patients of a doctor accused of fraud were pregnant when he said they were, contrary to prosecutors' contentions, another doctor testified Monday.
However, the women may well have been less far along in their pregnancies than Dr. Cecil Jacobson said, testified Dr. Stuart Campbell, a songram expert from London. Campbell examined about 180 pictures from ultrasound examinations conducted by Jacobson.
In four other cases, Campbell also said he had determined that the patients were pregnant.
Campbell testified as the trial for Jacobson, a former Washington area fertility specialist accused of fathering as many as 75 of his patients' children, began its third week in U.S. District Court.
Jacobson is charged with 52 counts of fraud and purity injury he used his sperm to inseminate unknowing patients and used hormone injections to convince some women they were pregnant when they weren't.
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23rd & Ousdahl
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KIEF'S
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24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66042
CD & TALES - AUDIO/VIDEO - CAR STEREOS
HAIR SALON
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PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
--rea. $5.15
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Any 1 Pizza
842-1212
Drs. Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
FREE CONTACTS*
One pair of disposable contacts to present lens wearer
FREE SOLUTION*
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CLASSES
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coating on old
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842-6555
Walk-ins Welcome
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30 min. Wolff XL Beds
Bring this coupon t 2 for the price of 1, 4 for 2,or 6 for 3 Valid only Fri 5p.m.-9 p.m. and Sat 5p.m.-9 p.m.
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Exp 3-13-92
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How You Like Pizza At Home.
get
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N. of 15th
841-8002
839 Town
WATERBEDCONDITIONER
Large 8oz. Bottle for the Standard 4oz. Price
841-7900
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Golf Course
Hours:
Mon. Thurs.
4pm-1am
Fri. Sat.
11am-2am
Sun. 11am-1am
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(913) 841-3287 Coupon Expires 5-31-92
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$191
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Extra toppings:
$0.47 per topping per pizza
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Open
Dail 10-8
Sat 10-4
Sun 12-4
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LAWRENCE, KS 842-7378
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847.7176
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 60¢ game during open bowling.
THE BUM
STEER
BBQ Sandwich Basket for $3.99
--rea. $5.15
60c
Bowling
(Exp 3\17\92)
V124 EXP. 5/31/92 UDK
VISA MasterCard
2554 Iowa
841-SMOK"E"
Jaybowl
COFFEE SHOP
Kansas Union
Level One
864-35-15
Free Delivery $6.00 Min.
- GAMES
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10%
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841-1294 not valid with any other discounts
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Open Thursday until 7 pm!
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ANY LARGE PIZZA
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EXPIRES. 3/24 #0557
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EXP.2/25/92
"We Pile It On!"
842-3232
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ON MON
& TUES
842-0600
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NOT VALID WITH OTHER COUPON SPECIALS
D
Any one of our
9" Pizzas & a
Pitcher of Beer
Any one of our
12" Pizzas & a
Pitcher of Beer
MD
675 with this coupon
PIZZA
§375 with this coupon
TACO JOHN'S
DAYS INN
MEAL FOR "2"
PRINCE PIZZA
SINGLE TOPPING
2 SALADS
2 COKES
BUY A SUPER NACHOS AND A DRINK GET A SUPER NACOS FREE!
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Exp.3/10/92
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1234 Street, Exe. F01/02
MEAL FOR "4"
KINGS PIZZA
SINGLE TOPPING
4 SALADS
PITCHER OF COKE
309 Iowa Street Exp.5/31/92
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1101 W.6th
$7 95
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Valentino's Restaurant
$1.00
VALUE
DINE-IN OR CARRY-OUT
EXP 12:31:92
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50% off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
Pizza • Lasagna • Salads • Spaghetti • Manicotti
FREE DELIVERY
544 West 23rd
Expires3/10/92
749-4244
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
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Natural Body Care Products
Exp. 3/16/92
841-0100
4
820-822 Mass.
Johnny's
CLASSIC BURGERS
99¢
900 Illinois
/4 lb. Hamburger Coupon Required No Limit
Check inside paper for everyday specials. EXPIRES MARCH 92
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,NO.103
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY,FEBRUARY 26.1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Interviewing begins for exec vice chancellor
No minorities included in field
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
A 10-member search committee appointed by Chancellor Gene Budig has begun interviewing candidates for KU's executive vice chancellor position.
Frances Ingemann, head of the search committee, said she would not release the number of candidates, who were selected in early February based on their resumes.
"We are interviewing more than three." Ingemann said.
She said that at least one candidate already had been interviewed by the search committee and that the others should be interviewed in the next four weeks.
Ingemann would not release the names of the candidates, who are all white males.
"We don't want any candidates to withdraw from consideration prematurely," she said. "Sometimes people get very strange ideas about whether internal or external candidates will be given priority. We just don't want to scare anyone away."
Ingemann said the committee did everything it could to attract minority and women candidates when the position was advertised.
"But when we looked at the resumes, the resumes of those candidates were not as impressive as those we will interview," she said.
Seven of the 10 members of the search committee were contacted yesterday. All said Ingermann would be the only committee member to comment.
Ingemann said candidates would meet with the search committee and KU administrators during the first round of interviews.
After the first round of interviews, the search committee will recommend three candidates to the chancellor, Ingemann said. The chancellor will conduct second interviews with the candidates.
During the second round of interviews, the candidates will meet with KU administrators, faculty and students, she said.
Ingemann said the search committee hoped to have the position filled by July.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, would not say he was a candidate for the permanent position. But he would not deny he was, either.
Shankel has worked as the University's interim executive vice chancellor since Judith Ramaley left the position in 1990.
"I only will say that I enjoy working with the chancellor and the other administrators very much," he said. "But any comment on the candidates must come from the search committee."
The 64-year-old Shankel said he was not contemplating retirement.
"I will stay at the University of Kansas in whatever capacity they feel I can best serve the University," he said. "I presume that will be teaching and research, but we'll just have to wait and see."
Ingemann said age would not be a consideration when the committee made its recommendations to the chancellor.
"There is no mandatory retirement age," she said. "Therefore,age will not be a consideration."
Shankel served as the executive vice chancellor from 1974 to 1980 and worked as the interim executive vice chancellor in 1987 before Ramaley was appointed. He also served as the acting chancellor in 1980 and 1981.
Shankel, professor of biochemistry,
resigned his position as executive vice
chancellor in 1980. When he resigned,
he cited his desire to return to teaching
as his primary reason.
Ted Vaggalis, graduate teaching assistant in philosophy who was a member of the search committee in 1987 when Ramley was appointed, said Shankel, who was the head of that committee, should be a candidate.
"If he isn't a candidate, that would surprise me," Vaggalis said. "He would make a great executive vice chancellor.
"I worked with him on that search committee, and he was for thright and very much in tune with what was happening. He's not power player, but he knows what the real concerns of the University are."
Vaggalis said the names of the candidates whom the search committee recommended to the chancellor were released to the public in the 1987 search.
Ingemann said such a decision would have to be made by the chancellor.
E
Derek Nolen/KANSAN
Carrie Meeks, St. Louis junior, takes a break from studying for her architecture class. Meeks was studying yesterday in Anschutz Science Library for a coming test before she fell asleep.
Turn out the lights...
Senate OKs bill tightening DUI rules
By Gayle Osterberg
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The chances of being charged with driving under the influence of alcohol could increase significantly if a proposed bill becomes a law, officials sav.
The Senate yesterday unanimously approved a bill that would lower the illegal intoxication level for drivers from a blood-alcohol content of .10 to .08 percent.
A person would have to drink one-and-a-half two beers in an hour to register. 08 percent, depending on that person's weight and on how often they drank, according to Lawrence police. That person would need to drink about three beers in an hour to register. 10 percent.
Ken Clark, a public information officer in the Kansas Department of Transportation, said, "I think you could safely say (the bill) will double the number of people arrested and charged with driving
under the influence," Clark said.
Under the orders of a man,
He said more than 9,000 people had been convicted
of crimes committed in Kansu.
Penalties for the conviction include fines up to $1,000 and sentences of up to one year in jail.
Because the bill originated in the House and has been amended, a house committee must review the changes and re-approve the bill before it can be signed into law by the governor.
Current law states that drivers are intoxicated at 10 percent, and that the charge cannot be overturned by the defense on the terms that the drivers were not actually impaired.
That law would not change under the bill.
That law would not charge under the bill. However, the bill would allow drivers who register between .08 and .10 percent to protest the charge on the grounds that they were not impaired. But some lawmakers said winning such a case would be difficult.
"I don't think it would be very easy to show that somebody with that level of intoxication was not
impaired," said Michael Heim, a legislative researcher at the Statehouse. "It is a tightening of the drunk-driving laws for sure."
the United Airlines.
The bill originated in the House last session, and was passed unanimously. The Senate Judiciary Committee conducted hearings on the bill earlier in February and made passes before recommending that the Senate pass the legislation.
In Senate debate yesterday, two senators expressed concern that stricter laws would contribute to prison overcrowding.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who heads the Senate committee, said he disagreed with senators using that reasoning in opposing the bill.
"What I hear them saying is that the highways are a better place for drunk drivers than jails," he said.
Winter said he had participated in a test sponsored by Lawrence police that measured a driver's competence after having a few beers.
"I can tell you that level of intoxication is very dangerous," he said.
Kerrey wins South Dakota primary; Bush hit by protest vote
The Associated Press
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Bob Kerney won the South Dakota primary yesterday and is the latest Democrat to gain a regional victory in a curious presidential campaign lacking a national front-runner. President Bush ran unopposed but was buffeted by a strong GOP protest vote.
"I've hit my stride," Kerrey said. He said his showing had catapulted him into the thick of the Democratic race.
Kerley, from next-door Nebraska, had 40 percent of the vote with 91 percent of the precincts tallied. His farm-state rival, Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, had 26 percent while Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton crossed regional lines and ran a respectable third at 19 percent.
Paul Tsongas was a far-away fourth, unable to capitalize on last week's New Hampshire victory. Jerry Brown trailed and was certain to lose his eligibility for federal campaign matching funds.
With 90 percent of the GOP vote tallied, Bush had 69 percent, and the uncommitted vote tallied 31 percent. The news had to be sobering for the White House, coming on the heels of Pat Buchanan's 37 percent showing in New Hampshire's GOP primary a week ago.
"In this case, the uncommented slate represents an anybody-but-Bush ticket," said political analyst Stuart Rothenberg. "Pat Buchanan campaigned day and night in New Hampshire and drew 37 percent. And here, a
non-existent candidate who didn't campaign drew nearly as much of the vote."
"Tonight, we've struck gold in the black hills of South Dakota," Kerrey said at a victory rally. "There's no question we've gotten a solid victory here and tonight we're going to begin a rush for gold, a rush for delegates in the South and in the West and in other parts of the country."
Buchanan entered the race too late to qualify for the South Dakota primary.
The results closed the campaign book on a preliminary round of single-state contests with few delegates at stake. Next up is a string of delegate-rich contests, many of them in the South.
With the string of big delegate contests just around the corner, South Dakota thus extended a trend of regional favoritism among the Democrats, left one-time front-runner Clinton still without a victory, and wrote a new chapter to Bush's political woes in a time of recession.
The Bush campaign conceded it needs to "work harder" to get the president's message out. But, said representative Tori Clark, "It's not as though we had the full court press going on. It's a little bit of the protest feeling you sense in a place hit hard by recession."
In the Democratic contest, Tsongas offered Kerrey congratulations, but it was tempered.
"It is obvious that the negative advertising worked, and we'll take that into consideration," he said.
Tsongas got one bit of bright news — an endorsement from Gov. William Donald Schaefer one week ahead of Maryland's primary.
With 92 percent of the state's 1,010 precincts tallied, this was the Democratic vote:
Kerrey: 20,785 or 40 percent;
Harkin; 13,521 or 20 percent;
Clinton; 9,865 or 19 percent;
Tsangas; 4,929 or 9 percent;
Isolegas, 4,250 or 9 percent.
Brown: 1.982 or 4 percent.
Among the Republicans, it was Bush with 26,841 votes or 69 percent; uncommitted had 11,907 or 31 percent.
In the race for national convention delegates, Bush was leading for 14; uncommitted for 5.
for 7; Harkin for 5; Clinton for 3.
Among the Democrats, Kerrey led
Health care mattered most to Kerrey voters, according to polling place interviews.
About three in 10 Democrats said they were not satisfied that Clinton had the honesty and integrity to serve effectively as president. The Arkansas governor has been hit with allegations of a 12-year affair and Vietnam-era draft dodging — charges he denies.
A quarter said they were concerned that former Sen. Paul Tsongas' health would interfere with his ability to serve effectively. The former Massachusetts senator had lymphoma in 1983, underwent a bone-marrow transplant and has been pronounced fit enough to run, and serve, by his doctor.
Students make no bones about donating marrow
KU's first bone marrow drive, aimed at minority students, draws 20 donors
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
After confronting fears they might have about surgery, 20KU students registered yesterday to become possible bone marrow donors.
The drive, which was the first of its kind held at KU, targeted minority students. The chance of finding a donor with matching tissue for a patient is difficult, but the match for minorities is even more difficult because they make up a smaller percentage of the donor pool.
Eighteen students registered yesterday were African American, one was white.
The American Red Cross and the National Bone Marrow Donor Program also sponsored the event, which was at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Garth said she was pleased with the turnout. Not everyone who came was eligible to register because of medical reasons, she said.
said Frenchette Garth, president of Zeta Phi Beta sorority, which co-sponsored the drive.
She also said that she expected next year's drive to be more successful.
Giving blood is a simple procedure that causes little pain besides the prick of the needle or the bruise that appears the next day. Thousands of people donate blood everyday.
But donating bone marrow is not as easy.
The students yesterday gave two tablespoons of blood to be tested. Their names will be entered into the computer where a match could be found. If a match is found, the students will be contacted and asked if they would be willing to undergo the surgery.
During the surgery, four to eight tiny incisions are made in the small of the back, from which the marrow is extracted. The procedure usually lasts about an hour.
The donor's body can replace its marrow within about two weeks.
Krista Morgan, Atlanta junior, regis tered to become a donor.
She said she had thought about it for a while and decided that if she were called she would donate her bone marrow.
"A friend of mine was just diagnosed with leukemia and the importance of this was brought to light. "Morgan said.
She said it was like giving someone a second chance.
"I did if for the simple fact that this process could save someone's life, if everything went well." Morgan said.
"I've never donated blood before, but the cause is the main thing that attracted me," she said.
She also has a cousin with sickle cell anemia, a disease that often requires a bone marrow transplant if the patient is to survive.
147
Mike McCartney, lab assistant at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, draws a blood sample from Mariquio Madlock, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, during the National Marrow Donor Program registration drive.
2
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26. 1900
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Massachusetts
841-0100
Buy 12" Sub & receive 2nd for $1.99
Buy 6" Sub & receive 2nd for 99¢
Sub & Stuff®
Sandwich Shop
Expires 5/11/92
1618 W.23rd
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Massachusetts
841-0100
Buy 12" Sub & receive 2nd for $1.99
Buy 6" Sub & receive 2nd for 99¢
Sub&Stuff®
Sandwich Shop
Expires:3/11/92
1619 W.23rd
We are the Manufacturer's outlet store!
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ON CAMPUS
The department of geography colloquium will be at 3:10 p.m. today at 317 Lindley Hall. Donna Luckey, associate professor of architecture and urban design, will deliver a presentation called "Housing, Environment and Settlement Patterns in Costa Rica."
Gamers and Role-Players will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
The Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center
The Juggling Club will meet at 7 tonight at the lower lobby in Lewis Hall.
today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m.
Eighteen guns, a television, a videocassette recorder and $300 cash, valued together at $7,085, were taken between 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. Monday from a home in the 700 block of Mississippi Street. Unidentified individuals pried open the front door to enter the
Support Group for Individuals with Eating Problems will meet at 7:30tonight at the conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
ON THE RECORD
home, Lawrence police reported.
A Lawrence woman was sexually battered at 2:21 a.m. yesterday in her home in the 3700 block of Pinnacle Court, Lawrence police reported. Police have not identified anyone in connection with the battery.
CORRECTION
falsely attributed Information attributed to Cinzia Byrd should have been attributed to Jeainie Johnson.
NEBRASKA
Omaha • 50/33
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO
Denver
59/32
KANSAS
Lawrence
54/35 •
Dodge City • Wichita
60/36
MISSOURI
Kansas City
52/35 St Louis
48/36
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
60/39
3-day outlook
Because of a reporter's error, information in the article "United at church" in yesterday's Kansan was
WEATHER
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
NEBRASKA
Omaha
50/33
COLORADO
Denver
59/32
KANSAS
Lawrence
54/35
MISSOURI
Kansas City
52/35 St Louis
48/36
Dodge City
Wichita
60/36
57/39
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
60/39
3-day outlook
TODAY
Some high clouds, but for the most part, sunny and mild.
TOMORROW
Partly cloudy and mild. NW winds at 5-10 mph.
FRIDAY
Sunny and nice with light winds.
Spring Break Watch
San Francisco 65/47
Phoenix 74/47
Padre Island 62/44
Atlanta 65/48
Fox Lauderdale 81/57
Washington D.C. 54/35
Chicago 40/31
Minneapolis 41/29
Seattle 60/41
Salt Lake City 46/28
54
35
60
39
65
37
SUNSHINE
Today high: 54 low: 35
The Associated Press
Baker's decree appalls Israel
JERUSALEM — Israelis reacted with dismay and anger yesterday to Secretary of State James Baker III's ultimatum that Israel must freeze settlement building or jeopardize 10 billion in U.S. loan guarantees.
Forecast by Brian Loving, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Political analysts said Israelis viewed Baker's move as designed to favor the center-left Labor Party over Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's right-wing Likud bloc in coming national elections. But analysts warned that the move could backfire.
In contrast to Modal's strong language, Foreign Minister David Levy
Modai echoed claims by other Israeli ministers that the U.S. demand to freeze settlement construction was a prelude to forcing total Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories.
"What will be the next condition?" he said. "Maybe less security for the state of Israel?"
Addressing high school students, Modai said that to accept the U.S. ultimatum would invite more pressure.
"It is a gross interference in the internal affairs of the state of Israel," Finance Minister Yitzhak Modai said in an interview with Israel radio.
struck a conciliatory note, telling visiting American Jewish leaders late Monday, "Everything must be done to overcome differences and reach agreement."
But Levy also said, "Israel cannot be seen to be caving in."
It insists the issue is separate from the settlements.
But Israel has become entangled in the U.S.-backed Mideast peace process, which opened its fourth round in Washington on Monday.
Ehud Gol, representative for Shamir, said the government had no official reaction to Baker's move, but he emphasized that Israel was continuing to negotiate with Washington on the loan guarantees.
The United States views the guarantees as leverage for stopping the settlements, which it sees as obstacles to a land-for-peace compromise between the Jewish state and its Arab neighbors.
Israel is seeking the guarantees to get favorable rates on international loans needed to build houses and create jobs for thousands of Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union.
Shamir on Monday renewed his refusal to freeze settlements in the
His hard-line housing minister,
Ariel Sharon, announced Monday that
he had started about 22,000 new hous-
ing units in the occupied territories or
annexed east Jerusalem since 1990.
He said that work on 2,000 new hous-
ing units had begun so far this year and
that 1,000 more would be built soon.
"We cannot, under any circumstances, go along with the principle thatJewshavenrighttoliveinthis or that part of the Land of Israel," Shamir told the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.
occupied territories, which the prime minister views as part of biblical Israel.
Palestinians fear this will add to the estimated 115,000 Jewish settlers in the territories, destroying a chance for a Palestinian state.
The territories, captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war, are home to 1.7 million Palestinians.
Gerald Steinberg, a senior lecturer in political studies at Barlan University and an expert on international relations, said yesterday that both Israel and the United States were at an impasse and needed to negotiate a solution.
Former KU student dies in Zambia
Kansanstaffreport
Brian Kaonga, a former KU student, died Thursday at his home in ___
Kaonga,
who was ill
when he left
the University
in December
for his home
in Chingola.
Zambia,
died of acute ill.
100
Brian Kaonga
ness, said Gerald Harris, director of international student services.
Kaoga, a junior last semester,
majored in computer science. He
was a member of the African
Affairs Student Association.
The hospital has not told the University about the exact cause of death, Harris said.
Memorial services for Kaoga will be at 5 p.m. Saturday at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
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Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 60454
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6004, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Teaching teachers to teach
Program tries to boost students in science,math
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By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
OLATHE — Get them hooked, and get them hooked early.
That is the advice KU professors have for elementary and junior high teachers who are trying to get more experienced.
For the past year and a half, the KU School of Education has run a program that offers classes to teachers in hopes of improving students' weak performances in science and math nationwide.
Carl Bricker, professor emeritus of chemistry, said U.S. students' lack of interest in the two fields was a problem that seemed to snowball after ninth grade.
Surveys done by education services across the nation have shown that U.S. students have done poorly in math and science as compared to students in other countries.
Bricker retired from teaching at the University of Kansas nine years ago, but continues to teach elementary and junior high teachers physical science and mathematics. Olafe as part of the School of Education's program
The National Science Foundation gave the school a grant for the program.
Doug Giesler, junior high science teacher in Olathe, said there was a danger in getting technical or abstract too soon with science because students would become bored or overwhelmed.
By taking this class, teachers learn experiments from KU professors that they can use in their classrooms.
"In science you need some degree of 'Wow.'"
Giesler said. "Then you get some real thinking. You need to pull a kid toward an answer, not throw it down their throat."
He said that by taking the class, he was learning some fresh ideas of presenting science to his students.
Sharon Moran, third-grade elementary teacher, said that it was difficult for elementary teachers to teach science.
"They're afraid to teach science," she said. "They feel they don't have the background or the understanding."
In a class taught by Clark Bricker, a retired KU chemistry professor, Kansas City area science teachers can get college credit and improve their teaching methods.
Michael Gaines, professor of systems and ecology, said the lack of money was a problem teachers needed to overcome.
"You can't slow down just because the money is not there," he said. "You still have to be creative. You just have to find ways to be creative without using a lot of money."
Kansan staff report
The Joint Committee on State Building Construction voted yesterday to approve a $1 million appropriation to plan reconstruction of Hoch Auditorium.
Committee approves cash for Hoch planning
The recommendation will be considered in the coming weeks by the full House Appropriations Committee as part of the Board of Regents budget.
The $1 million appropriation was recommended Friday by a House Appropriations subcommittee. When the appropriation was recommended by the subcommittee, it was subject to a review by the joint committee, which comprises three senators and three representatives.
Warren Corman, director of facilities for the Regents, said approval from the joint building committee was important
to the project.
"I think the recommendation of the joint committee carries a lot of weight," he said. "We should they want to do juggs
THE U.S. CAPITOL
done because it is made up of House and Senate members. Their recommendation was very necessary and very positive."
Jon Jesserdan, KU's legislative liaison, said the recommendation would be considered when the full House Appropriation Committee considered the Hoch plan.
"The recommendations are key to the appropriations process," he said. "The committee usually relies heavily on its suggestions."
Subcommittee may not favor NCAA bill
By Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writer
It also would ban penalties for a coach or player who has not violated
"The question now is, do we have students in Kansas universities being
TOPEKA - A House subcommittee probably will not recommend that the Legislature try to regulate the NCAA's national policy, two of the three subcommittee members said yesterday.
State Rep. Robert Krehbiel, D-Pretty Prairie, heads a three-member subcommittee assigned to study a bill that would prevent the NCAA from punishing athletes for the crimes of others. The subcommittee met yesterday to discuss the legislation.
Promoters of the bill had suggested that because the NCAA's headquarters are in Overland Park, the Legislature had the authority to regulate the organization's nationwide policies.
But Krehbiel said he did not think the subcommittee would recommend a bill that would set standards for national operation. Krehbiel said he would prefer a bill that affected only Kansas institutions.
The bill's main provisions would prohibit sanctions against a member college or university unless the NCAA could prove that a responsible administrator knowingly broke the rules.
deprived of their right to participate in
their work; and someone else
elseblocks the rules"s hesa
State Rep. Don Smith, D-Dodge City, a subcommittee member, said he would not support a bill that had national ramifications.
"I don't think we can do anything nationally," he said. "We lack the jurisdiction to legislate what may happen in our state." He added, "do what we can in the state of Kansas."
He said he would consider any bill the committee recommended to be an improvement of the situation.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-State, the bill's leading supporter
"Even if (the bill is not national in scope), it would be a major step forward by itself because it gives the message to the organization to do more," Winter said. "The goal here is to make things better."
In the first day of discussion, the subcommittee questioned NCAA representatives about the procedures the NCAA used in its investigations and about whether the NCAA had any regulations that would punish only the individuals involved with the violations.
The subcommittee will make recommendations to the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, which might then send the bill to the House floor for a vote.
Speaker urges war against social problems
By Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
PETER HILTON
Peggy Woods / KANSAN
When Mary Francis Berry is in Washington, D.C., at a conference or meeting, she says she does not look at the influential people sitting at the tables smoking cigars.
She looks at the people who are waiting on them.
Mary Francis Berry takes the time to autograph a copy of Brian Lanker's book, "I Dream a World" for Wendi Coleman.
ing on it.
Berry encourages others to look with what she called her "different angle of vision."
In her speech last night, which was sponsored by the Black Student Union, Berry, a commissioner on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, stressed the importance of looking at issues and education in new and different ways.
The office of minority affairs, Panhellenic, Interfraternity Council and Delta Sigma Theta sorority also sponsored the program. About 60 people attended the speech at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
"Looking at diversity is absolutely required. It is in everyone's own interest," she said. "We need to look at old things in new ways. This type of education is absolutely necessary to live in and be productive in this society."
"They say there are quotas, and the best opportunities and jobs go to people of color and women," she said. "But if we look at history and see that the quotas for the best jobs, opportunities and education were zero for people of color in the early 1960s, but men, the issue looks a lot different. Who was complaining about quotas then?"
Berry urged people to start their own war against social problems and not to depend on politicians to solve all the problems.
"You don't have to be on one side of
"Dr. Berry showed us that equality and civil rights are not ideas limited to a particular time," he said. "They're important in Black History Month, but they are important in the other 11 months of the year also."
any issue, be for both, "she said. If they ask you if you are for affirmative action or equal qualifications, say both. If they ask you if you are the middle class or the poor, say both.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, introduced Berry at the program.
Tanning store owner plea bargains convicted on sexual battery charges
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
The owner of a Lawrence tanning salon yesterday entered a plea bargain and was convicted of the sexual battery last year of two of his female customers.
A KU student and a Lawrence woman filed sexual battery charges in July and September of 1991 against Gerry Meyer, owner of European Tan, Health and Hair Salon, 1601 W. 23rd St.
Meyer had been charged with two counts of sexual battery that were reduced to one count of sexual battery through the plea bargain, said Chris Kenney, assistant Douglass County district attorney.
Meyer pleaded guilty to one count of sexual battery. Keeney said.
Julie Burditt, Topeka junior, was one of the women who filed charges against Meyer.
Burditt said she was pleased Meyer was convicted of the charge, although it was a lesser one than the charge she had originally filed.
"I don't want him to get away with anything, but I'm pleased that he is being punished at all," she said.
Burditt said that she did not want to be vindictive toward Meyer, but that she wanted people to be aware of what happened to her so they could protect themselves.
She said she had told friends and some of her professors about what had happened to her.
"I'm less concerned about my embarrassment than I am about this happening to other people," Burditt said.
She said she was tanning at Meyer's salon in July when he offered to let her use the tanning bed for an extra ten minutes.
He recommended a special tanning moisturizer to her, and told her he would rub some on her back after she changed into her two-piece bathing suit, she said.
He asked her if she would lay down on the tanning bed while he applied the lotion. Burditt s.id.
"The whole time I was trying to figure out how to get out of there." Burditt said. "I was very uncomfortable."
While he was rubbing moisturizer on her back, Meyer tried to take off her bathing suit bottom, she said.
She immediately yelled and told him to stop, and he ran from the room. Burditt said.
She left the salon as quickly as possible and filed a police report
Burditt said she has tried to protect others from similar experiences by telling people about what happened to her.
"I'm not going to be one of those people who just sits there and lets it happen." she said.
Meyer will be sentenced March 27 in the Douglas County District Court, and the maximum sentence for his conviction is 1 year in prison or or a $2,500 fine. Kenney said.
Meyer would not comment on his case, and his attorney, Wesley Norwood, was not available for comment.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
OPINION
MAEY Chicago Tribune
Alternative spellings may change attitudes
I've come up with a better name for "Boys Against Ridiculous Females," Andrew Hodges' proposed organization.
I like "White Males Who Are Threatened by Anything That Challenges Their Privileged Position in Life," or W.M.W.T.A.B.T.C.T.P.I.L. The acronym is a real tongue-twister, but we cannot all have the creative genius that Hodges possessed when he cleverly came up with B.A.R.F.
Hodges is upset at the introduction of the word "womyn." He feels more comfortable with the old spelling, w-o-m-a-n, which comes from the two words "womb" and "man," i.e. "womb of man."
Now, anyone who has taken a basic communication course (Mr. Hodges?) knows that the way we speak influences the way we think. Hodges may find it "ridiculous," but I can understand why a feminist would not want to think of herself as the "womb of man." (God, how depressing!)
Although I don't use the new spelling of the word yet, I respect the perspicacity.
And that is the very concept that Hodges, and others like him, do not understand. "Political Correctness"
PETROLEGIST
Laura Moriarty
Guest columnist
(I hate that phrase) is not about "thought police"; it is about sensitivity and respect for others.
No one is going to imprison Hodges for saying and spelling words the way he chooses. People probably will just consider him less sensitive, less cultured and less educated than he could be.
If I constantly called a person something they did not want to be called, I would hope they would tell me so that I could refrain from doing so.
Hodges writes about how the word "herstory" grates on his ears. Maybe, for the first time in his male life, he realizes how it feels to be excluded by a word. Maybe he feels the way I do every time I am asked to write an essay on "The Literary History of Mankind" or "Man's Varying Ideas on Religion."
People who are asking for different
spellings and phrases are simply asking the world to take a look from a different perspective; to question its own language and the effects it may have. It was not too long ago that the "thought police" cut the use of words like "nigger" and "faggot" to a minimum.
I consider the term "political correctness," the column by Hodges, and the even more annoying column by Eric Olkoski only to be the expected backlashes against women (or womyn, whichever you prefer) who are promoting change in the way we are treated in academia, the press and life.
Perhaps Hodges considers this to be "childish," but you cannot convince me that our language — which consistently excludes females from the human race — does not affect the fact that my sex earns 62 cents for every dollar a man makes.
Little words add up to big ideas. If someone wants me to refer to her as a "wommy," I'll do it. Furthermore, I'll stop to think why she prefers it.
- Laura Moriarty is a Bozeman, Mont., senior majoring in social welfare.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Abortions must be accessible
An Irish High Court decision exemplifies problems that may lie ahead for the United States
In a recent Irish High Court decision, a judge ruled that a 14-year-old girl who claimed she was raped by a friend's father could not leave the country to obtain an abortion. Ireland passed a constitutional prohibition against abortion in 1982. The court decision has led to much dissension among the Irish. This case also identifies a key problem that can occur in the United States if abortion rights are severely limited.
The current direction of the U.S. Supreme Court indicates that Roe vs. Wade's days as the law of the land might be numbered. The addition of conservative justices by the Reagan and Bush administrations has produced views that are openly critical of a woman's right to have an abortion. However, those who want to diminish this right fail to fully consider the inequities of such a decision.
The underliving tenet of Roe vs. Wade is the
right of every woman to have equal, uncompromised access to abortion. The problem with overturning this landmark case is that it would no longer provide the universal access. Wealthy women would be able to leave a state or country where abortion is prohibited, while less fortunate women would be left behind. The results could be disastrous.
If Roe vs. Wade is overturned, women are still going to attempt to obtain abortions. Only this time they won't be safe. The United States doesn't need to turn into another Ireland, forcing its citizens to remain in the country and get illegal and unsafe abortions or have unwanted children.
The pro-choice forces realize that diminished rights to abortion are only going to increase the number of back-alley and self-inflicted procedures. It is time for people and the courts to accept human nature as it is and not as they would want it to be. Ireland could be a good example of the United States in a few years.
Apology comes 50 years late
Stephen Martino for the editorial board
War hysteria, racial prejudice imprisoned U.S citizens in '42: It should never happen again
This month marks the 50th anniversary of one of the darkest moments in Amer-
One of the darkest moments in American history. On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed an order that placed 120,000 U.S. citizens of Japanese descent into concentration camps.
They had committed no crimes. No charges were filed. They were guilty only of living on the West Coast in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. Roosevelt ruled that the citizens posed a significant threat to national security.
They were rounded up, placed on rail cars and transported to camps like Minidoka in Idaho or Manzanar in the California desert. They could take with them only what they could carry. Many families lost everything.
Survivors tell of scraping manure off the walls of the converted animal stables in which they lived. They also tell of the barbed wire and rifle towers that ringed the camps.
It was anti-Japan sentiment run wild. Roosevelt feared they would spy or participate in other war-time crimes. Yet there was no evidence. Most of the people in the camps had never been to Japan, and Japanese-Americans were fiercely patriotic during the war.
How could this happen in the United States?
The performance of the 442 Regimental Combat Team, a unit of second-generation Japanese-Americans, proved that. Today, the 442nd remains the most highly decorated unit in U.S. military history. Recent ceremonies in California displayed pictures of the 442nd participating in the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau.
The 60,000 survivors of the camps this year will receive an official apology and $20,000 each from the U.S. government. This was approved in the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 to redress the grave injustice motivated by racial prejudice and war hysteria.
We must never forget the unjust, illegal treatment of U.S. citizens of Japanese descent during World War II. And we must never let it happen again.
Chris Moeser for the editorial board
Friends help Martin
Readers may have noticed Gary Bedore's column regarding Jackie Martin in the sports section of a recent issue of the Lawrence Journal-World. Martin was a starting forward for the KU women's basketball team. Her collegiate career was cut short by an injury to her Achilles' tendon. On New Year's Eve she learned she had leukemia, and she now is receiving chemotherapy at the University of Kansas Medical Center. I hope you will read the article, because it gives a glimpse of this remarkable young woman's accomplishments and unfailing spirit.
Martin came to the University of Kansas from a very small town in the most rural part of Georgia. I met her shortly after she arrived, and I advised her during her freshman year. Bedore's column quotes Marian Washington as saying, "I've seen so much growth in her. They talk about graduation rates and the whole bit. She is one of those, quote, 'late bloomers.' She didn't get her degree in the time period they measure it by. But she has come so far."
I agree with Coach Washington's statement. Jackie Martin affirms the belief that the college experience adds up to mucr more than just a bachelor's degree. Martin's life was radically transformed by her years at KU. It took a great deal of courage for her to start this journey, and she certainly has encountered a great deal of personal tragedy along the way. But she has persevered through all of this, completing a degree in sociology and exploring career options while working as an assistant coach under Washington's guidance.
To compare Martin today with the awkward young lady I advised six years ago is to ponder one of the most remarkable changes I have ever observed in another person.
I visited Martin in the hospital. Her spirits are great and the chemotherapy has presently brought the cancer into remission. But she faces a lot more medical treatment and, of course, some horrendous medical bills. Washington has established a fund to help pay Martin's expenses. Any contribution would be greatly appreciated by all of us whose lives have been enriched by knowing this courageous young woman. Contributions may be mailed to this address:
Jackie Martin Fund
Box 3302
Professor of Psychology
Lawrence,KS 66046
Letters to the editor
Rape is a violent crime
The Kansan's Feb. 19 editorial on the "sex poll" ignored a critical point.
Rape is more than a mere "lack of communication between the sexes. It is a violent crime.
Sharon Danoff-Burg Lawrence graduate student
Alumni merit respect
Throughout the University of Kansas' rich history, alumni have enjoyed the respect they appropriately deserve. However, a recent article by staff columnist David Mitchell uncovered a very disturbing anti-alumni sentiment that seems to be festering among certain groups of students.
In his article, Mr. Mitchell suggests that student fans at KU do not appreciate the behavior of alumni at basketball games. Mitchell contends that instead of acting in a mature and classy manner, alumni should look to the student section as an example of how to act at games.
This expression of ignorance and blatant disrespect probably does not even warrant a response.
Nonetheless, to clear up any misunderstanding that may have arisen from this article, I would like to make it abundantly clear that Mr. Mitchell's opinions are only shared by a small, ungrateful minority.
It is great that Mr. Mitchell and those fans who share his sentiments are enthusiastic at games. However, the motivation for this enthusiasm seems a little dubious. I wonder if these fans truly understand Jayhawk basketball and its rich tradition, or if they merely attend games at Allen Field House to paint their faces, taunt free-throw shooters with Duke-like antics, and partake in ridiculous ice fights.
Lawrence is a cridle of basketball, and KU has enjoyed tremendous success since Phog Allen revolutionized the game. History is the lifeblood of Jayhawk basketball, and our alumni are living part of this history. For a group of 20-year-old rowdies to impose their ways on people who have been supporters of Jayhawk basketball before they were even born is presumptuous and rude!
Allen Field House is one of the top arenas in the country for college basketball, and this is the case not merely because it is loud and obnoxious.
The field house is such a neat place because
So, for those who are not satisfied with the manner in which alumni choose to enjoy Jayhawk basketball, please remember that KU basketball has been around for a century and that you are only a small piece of the Jayhawk tradition. Have a little respect!
when one first enters it, one can sense the tradition — the merging of young and old that makes KU basketball so special.
Trevor Wohlford Wichita junior
Show respect for dead
I am appalled at the actions of a group of antihomosexual activists who found it necessary to picket a funeral of a person who died of AIDS-related causes in Topeka.
A funeral is a time of peace and understanding. It is a final journey to go before the seat of God so that he may decide the fate of the soul. A funeral is NOT a place for hate. I think that these people need to show some courtesy and let the deceased rest in peace.
Michael C. Davis Topeka
KANSANSTAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
Editors
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Campus Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olean
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Photo Julie Jacobson
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JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
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Campus sales mgr • Rich Leibswood
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Creative director • Leslie McCarthy
Classified mgr • Kip Chin
Business Staff
writers must be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. The writer will be photographed. Writer 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 newsroom, 111 Stuart-Flint Hall.
Stick
OPINIONS EXPRESSED IN THIS CARTOON ARE NOT NECESSARILY THOSE OF THE NEWSPAPER— OR EVEN THE ARTIST...
OPINIONS EXPRESSED IN THIS CARTOON ARE NOT NECESSARILY THOSE OF THE NEWSPAPER—OR EVEN THE ARTIST...
... WHO IS MERELY A CONDUIT THROUGH WHICH DIVINE FORCES RELAY MESSAGES OF COSMIC IMPORTANCE.
HERE ARE SOME OF THOSE MESSAGES NOW...
• LOOK BOTH WAYS BEFORE CROSSING THE STREET
• GET PLENTY OF REST
• SING MORE OFTEN
• EAT WELL
• CALL YOUR FOLKS (OR A FAMILY MEMBER)
• READ KATE KELLEY'S COLUMN (it's usually pretty interesting)
• CHECK YOUR FLY
• VOTE YOUR CONSCIENCE
• LOVE ONE ANOTHER
• DON'T BELIEVE EVERYTHING YOU READ IN THE NEWSPaper.
@Copyright J. Dammit and Dan McClure 2013
... WHO IS MERELY A CONDUIT THROUGH WHICH DIVINE FORCES RELAY MESSAGES OF COSMIC IMPORTANCE.
by David Rosenfield
I love you
HERE ARE SOME OF
THOSE MESSAGES NOW...
• LOOK BOTH WAYS BEFORE
CROSSING THE STREET
• GET PLENTY OF REST
• SING MORE OFTEN
• EAT WELL
• CALL YOUR FOLKS
(OR A FAMILY MEMBER)
• READ KATE KELLEY'S COLUMN
(IT'SUSUALLY PRETTY INCREMENT)
• CHECK YOUR FLY
• VOTE YOUR CONSCIENCE
• LOVE ONE ANOTHER
• DON'T BELIEVE EVERYTHING
YOU READ IN THE NEWSPAPER.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
5
Protesters aim ire at wrong doctor
The Associated Press
LEAWOOD, Kan. — An anti-abortion demonstration in front of a doctor's home included shouts of "baby killer" and a picture of an aborted fetus but lacked one thing — the right doctor.
About 15 anti-abortion demonstrators gathered outside the home of Arnold Katz, a rheumatologist who is also with arthritis and similar impairments.
"They obviously have been confusing me with someone else," Katz said. Sunday's demonstration was the second time abortion opponents had picketed at his home.
Katz said he thought he was being confused with another doctor because of the similarity of their names.
The other doctor, an obstetrician-
gynecologist who works at Planned
Parenthood once a week, asked that he
not be identified because of the likelihood
of more protests.
Katz said he was harassed at Planned Parenthood's Kansas City office in November. The protesters threatened at that time to picket at his home, he said.
"The thing is, I don't do abortions," he said. "We've told them so many times, it's unreal."
Still, the protesters showed up at Katz's home in November.
"They asked my wife, 'Did you know that your husband is killing babies?' She told them they were not at the right place," Katz said. "They told her that she just didn't realize what I was doing."
No one was at the Katz home when the protesters arrived Sunday, Leawood police Capt. Ron Anderson said.
When officers arrived about 3:45
p. m., the group was beginning to disperse, Anderson said. No arrests were made
Missionaries to Preborn, a Kansas City anti-abortion group, said that group was responsible for the protest and apologized to Katz.
Office manager Jeanne Solum, referring to the list of doctors who perform abortions in the area, said: "Evidently, whover made up the list got the names mixed up. I'm going to check the list myself. I'm not going out there again not knowing who I'm picketing."
Irish abortion law, hearing prompt protest
The Associated Press
DUBLIN, Ireland — Protesters scuffled with police outside Parliament yesterday while the Supreme Court heard more arguments in the case of a 14-year-old girl barred from leaving Ireland to get an abortion.
Some 300 demonstrators protesting the order struggled with police while trying to remove barriers outside the Parliament buildings.
Five Supreme Court judges heard a second day of arguments, and another session is scheduled for today. The closed hearing had been expected to last two days, with a judgment expected by the end of the week. It was not known if the extra day of arguments
would delay the ruling.
The attorneys have not laid out their arguments publicly, but are likely to focus on whether Ireland can forbid its citizens from going to another country in order to do something that is legal in that country but illegal in their own.
Ireland, a member of the 12-nation European Community, has signed treaties that guarantee freedom of travel.
The girl says she was raped by the father of a friend. Her family is appealing to the High Court that upheld an order by the attorney general, who barred the defendants from taking her to Britain for a legal abortion.
Ireland has the most restrictive abortion law in
Europe, permitting only a "morning-after pill" that terminates pregnancies in the first 72 hours. Some 4,000 Irish women had abortions in Britain in 1990.
The Constitution was amended in a 1983 referendum to affirm the right to life of the fetus, "and as far as practicable by its laws to defend and vindicate that right."
Opposition parties have called for a new referendum. Prime Minister Albert Reynolds sale Monday night.
The government is paying the family's legal costs in the appeal because it wanted the matter to go to the Supreme Court as a test case, Irish media reports said.
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IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is in need of volunteers to participate in a medical research study on a currently marketed medication
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6
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
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Between five and 15 students are treated at Watkins every day for asthma, Yockey said.
Institution (Full name)
Watkins staff members have received phone calls from concerned asthma patients since the study was
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said he thought the results of the study were premature and inconclusive.
Beta agonists, the type of medicine cited in the study, is sold as a spray under the brand names Proventil and Ventolin.
The study, published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine, said that asthmatics nearly tripled their risk of death with each additional canister of the spray used in a month.
A study that warns against overuse of a common asthma medicine has generated concern from people who suffer from asthma, but specialists at KU question the validity of the study's conclusions.
Daytime Phone ( )
KU physicians question asthma inhaler risk study
TIAA-CREF Participant
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By Katherine Manweiler
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"There is no reason why an asthmatic in 1992 should die from an asthma
attack."
Charles Yockey chief of staff, Watkins health center
"Anytime an article comes out about any chronic illness, it always generates a lot of anxiety because patients don't know if they're on the best treatment," he said.
released last week.
The key to controlling asthma is early intervention, he said.
"Someone who has trouble sleeping one night because of asthma needs to
be seen the next day without exception,
Yockey said. "There is no reason why an asthmatic in 1992 should die from an asthma attack."
Laura Rubin, St. Louis senior, said her asthma was diagnosed when she was 13 years old.
"Exercise is the most common time that I seem to have a problem," she said.
Rubin has not had a severe asthma attack in more than a year, but she often feels tightness in her chest when trying to sleep, she said.
"It's not a concern for me because I don't use it to a great extent." she said.
Rubin said her allergist told her Monday that beta agonist inhalers were a danger only to people who overused them.
Bush campaign will question Buchanan's abilities in TV ad
Daniel Stechschulte, director of allergy clinical immunology and rheumatology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said betaagonists were necessary for the treatment of severe asthma.
Rubin uses a beta agonist inhaler twice a day to control their symptoms.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush's campaign is set to unleash a television ad in which a former Marine Corps commander attacks Republican Party challenger Pat Buchanan for his opposition to the Persian Gulf War.
The ad is the first campaign ad attacking Buchan directly and represents a clear response to his strong, 37-percent finish in the New Hampshire primary. More attack ads using surrogates are planned, a Bush campaign adviser said yesterday.
The first ad will feature retired Marine Corps Commandant P. X. Kelley, according to the adviser, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Buchanan was a critic of the U.S. role in the Persian Gulf, and Kelley will be critical of that position in the Bush campaign's ad, the adviser said. Another ad will outline Bush's
"reform agenda," advocating welfare initiatives and school choice, the adviser said.
Both ads were expected to air today in Georgia, where Buchanan is campaigning hard in advance of that state's March 3 primary.
Bush's ads have been avoiding mentioning Buchanan and instead concentrating on the president's experience and challenge to Congress to approve his program by March 20.
White House representative Marlin Fitzwater said Monday that the Bush campaign was planning to alter its strategy by using surrogates and ads to counter Buchanan in every state where he mounts a challenge.
"We'll take pains to point out differences," Fitzwater said. He said Buchanan had "some pretty strange
Bush himself told reporters traveling with him aboard Air Force One enroute to California that there would be ads defining the differences in position between himself and Buchanan.
CALICO • PANEMEA • NATURALIZER • HUSH PUPPIES • UNISA • PRIMA ROYALE • SOF SPOTS • BELLINI • ESPRIT • EASY SPIR
"But I'll try to keep it on a high plane, "Bush said.
beliefs" but declined to elaborate
Betsy Weinsel, a Buchanan media adviser, said the challenger was not worried and likely would not respond to the Bush ads.
"I think we'd rather stay in our own court," Weinshel said.
Buchanan's ads have sharply criticized Bush for breaking his 1988 new-taxes pledge by approving tax increases in 1990, and suggested he already has abandoned a middle-class tax cut he promised in his State of the Union address last month.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
INTERNATIONAL
7
Lawrence Community Theatre & SallieMae Present
The ROAD to MECCA
By Athol Fuzard
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS
Nineteen key Black and white groups said yesterday that whites must vote to end apartheid through negotiations or face a full-scaler racial conflict.
U. S. jed coalition forces liberated Kuwait on Feb. 26 last year after seven months of Iraqi occupation. Yesterday also was the 31st anniversary of independence from Britain.
A
Meanwhile, the pro-apartheid Conservative Party urged whites to reject race reforms in a March 17 referendum and said President F. W. de Klerk was in a hurry to surrender power.
A Shiite militiaman fired shots in the air while U.N. envoy Marrack Goulding was inspecting a damaged south Lebanese village, but he was able to continue the tour, the United Nations said.
The emir announced earlier this month that Kuwait would not mark national and liberation days with festivities out of respect for the families of about 700 Kuwaitis still held prisoner in Iraq.
Key groups urge negotiations
Tyre, Lebanon
According to the U.N. statement from New York, Goulding was visiting the village of Kafra when members of his entourage got in a brief argument with pro-Iranian Hezbollah militia at the village entrance.
Shooting interrupts U.N. tour
Sheik Said al-Abdullah al-Sahab spoke after leading a silent march of about 4,000 Kuwaitis to a waterfront plaza. There he raised the Kuwaiti flag to mark the national and liberation days.
Capetown, South Africa
"The government has no real mandate to do everything it is doing." Conservative leader Andries Treurnicht said of de Klerk's sweeping reforms
De Klerk has called the whites-only ballot to determine whether the 5 million whites support his plans to end apartheid and share political power with South Africa's 30 million blacks.
Feb.28,29 Mar.1*,5,6,7,8*
Fortickets call: 843-SHOW
Performances 8pm. '2:30pm, 1501 New Hampshire
From The Associated Press
"When the group was informed of Mr. Goulding's identity and his purpose, he was allowed to proceed, although one member of the group fired some shots into the air," the statement said.
Kuwait's crown prince told thousands of Kuwaitis at a rally yesterday that dialogue could solve the emirate's problems, but he said the monarchy opposed a democracy that destroys.
Kuwaitis remember liberation
Kuwait City
Democracy advocates sentenced in Beijing
Also mentioned were
■ University students Li Minqi and Zhai Weimin.
Both took part in the 1989 movement and continued pro-democracy activities until their arrests in 1990.
■ Wang Guoqing, Wang Zhongxian and Dong Huiming, about whom little is known.
The Associated Press
BEIJING — Seven dissidents were sentenced to prison terms yesterday, including an editor of the Communist Party newspaper and three students who helped lead pro-democracy protests in 1989 and 1990. Chinese sources said.
All seven were convicted of counter-revolutionary propaganda and incitement, the sources said.
b. Morgan
None of China's official media immediately reported the sentencings, which came as the U.S. Congress prepared to resume debate on linking China's low-tariff trade status to its human rights record. Critics of China demand the release of political prisoners as a condition for renewing its most-favored-nation status.
Sources close to the men's families said that Wu Xuecan, a pageeditor at the Communist Party newspaper, the People's Daily, was sentenced to four years in prison and that Beijing University student Peng Rong was given two years. Peng was arrested in May 1990 and will be released this May.
Loss of the status would cost China billions of dollars in trade with the United States.
Also sentenced were:
The sentences apparently were the subject of prolonged internal debate.
Wu, 48. w was arrested in December 1989 after six months in hiding. He helped issue a leaflet in the 1989 democracy movement criticizing official corruption.
Baghdad is seeking target dates for the lifting of sanctions in exchange for its full cooperation with the U.N. Special Commission that is dismantling Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
Hussein said experts from the United Nations and Iraq should work out details for modifying Iraqi industries to make sure they cannot have any future military purposes prohibited by the Security Council.
Senate threatens China relations
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted yesterday to slap new conditions on renewing normal trade relations with China but fell well short of the two-thirds vote necessary to override President Bush's promised veto.
He said the United Nations should then declare "Iraq is in substantial compliance with its obligations" under the Security Council resolutions that ended the gulf war."
The 59-39 vote came after an unusual secret session of the full Senate to review intelligence
The compromise bill would require substantial progress by China in the areas of human rights, trade and weapons proliferation before most-favored-nation trade status could be renewed. That trade status will expire in June.
The House approved the conditional measure 409-21 last November, and it now will go to the White House. The Senate tally was eight votes short of the two-thirds that would be needed to override a veto if all senators voted.
Millions of people joined in national street protests in May and June 1889, demanding more democracy and an end to official corruption. The movement ended when the army fired on protesters in Beijing, killing hundreds and possibly thousands.
Terms of their sentences were not released.
Iraq agrees to inspections
between Iraq's cooperation and the lifting of economic sanctions imposed by the Security Council after Saddam's troops invaded Kuwait in August 1990.
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Iraq said yesterday that it would cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors and the dismantling of its military industries if doing so would pave the way for the lifting of economic sanctions.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Ahmed Hussein sent a lengthy letter to the Security Council and the secretary-general responding to the weekend visit of U.N. envoy Rolf Ekeus, who went to Baghdad to secure the complete cooperation of Saddam Hussein's government on the weapons issue.
However, the letter also called for a "balance"
Hussein's letter accepted the inspections of its weapons facilities and said Baghdad would cooperate with the long-term plan to dismantle its military industries, as called for in U.N. resolutions ending the Persian Gulf War.
in honor of Women's History Month Mothers & Daughters
Growing Apart While Staying Close This workshop takes a closer look at the interactions between mothers and daughters. It examines the extent to which daughters are reflections of their mothers and explores ways in which daughters can be their own people—that is, how they can become individuals in their own right.
Tuesday, March 3, 1992
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Facilitator:
Dr. Barbara W. Ballard
Acting Dean of Student Life
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. 115 Strong Hall For more information, contact Katherine Kagameh at 864-352 1851
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842-7810 Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
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Make plans now to attend the Spring Semester COMPUTER FAIR
10 am - 2 pm Wednesday, March 4th Big-Eight Room, Kansas Union Level 5
Sponsored by:
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KU
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PARTICIPATING STORES Computer Consulting, Connecting Point, Designlab, Jayhawk Bookstore KU Bookstore, MacSource Microtech, and Radio Shack. Representatives will be on hand to answer questions. Stop by!
Drawings for free merchandise!
Free Spring Break Trip From Johnny's Tavern Cancun, Ft. Lauderdale, Palm Springs S. Padre Island
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It's simple. All you need to do is visit Johnny's Tavern tonight and have a few ice cold, refreshing $.50 draws. While you're enjoying Johnny's cozy, relaxing atmosphere with your closest friends, as well as the $.50 draws, sign up for a free spring break trip to wherever you want to go. Then on the evening of March 4th, go to Johnny's and they will draw one name from all the entries and that lucky person is going on spring break compliments of Johnny's!
P. S. Don't forget that you can get Johnny's classic burgers in the bar as well as in you car at our 9th and Illinois location.
8
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
LSAT
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KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that shares its profits with the KU students
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lunch: Bratwurst$3.25
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lunch: Turkey Sand. $3.50
dinner: Chicken Fingers/
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drink: Imports $1.75
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lunch: Admiral
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dinner: KC Strip/
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drink: Well Drinks
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lunch: Turkey Club $3.75
dinner: Entrees $6.50
drink: Bucket of Busch/Busch Light $6.00
Cheeseburger/Curly Fries & a Draw or a Coke $2.50
drinks: well shots, watermelon.
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[ACOBAR4:30-? kamikazee, &sex-on-the-beach $1.00
refills 50c
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Friday, February 28
6:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.
Saturday, February 29
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Sunday, March 1
10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Plant Sale 4:00 p.m.
COMMERCIAL BOOTHS. The latest in garden and home products, equipment, services and materials will be available through commercial displays.
FLOWER SHOW. Presented by the Lawrence Associated Garden Clubs.
EDUCATIONAL DISPLAYS & SEMINARS. Special displays relating to garden and home improvement, remodeling and maintenance will be included. Lists of educational helps will be available free to the public. A variety of topics will be presented by professional horticulturists.
Daily admission: $2.00
Weekend admission: $3.00
Friday Senior Citizen
Night: $1.50
Children under
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Lawrence Garden &
Home Show
A
M
Cole tribute wins six Grammys
NEW YORK - Natalie Cole's sentimental, high-tech tribute to her late father Nat "King" Cole reigned as the big winner at last night's Grammy Awards, winning awards for record and song of the year and accumulating a total of six awards.
"I was really not expecting this," a beaming Cole said after a standing ovation when the record-of-the-year award was announced. I thank my dad for leaving me such a wonderful, wonderful heritage." she said.
The Associated Press
R. E.M. picked up three prizes, as did Bonnie Raitt.
Raitt won for best pop female vocal ("Something to Talk About"), best solo rock vocal performance for the album "Luck of the Draw" and for her duet with Delbert McClinton on "Good Man, Good Woman."
Former underground darlings
Gordon wrote the song, a spliced-together duet with Cole's father, who died of lung cancer in 1965, in the 1950s.
R. E.M. - which topped the field with seven nominations - won their three Grammys for best pop duo or vocal group; best alternative music album, "Out of Time," and best music video-short form, "Losing My Religion."
The Judds won two Grammys for the song, "Love Can Build a Bridge." Michael Bolton won the best pop male vocal award for "When a Man Loves a Woman."
Bryan Adams" ("Everything I Do! I Doit for You" and Amy Grant's "Baby, Baby" also were nominated.
Song of the Year, a writer's prize,
to Irving Gordon for "Unforgettable"
Awards were presented in 78 categories, including jazz, classical, rock, rap and country music.
The vast wasteland
TV neglects those who watch the most
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—Commercial television poorly serves the people who need it and use it most—children, the elderly, ethnic minorities and women, a report from the nation's psychologists said yesterday.
The psychologists said television did not portray those groups as they really were or provide them with the programming they really wanted.
The criticism was contained in a book-length report produced by a task force of the 108,000-member American Psychological Association after a five-year review of research on the effect of television on society.
"The major flaw in American broadcasting is that commercial television must generate revenue through programming that attracts large, heterogeneous, affluent audiences which do not represent the majority of viewers." the report said.
The report advocated government support for non-commercial outlets. "So long as the primary goal of programming is to lure audiences to advertisements, the needs of many demographic and ethnic minorities will not be met." it said.
Additionally, the task force called
on the Federal Communications Commission to return to the principle behind the Communications Act of 1934, which said that to keep their licenses, broadcasters must serve the public interest, convenience and necessity. The panel said that that philosophy had been abandoned by the FCC in the deregulatory climate of the Reagan and Bush administrations.
The audiences that are the heaviest users of TV and have the fewest entertainment alternatives — the elderly, minorities, women and people in institutions— do not constitute an attractive advertising market and thus are ignored when programming decisions are made, the report said.
"We have never as a society taken television seriously or used it sensibly," said John Murray, professor of human development at Kansas State University and one of the authors of the report.
TV watchers
The report is titled "Big World, Small Screen. The Role of Television in American Society." Its other authors are: Aletha Huston, University of Kansas, Lawrence; Ed Donnerstein, University of California, Santa Barbara; Halfford Fairchild, past president, Association for Black Psychologists; Norma Feshbach, UCLA;
Elderly watch more television than other age groups
A report released yesterday says U.S. children spend much of their free time watching TV. Other facts about TV viewers:
Average U.S. child watches television about three hours a day
Low-income people watch more than those with high incomes; those with less education watch more than highly educated
African Americans watch more TV than whites; well educated, young adult African Americans watch the most
Boys watch more than girls; women, especially those who don't work outside the home, watch more than
more men. se rk
SOURCE: American Psychological Association; Research by CORDELIA GAFFNEY
Lee Hulteng, Knight Ridder Tribune
It's not the easiest thing in the world to say.
1980
"If he doesn't have a condom, you just take a deep breath and tell him to go get one."
For more information on condoms and AIDS, call 1-800-342-AIDS or 9 the Student Senate AIDS Task Force 864-3710
Deaf access: 1-800-483-TTY (1-800-423-7889)
But these days, you have to. If you're dating someone who doesn't like condoms, talk before having sex. Explain how you feel. Offer help during the awkward moments. And if this doesn't work, ask yourself, is it worth the risk?
Paid for by: Call for
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864-3710
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WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
S
P
Sports Medicine Clinic
It's not just for athletes.
It's available for any student needing evaluation and treatment for injuries such as sprains, strains, or joint problems. The Clinic is staffed by physicians and physical therapists. There is no charge for full fee paying students except for supplies, if needed. "Walk-ins" are welcome, or for an appointment call 864-9507.
Hours: 8:30 - 11 a.m., Monday - Friday.
---
CPR Classes: 864-9570
"A class trains you to assist adult victims. The two session "B" class trains you to assist adult, child, and infant victims. $5 fee for "A" or "B" class. Training is through the American Heart Association.
Health Center 864-9500
Health Education 864-9570
Regular Clinic Hours:
M E 8a 4:30a/Sa 8:11:30a
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1:30A 1M-F 1:30P/11:50A 1:50P/11:50A CALENDAR CAMERA STUDENTS
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26. 1992
9
NPR reporter won't reveal sources
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A National Public Radio journalist is refusing to identify the sources who told her about sexual harassment allegations against Justice Clarence Thomas.
Reporter Nina Tenkenberg appeared under subpoena Monday before Senate special counsel Peter Fleming Jr. was hired to investigate news leaks.
Tottenberg told reporters after the closed-door questioning that she refused to cooperate in the leak investigation in part because of personal
honor.
But most important is the first principle of the Bill of Rights — the First Amendment — which guarantees press freedom, she said.
Fleming was hired, in part, to discover who leaked law professor Anita Hill's allegations that she was sexually harassed by Thomas, who now is an associate justice of the Supreme Court.
Tottenberg and Timothy Phelps of Newsday, a Long Island newspaper, were the first journalists to reveal
Hill's allegations. Phepis was questioned by Flingon on Feb. 14 and said
"Within the next day or two, I destroyed all notes, copies of documents, phone logs or anything else that might lead to the identification of the source or sources of my story," Totenberg said.
WASHINGTON — Thus far in his Supreme Court tenure, Justice Clarence Thomas is living up to — perhaps exceeding — expectations that he would be a staunch conservative addition to the court.
The Associated Press
In the 13 decisions in which he has participated, Thomas has the identical voting record of only one other justice, Antonin Scalia, the court's most conservative member.
Conservative label sticking to Thomas
"It looks to me that he's going to become a clone of Justice Scalia, confirming the worst fears of those who tend to be more liberal." New York lawyer Cameron Clark said yesterday after Thomas issued a strongly worded dissenting opinion in a prisoner-rights decision.
The court ruled 7-2 for a Louisiana inmate who had been punched and kicked by prison guards. It said unnecessary physical force might be unconstitutional even if no serious injuries are inflicted
Scialia joined Thomas in a dissenting opinion that accused the court of giving in to the pervasive view that the federal Constitution must address all ills in our society.
Clark, who represents the international anti-torture group Human Rights Watch, called Thomas' opinion surprising and disappointing for its narrow view of the Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
EUROPE IN TRANSITION
A Summer Program on Europe West and East June 10-July 29,1992
Enhance Your Future This Summer
- Taught in English -
- Taught in English -
DiS Denmark's International Study Program
333
Affiliated with the University of Copenhagen
SUMMER COURSE OFFERINGS FOR KUCREDIT:
*The European Community
*European Security Issues
*East-West Business Relations
Informational meeting - Wednesday, February 26
207 Fraser; 3:00-4:30 p.m.
REDIT:
* Modern Scandinavian Art and Architecture
* Nordic Mythology
* Danish Language
DIS also offers fall and spring semesters in Humanities and Social Sciences, International Business, and Architecture and Design. Come by the KU Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, for more information.
AN "Environment in Crisis" Series THIS OLD EARTH
David Blockstein
Towards a National Strategy for Conserving Biodiversity
2 March 1992, 8:00 pm, Woodrud Auditorium
Free to Students, Faculty and Staff, and the Public Presented by the KU Systemsatics Group, the CLAS Lecture Series, and ENVIRONS
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Sometimes to do your best work all you need is a change of scenery.
The new Apple* Macintosh™ PowerBook™ computers give you the freedom to work anywhere you want, any time you want.
They're small enough to fit in a book bag. Powerful enough for your toughest class assignments. And they're affordable, too.
They run virtually all Macintosh software. And can run for up to three hours on a single battery charge.
They can be expanded to up to 8MB of memory and come standard with plenty of hard disk storage.
The Apple SuperDrive™ disk drive reads from and writes to Macintosh and MS-DOS formatted disks—
With built-in AppleTalk Remote Access software and a modem, you can use a PowerBook to retrieve files from your project partner's Macintosh without leaving the library. Or log on to the library computer without leaving your room.
allowing you to exchange information easily with almost any other kind of computer. Add SoftPC and you can run MS-DOS programs, too.
There are three models from which to choose: the PowerBook 100 is the lightest, most affordable PowerBook, the PowerBook 140 offers higher
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
It's the next thing
performance and a built-in Apple SuperDrive disk drive,
and the PowerBook 170 is the highest-performance
PowerBook. All three offer bright, adjustable backlit
screens and the simplicity of Apple's latest system
software innovation—System 7. And their ergonomic,
all-in-one design makes them comfortable to use—
no matter where you do your best work.
KU Bookstore Burge Union • Level 2
See the PowerBook computers at our place today, and while you're in, be sure to ask us for details about the Apple Computer Loan.
864-5697
There's no telling where a PowerBook could take you.
Apple
Macintosh. The power to be your best at KU.
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3 Prime-Timer Show (/)Senior Citizen Anytime
Dear Kristen
My roommate just left for Rio. 15 members of his host family will meet him at airport!
I'm off to the Amazon tomorrow Archbishop Desmond Tutu just boarded the ship.
Can't believe we will spend 10 days crossing the Atlantic hearing him lecture on South Africa and talking informally at dinner and on deck.
Com Amor.
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P. S. Glad to hear you got your application for Semester at Sea by calling 800-854-0195. Send it in!
10
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26. 1992
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Economists discount Bush's recovery plan
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A boost for small business here. A lift for veterans there. President Bush calls it a "rifleshot" strategy for revitalizing the economy. But economists say the scattering of new programs and initiatives will not be enough.
"It really just a bunch of nonsense, bells and whistles," said economist Paul Getman of Regional Financial Associates in West Chester, Pa.
"I think they are designed ... to take credit, as much as possible, for the recovery going on even though it would have gone on anyway," said economist David Wyss of DRI-McGraw Hill in Lexington, Mass.
The administration acknowledges that no proposal, by itself, will have much effect on the economy as a whole. But put them all together, Bush says, and they will help rouse the nation from its economic lethargy.
Since the president's State of the Union address in January, the administration and independent regulatory agencies have put together a package of initiatives, all designed to give a boost to the recovery.
Prairie House, TWANDA
Peggy Woods/KANSAN
Looking for options
Students take advantage of the opportunity to discuss their job qualifications with personnel representatives from the more than 52 companies that attended the annual Minority Symposium at the Kansas Union. About 200 students from colleges across Kansas attended yesterday. The program was sponsored by the minority engineering programs at KU and Kansas State University.
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PLAYBOY
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DEATH IN OUR SCHOOLS:
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GIRLS OF THE BIG EIGHT
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Thursday, February 27
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Town Crier Bookstore
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11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
11
N. Carolina girl, 14, dies after stabbing; ex-boyfriend arrested
The Associated Press
ARCHDALE, N.C. - A 14-year-old girl died yesterday after she was stabbed in a classroom as 25 other eighth-graders watched, authorities said. The girl's former boyfriend was arrested on a murder charge.
"Everybody was running down the hall screaming," 14-year-old Karalee Cameron said.
The attacker entered the Archdale-Trinity Middle School classroom and asked to speak to Patricia Mounce, but she refused, Police Chief Larry Allen said.
The attacker stabbed the girl once
near the heart and fled the classroom. The youth ran to a nearby business, telephoned police and surrendered, Allen said.
"We understand that it was an eyeboyfriend," said Worth Hatley, associate Randolph County school superintendent. "I can't remember anything this terrible happening in our school system."
Willis Odei Gravely Jr., 16, of High Point, N.C., was charged with murder and held without bond in the Randolph County Jail.
The former boyfriend had been a student at the school but no longer was living in the district. He had been
charged with kidnapping recently in another incident involving the girl and may have been upset about the charge. Allen said.
The girl died in surgery at High Point Regional Hospital near Archdale, about 15 miles southeast of Winston-Salem in central North Carolina.
Classes continued, and other students were told of the slaying. Counselors were brought in to talk to students.
"I think everyone is still trying to remain calm and trying to understand the tragedy that's occurred," said George Fleetwood, county school superintendent.
Oregon group works against gays
The Associated Press
SALEM, Ore. — A group espousing right-wing politics and traditional family values has touched off a political firestorm by launching an anti-gay rights movement in Oregon.
The Oregon Citizens Alliance is working to repeal ordinances in several cities that prohibit discrimination against homosexuals.
And the alliance appears on its way toward collecting enough signatures to force a statewide vote this fall on a ballot measure to label homosexuality
as abnormal and prohibit the state from "promoting" it as an alternate lifestyle. The group says it has about 30,000 signatures so far; it needs 89,000 by July to get on the ballot.
"We believe that things have gotten so bad that it's time for people to stand up and get involved," said Lon Mabon, founder and head of the alliance.
A group supporting gay and lesbian rights says the Citizens Alliance is encouraging hatred of homosexuals.
groups to come along in a long, long time," said Linda Welch, executive director of Right to Privacy.
Welch said there had been an increase in the number of hate crimes reported in Oregon in the past year, including acts of intimidation and violence aimed at homosexuals.
"It is one of the most frightening
"I'm not saying it's the OCA that did it," Welch said. "But introducing this kind of ballot measure creates a climate where it's open season on gay men and lesbians."
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ACLU
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PHOTOGRAPH BY KEN HARRIS
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ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA!
Ronkin's New LSAT Premium Program: The Best Way To Prepare For The LSAT
If you're one of the nation's 95,000 applicants determined to get into an accredited law school, you know the competition
- LSAT Preparation Course
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our two-day LSAT Intensive-Study Clinics offered immediately prior to LSAT examination dates. These clinics concentrate on Logical Reasoning and Logic Games. The Gold Package also includes our Law School Success Program which covers law school exam preparation, legal writing, legal research, and career planning.
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12
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
SPORTS
Kansas eying conference title
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportwriter
After playing three games in six days, the No. 3 Kansas Jayhawks now have a five-day break to contemplate their rematch with No. 14 Oklahoma State on Monday in Allen Field House.
And they will have more time to contemplate a possible Bie Fight Conference Championship.
Monday's 84-65 victory against Oklahoma improved the Jayhawks' record to 21-3 overall and 9-2 in the conference. Since Oklahoma State, which at one point was 20-0, has lost four of its last five, the run to the conference title has become a two-leam race.
Kansas point guard Adonis Jordan, who scored 22 points against the Sooners, said the Jayhawks were exactly where they wanted to be at this point in the season.
Those two teams are the first-place Jayhawks and No. 6 Missouri at 7-8 trials Kansas by a conference.
"We always wanted to be in the driver's seat. We wanted other people to have to worry about us, not for us to worry about other people."
"We always wanted to be in the driver's seat," Jordan said. "We wanted other people to have to worry about us, not for us to worry about other
Adonis Jordan Kansas junior guard
people. We just want to worry about ourselves."
Kansas seems to have the inside track to the conference title. In addition to a one-game lead, the Jayhawks will play two of their last three conference games. The Wildcats face a race for road game is at Iowa State next Wednesday.
The Tigers, on the other hand, play three of their four remaining conference games on the road, beginning with tonight's game at Iowa State. Missouri then will travel to Kansas State on Saturday, will play Oklahoma at home next Wednesday and will finish the season in Allen Field House against
the Jayhawks on Sunday, March 8.
That game could decide the conference championship, but only if Kansas loses against either Oklahoma State or Iowa State and Missouri wins its next three.
However, senior forward Alonzo Jamison said
the Jayhawks were just waiting to see what happens the next week and a half before thinking about a conference title.
"We're going to take it one day at a time," he said. "Actually, I think being in first place puts more pressure on us. Everyone will be wanting to knock us off. It keeps us on our toes."
The Jayhawks did not practice yesterday and have a full five days to prepare for Monday night's game against the Cowboys. The game, which will be televised nationally on ESPN and will be a chance for Kansas to redeem one of its two conference setbacks, a 64-56 loss earlier this month against then-No. 2-ranked Oklahoma State.
"It's good for us," junior guard Rex Walters said about the week without a game. "We have a whole week to work on Kansas basketball. We're still trying to improve."
"We need a lot of practice right now," he said. "These next few practices will show what this team is all about."
Jayhawks to face stingy Oklahoma defense
Victory would guarantee at least share of league title for women
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswriter
Although only two regular season games remain for the Kansas women's basketball team, its season is far from over.
Kansas will face a huge task tonight in Norman, Okla. in a battle against
the Oklahoma Sooners at 7 p.m.
Tenight's game is a rematch of the Big Eight Conference's stingiest defense and most explosive offense. In the first clash, Kansas prevailed 75-56 at Allen Field House.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said a conference championship was very important to her team.
A Kansas victory would clinch for the Jayhawks at least a share of the conference title.
"It's not only important for this team but it helps with recruiting in
The Big Eight race has been narrowed to two teams:10-2 Kansas and 9-3 Colorado.
The Jayhawk defense, ranked
the future," she said. "It brings recognition to our program and the conference.
"We're in a battle with every conference to see which one is best."
defense. Ranked second in the nation by limiting opponents to 55.4 points a game, held the Sooner offense to its second-lowest point total of the season. Oklahoma averages 82.1 points a game.
The conference race has been narrowed down to two
teams: Kansas and Colorado.
The Sooners are led by senior guard Carin Stites who averages 14.8 points a game. Stites, who was the conference's fourth leading scorer last season, scored 14 points in the teams' first meeting.
The Jayhawks, 10-2 in conference play, have a one game lead over Colorado, 9-3 in the Big Eight, with only two games remaining.
Washington said her team was ready for the challenge of maintaining their conference lead.
"I like our chances," she said. "These final two games will make us or break us."
Women's basketball probable starters
Game time: 7 tonight at Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Okla. The game will be broadcast on KJHK 90.7 FM, KLWN 1320 AM, and KMAJ 1440 AM.
Basketball
Kansas 21-4 (10-2) Position Year Height PPG RPG
23 Daniels Shareef F Sr. 5-10 9.1 5.9
23 Terriben Johnson F Sr. 5-11 7.1 9.0
23 Angela Aycock F Fr. 6-2 10.1 4.6
20 Jolo Witherspoon G Jr. 5-7 2.8 1.2
33 Kay Kay Hart G Sr. 5-7 9.7 3.5
LAYBOWS
HONEYCUTT
KANSAS
Oklahoma 15-10, (6-6)
24 Share Mitchum F Fr. 5-10 4.2 2.6
44 Angi Guffy F Fr. 6-1 14.2 6.7
45 Mandy Wade F Fr. 6-3 10.5 7.3
22 Angie Alexander G Str. 5-11 10.4 4.6
23 Carin Sites G Str. 5-9 14.8 2.2
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
Kansas' senior forward Terrilyn Johnson shoots as members of the Kansas State women's team attempt to block her.
'Hawks aim to toughen mindset against Sterling
By Jerry Schmidt Kansas sportswriter
After the Kansas baseball team's 4-1 victory against Arkansas on Sunday, sophomore center fieldar Darryl Monroe took it upon himself to warn his teammates about the ramifications of taking tomorrow's home opener with tiny Sterling College too lightly.
"Arkansas was a big series," Monroe said. "In the past we've lost concentration after big wins. We can't play that game." We have to focus on playing the game."
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said Monroe won the team after Sunday's game that a lackluster perforation would be deadly for the Jawahaws.
Sterling, which plays in the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference, is a NAIA Division II school with an enrollment of 475 students.
Kansas will play Sterling College at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"He cautioned the team that we need to be prepared to play them and not take them lightly." Bingham said.
Bingham said he preached to his teams not to take any opponent lightly.
"In our program we try to approach every team the same way," he said.
Sterling coach Hadley Hicks said the game with Kansas would be a learning experience for the Warriors.
"This is a real honor for us," Hicks said. "Our kids are real excited. We want to see how Division I teamsplay, how they hit and how they pitch. It's going to be a learning experience regardless of the score."
Kansas, 3-2 overall, will start a four-game homestand starting with tomorrow's game. The Jayhawks will play Southeast Missouri State on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
One change will be with sophomore Kent Mahon. Afterstarting four of the first five games at designated hitter, Mahon will catch tomorrow. Junior Jeff Niemeyer, Kansas' regular catcher, will be the designated hitter.
The game will give Bingham a chance to shuffle the lineup and see who can play where.
Junior outfitier Rory Tarquinio, who broke the little finger on his right hand last week, will have surgery to repair the injury this morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He will be out two to four weeks.
"It will give me an opportunity to experiment and to see some different things," Bingham said.
Sophomore Chris Corn will be the starting pitcher tomorrow.
Starting lineups
Kansas (3-2) vs.
Sterling College (0-0)
tomorrow at 3 p.m. at
Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Kansas
1. Dan Rude- RF
3. Darryl Monroe- LF
2. Kent Mahon-C
Sterling College
7 Prent Wilhelms R
Chris Corn-P
4. Jeff Niemeier- DH
5 John Wovebeck JK
8. Jimmy Walker-LF
Whycheck
2 Hermie Padilla-3B
1. Dennis Toia-SS
2. Hermie Padilla-3B
3. Ted Webster-LF
4. David Delk-CF
5. Greg Stewart-RF
4. David Deik-CF
6. Jett Berblinger-2B
7 Eddi Padrono C
8. Brian Stephens-2B
9. Gregg Yurevich- DH
Shawn Carey-P
Seven 'Husker players named in house fight, will go to court
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — Seven Nebraska football players have been cited for assault, trespassing and other violations in what police say was a fight with members of the school's baseball team at a house party.
The seven are scheduled to appear in Lancaster County Court over a three-day period beginning March 11. City Attorney Bill Austin said yesterday that no formal charges had been filed.
Police LT. David Beggs said a group, including some baseball players, forced two football players to leave a house party Friday night because they would not付 a cover charge for beer.
Six members of the baseball team and one former player were injured, Beggs said. Several of them were treated and released from Lincoln General Hospital.
The two came back later with other members of the football team and a fight allegedly ensued, Beggs said.
Police identified the football players as:
Brian Havens, 19, cited for disturbing the peace and trespassing. Havens, a scholarship linebacker, is from Los Alamitos, Calif.
Lance Gray, 21, cited for assault and disturbing the peace. Gray, a walk-on linebacker, is from Oswego, N.Y.
Jeffery Hughes, 20, cited for assault and trespassing. Hughes, a walk-on receiver, is from Norfolk, Neb.
Zach Wiegert, 19, cited for trespassing and assault. Wiegert, a scholarship lineman, is from Fremont, Neb.
Raymond Reifenrath, 23, cited for assault and criminal mischief. Reifenrath, a walk-on lineman, is from Dakota City.
Todd Gragnano, 20, cited for trespassing. Gragnano, a scholarship quarterback, is from Fountain Valley, Calif.
Lt. Lee Wagner said he did not know which two players initially visited the party.
Terry Connealy, 19, cited for trespassing. Connealy, a scholarship lineman is from Havannis.
Osborne said the players would be punished but would not elaborate on how.
"This is embarrassing to the program, to the team and to me," he said. "There will be some pretty severe discipline."
New team is average, not Royal
1
David Mitchell staff columnist
spring training began this week, and the 1992 Kansas City Royals are beginning practice — whoever they are.
If you make it out to Royals Stadium this spring, buy a scorecard. You'll need it.
Cy Young award winner Bret Saber-hagen was dealt to the New York Metls. Outfielder Jim Eisenreich is a man without a position. And free agents Kurt Stillwell and Danny Tarttabul signed with new clubs.
After a lackluster 75-86 season in 1990, the Royals improved to 82-80 last year. The team's mediocrity resulted in drastic changes this winter. Unfortunately, general manager Herk Robinson may have created more damage than damage control.
Joyner and McReynolds seem tailor-made for the gaps of Royals Stadium. And Jefferies, who floundered under the pressure of New York, might flourish in Major Leauge Baseball's smallest market.
In return for Saberhagen, the Royals received sluggier Kevin McReynolds, underachieving infielder Greg Jefferies and utility man Keith Miller. The Royals also signed free agent, first baseman Wally Joyner.
But despite these offensive additions, the club does not look like a legitimate contender. Remember — if you can—when the Royals ruled the West. Kansas City's great teams of the late '70s and mid '80s were nothing like Kansas City of 1992.
In the old days, Royals outfielders such as Amos Otis hit for power and average, stole bases and played solid defense. Don't expect McReynolds to burn up the base paths.
In 10seasons, the Royals won six division crowns with pitching, defense and speed. Power hitters do not win pennants in spacious Royals Stadium. Bo Jackson and Tartabull should have proven that. To win in Kansas City, a team needs gap hitters and speed. Shortstop Freddie Patek and Willie Wilson both took a turn leading the American League in stolen bases in the late '70s. Today, the Royals' only speedster is Brian McRae.
The Royals also have sacrificed defense. The successful clubs of the past had players as second baseman Frank White, an eight-time Gold Glover winner who could also crank out 20 home runs a year. Today, the Royals defense is a joke. Second baseman Terry Schumpert is not quite White's equal at second, and he couldn't hit his way out of a wet paper bag last season.
Most importantly, the Royals of today lack what their predecessors lived and died with — great pitching. In the mid 80%, the Royals assembled one of the best young pitching staffs in the game. The trade of Saberhagen was the final blow to the short-lived staff. Every pitcher who started for Kansas City in the 1985 World Series is gone Danny Jackson earned a World Series ring with the 1990 Cincinnati Reds Charlie Leibrandt helped the Atlanta Braves to the Series last fall.
Even worse, the Royals have received little in exchange for endangering their future. For Jackson, the Royals got stillwell, who has already moved on. For Liebrand, they got first baseman Gerald Perry. They got another backup first baseman, Pat Tabler, for Bud Black. All three piters are left-handed. This spring the team is so desperate for lefties they have invited Curt Young and Jerry Don Gleton to camp.
The only remaining survivor of the 1985 staff is Mark Gubica, who is coming off his worst season ever. He struggled with arm problems and a 5.68 earned run average. After Gubica, it does not get any prettier. Tom Gordon had a record of 9-14 for 1991. Mike Boddicker was 12-12.
until Davis was inspired move the club made was unloading Storm Davis. Unfortunately, they still have one Davis left over. Multi-millionaire Mark Davis was such a flop in the bullpen he was promoted to the starting rotation. Don't expect Davis to replace Sabes.
Furthermore, the fans will pay the price for the moves that have made the Royals what they are today. Joyner will make $4.2 million in 1992. All ticket prices were raised a dollar. So was parking. That means a fan will pay a minimum of $10 before he gets to his seat. And if you want to eat at the game, take out a loan beforehand.
And don't try to adjust your television set when you watch the Royals on the road. The beautiful powder blue uniforms with royal blue lettering that they have worn since 1973 will be replaced with gray road uniforms to conform with the rest of the league-which just goes to show they aren't the Royals any more.
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
SPORTS
13
Tark attorneys declare resignation void
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS—Attorneys for Jerry Tarkanian say they will go to court if the UNLV coach is not allowed to rescind his resignation and coach the Runnin' Rebels next year.
Meanwhile, a UNLV professor has joined in the call for a two-year suspension of the basketball program, a suggestion first made last week by a Las Vegas newspaper columnist.
Attorneys for the coach delivered a letter to UNLV president Robert Maxson yesterday, declaring Tarkanian's resignation of June 6, 1991, to be null and void. The resignation was to have been effective July 1, 1992, but Tarkanian told supporters Sunday night that he was withdrawing it.
The five-page letter to Maxson said
Tarkanian was coerced and pressured into signing the resignation agreement.
Both Maxson and Don Klasic, legal counsel for the Nevada University System, have said the resignation was legal and binding. Maxson has called Tarkanian's resignation a dead issue.
Attorneys Chuck Thompson and Alan Jones contend a "civility agreement," which was part of the resignation, was violated by UNLV officials. University officials have confirmed the civility agreement, but say it was violated by Tarkanian, not UNLV.
The letter charged that UNLV officials:
- intentionally distributed false negative publicity about Tarkanian to the media;
- presented Tarkanian in a false light
and demeaning manner at a secret Board of Regents meeting last year;
- provided false information to the NCAA to weaken and diminish the basketball program's ability to defend itself against the agency;
- risk organization disseminated false and fraudulent information to the Las Vegas community to embarrass Tarkanian; and
- conspired with certain regents to create circumstances to embarrass Tarkanian.
The letter contends that if Tarkanian had known of such circumstances, he would not have resigned.
It also contends that Maxson and UNLV legal counsel Brad Boakeformed Tarkanian to meet them outside the presence of his attorneys and told the coach he would be destroyed in the media if he didn't resign.
Booke said it was perfectly ridiculous to suggest Tarkanian was coerced into the resignation and said it was the coach and his followers who violated the civility agreement.
Maxson yesterday repeated previous statements that Tarkanian's resignation was legally binding, adding the matter was closed.
As the flap concerning the resignation continued, a UNLV professor called on the UNLV Faculty Senate to pass a resolution calling for a two-year suspension of the basketball program.
Jim Deacon, UNLV professor of biology and director of the school's environmental studies program, submitted the resolution, saying the furo about the high-profile basketball program had resulted in irreparable damage.
ATTENTION ALL FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES:
LAMBDA SIGMA, Sophomore Honor Society &
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Applications are available in the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union or in Nunemaker Applications are due Tuesday, March 6
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KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
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Please remember to pre-check that a device is turned on. This device per unit of power is called the **Power Rating** of your device. For example, a device with a Power Rating of 2000 watts will be capable of delivering at most 2000 watts of power. The device's Power Rating is also found in its label, as shown in Figure 10-4. *Code 31*
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Practice memorization of other material. Focus on the concepts in each question or problem statement for practice. Practice using the format and content of PCAI 9th Edition, as described below. You should be able to recognize and use the following identifiers:
Code 76
14
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
City grants 10-year tax abatement
Exemption attracts veterinary supply business to Lawrence
By Andy Taylor Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission unanimously decided at its meeting last night to give a 10-year, 50-percent tax exemption on property and equipment to a company that is expanding to a Lawrence industrial park.
Pitman-Moore Inc., a veterinary supply company, will sign a seven-year lease with the city to move into a vacant building in East Hills Industrial Park, three miles east of the city on Kansas Highway 10.
The tax abatements, commonly used
to encourage industries to move to a new area, will total $445,932.
Allen Ford, a KU professor of business, opposed the idea of the 10-year tax abatement because it would leave the company without needed revenue for its coffers.
"I submit to you that this is a pretty bad deal, and it is a terrible precedent," he told the commission. "We are taking property off the tax rolls."
"I do not think it is going to be a precedent because I did not believe that there
Bob Schumm, city commissioner,
said he disregarded with Ford.
will be an effort to go build another structural warehouse," he said. "That is something we have learned from this. On the other hand, I think that if we deny this request it might create some very negative circumstances in terms of community image and community cooperation."
The building was constructed by Douglas County Development Inc., an independent group of county business owners, to von Achen, vice president of the DCDI.
"There may be people who believe jobs will come to Douglas County on their own," he said. "Without this kind of private cooperation, I don't think so."
Von Achen said the building and the tax abatement lured the company to
Lawrence.
L. J. Bair, manager of distribution for Pitman-Moore, said the company, which plans to hire 16 employees, had previously rejected Lawrence as a possible site but reconsidered it because of the tax abatement.
"Because of the private bond holders, Lawrence vendors, the city and the county, we were able to get the lease rate to a more competitive level," he said. "That made us reconsider Lawrence."
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120 Announcements
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CASH FOR COLLEGE! Don't miss your opportunity for the scholarship/financial aid you are qualified for! Call or write for information on our scholarship service and a free copy of "Ten Ways to Win" by Sharon Charity Chair. For College, P.O. Box 902, Lawrence, KS 66044 (800) 738-3388 Ext. 136
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly, understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (calles returned by counselors). Headquarters 81243 or KU info. 84346. Sponsored by GLSOK.
READ THIS! **Reading for Comprehension**
and Speed Thursdays: February 27, March 5 and 19.
Weekly on Tuesdays: February 16 and pay $19 materials by f. b.p. on Wednesday,
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PREPARING FOR EXAMS workshop. weekday, February 26, 7 p.m., 9:25 Wescue. FREE! Time management, concentration, memory and memory techniques. Presented by the Student Assistance Center
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
15
Attention College students. The Kansas Nat'l Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. The team will meet you to see. To see if qualify, call De Wint 842-9293
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/grlssummer camps. Teach swimming, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, rifley, camping, crafts, drama lessons, camping, crafts, dramas, DR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, $ salary 1,000 or more. Camp Sea Seer, 786 Maple, NL. 6108-746-4244
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ciple and rules of bowling, be self-motivated and
able to work under pressure, maintain status. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions Personnel Office, Level 5, Union Building, EOE
Coordinator for Student Senate Transportation Board needed. Responsible for administering day-to-day operations, preparing Board's budget and report to the general meeting. Supports board and liaison to the general public. Stu-
CRUISE LINES NOW HIRING *Students Needed*
*Caribbean Island, The Caribbean*. Cruise Staff. Gift Shop. Tour Guides. Waiter/Waitress, etc. Holiday, Summer and Care Employment available. No experience required.
den menthol position in 20 hours /w/k. $400/month for a summer job or a better for Summer 1992. Pick up application information from the Student Senate office. 40 Kansas University deadline Wednesday, February 26, 5:00 p.m.
Hairport Stylist or mail technician - part-time or full time call 842-1978
Need extra cash? Earn $1000 weekly processing
their order. 3241 M 31 M, SNue 138, Washouga
3241 M 31 M, SNue 138, Washouga
PART TIME. Intramural referes needed for both Floorthe Hockey and Soccer. No experience necessary. We will训. Attend meetings Tuesday. w: 10, 1980佛罗里达.Recreation班。864-3546.
Individuals needed Self motivated and enthusiastic individuals apply in person at A picture Truck
Roommate wanted. Furnished apartment 1700
Kentucky 1823m + 14伙業s Cabinet 845-1708
saturday 12:30 p.m. *weekdays* *cunilateral*
brain surgery 12:30 p.m. *weekdays* *cunilateral*
knowledge of word perfect and ability to relate
to public and young children $ 40 hr. Apply at
Children's Learning Center 331 Main EOE
Spend the summer in the Catskill Mts. of NY Receive a meaningful summer experience work with the Children's Mental Disabilities. Positions are available for Counselors, Program Leaders, Cabin Leaders and Daycare staff. Become personally those who are majoring or considering allied health fields. Season June 12 to August 21st Weekdays. Allowance. Will be on campus Mar 19 for interviews. Sign up in Placement Center, Call Camp
SWIMMING LESSONS MANAGER - City of Eudora is taking applications for swimming lessons manager. Applications are available at Eudora City Hall, 7th and Maine Eudora
POOL MANAGER - City of Eudora is taking applications for city pool manager. Applications are available at Eudora City Hall, 7th and Maine Eudora
225 Professional Services
to $400 per week, live in job east/west
coast/highway. Minimum 1 year NATIONAL
school.
WANTED Knowledgeable tutor for MATH 647
Call 865-2953
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
Criminal Defense • Fake ID
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Lench
Elizabeth Leach
make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to you for business. Students' rates: 842,7344.
16 East 13th 749-0087
your home or office. Student rates: 842-2344
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding &
portraits. Instant ID photos, student prices call
Rochi 841-9698
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES- Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Designs, Inc.
971/2Mass.841:1071
16 East 13th 842-1133
PRAKES S & ALCOHOLENSIS divorce; criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Reliable experienced woman wants to clean your house 'Call Nina 841-3640
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 1E 92 0th Street 843
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
823 Missouri 843-4023
- Free Consultation
Tired of crowding tutoring sessions, high rates? Prive French lessons. Flipped. Callena Dearby 865-219-8078
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-type type. 945-2063, days or evenings
For Laser or Del Matrix printing of your PC files on HP 210, HP 300, HP 400, HP 810-011, Microtec Education Services.
1+ Typeing/WP. WLs, term papers, resumes,
864-4274-5930, 30 wkdays anytime wkends
From Quality Tipping to Mailing List Entry Maintenance/Production, and Personalized PC Training! For Experience and Reliability call Louse at 843-4022 with your ideas.
K5 Professional Word Processing, accurate and
affordable, call after 1 p.m. 814-6345
Laser Type Word processing, typing, editing
workbook and employment services.845.7063
**Resumes** and cover letters. Fast and affordable,
competitive prices, over 80 formats laser printed.
Ask about our Referral Discounts? Mac Resumes
766-3325
PINK ALA MODE GO an edge on the rest. Schoden 749-1090 How! Now! 'Call' 749-1090
Wood Prefer II™ IBM Macintosh Wood Presser
Wood Prefer II™ IBM Macintosh Wood Presser
Wood Prefer II™ IBM Macintosh Wood Presser
Word processing, applications, term paper dis-
tribition, online research, construction, rush
pability, Master's degree, 1964
---
305. For Sale
300s
Merchandise
Spring Special 365-28 MH computer, 4 MB RAM,
1.2 & 1.4 Floppy, 10 MB Hard Drive, "14" Super
RAM, MH RAM, 10 KB keyboard, mines tray
MS DOS 0.5, Serial mouse, $143.00, Bargain Bay
R32-247
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art, and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, hand-made books, boyshops, vintage clothing, books, carnival glass, Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising materials, children's furniture, Doullon, military collectibles, country furniture, coins, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale furniture, knives, stuff to ill show you away! QUANTRILLE'S FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Friday, Sat and Sun 9:30 a.m. Book rental info 482-646-6121
Bicycle women's Schwinn 10 speed with Gen. set.
$89 911-541-132
1990 Ford Mustang GT 5.0 eng. Loaded all power,
interior tape, Tint windshield, $11,500 839-541-1322
Chicago to Chicago Two-one way Airline Tickets, Fri.
March 13, 1441 Each, 863-459-309, evenings.
State of Kansas Trade-in. Excellent condition
seller. Refurbished used appliances.
sockets, 400W and up on usage. Call SysVia
at (801) 327-5600 or visit www.sysvia.com
Dynacr 80-watt amp, PAT-Y preamp, sompy receiver, $25.00, Star X100 armor, hardy
FOR SALE Imagewriter Printer Practically
new $2,800 negotiable 1-268-3280
For Sale Cheap ! Olympic Weight set w/bar. Like
new. Call John at 865-0616
For Sale. Men's & Sailor Skirts. Ft. a size 9 tennis
shoe. Gray, good condition. $40. Call Howard
748-2567.
Guitar & Amp Sale. 20.25% off, Hayes House of Music 944 Mass 842-5181
How many VCRs does one family need? We have 3.
2for sale $90. $90. Both work well. Call 842-4439
music sale $119. $119. Both work well. Call 842-4439
music sale $119. $119. Both work well. Call 842-4439
Call 814-7594 811-883
New Orleans, Mardi Gras. Plane ticket Feb. 27.
New Orleans, Mardi Gras, Plane ticket Feb. 27.
March asking $109 acceptable, code 684-8114
NOTERLOK computer. 386x80,20) ZM ram, 20 MD, mouse, software. Steve. 842-9385.
No more paper worries, new Brother WD64K +
Storage, many stuffs in1. 4400 obc W85 3694
One way to ticket First Lauderdale Sunday March 8th from BCM KC $75. Call 0414-6142 between 8:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Genuine ROLLERBLADE skates for the GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the best. All models available. Many colors. 843-2211
SHAPL Laptop Computer 4080 3/12 drive 3/14
port SPF-Laptop Modem Software Manual Expan
dition
Student Basketball tickets. KU vs. OU, OSU
sensitively let them to best offer 842-872
340 AutoSales
1976 Plymouth Volare V6, 2 DR, AM/FM, Auto, sleeper Volume C048, 234W
1978 Jaguar, XJ6, beautiful car 34,900 miles, Kenwood Stereo system, $780 call,君尔 841-34743
1891 TOUYA COROLLA S-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
Brake, brake 118K, A/C $800-$1682 GaliL7257
mileage mpg run time runs GPS PS/HP AM/FM车机 $2200 Many new parts. Call 844-792-6007, David葛慰
1087 Mercury Lynx - Automatic, A/C Cassette,
door 96, Skewed excellence. Temperature 8065-36325
door.eks $ Excellent condition $300-865-3521
107 Subway Service 91,000 miles $41 mn
$355-129-5141
1987 Subcompact. Only 21,000 miles, gats 41mpg.
Outstanding condition. $600 cash. Must sell soon.
Toyota Corolla GTSWtam Cwm-85rd.2ed .5 ppd, air
power suction,飞船 -cust骚 7300-9947 4175
360 Miscellaneous
On TV, v. VCR, jewelry, stereo, musical instrument
on the stage. On DVD, music. On MIC, Jaywalka Pawn & Jewelry
MUSIC. On CD, Walkman.
During research on teacher misconduct. Seeking interviews with students who believe they have conducted research in a way that is inappropriate.
SUPPORT CLOTHING OPTIONAL RECREATION
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits! OMNITRITION
OF YOUR DAYS.
370 Want to Buy
Basketball Tickets to O.S.U. and M. U games
be NON-Student tickets (Call 865-3751
BASEBALL SPORTS/SPORTS MEMORABILIA
need cards (or SPRUNG BREAK)
Wanted: Good Used Sporting Goods - Mountain Bikes, Baseball/Softball Equipment, Balls, Bails, Gloves, Golf, Tennis and much more. PLAY IT AAGN SPORTS MUSEUM, KS1-722-3600
D desperateay 3-4 KU-MU tickets. Please call daire or Love dina 11-89-5967
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry,
rare coins, etc. Call David 841-2965
Bring up your old cards and collect them. They may
be worth more than one dollar in a collection
total paid. 832-1871. Leave message
Wanted: one non-student B-Ball ticket for Kansas
vs. Missouri; March 8. Call Lacey 749-2685
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
405 For Rent
i bedroom basement apartment, close to K.U. and downtown, $250 per month, $200 rent, pay by credit card only.
400s
合
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Real Estate
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
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, gender, sexual orientation, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & bedroom
apartments. Clean, Fully
equipped kitchen. Laundry facility.
On-site management. Heat, AC, water
and trashpail. Compile baths! 1741 W. Kirchner Call
Chris
9th & Avalon 842-3040
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 applicable on an equal opportunity basis.
- House: Sublease 2BR 2 Bath 2 car garage on corner lot corner adjoined to dcreek. C.A, F.P. W. W.DlKdo up, Micro Mphe. Fenced yard and W. 24th St. 28th St. Call 811-3801 and ask for or leslie L
is where the
Spacious 1,2 & 3 bedrooms
available for the mature
studio-style residence
Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, inexpensive utilities,
on bus route. Summer spa facilities.
843-7454
Coyy, 1 Edbm, wood floors, near campus $295.841
STAR (7827)
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Artsy, 2 Bfbrm, 3rd floor, wood floors, near campus
$508-841*STAR (7827)
Naismith Place
- Assistant Director/Fleet
• Assistant Director/Fleet
• Chief Operating Officer/Pilot
• FMCs
• FMCs
• Officers/Administrators
• Other Management
(115) 439-2677
VF-Lot of Fleets
• VF-Lot of Fleets
• Vice President, Operation
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus. Washers/dryer, microwave, ceiling fan, mini-binches. Call 1st Management, Inc. Mpri.Fr.3-20.m.-30.m. 799-1596
Available now Spacious 3 DBR Duplex fully equipped kitchen with large windows to campus and apartment 4 bedrooms & 3 bathrooms. Mk8702A
Boardwalk
Now Leasing for Summer &
524 Frontier 842-4444
SERPERTELY NEEDED: Person to sublease
SERVICES: Gas cable pad, Nego NGO-
MARRE: 841.357
MARE: 841.357
YOUNG ISLAND RESORT
Open days a week for your convenience
Cozy侃尼 one bedroom, available March 18
convenient to RU and Downtown, $35/mo. built
belowstairs, sleeked, glass garage, built
422-860-7188
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
660 Gateway CL
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
841-5444
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
Free Feb Bent. two bd apt. $385 ends July 31st. On bus route. C947-7495.
Get a group! Restored 8bed 4bath fireplace, wood floors, W/D, W near riverfront. R141-ST827 (JAR)
No Appt. Necessary
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
*2 Full baths available
Part25
- Luxurious 2,3,& 4 Bedroom TownHomes
* Garages; 2'/2 Baths
* Microwave Ovens
* Some with Fireplaces
* On KU Bus Route
* Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
in 2,3,4 & bedrooms
• Large bedrooms & closets
• Pool & volleyball
SUNRISE VILLAGE
*Large, spacious floorplans
- Carpet colors:
*Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
10-5 M-F
'2-5 Sat
- 2 Pools
- Volleyball Court
- On KU bus route-open 7 days a week
- 4 stops on property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
842-1455
--open 7 days a week
Heatherwood Apartments - 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments will be released now until the day of May.
Illview Apts $15 to lease signing签订 1 & 2 bedroom apartments $23 & $35 plus deposit. On request.
meadowbrook
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom to choose from
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 14
Close to Campus and on KU
It's Time to Step Up To
Bus Route
MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline 842-4200
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT? CALL US FIRST MALLEMENT INC.
New locations on campus: 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Washer dryers, microwaves, ceiling fans, min-binbs. Call now for an appointment. Mon-Fri 5p.m - 5p.m. 749-1568
Looking for a place? Cove 2 bedroom apt in the
Middlebury neighborhood. Purchase through
July 15/$30/month - utilities. Negotiable
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
Louisiana Place Apts. Now leasing nice BPR Apt Bordering Campus Beautiful view of the city. Call 412-630-7985
Need Quit? Great 2 BR apt. for Grad student or
course $335/mo + LOW utilities. Pool near campus. Current residents moving after 4 yrs. Available in April, 841-2727
Save $$$ with each new deposit
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and GradStudents!! --- You u can get rid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special" That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
Sublease July with option for year after, larger 1 RR,
Cold Woods, Water paid, b23-0749.
- Weeklymaidservice
- Dine Anytime meals
- Microwaves
* Mini Blinds
- Macintosh Computer Room
Plus...
- Exercise Room
- Walk to K.U.
- On Bus Route
* Heated Pool
* 3 Hot Tubes
- Front door bus service
Call now to reserve your room.
- Basketball Court
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Naismith Hall
- Water Paid
- Laundry Facilities
- Dishwasher
- Basketball
- Flexible Leasing
Location-Lifestyle
The Best Value
In Town
842-5111
Sublease one bedroom apartment at Hanover Place. Water paid, furnished. From March to August. Close to downtown & campus. Call 865-4386.
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths,
close to campus, furnished. Call 749-386-8701
close campus, furnished. Call 436-598-10
Two bedroom apartment on bus route. W/D:
$450/month + utilities. Call after 5:30 p.m. 842-
7903.
Very nice 1 bed, near 6th and Kaskad, KU use
50.19.22, very large room, water, trash 18.19.22,
very large room, water, trash 18.19.22
430 Roommate Wanted
2 roommates needed ASAP for newer, 4B, north Lawrence home. Male, non-smokers preferred. 2 baths, DW, W/D, Microwave $215.00 utilities. cable/paid. Ivane 841-4698
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-4631
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FEBRUARY RENT FREE.室mates wanted to share duplex in JP: BOCC. 35 min. from KU w/car pool available. 2 bifurcats vacant. FREE Mobil phone. special situation C call Mike at: 41-6378 for detail
Hurry. We need a roommate to a townhouse.
On bus route B, 1/3. 1/5. utilities. $16/m. Flexible.
Roommate required.
New-Roommate Matching Service For theirxen23
registrations, it’s free. After that, until 31st, it’s $5.
We check references, give you candidates who
require requirements. Call Diaxie at 380-2494
today!
- Policy
Worked with CAD software on Windows
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $200/mo. 841-1287
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR towneb at Apple
Store, DW, DW, FD, all amenities
84.81 - 867.66
Non-smoking male for 3 bedroom house bordering campawwaler/driver & micro, no lease. $120.00
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female wanted to share 2 bedroom. Have own room with walk-in closet. On bus route. $249mth + 1/2 utls. Call 851-0541. Available Now!
Roommate needed immediately through July; $200
annually; accommodates great neighbors, a
neighborhood, 482-609-Lowey.
One female student for a furnished 53 Brown Street,
1220 Lexington Ave. parking 729/730 or 1/814th. Anytime 422/436.
$170/month + 1/814th. Anytime 422/436.
*Policy*
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Two non-smoking female roommates wanted to share 3 RB 2 h bath, near campus. For 92-91
very 1.3 IIR plus staircase left apartment
sprinkle summer, and/or next year $180/mo. plus
20% off.
Summer roommates need: quiet spacious apartment 3 rooms from campus. Owned furnished bedrooms.
4. WORDSET
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered line counts as 10 words.
Classified Information Mail-in Form
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Prepaid Order Form Ads
None holds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising.
Purchases held on cancellation and RAI 0 charges apply.
Deadlines
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are for free three days, no more than 15 words.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all ad classifieds attached to the Unit.
105 personal
120 individuals
120 announcements
120 announcements
225 professional service
360 minute filming
Words 1 Day 2-3Days 4-5Days 10Days
0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
Classifications
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Name Phone
Address
(phone number published only if included below)
Please note that a hard copy is also available.
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| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins.
Total days in paper.
Amount paid.
Classification
Makecheks payable to:
University Dial Kansan
191 Stauffer Flint Hlnt
Lawrence, KS 6045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
NEWS
"Good heavens! Pablo got an 'F' in art! . . . Well, I'm just going to go down to that school myself and meet this teacher face to face!"
16
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, February 26, 1992
ZEP ZEP
SALE!
ZEP ZEP
ZEP ZEP
FINEST GARMENTS
FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISI
Up to 50% Off!
M-Sat 10-6
703 Mass. Thurs 10-8 843-5607
Breakfast•Lunch•Dinner
in installation the only new
backed by a national
film and installation
program that heats up
heavyly to reduce heat up
and 90% reduction of
Gommetts' heating needs.
Gommetts' heating needs
Treat Yourself
As The Weather Gets Cold
Make Your Cat Look HOT!
728 Massachusetts • 842-5199
- Auto Detailing
- Sunroof Installation
- FREE ESTIMATES
Jayhawk Bookstore
*at the top of Nantucket Hill*
Paradise Cafe & Bakery
Suntint Auto Tinting Can Reduce Interior
Clarking and Sun Fade with Insulfim Tint Film
KU
SAILING
CLUB
Bottleneck
Have you had mononucleosis within the last month? If so, your plasma could make a valuable contribution to research and earn you $50 at the same time.
---
The Athlete's Foot.
WINTER SPECIALS:
$50 for 3 window trucks
$100 for 2 door cars
JBS Briti-Bus
For additional details call Lawrence Donor Center at 749-5750
Kill Whitey
Course of Empire
THURSDAY 27
WHICH
DOCTOR?
Camberwell Green
Meeting tonight at Governor's Room in Kansas Union at 7 p.m. For more information call 864-6702
SUN TINT
2201-C West 25th St
841 - 4779
Call for Special Charter Rates Mon.-Thurs. 843-3826
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
Brilleneck
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
WEDNESDAY 26
18 & over
from Dallas
Kill Whitey
Course of Empire
THURSDAY 27
WHICH
DOCTOR?
Camberwell Green
FRIDAY 28
Adv. Tix. 18 & over
from N.Y.C./Toronto
Fleshtones
Shadowy Men on a
Shadowy Planet
SATURDAY 29
from St. Louis
The URGE
Id Explosion
$50 $50
MONO
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
BROOKS
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
New Horizons
TAE KWON DO
Holiday Plaza - 25th and Iowa
(913) 749-4400
12:00:1·00 * ☑ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐
4:30:5·30 * ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐
5:40:6·40 * ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐
7:00:8·00 * ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐
TAKEDOWN
MONDAY 2
OPEN
MIC
1 MONTH
INTRO.
Only $1995
Exp. 3-31-92
"Self Defense"
"Self Discipline"
"Self Confidence"
"Balance & Coordination"
"Fitness & Weight Control"
Ask us about a high
energy & very affordable
Nutrition/weight loss
system.
WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 34TH ANNUAL
DOGSALE!
SALE ENDS SATURDAY
A DOG RAILWAY
Huge savings on new and used cameras, video, and computers, accessories, demonstrators, trade-ins and discontinued items. Bring cash, MasterCard, Visa or Discover, but hurry to Wolfe's Camera & Video for the most dynamic sale ever. Financing available.
386SW WITH VGA MONITOR
Only
$35/Mo.*
$899
KLH Champion IBM Compatible with VGA Color Monitor
The KlH Champion features 16Mhz computation speed and 42Mb hard drive. It has 1.1 Mb of RAM, 3.5" disk drive to take modern software and comes with mouse. Software includes DOS 5.0 and Georockis ensemble. This is a fine basic computer for home use that has a high computation speed.
COMPLETE CHAMPION OUTFIT
Champion with VGA color monitor, dot matrix printer, printer cable, mouse pad and paper $1099
FANTASTIC CD ROM
er Incl ed in Outfit
$899 Only
*35/Mo.*
Groier's encyclopedia on one CD. It has 3.5" floppy drive, 80286 CPU, 1M RAM, and 40MB hard drive. Software includes GeoWorks ensemble, Lotus 1-2-3 version 2.2, DOS 4.01 and PC Globe 4.0.
CD disks offer tremendous storage. For example, the 4KCD comes with a complete
MAGNAVOX HS 48 CD COMPUTER
COMPLETE 48CD OUTFIT
48CD, color 41 VGA monitor, dot matrix printer,
cable, mouse pad and paper.
Upgrade CPU to 386SX
$1399
ONLY $300
Instant Credit to Qualified Customers
*With approved credit. Based on 21% A.P.R. with 10% down and 36 monthly payments. Sales tax of 5.25% included. Other terms and down payment options available.*
486SX/20
6
Commodore 64
$1499 Only
*54/Mo.*
Monitor Included
In System
Monitor sold separately
5. 25" and 3.5" discs plus large 80 MB hard drive and 2 MB or RAM. Software includes DOS 4.01, GW basic, Lotus 1-2-3 and Geoworks ensemble.
Magnaxov 486XS with 20Mhz processing speed. Fionna drives for
Powerful 486 computer with 33MHz processing speed and large 100MB hard drive. Has both 3.5" and 5.25" floppy drives to accept modern and older software. It includes 64K Cache, DOS 5.0 and Windows 3.0. New minitower design has lots of room for expansion.
OFFICEMATE
486DX/33
90 DAYS NO INTEREST
Credit Instant to Qualified Customer
$2399
486x/33 computer with 28 Super VGA
Color Monitor. dot matrix printer and pin cable.
$2899
COMPLETE 486 SYSTEM $29
USED 35MM SLR CAMERAS
Canon
Choose from over 100 famous name cameras. Choose autofocus or fully manual cameras. Save ?2 and more from original new retail. These used cameras have lots of great pictures. Check these examples. Many unlisted items!
| | When New | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Yashica FX-3 with 50mm | 199.99 | 79.99 |
| Pentax ME-Super with 35-70mm | 389.95 | 199.99 |
| Nikon F-4 body | 1895.00 | 1199.00 |
| Minolta XG-1 with 45mm f2 | 298.00 | 109.99 |
| Maxxum 5000 body | 445.00 | 159.99 |
| Canon T-50 with f1.8 | 298.00 | 99.99 |
| Canon AF-1 with 50mm f1.8 | 395.00 | 179.99 |
35mm AUTOFOCUS CAMERAS
CAMERA
Factory samples, used, new closeouts. Over 200 cameras to sell. $19.95 up.
| When New | SALE |
|---|
| Ricoh FF-3 AF (used) | 199.95 | 69.99 |
| Keystone AF-1 | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| Yashica T-2 (new) | 289.00 | 149.99 |
| Minolta Autofocus(used) | 229.00 | 49.99 |
| Minolta Zoom 90 (new) | 289.00 | 179.99 |
| Olympus IS-1 | 599.00 | 439.99 |
| Pentax IQ105 date outfit | 395.00 | 299.99 |
| Fuji Mini Dual | 189.99 | 129.99 |
MANY ONE OF A KIND
VIDEO
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Fisher 730 features powerful 8X zoom; accurate 'fuzzy logic' controls, autofocus and 3 lux low light it has high speed shutter to 1/4000 date/time display and wireless remote
CINEMA
Nikon
2EX1050
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$699 Only 26/Mo.
5 Year Factory Warranty NIKON Camcorder
Nikon 8mm camcorder with 8X zoom lens and digital shutter speeds from 1/60 to 1/4000. It features autofocus, auto fade and CCD sensor with 270,000 pixel high resolution image
4 HEAD AND HiFi STEREO
SALE
Only $11/Mo.*
Only $40/MO.*
$299
SONY Hi-8 Camcorder
Save $1099
$200
SAMSUNG MTS STEREO READY VCR features 4 heads for excellent special effects, 1 year 8 event programming from remote with on-screen display, HiFi stereo sound, random access tuning and more.
Hi-8 for superior picture quality and Hi-Fi hi-fi stereo sound for more lifelike sound. Features 8X macro zoom lens, 16 speed high speed shutter, wireless remote and 3 lux low light.
SONY 801 SAVE $300 $1399
BIRDIE
MP3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
All Items Subject to Prior Sale
$399 Only $15/Mo.
SONY LASER DISK PLAYER
Sony Laser Disk,player for CD. CDV and LD. If features digital stereo audio, superb special effects, full feature wireless connectivity, or disk for the highest quality picture available for your TV today.
BINOCULARS
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 10X4BQ Zeiss Armored | 1196.00 | 799.99 |
| 7X35 Trag Biblical | 149.95 | 49.99 |
| 7X35 Superita | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| 7X35 Extra wide Bushnell | 129.95 | 59.99 |
| 7X45 wide Swift infocap | 150.00 | 79.99 |
| 7X48Z Zeiss Armored | 1130.00 | 799.99 |
| 7X48W navigator空军 | 664.95 | 249.99 |
| 7X50 Nikon Seasider | 336.00 | 199.99 |
| 8X30B Zeiss Armored | 970.00 | 699.99 |
| 8X40 Trag Armored | 169.95 | 49.99 |
| 8X42 Banner Rootprism | 377.95 | 19.99 |
| 9X40 Simmons V | 79.95 | 39.99 |
| 8X22 Minolta Autofocus | 376.00 | 199.99 |
| 10X28 B&L Compact | 580.95 | 199.99 |
| 7X21 Tacose rose | 119.95 | 59.99 |
| 7X25 Jason Graphite | 99.95 | 39.99 |
| 8X20B Zeiss Armored | 580.00 | 199.99 |
| 10X25 Leit pocket | 549.99 | 399.99 |
| 10X25 Zeiss pocket | 525.00 | 349.99 |
---
ALBUMS & FRAMES
1/2 PRICE
Assorted Styles.
Odd Lots.
Discontinued Colors.
ENLARGERS &
DARKROOM
IF NEW RETAIL
| IF NEW RETAIL | SALE | YEAR |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 12' Premier Dryer (u) | 199.99 | 79.99 |
| Brownie Safelett (u) | 29.99 | 9.99 |
| Jingle Belt liner (u) | 49.99 | 14.99 |
| Morrisk Color Analyzer (u) | 279.95 | 99.99 |
| Richards '25 washer (u) | 169.95 | 69.99 |
| 76mm i45 Wolensik (u) | 95.00 | 149.00 |
| 4x5 Bearste MXT Dichro | 2300.00 | 1449.00 |
|凸显头 color for Beseler MXT | 3068.00 | 1749.00 |
| Beseler G7S/CXL cond | 458.00 | 1399.00 |
| Beseler Cadiel I Kit | 175.00 | 1399.00 |
| Printmaker 35 enlarger | 225.00 | 1099.00 |
| Durst M370 color(denom) | 498.00 | 299.99 |
| 105mm i45 Companion | 165.00 | 99.99 |
| 105mm i45 El Vemar | 69.95 | 29.99 |
| 28mm i35 El Hansa | 89.99 | 29.99 |
| 135 mm i35 El Kait | 49.95 | 19.99 |
| 75mm i45 isofern (gent) | 69.95 | 29.99 |
METERS
Capital F4 Cos 59.95 39.99
Elicar Analog Spot meter 289.95 119.99
Elicar Digital Spot meter 369.95 149.99
Elicar Flashstudio meter 249.95 79.99
Goseen Micro attachment 66.00 19.99
Sekonic foot candle miT 134.99 99.99
Sekonic L-188 underwater 89.00 99.99
Sekonic L-488 Digstop 450.00 249.99
Shepherd ft. cable meter 44.95 29.99
TRIPODS, COPY STANDS AND ACCESSORIES
Wolfe's
| IF NEW RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | ---: |
| Bilora1050 head (demo) | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| Stitz 800m pan ball head | 49.99 | 14.99 |
| Bogen 300m tripod | 121.45 | 109.99 |
| Bogen 3003 tripod | 147.90 | 129.99 |
| Bogen 3024 tripod | 202.90 | 179.99 |
| Bogen 3124 tripod | 192.90 | 179.99 |
| Bogen 3794 tripod | 198.98 | 169.99 |
| Bogtail ball head | 10.95 | 2.99 |
| Huma 45 suction mount | 37.95 | 14.99 |
| Huma 4040 car mount | 112.95 | 19.99 |
| Clamp & elev. ball head | 47.95 | 19.99 |
| Clamp w/ elev. ball head | 53.85 | 19.99 |
| Testite CS-1 copy stand | 67.99 | 49.99 |
| Testite CS-1L weights | 99.99 | 89.99 |
| Testite CS-3 copy stand | 119.99 | 89.99 |
| Testite lights 23-C | 64.99 | 49.99 |
| Testite adj. copy stage | 79.95 | 29.99 |
| Sima SC monopod | 59.99 | 39.99 |
| Pestol grptable tripod | 29.95 | 19.99 |
| Pro 3631 (tip型) | 169.95 | 24.99 |
| Promaster 180T tripod | 19.95 | 19.99 |
Promaster 4050 tripod | 99.95 | 19.99 |
Promaster 4300 tripod | 119.95 | 69.99 |
SFX mini tripod | 19.99 | 9.99 |
Shoulder stock with cable | 59.95 | 19.99 |
Titalil Silver Anniv Tripod | 199.95 | 139.99 |
Vanguard PT10X tripod | 69.95 | 29.99 |
Vantage VT207 tripod | 69.95 | 29.99 |
Fiesta Video Tripod | 79.95 | 39.99 |
Pro 4600 tripod | 149.99 | 79.99 |
Pro 4700 video (demo) | 179.95 | 69.99 |
Pro 4900 video tripod | 219.95 | 119.99 |
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.NO.104
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
HURSDAY FEBRUARY 27,1992
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Women in Big 8 issue are not all students
Magazine caption misidentifies model as KU cheerleader
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
On page 118 of *Playboy*'s April "Girls of the Big Eight" issue, the caption above a photo of a topless Nikki Merle says she is a "cheerleader and engineering major at Kansas."
Merle is one of five women featured in the pictorial who did not use their real names, a Playboy representative said.
But spirit squad members and coaches say Merle never led cheers at the University of Kansas. And staff at the School of Engineering say they don't recognize the woman.
But of the women who did use their real names, three are not enrolled at any Big Eight Conference university, including one who was registered according to the universities' registrar offices.
Some of the 41 women in the pictorial, including two who are enrolled for this semester at KU, are scheduled to appear today from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Town Crier Bookstore, 930 Massachusetts st. , and from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Hastings Books, Music and Video, 2000 W. 23rd St.
None of the women could be reached yester day for comment.
Playboy would not release Merle's real
name, but Scott Lamontagne, KU cheerleading coach, said that he had seen the picture of Merle.
"She is not a cheerleader," he said. "She has never been a cheerleader at KU."
Lamontagne said he was angered by the Plavbov pictures.
"It's unnerving for me to see our program associated with a person who is not a part of it," he said. "My kids work very hard. Competition means you are going away from my team and the members of it."
Lamontagne said there were no rules against squad members posing nude.
"But we try to keep kids on our squad that portrays a clean-cut image," he said.
Elaine Brady, spirit squad coordinator, said the pictures were in *now you* was not the type of pictures he would be in. The spirit squad
"The kids on our squad are all-American kids," she said. "These kids are beautiful on the inside and the outside. It's disturbing to me that this picture in a national magazine will be associated with our program."
Kendra Shaffer, a cheerleader and Toppera junior, said she wanted to find out who Merle
"I want to know if Playboy made up the cheerleader part or if the girl led," she said.
"Did she say she was cheerleader?"
Elizabeth Norris, a public relations representative for Playboy, said from Chicago yesterday that Merle had indicated cheerleading as one of her hobbies on a questionnaire.
"She said her hobby was cheerleading," she said. "She never said she was a cheerleader at
When asked whether the magazine's caption made Merle seem like a KU cheerleader, Norris said the caption's wording "certainly did."
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In a telephone interview later yesterday, Norris said she had talked to the caption's witness.
"The caption says Nikki is a cheerleader,
orris said. "Then it says she's an engineering
student."
But after looking at the Playboy picture of Merle, seven staff members in the office of Carl Locke Jr., dean of engineering, said they did not recognize her. Locke said.
"We would recognize most of them," Locke said.
He said the School of Engineering had 226 female students.
Whether any of the five women who used false names in the pictorial are enrolled at a
A representative of KU's registrar said no one named Merle was enrolled at KU.
Big Eight university could not be determined because Playboy would not release their real names. Norris said Playboy often allowed women to use false names.
But at least three women who posed for the pictorial under their real names, including one who claimed to be a student at KU, were never enrolled at the universities at which they
claimed to be students, according to the universities' registrar's offices.
A representative of KU's registrar said Gindy Schuetz, who appeared on page 115 of the magazine, registered at KU during pre-enrolment for spring, which would have been her first semester, but never completed enrollment by paying fees.
Theresse Bulver, who claimed to be a student at Iowa State University, was never a student at Iowa State, a representative of the registrar's office said.
And a representative at the University of Oklahoma registrar's office said Tina Lavon Wahl, who claimed to be a student at Oklahoma, had no records at the university.
Norris said Playboy required applicants to present a valid student identification card or a receipt for fees when they were interviewed for the pictorial during the fall.
She said the magazine required women who appeared in the pictorial to be full-time or part-time students when the pictures were taken or when the magazine was published.
"All I can say is that our fact checkers verified all the women with the registration offices at the universities," she said. "We don't want girls who are not students, and we went out of our way to make sure they met our requirements.
Breaking away
"But remember that sometimes people will do anything to appear in Playboy."
I am not sure if it is safe to do this. It might be unsafe, but I can't find any evidence that it is. So I'm going with what I see.
By Shelly Solon
Kansan staff writer
When her stepfather picked her up from school on the last day of seventh grade, Sherree Lane knew she was in trouble.
Editor's note: This story contains graphic descriptions which may be disturbing to some readers.
A teacher told Lane's father she had misbehaved in class that day.
"He had my teacher watch me," says Lane, now a St. Louis sophomore. "I kissed and hugged a boy."
"It's such a relief to have this all out in the open that don't feel like have to spend nearly as much time thinking about things and being angry or depressed." Lane says.
Lane knew she would have to be punished.
She laid down, and her 6-foot, 230-pound stepfather got on top of her.
"He told me to strip down," she says. "He took a leather belt and whipped me down to the back of him. He rolled me down on the living room floor."
"Then, he stuck his penis in my vagina," she says.
He yelled at her: "You're on your way to becoming a slut! Is this what you want?"
It was then, at age 13, that Lane learned about 'checking' and 'pushing.'
"Checking' meant he was 'checking my numbers,' or seeing how wet I was." Lane says. "Depending on how wet I was, he would assign me a number. If I was completely dry or at number one, I had a good attitude. If was at 10 or above, I needed 'help.' If was i higher than one, I had to be 'pushed,' which meant he had to stick the head of his penis in my vagina. He said this would pull my numbers down. He would stick his finger in my vagina and check me in the car on the way to school, when I got home or whenever."
He said he was keeping her from becoming a whore and preparing her for sex.
During her junior year in high school,this happened ever
"He'd push to the left, 'Does that hurt?' He'd push to the right, 'Does that stimulate you?' He'd lift my legs, turn me around. The whole time I'd just go numb, stare at the ceiling or the green curtains. I disconnected myself from it. It'd just say 'yes' or 'no' in a totally monoteye voice."
Just a student
spending a lot of time in the library.
In some ways, Lane is no different than other accounting majors at KU. She is hoping for a 'B in business statistics, trying to survive on Pell Grants and
But like a small number of KU students, she has more than grades and money problems to cope with. More than 22 percent of females and 8 percent of males surveyed at the University of Wisconsin had been sexually molested or assaulted before age 18.
school, he happened By then, she realized he was ejaculating inside her. He also had anal sex with her.
Lane says she was sexually abused by her stepfather until the second semester of her freshman year. Until she went last year to the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and KU police, she had found no way to escape the abuse.
With their support, Lane declared independence from her parents, went into therapy at the counseling center in Bailey Hall and filed a rape charge against her stepfather.
Although the abuse has ended, Lane continues to deal with her past.
Sometime, maybe in six weeks, maybe in six years, Lane knows her life will be interrupted by a suboenae.
She will have to tell a Kansas court how the man she called "dad" for eight years raped her.
Lane never cries or hesitates when she describes the abuse. She talks about it like she might describe her weekend. She smiles and laughs like it's a casual conversation.
"I think I have a good chance," she says. "I know they'll put me through hell, though. I know the jury will have a problem with me, because I won't cry."
When Lane does feel like crying, she goes for a walk. She hates to cry in front of friends.
They pay for Lane's room and board. She stayed with them this summer when she went to therapy. During therapy, she learned to tell her stepfather how she felt about him.
She even sent a letter, but never sent it to the Missouri prison where he is serving time for forgery and passing bad He will face the rape charge in Kansas when he is paroled.
"When you have someone who's finally listening, there's no need to cry." she says. "I no want you to be kidding."
Lane says she doesn't want pity and feels lucky to have her grandparents' support.
"If I could do whatever I wanted to 'I'd put a bullet in his genitals, watch him suffer for a few minutes and then shoot him in the head, or I'd want to cut the
fingers he put in me down to nothing so he'll never use them again," she says.
She says she hopes men in prison will do to her stepfather what he did to her.
Asfar as Lane is concerned, he should die violently.
Falling on deaf ears
Her story is no secret. But Sherree Lane is an alias she used for this story. Lane is her mother's maiden name.
Lane has told friends, therapists, KU police and a counselor at the women's center about
what happened to her. She's beentrying to get people to listen for years, starting with her mother.
Her mom would confront her stepfather. They would argue and her mom would leave.
"Then it would all come down on me." Lane says. "He'd slam me into the wall. He'd backhand me once in the face in just the right place so my nose would bleed."
When Lane realized her moth
Although Lane's grandparents and relatives had little contact with her, she suspected that she was afraid of her stepfather to act.
er was not going to stop her stepfather, she gave up. Other relatives, a social worker and a therapist, were in attendance enforced Lang's loathness.
Finally, one of Lane's uncles called a child abuse center in St.
Continued on Page 6
Abortion bill to be debated in Legislature
By Gayle Osterberg
Korean staff writer
TOPEKA — After less than one hour of discussion, a House committee yesterday passed by voice vote a bill that would make abortion legal in Kansas if Roe vs. Wade were overturned.
"I'stime we put a state policy in place," she said.
State Rep. Kathleen Sebelius, D-Toppea, who heads the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said that this summer the U.S. Supreme Court could overturn the Roe vs. Wade decision, which legalized abortion.
Committee members briefly discussed several aspects of the bill before the vote.
House Speaker Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg, said during yesterday's House session that the bill would be debated on the floor Friday.
A specific count is not taken during a voice vote and individual votes are not recorded unless a committee member questions the outcome.
Sebelius led committee discussion on the bill later in the day.
If Roe vs. Wade were overturned, if the proposed bill were defeated, current Kansas law would go into effect.
The bill would make abortion legal if the fetus were unable to live outside the womb. It also would legalize late-term abortions if the mother's life were in danger, or the fetus was severely deformed.
Current law prohibits abortion except when the mother's life is in danger, the fetus has a severe deformity or the pregnancy resulted from a rape.
During committee hearings on the bill earlier in February, an opponent called the bill the "abortion clinic protection act."
Sebelius said the bill was a reasonable policy for Kansas.
"The anti-choice voices in this legislature will not be satisfied unless we criminalize abortion," she said. "When I listened to those 22 (opponents), there was no suggestion that would be an alternative for anyone at any time for any reason."
Sebelius said she did not know how many favorable votes the hill would receive in a House vote.
"The House traditionally is more favorable of things like this, (the Senate)," she said.
State Rep. J.C. Long, R.-Harper, an anti-abortion advocate and committee member, said the entire House was more conservative on the issue than the committee.
"I think the entire bill has problems," he said.
nRequire a woman under age 16 to be counseled about her alternatives before having an abortion.
nP prohibit the interference of access to or from a health care clinic that performs abortions.
The issues of parental notification and viability would like raise debate on the floor. Sebelius said.
Viability is the stage at which the fetus can survive out side the womb without extraordinary medical measures.
Amy Bixler, a representative of the National Organization for Women, attended yesterday's meeting and has discussed the bill with House members.
Two students shot at Brooklyn school
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A 15-year-old student shot and killed two classmates Wednesday in a high school swarming with security guards preparing for a visit from the mayor, police said
Later in the day, a 16-year-old classmate distraught over the killings attempted suicide and was not expected to survive.
Ian Moore, 17, and Tyrone Sinkler, 16, were shot pointblank in a second-floor hallway at violence-plagued Thomas Jefferson High School in the rough East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn.
The suspect went to school looking for them, then "walked right up to them without saying a word and shot them," said Deputy Inspector Patrick Carroll.
2
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
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Towards a National Strategy for Conserving Biodiversity 2 March 1992. 8:00 pm. Woodruff Auditorium
Free to Students, Faculty and Staff, and the Public
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Ex-KUAC employee charged
Charges have been filed against a former Kansas University Athletic Corporation employee who allegedly took more than $3,000 from the corporation during a period of 11 months.
Arthur Lingle, 62, was charged Feb. 19 with four counts of felony theft and six counts of misdemeanor theft between September 1990 and July 1991.
Doug Vance, sports information director, said Lingle resigned soon afterward on Aug. 30, 1991, after 22 years as KUAC employee.
Kansan staff report
Lingle, former assistant business manager for KUAC, was not arrested when the complaint was filed, but has been summoned to appear in Douglas County District Court on March 10 to be formally charged. He said yesterday that he did not want to comment on the charges.
ON CAMPUS
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization, will have a luncheon meeting at11:30a.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union
The Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel.
The Women's Concerns Committee of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 6:30 today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Urine.
The KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Kansas Union.
Campus Tour Guides will meet at 7 tonight at the Crimson and Blue Room in Strong Hall.
- The Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
GLSOK will meet at 7:30tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Hotel.
KU Democrats will meet at 8 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Oread Room in the Building.
**The Men's Lacrosse Club will have a conditioning practice at 8:30 tonight at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.**
reports. No one has been arrested in connection with the burglaries, Lawrence police reported.
ON THE RECORD
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 toion at 130 Robinson Center.
Stereo equipment, a television, a videocassette recorder and 70 compact discs were taken between 6 and 12 months. The student's apartment. An unidentified
WEATHER
Three burglaries in the 1600 and 1700 blocks of West 21st Street and West 21st Street Terrace between 4 and 8 p.m. Tuesday resulted in total losses of more than $2,500 and $300 in property damages. Unidentified persons used similar methods to enter the residences, according to police
NEBRASKA Omaha 52/36
Today's high/tomorrow morning's low
COLORADO Denver 61/32
KANSAS Lawrence 63/43
Dodge City Wichita 68/39 65/40
MISSOURI Kansas City 62/41 St Louis 55/43
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City 66/42
3-day outlook
TODAY Mostly sunny and pleasant, winds NW at 10-15 mph.
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Minority athletes break the mold
KU jocks battle 'dumb' stereotype
By Cody Holt
Kansan staff writer
Somewhere on campus there is an African-American student who does not want you to know he plays football for the University of Kansas.
he does not wear his letter jacket or any other
hat that would label him as an athlete
when he is playing.
"I think when a Black athlete tries to give an intelligent response in class there is a lot of shifting in seats," the student said. "It's like 'Oh no, here he goes again.'"
Carlos Fleming, a junior on the tennis
He is just one of many KU students trying to overcome the stereotyping of Black athletes.
Carlos Fleming, a junior on the tennis team, said that his teachers seemed surprised when he received the trophy.
Black History Month
"The stereotype of the Black athlete is that he is going to try to cut corners," he said.
Fleming dispels these misconceptions. He is a former Phillips 66 Classroom Champion and earned first-team Academic All-Big Eight honors in 1990.
Macolm Nash, a senior on the men's basketball team, said that some of the stereotypes could be caused by athletes in the past who were not as concerned with academics.
"I think athletes now are starting to realize the importance of an education," he said.
MARCUS SMITH
However, Fleming said that stereotyping of the Black athlete went beyond the classroom.
"It's as if being an athlete legitimizes a Black person on campus," he said, "The fact that students draw conclusions about Black athletes for reasons
Nash agreed that Black athletes were more accepted on campus because of their participation in a sport.
other than personal is a big problem. "
"People have a tendency to praise athletes," he said. "I'm more accepted as a person because of the press and being in the limelight."
Fleming said that media attention often isolated Black athletes from the African-American culture, creating a rude awakening when their playing days were over.
"Athletes live in a dream world for four years and then wake up without a degree or a pro contract," he said. "They need to remember they are also part of the Black community."
Fleming said that when he arrived at
KU as a freshman the first question he asked his coach was, "When do we get our gear so I can wear it on campus?"
He said the thought this was a common attitude of incoming athletes that created many problems.
Fleming and Nash both said that there were physical stereotypes of Black athletes that had the potential to affect any African-American student.
They said the stereotype that Blacks are superior athletes sometimes leads to conclusions about their athletic prowess and consequently, a belief about their inadequacies in the classroom.
Nash said that he wished he could be seen as just another student.
"If I were in charge of things I would make sure athletes are not isolated from all other students," he said. "I would want every student to know us and not base perceptions only on what they see on the court."
SPALDING
Athletically-inclined students are sometimes seen by other students and professors as disinterested in their classes.
Photo illustration by Christine McFarland / KANSAN
KU, Budig oppose threat to minority aid
Kansan staff writer
By Jenny Martin
But KU's efforts could soon be undermined by a proposal made by the federal government to ban minority-targeted financial aid in institutions of higher education.
From improved recruitment and retention efforts to more scholarships and programs, the University of Kansas has heightened its commitment to attracting minority students
Nationwide, hundreds of university and college presidents are writing letters to the U.S. Department of Education in support of a statement by the American Council on Education that denounces the department's proposal.
Chancellor Gene Budig's letter stating KU's opposition to the proposed changes should be received by the department by the March 9 deadline for public comment.
"The University of Kansas is committed to assisting economically disadvantaged students and those who have traditionally not been able to participate fully in the professions and in public life." Budig wrote in his letter to Michael Williams, assistant secretary of the department's Office for Civil Rights.
The proposal is based on Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It states that "no person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."
The department wants universities
to find ways to attract and keep minorities without unlawfully discriminating against them for reasons of race, color or national origin.
Budig in his letter that the proposed policy would be a tragic setback for the progress that had been made by many institutions over the past several decades in achieving equality for the diverse racial and ethnic groups in our society.
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said the department was acting as if the advancements made for minorities up to now were sufficient.
"This is what the uproar is about—most educators and administrators think we are far from eliminating racism at universities," he said. "I think the conservative right wing in America is making a significant effort to encourage administration to cut back the services and resources that have been used to increase minority opportunities."
Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancelor, said that only a small portion of scholarship money at KU was reserved for minority students.
Scally said that the department's proposal was a reflection of a backlash going on in the United States against minorities by people who thought minorities were unnecessarily privileged and that the laws worked in their favor.
The department will issue a notice of proposed rule-making after the March 9 deadline for public comment. The proposal will again be open for comment before it becomes a regulation.
Minority scholarships could be cut
By Svala Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
The KU Endowment Merit Scholarship Program for minority students is one of the programs that could be affected if the U.S. Department of Education proposal to eliminate race-based scholarships is implemented.
The program, which started in 1979, offered more than 100 scholarship based on academic merit to minority students. The program was assisted by a dean of educational services,
More than 400 minority students and their parents visited the University of Kansas in recruiting efforts for both the Endowment Merit and Discovery scholarships for minorities and women, she said.
Marshall Jackson, administrative associate at the Student Assistance Center, was one of the founders of the merit scholarships.
Students competing for the scholarship must be from Kansas or the Kansas City metropolitan area and have a 3.0 grade point average or composite score of 23 or higher on the ACT, said Pearl Rovaris, representative for the Office of Admissions.
"It was attempt to attract academically talented students of co'or to the University," he said. "The first year we had 20 students who visited the campus, and 13 enrolled in the fall of 1980."
dents are subject to being reviewed," he said. "I think the commitment at KU is such that we are going to do whatever we can continue these important programs in an effort to increase the diversity on this campus."
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said the proposed federal policy endangered the scholarship program.
Thompson said that some people thought minority students were at the University only because of their race. Other students proved this perception wrong.
*All programs that provide some kind of scholarships for minority stu-
"These students are in the top 5 or 10 percent of their graduating classes," he said. "They are receiving assistance on academics, not based on race."
Linda Lily, Wichita freshman, said the Endowment Merit Scholarship she received weighed in her decision to come to the University.
"I considered Purdue, KU and JF accepted to Purdue, but I do not expect to expire."
Ly, who plans to major in biochemistry, said minority scholarships were helpful but should not be taken for granted.
"I don't think that just because you are a minority you automatically deserve a scholarship," she said. "Acaa merit also needs to be considered."
Melissa Burgess, Lee's Summit, Mo. freshman, said she opposed the elimination of race-based scholarships.
"I think a lot of minorities would not be able to afford to go to college without financial aid," she said. "If I did not have the scholarship and other financial aid, I would not be here."
Senate discipline bill passes committee vote
By Jav Williams
Kansanstaffwriter
Specific procedures for displining members of Senate were passunamiously by the Student Senate Student Rights Committee last night.
The proposed procedure states discipline could run from censure by Senate to removal by impeachment.
John Robertson, graduate senator and a member of the committee, said the bill grew out of the effort last semester to remove Darren Fulcher, former student body president.
Senate voted to oust Fulcher after charges that he battered his ex-girlfriend became public at the beginning of last semester.
Robertson represented Senate before the Judicial Board after Fulcher appealed Senate's decision to remove him. The Judicial Board denied Fulcher's appeal.
One of Fulcher's arguments was that he did not have an adequate opportunity to present his case.
"It was suggested we needed to fix the rules regardless of what happened regarding president Fulcher." Robertson said.
Senate procedures do not have specific procedures that allow disciplinary action against a
member.
Jason McIntosh, co-chairperson of the committee, said they began working on legislation in October.
"It took a lot of time to ensure due process and make it fair," he said.
McIntosh said the committee looked at removal procedures of other universities, such as Duke, the university of North Carolina-Chapel Hill and the University of California-Berkley.
He said constants in the other programs were a two-thirds vote to discipline and fair process for the accused.
Creating the removal procedures has been the largest task for the committee this year, McIntosh said.
Daron Sinkler, co-chairperson of the Ethics Subcommittee, said he was pleased with the adopted bill and expected Senate to pass it at the March 4 meeting without major changes.
"I think they may change a few small types, but nothing big," he said. "We tried to cover every conceivable thing that could go wrong with it."
The subcommittee drafted the original bill, which was later amended by the Student Rights Committee.
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4
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
OPINION
MANEELY Chicago Tribune
Visions of Jimminess.
New Hampshire
Acts of violence prove need to re-evaluate aid
"And in those days men will seek death and will not find it; they will long to die, and death will fly from them." — Revelation 9:6
Sometimes I think idiocy is contagious. Like a particularly virulent strain of syphilis, it spreads from victim to victim through repeated contact. During last week, Israel and Lebanon have exchanged a series of vicious and meaningless attacks that each side claims as "revenge." Beginning with the Israeli assassination of Sheik Abbas Musawi, the head of the pro-Iranian Hezbollah party, his wife and his 5-year-old son, Shite Muslim guerrillas and Islamic forces have murdered and maimed each other for reasons that a kindergarten teacher would not tolerate among a group of 4-year-old children.
OK. So what? The United States cannot answer for Lebanon and the Hezbollah party, but Israel is our ally. We provide them with money — lots of it. Secretary of State James Baker did give the Israeli government a taste of the whip this week by announcing that Israel will have to choose between a $10 million loan and building Jewish settlements in the West Bank area. But more needs to be done. Whip them until they realize that they cannot get
PASCAL MARTIN
Kevin Bartels
Staff columnist
away with that sort of behavior.
But the irony is, of course, that you can. The Israeli government lately has acted like a group of hired thugs with the assassination of Musawi. Consider the results that thus far have been generated by the Israeli government's "revenge" killing: a virtual war with Lebanon, Innocents, on both sides, died. Consider the statement by Israel Defense Minister Moshe Arena that the Islamic State was "entirely coincidental." And finally, consider that Israel killed two more children in a series of raids on the Palestinian refugee camps. Does the United States really need allies such as the Israelis? Hmm.
Not that the Hezbollah party is exactly peaceful either. The spiritual leader for the fundamentalist Hezbollah, Sheik Mohammed Hussein Fadallah said the attacks on Israel were
steering Lebanon in "the right direction." If anything, the difficulty of mediating the Middle East peace talks becomes more and more apparent. How can anyone talk to such people?
Perhaps we, the United States,
could provide an, er, incentive to one
or both sides. Halt all aid to Israel.
And, for God's sake, do not sell military
equipment to Iran. Oh - you
didn't know about that? Yep. Another
bright idea from our friends at the
Pentagon. Shall we send them
hostages as well? As a complimentary
service for every thousand bombs
ordered?
I just remembered that operation Desert Storm was only a year ago. Funny how you forget. Then, Saddam Today, Israel and Lebanon. If we stopped the war between the Hezbollah and Israel now, perhaps the U.S. armed forces can stay home for a while. Because operation Desert Storm II doesn't work, at least for me. Although it might get George Bush elected. Which is another reason to work for peace. Besides, I really hate those damn sequels.
- Kevin Bartels is a Louisville, Ky. graduate student majoring in English.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports are not state business
Legislature shouldn't oversee volunteer organizations; NCAA
must start policing itself
The Kansas Legislature is not eligible to officiate the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The NCAA is a voluntary, private organization. Its members, not Kansas legislators, make the rules. And that's the way it should be.
If Wint Winter's bill passed, the legislators would assume authority. Winter, a Republican state senator from Lawrence and a former Kansas football player, wants to mandate due process for the NCAA. And he wants to end the organization's practice of punishing an entire program for violations committed by an individual or a small group of individuals.
Bob Frederick, KU athletic director, has said it would be wrong for the Legislature to control the affairs of a volunteer organization. That is why the NCAA, including the University of Kansas and the five other
Kansas schools that are members, opposes the bill.
Winter addresses problems for which the NCAA is notorious. The NCAA's record in punishing members smacks of double standards and violations of due process. KU was one of the victims when the NCAA banned the 1988-89 Kansas basketball team from defending its national title. But Winter looks the wrong way for remedies.
The remedies cannot be imposed by the Legislature. The members of the NCAA will neither accept nor enforce them. They must come from the members of the NCAA themselves. And they should come soon. If they don't, proposals such as Winter's will gain more and more support and eventually approval.
Winter deserves credit for putting the NCAA on the spot. But his proposal is out of bounds. The Legislature should not intrude into college athletics. Our representatives should acknowledge that and reject Winter's bill.
Environment needs attention
Alexander Bloemhof for the editorial board
Voters harm themselves when they allow presidential candidates to ignore pollution
Mexico City's plan to construct 100 gigantic fans to blow smog out of the valley sounds like something out of George Orwell's 1984.
Mexico City looked for the quick fix and opted to make its pollution someone else's problem.
Mexico's inability to rectify a critical situation should leave U.S. voters wondering: How much more does the environment have to deteriorate before its protection merits attention? Seeingly, environmental woes just are not woeful enough for voters to start communicating with votes.
In more idealistic days, President Bush said, "Those who worry about the greenhouse effect are forgetting the White House effect." Nice. Yet Bush has failed to commit to any type of environmental policy.
Bush is not alone in the disregard for the environment.
The other major presidential candidates' positions on environmental policy remain foggy. The candidates probably are better off not to mention the word environment. Voters are not expecting a platform that includes environmental policy.
Some argue that it is hard for people to care about what they cannot see or touch.
But what can be seen should cause alarm: hospital waste floating back to shore, test results that indicate high levels of toxins in drinking water, barges searching for a permanent home for piles of garbage.
But if those sites are not scary enough, voters could wait. They could wait until the Mexico fan plan or any other similarly absurd idea is implemented. Voters could wait, and hope, that the United States can build bigger fans when the time comes and neglect the environment for a while longer.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
Abortion is not a right
I am writing this letter in response to Nathan Olson's letter in the Feb. 20 Kansan.. While I acknowledge that certain rights should never be taken away from any person, male or female (such as the right to free speech that Mr. Olson and I have used in our letters), I must point out that when discussing the issue of abortion there are at least two lives involved, and the rights of both must be considered.
I do not wish to remove anyone's rights, I merely wish to protect the rights of the unborn person who is being sacrificed for whatever reason may exist. Mr. Olson states that one should not force one's opinion on others. I ask him to consider this: Is not the unborn child entitled to an opinion?
Mr. Olson also points out that we currently live in a free country, one that he wishes to retain as I do. However, I must point out to him that this "free" country he professes to believe in does have laws against the use of illegal drugs, the use of alcohol by minors, driving a car before a certain age, etc. How about a person's right to practice human sacrifice if his or her religion requires it?
Would anyone who is in favor of abortion rights be willing to support a loved one's right to become a heroin addict? Or would such a person be willing to allow the ceremonial slay
ing of teen-age girls to appease the volcano god?
Think about it.
Lawrence graduate student
Lettersto the editor
ASK anything but idle
As an active member in the Associated Students of Kansas for two years, and having been involved in Student Senate, I feel the editorial written by Chris Moeser needs some clarification.
Also last semester, ASK went to the Legislative Assembly, where we spoke on such issues as the state's self-insurance policy, in direct
ASK had some problems last semester, as anyone involved in the organization will admit. The campus director did not live up to his responsibilities, and because the Legislature was not in session the state issues director was "silent" as Mr. Moeser put it. This is not to say that ASK was sitting idle. The director for state issues, Joe Cinali, went on weekly trips with among others, the chancellor, the executive vice chancellor, the head of governmental relations and the head of the Adams Alumni Center. These trips were to various districts of Kansas to speak with alumni, state representatives and state senators on issues pertaining to the University of Kansas.
response to the Hoch Auditorium disaster. We also spoke about graduate teaching assistant fee waivers, tuition increase and other topics. This assembly was very instrumental in the Hoch situation, because had KU not been there, the subject of self-insurance would not have become an ASK priority.
Mr. Moeser also stated that the campus director's responsibility was to create an Advisory Board. Even though last semester's director was ineffective, an Advisory Board was created and does still exist. 'True, the board has not met yet, but I am sure this will be remedied soon.'
This semester, the old campus director resigned and a new one, John Schwartz, was hired. In the time Mr. Schwartz and Mr. Ciniella have been working together, they have organized a very successful Lobby Day and are currently working a phone bank and a letter drive.
ASK has been a very creditable organization for over 10 years and has worked to bring many great benefits to KU. This year will be no exception. The problems that have plagued the organization are solved, and within two weeks from the time they were solved you saw a very successful Lobby Day. ASK has traditionally been a stronger voice in the second semester, and this year will be no exception. The Legislature already knows we're here, and if you are in doubt, sit tight for a few weeks and keep your
eyes and ears open. You will see, hear, and feel our efforts.
Kurt Broeckelmann
Braemann
Kurt Buckelmann
ASK Advisory Board member
Gulf war was over oil
All right, enough is enough. Having plowed through the umpteenth reply to David Caruso's column, I think it's high time that all of you warmongers out there give it a rest and stop using twisted philosophies and Americanisms to justify the murder of 100,000 Iraqi men, women and children.
So what if Saddam Hussein invaded and raided Kuwait? Are you ignorant enough to believe the administrative line that we were dutifully removing the yoke of tyranny from those poor, ravaged Kuwaiits? Educate yourself. Kuwait is not a democracy. Kuwaiit women do not have the right to vote. The Kuwaiit government practices political imprisonment and torture (For example, after the war, a Kuwaiit man was sentenced to 25 years in prison for wearing a Saddam Hussein T-shirt). Does that sound like your America?
We bombed Iraq because we are addicted to Mideast oil and because foreign wars tend to dilute our own oil.
Go to the store and buy a clue — George Bush
is a mass murderer. The only thing that scares me more than the ignorance that prompted you to support "nipping the next Hitler in the bud" is the idea that you will probably vote for the real Hitler in '92.
■ Neil Tauzin
Lafayette, La., senior
Defective 'genes'
What kinds of editorial decisions allow the publication of a column like Kate Kelley's offensive essay titled "Humor originates in genes?" Besides the inane title (and its silly implications), is it now editorial policy to allow a staff columnist to poke fun at someone's looks? If the kid who brought Kelley and her bigoted relatives so much amusement had been an African American or an epileptic or a fat, bald guy or even a "dumb [blond] thing" from Leavenworth County, would you allow such a column in the Kansan? I know of no evidence for a genetic contribution to human humor, but there are some genetic implications to human intelligence. Kelley might consider getting her genes checked for deficiencies. Failing this, certainly a little cultural therapy would be beneficial, along with some sensitivity training.
David Payer professor of anthropology
KANSAN STAFF
TIFFANY HARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
Editors
News... Mike Andrews
Editorial... Beth Randolph
Planning... Lara Gold
Comics... Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olsen
Sports... Eric Nelson
Photo... Julie Jacobson
Features... Debbie Myers
Graphics... Aimee Brainard/J Jeff麦雷
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr...Brian leibwengo
Regional sales mgr...Rick Harbargarber
National sales mgr...Scott Hanna
Co-op sales mgr...Amel Johnson
Production mgrs...Kim Wallace
Marketing director...Lee Keeler
Creative director...Leanne Bryant
Classified mgr...Kip Chin
Letters should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be phoebe. 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-Fint Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27. 1992
5
Morning-after pill causes controversy
By Katherine Manweiler Kansan staff writer
Students may not know about an option available to women at Watkins Memorial Health Center called the morning-after pill, or Oval. But the medical community is well aware of the controversy surrounding this medicine.
If someone is opposed to using the morning-after pill, they better be opposed to using birth control in any circumstance."
Ovral is effective within 72 hours after unprotected intercourse. It is a cycle of four pills containing the synthetic hormones estrogen and progestin, which reduce the possibility of the implantation of a fertilized egg.
Henry Buck, Watkins gynecologist,
said Ovalhada a 2-percent failure rate,
making it 10 times less effective than
birth control pills.
The morning-after pill does not prevent conception.
If pregnancy occurs, birth defects could be caused by Oral.
Students must sign a consent form and speak with a member of the Watkins staff, usually a gynecological nurse, before obtaining a prescription
Henry Buck Watkins gynecologist
The morning-after pill is intended for emergency use only, such as for rape victims. But anyone who has had unprotected sex can get a prescription for Oval at Watkins.
for Oval. No examination is necessary. Buck said.
"We discourage people from relying on this as a primary method of birth control." Buck said.
ing-after pill has been prescribed to students more than once at the their request, he said.
Although Watkins staff encourages other forms of birth control, the morn-
Buck said he did not consider the morning-after pill to be an abortifacient, or something that induces an abortion, because regular birth control pills worked in a similar way.
"If someone is opposed to using the morning-after pill, they better be opposed to using birth control in any circumstance," he said.
John Baughman, chief pharmacist at Watkins, estimated that 12 Ovral prescriptions had been filled at Watkins in the past year. The cycle of pills costs $9.
Kris Wilshusen, executive director of Planned Parenthood in Wichita, said she was not surprised that the number of morning-after pill prescriptions at Watkins was so low. She used to work at the Wichita Area Sexual Assault Center.
"My past experience is that medical professionals for a long time were leery of prescribing what was termed as the morning-after pill because of the side effects." she said.
The morning-after pill potentially could endanger the health of women with high blood pressure or other health problems. Wilshusen said.
"I think some medical professionals for philosophical and moral reasons don't want to prescribe it," she said. "If the morning-after pill) is an option, then medical professionals have an obligation to educate people about it."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. February 27, 1992
KU gives woman opportunity to escape stepfather's abuse
Louis.
A social worker came to the house and talked to her parents, but not Lane.
"Nothing was done, and the guy never came back," she says.
In eight grade, she was depressed and went to a psychiatrist.
Lane's parents told the doctor she was jealous of her new baby brother and new father. Lane told him she was being sexually abused.
"He didn't believe me," she says.
"He had me go to a gynecologist and never told me the results."
But her stepfather warned her if she continued to tell the psychiatrist she was sexually abused, someday her husband would find out and her reputation would be ruined.
"I was 14 years old, I thought maybe he was right." Lane saws.
She changed her story and denied the abuse.
"The jerk believed me and starting taking action, I thought if I would go college," she told reporters.
Help insight
College was going to be her refuge. Lane thought that she would be safe at KU.
Her stepfather raped her in her room at McCollum Hall during a weekend visit.
In late January of 1991, Lane missed
a call from her stepfather and decided she had had enough.
she had made her every move. He called her almost hourly. This time she was not where she was supposed to be.
When she finally talked to him, her stepfather told her she had to leave KU and come home.
"OK, I'll start packing and leave." Lane told him. "But I'm not ever coming home."
She knew her parents would come after her. Her stepfather never would let her of his control. Lane says.
letter of a friend.
She confined herself to a friend's room in Ellsworth Hall. Living like a fugitive, having clothes and food smuggled to her, Lane began a game of hide and seek.
"I would call her on the phone and tell her I was coming to bring her clothes," says a friend of Lane's. "I would knock, announce who I was. She'd hesitate and then let me in. We brought her everything she needed. It was scary because her parents were interrogating us. But she'k keep us up. She'd keep us lighthearted."
But the chase was just beginning.
"We were always looking over our shoulders," says Lane's roommate at the time. "We never totally knew where her parents would be. They would call and call, or leave messages threatening her. We had to run to the car and look around every corner."
A counselor at Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center encouraged her to take action, and KU police finally gave Lane the help she had sought since junior high.
"Because no one helped me for so long, I didn't think I'd ever get help," she says.
Barbara Ballard, director of the women's center, says a substantial number of students have experienced incest or rape.
"We want to provide a supportive, accepting atmosphere where women know they can come to talk," she says. "When they know we provide a supportive environment that does not blame them and guarantees confidentiality, they may find it easier to come us."
John Mullens, KU police lieutenant, says most cases like Lane's are handled successfully.
"There can be trust and a rapport within the system, but only the difficult situations are publicized," he says.
Mullens says people in Lane's situation have several legal options.
Lane filed a report when she was 19, a legal adult. If she had been abused by a blood relative, she could have filed an incest charge. Since she was abused by a stepfather, her only option was a rape charge.
Working with police put Lane in danger of being discovered. One day at 7:30 a.m., Lane and a friend, coats over their heads to conceal them, drove to campus where Lane sought a restraining order from KU police.
She filed charges with KU police on Feb. 2, 1991.
According to KU police records, a warrant for one count of rape against Lane's stepfather was issued March 19, 1991.
Without Mom's help
People at KU offered Lane support, but her mother never did.
"It's damn sad when a lady at the resource center who doesn't even know how to help me, but my own mother who brought me into this world doesn't," she says.
During winter break last year, her mom confirmed what Lane had suspected; she was not going to help her.
"I mouthed off to him," Lan recalls. "He grabbed me, he threw me to the ground and put his knee in my chest. I just sat there in the chair next to us."
Her mother didn't move.
"You're crazy just like he is! He can do anything to me and that's OK with you!" Lane yelled at her mother. "Then she told him to stop, but that was it."
Before her mom married her stepfather when Lane was 11, Lane counted
on her, trusted her and depended on her for everything. Her mom was all she had.
Lane has not spoken to her mother since July. Neither Lane nor her grandparents have any idea where her mother is. She sent Lane a card for Valentine's Day telling her she loved her and missed her.
When her mother was contacted for this story, she refused to comment. Lane does not blame her for what happened.
"Here you think you found the perfect father for your daughter, the father she never had," Lane says "Then you find out he's putting his penis in her vagina and her anus. I don't blame her for not dealing with it. If she dealt with that guilt all at once she'd probably have a nervous breakdown."
Still talking
"I talk so openly about sex to girls and guys," Lane says. "A lot of people are uncomfortable with it. My stepfather made me talk to him openly about sex. I just always have been able to."
"What my stepfather did was not sex," she says. "It was not about sex. I learned sex can be nice. It's not for
Lane separates the abuse from sex.
controlling and hurting other people." The bushes had made Lane cold.
"Most guys think once they have sex with a girl, she's hooked emotionally to him." Lane says. "But I'm not like that. I've cut myself off during sexual activity for so long that I still do it. It's a problem I have to work on."
Lane never has flashbacks with boyfriends. She says she is comfortable with most guys and can trust them.
But there is one man she still has trouble with.
Lane met with her biological father in April, not after seeing him for 10 years. He wanted to be the father he had never been.
"I was not ready to deal with a father figure or any kind of parental authority," she says.
ire and her mother never married.
Lane and her father exchanged
addresses and phone numbers and
decided to start a friendship.
They have not spoken since last semester, but Lane toys with a gold necklace around her neck when she talks about him.
"He gave me a necklace that he said he wanted to save for someone special," she said. "The necklace has an eagle on it. He told me, as long as I wear it, I will always be free."
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FLOWER SHOW. Presented by the Lawrence Associated Garden Clubs.
EDUCATIONAL DISPLAYS & SEMINARS. Special displays relating to garden and home improvement, remedial and maintenance will be included. Lists of educational helps will be available free to the public. A variety of topics will be presented by professional horticulturists.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
Prague, Czechoslovakia
Treaty renews fear of Nazism
A Czech-German treaty to be signed today has revived fears rooted in Germany's Nazi past and its growing power in Europe.
The governments of German Chancellor Helm Kohl and President Vacla Havel see the treaty as a blueprint for a positive future relationship, but some Czechs grumble that it will only encourage what they see as unwelcome German involvement.
Seemingly arcane points of the treaty text have sparked angry debate over Nazi aggression against Czechoslovakia and the post-World War II expulsion of about 3 million Germans from the Sudetenland territory of Czechoslovakia.
The Czech left is angry that the treaty fails to officially nullify the 1988 Munich Pact. Rightist Germans are unhappy that it fails to redress wrongs done to the expelled Germans.
Moscow
Three soldiers die in riot fires
Hundreds of construction troops rioted at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan after complaining of inhumane treatment by their superiors, news services said yesterday. Three soldiers were reported burned to death.
The rioters commandered 17 trucks, set fire to four barracks and stole 35,000 rubles from a cashier's office, the Interfax news agency and the police. The victims were found inside one barracks.
Police forces and regular army troops were called in to try to stop the mutineers from marching on the nearby city of Leninsk, where space center officials live. But the hungry and unwashed soldiers reached the city to present their grievances, the TV said. They dispersed after authorities gave them food and their allowances and met some of their demands.
Dhaka, Bangladesh
An 18-year-old U.S woman was arrested with nine pounds of heroin hidden under her dress, police said Wednesday. She could be sentenced to death if tried and convicted of drug trafficking.
U.S. woman arrested with drugs
The woman, who identified herself as Eliadah McCord, of Houston, Texas, was arrested Tuesday at Zia International airport.
A police official said a customs official found the heroin hidden under McCord's long flowing dress when she reported for boarding a flight to London. The street value of the heroin would be above $1 million, officials said.
McCord, who said she was a model, claimed her boyfriend, whom she did not name, had paid for her trip to Dhaka earlier in the month.
From The Associated Press
Irish court allows girl,14, to get abortion elsewhere
The Associated Press
DUBLIN, Ireland — The Irish Supreme Court cleared the way yesterday for a 14-year-old girl to have an abortion in another country, leaving divisive legal and political issues for another day.
The ruling overturned the first attempt to prevent an Irish woman from seeking a legal abortion in another country. The case attracted international attention and reopened the debate over abortion, which is banned in Ireland by a constitutional amendment that won overwhelming support in a 1983 referendum.
"From a humanitarian point of view I welcome the decision. It has been a sad and distressful case and I am glad that everything is over," Prime Minister Albert Revnoels said.
The five Supreme Court justices overturned a High Court order that had prevented the girl, who says she was raped and has threatened to kill herself, from having an abortion or leaving the country
Opposition leaders, pro-choice groups and even the Roman Catholic Church welcomed the decision. But supporters of the right to an abortion stressed the
court's written decision would indicate whether they would seek a new constitutional referendum or legislation.
Chief Justice Thomas Finley said that the written judgment would be issued in a few days.
"No girl or woman who is the victim of rape should ever again find herself and her family put on trial in such circumstances and suffer such barbaric treatment at the hands of the state," said Alan Shatter, justice representative for the main opposition party, Fine Gael.
Shatter said that the government should not assume that the decision relieved it of its political responsibilities.
Reynolds said that he wanted to see the written decision before commenting on implications for future cases.
Reynolds previously said that he hoped to avoid another hitter fight over a referendum on abortion.
It was not known whether the Supreme Court had decided that the High Court had overstepped Irish law or had acted contrary to Ireland's commitments under European Community treaties calling for freedom of movement of citizens.
Drug summit is ambitious
Countries hope to cut U.S. demand and foreign supply
The Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO — President Bush yesterday joined Latin American leaders for a second drug summit and promised to redouble their efforts to choke off both U.S. demand and foreign supply. Peru's president said that those efforts must include the infusion of more U.S. money.
"We're going to get maximum cooperation," Bush said as he opened a meeting with President Alberto Fujimori of Peru, the nation with the most limited progress in the war against drugs.
Who's at the drug summit
But even as they and five other leaders gathered, Bush faced criticism at home that his multibillion-dollar drug-fighting strategy has been ineffective, with U.S. cities still flooded with ample, cheap supplies.
President Bush meets in San Antonio, Texas, with leaders of six Latin American countries to discuss the war on drugs.
Bush said that they were going to build on the Cartagena meeting, referring to the first drug summit two years ago. "We're going to redouble our efforts on the demand side and on the supply side," he said.
Summit nations' drug woes Extent of cocaine production, processing and money laundering 1988 vs. 1991
Extent of cocaine production, processing and money laundering 1988 vs. 1991
Producer Processor Money laundering San Antonio U.S. 1988 1991
Colombia Mexico Venezuela Ecuador Peru Bolivia
$ $
Ecuador
$ $
Peru
$ $
Latin American cocaine seizures (in metric tons)
203. 4
45.6
'87 '88 '89 '90 '91
U. S. anti-drug funding (in billions of dollars)
SOURCE House Judiciary Committee R.L.REBACH and JUDY TREIBLE Knight-Ridder Tribune
$6.6
'89 '90 '91 '92 '93
SOURCE: White House
Let's Padre Jayhawks!
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Thursday, February 27 1992
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Dr. Richard Nelson Counselor Counseling and Psychological Services Joel Phelps Graduate Assistant Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 High Hall For more information, contact Sharon Richards at 661-8552
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February 29 is SOLD OUT! Buy your tickets today at SUA
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ALCOHOL: If you choose to drink -- don't drink and drive.
TRAVEL: Seat belts save lives -- remember to buckle up!
SUN: Use sunscreen -- whether sunny or cloudy.
DRUGs: Consider the serious consequences if you use them.
SEX: If you choose to have sex -- use a condom & spermicide.
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The Senate Committee on Transportation and Utilities defeated the measure in a voice vote. The vote appeared to be close, but none of the members asked for a recorded vote.
SPECIAL TUESDAY EVENT:
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12:20 p.m., Stauffer-Flint lawn
Senate committee defeats helmet bill
- Daffodil Days - Buy a daffodil from FACTS to benefit Douglas County Chapter of American Cancer Society!
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A proposal to require all motorcycle riders to wear a helmet down to defeat in a Senate committee yesterday.
State law presently requires everyone under 18 to wear a helmet while riding a motorcycle. The bill would have made the law apply to all riders.
See a mock sobriety test and "Jaws-of-Life", ambulance/police/ fire departments in action! Emergency equipment will be on display from 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Sponsored by Watkins Department of Health Education. PARTY, GAMMA. FACTS, KU Police Department. Lawrence Fire Department. Douglas County Ambulance Service. Douglas County Office of Emergency Preparedness, SubWay, Kansas Union Jaybowl, and the Safe Break Planning Committee.
The committee heard testimony Tuesday that failure to pass the law could cost the state as much as $1.5 million in federal money for highway construction in 1995 and $3 million a year after that.
During committee discussions, Sen. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburg, asked for further study on the issue. He said that motorcycle helmets restricted vision and hearing.
highway accidents. The bill was supported by law enforcement officials, nurses and doctors, who said the requirement that all motorcyclists wear helmets would save lives and reduce severe head injuries.
He also said many bikers did not have the ability to handle large motorcycles, and that helmets would not prevent injuries in those cases.
cases "This issue is a lot broader than just sticking a helmet on somebody's head," he said. "The individual should show he can ride a bike like this before it's sold to him."
Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, supported the measure in committee discussion.
"Anyone who gives a nonpartisan look at the issue strongly recommends that we pass the bill," he said. "So many cases are just so expensive in terms of human suffering and dollars and cents."
The committee heard testimony that the death rate in states requiring motorcycle helmets was 11.7 per million a year, while states like Kansas, with partial laws, had an average of 19.5 deaths per million.
aron J. Bennett/KANSAN
Lights out
Matthew Ain, Overland Park senior,
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
9
Big Eight will run at Anschutz
Kansas track teams seek to improve '91 record
By Chris Jenson Kansas sportswriter
The Kansas men's and women's track and field teams hope to be less than gracious hosts for this weekend's Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships.
"The team is really optimistic," Marybeth Labosky, junior, said. "Everyone is anxious to show what we can do." The Big Eight leagues will be surprised.
Kansas is hoping that its recent success and improvement will carry over to the Big Eight meet, which begins at the Hornet in Anchizt Sports Pavilion.
Action begins with the pentathalon. The 5,000 meter race and the pole vault will also take place tomorrow Other finals will be held Saturday.
Coach Schwartz said he was optimistic about the team's prospects.
"Everybody has their head where it should be," he said. "We have a lot of good indications."
The Jayhawk men are returning with 1991 Big Eight Indoor champion Michael Cox in the 3,000 meters, who adds depth and quality to their roster.
Cox said he expected the meet to be totally different from last year's.
"The field is a lot stronger this year," he said. "It should be exciting."
Cox said he was a no-name in last year's 3,000 meter race and now people would change their strategy to include him.
"I would like to see it go out slow and tactical," Cox said. "That kind of race favors me."
Kansas will have a distinct advantage in racing on the home track. The track in Anschutz measures 252 meters. Six of the Big Eight schools have regulation-size indoor tracks measuring 200 meters. Only low
State has a bigger track at 300 meters.
"Our track gives us an advantage because it is slow," Cox said. "Most large tracks are faster, but ours is like running on oatmeal."
The Kansas men have won 24 Big Eight Indoor titles, the most in the conference, but they have not won a title since 1983.
Nebraska is favored to win both the men's and women's titles. The Huskers have won the women's title for the past 12 years, while the Nebraska men finished second to Iowa State last year.
Although the Jayhawks are not expected to win the title this year, Schwartz said he expected the team scoring to be close.
"It is going to be a very tight race after first place on the women's side and after second place on the men's side." he said.
women's teams finished fifth last year.
"Our intent is to score in more events and to score more points than last year," he said.
The women's team will be lead by freshman Nietzsche Shafer in the sprint events.
Senior co-captain Cathy Policies will lead the women in the middle distance events, along with sophomore Helaen Helafabr, who was third in the 800 meeters at last year's Big Eight Championships.
Another group of Jayhawks to watch is the men's two mile relay of Cox, Jason Teal, Dan Waters and Jon Handy.
"Weare all really excited," Palacios
"We are going to bleed pink and
blue."
Mizzou wins tightens race in Big Eight
The Associated Press
Missouri kept its hopes of a Big Eight Conference championship alive. Oklahoma State broke its four-game loss streak and Colorado secured its position in the conference basement last night.
Jeff Warren scored 20 points and Anthony Peeler hit four key free throws in the final minute to lift No. 6 Missouri to a 75-71 Big Eight victory against Iowa State last night.
Missouri rallied from a seven-point deficit in the second half to secure its fourth straight 20-victory season. The Tigers, whose record is 20-4 overall and 8-in conference play, went ahead with an 9-0 run late in the game, then held off a final Iowa State charge.
Iowa State, 18-9 overall and 4-7 in the conference,
lost for the third straight time. The Cyclones led 42-
38 at halftime and 49-42 after Fred Hoiberg's layup
with 15-53 left.
But Iowa State went scoreless for the next 4:21 and Missouri ran off 12 straight points to take a 54-49 lead. Peeler, returning from a one-gam suspension, was able to play 16 points and finished with 16 points, 12 in the second half.
Kansas State's Vincent Jackson scored eight points to spark a 20-8 Kansas State flurry to open the second half, helping carry the Wildcats to a 74-66 Big Eight triumph over Colorado last night.
Colorado, 12-12 overall and 3-8 in the Big Eight, responded with a 16-4 run of its own to creep back to 62-52 with 5:20 left, but the closest the Buffaloes could get was seven points on a James Hunter basket with 52 seconds remaining.
Kansas State, whose record is 14-100 overall and 4-1 in the Big Eight, hit its first seven shots of the second half and nine of its first 11. The outburst enabled the Wildcats to expand their 10-point halftime advantage to 22 points, 58-36, with 11:49 to play.
Askia Jones led the Wildcats with 21 points, including 17 in the first half, while Jackson and Gaylon Nickerson added 13 apiece and Wylie Howard had 11. Nickerson's 40-foot basket just before the half-time buzzer gave the Wildcats a 38-28 half time and seemed to trigger the second-half explosion.
The return of Byron Houston helped things return to normal for No. 14 Oklahoma State.
Houston, who missed the previous game with a sprained left ankle, had 17 points, eight rebounds and three blocks last night as the Cowboys ended a 14-0 streak with a 72-31 victory against No. 25 Nebraska.
"I think he's the type who rises to the occasion," Nebraska coach Danny Nee said. "He knew his team needed him, so he comes out and meets the challenge."
The Cowboys, 22-5 overall and 6-5 in the Big Eight, held Nebraska to 39 percent shooting and limited leading scorer Eric Piatkowski to five points, nine below his average. No Cornhusker scored in double figures.
Nebraska, which got into the Associated Press Top 25 this week for the first time this season, drowned to 17- overall and 5- in the Bie Eight.
"It was kind of hard to play on it," he said. "Once it got pretty loose, I was able to move around a little bit. I still wasn't able to explode, but I was able to play."
He scored eight of the Cowboys' first 16 points as Oklahoma State took an early 16-7 lead. After the Cornhuskers went on a 9-2 run to make it 18-16, Oklahoma State scored the next nine points to take a 27-16 lead.
Houston played with his ankle heavily taped, but played 31 minutes and did not seem to lack much quickness or jumping ability.
HUTON
392
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JustinKnupp/KANSAN
UNLV team plans suit for postseason eligibility
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — While attorneys for coach Jerry Tarkanian contemplated their next move in a bitter fight with UNLV administrators, supporters of embattled university president Robert Maxson planned a pep rally today in favor of academics at the school.
Jumping Jennifer
Hoping to qualify for the final round of the women's long jump, Jennifer Porter of Hutchinson Community College, strains to get every inch out of her last jump of the qualifying round. The NJCAA Region VI Indoor Track Championships were held yesterday afternoon in Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Ten community colleges attended the championship.
UNLV players, meanwhile, pressed ahead with plans to sue to get the sevent-ranked Runnin' Rebels in the NCAA tournament, despite reservations by some about the success of the suit.
"They say they've got a legitimate case and they're going to fight it," said junior guard Dexter Boney. "But it all may be for nothing and that can be discouraging."
Stein declined to discuss the substance of the suit, but said that he would ask a judge to issue a temporary restraining order and later an injunction.
Attorney Steve Stein, who represents the players, said that they were unanimous in supporting the suit, which he said would be filed either tomorrow or Monday in Nevada state court.
tion to allow the Rebels a chance to compete in the postseason tournament.
"We're going to file." Stein said. "The players are all for it."
UNLV, 24-2 and riding a 21-game winning streak, was banned from live television and postseason play this year as the resolution of a 13-year battle between Tarkanian and the NCAA.
Tarkian, who agreed to the ban so last year's talent-laden team could compete in the tournament, has said that he would not coach the team in the playoffs even if they managed to get
in
Tarkanian's attorney, Chuck Thompson, said yesterday that the coach remained firm in his conviction that he had rescinded a resignation he gave to Maxson last summer after pictures were published of former UNLV players in a hot tub with convicted game fixer Richard Perry.
Thompson said that Tarkanian would continue to act as coach, even at Tuesday's home game against Utah State, the final game of the regular season for the Rebels.
Kansas women clinch Big 8 title
By Cody Holt
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team wrapped up a share of the Big Eight Conference title on the strength of a 78-72 overtime victory against Oklahoma last night in Norman, Okla.
The Jayhawks overcame an 11-point second half deficit behind strong defense and a 16-point second-half performance by junior guard Stacy Truitt. Truitt and freshman forward Angela Aycock led Kansas with 22 points each.
With just over 7minutes left in the game, Kansas took its first lead in the second half on a Truitt steal and basket. The Jayhawks led 67-60 with 1:35 left in the game on an Avcock jumper.
Kansas turnovers allowed the Sooners back in the game when senior forward Angie Alexander hit a three-pointer with 15 seconds left on the clock tying the score at 67.
Kansas senior forward Terrilyn Johnson was fouled with eight seconds left but failed to convert the front end of a one-and-one and the game was sent into overtime.
Kansas scored first in overtime and never relinquished the lead.
The Jayhaws did receive a scar at 73-72 when the Sooners stole an inbounds pass with less than 10 seconds on the clock. It took another defensive play by Truitt to block an open Sooner layup with 4 seconds on the clock.
Oklahoma inbounded for two final shots that both fell short as the clock wound down and Kansas escaped with a one-point victory.
Colorado, 18-8 overall and 10-3 in conference play, keeps its chances alive for a share of the title with a 65-42 victory against Kansas State in Manhattan.
Aycock led the team with 12 rebounds. Senior guard Kay Kay Hart grabs seven steals and dished out five assists to lead the Jayhawks.
Kansas plays its final game of the season Saturday against fourthplace Missouri at Allen Field House. Missouri defeated Kansas 57-56 Jan. 15 in Columbia, Mo.
Colorado plays host to third-place Nebraska in the two teams' season finale.
Any combination of a Kansas victory or a Colorado loss would give Kansas its first outright conference championship since 1981.
Kansas tennis wins after difficult start
Bv Lvlle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
After losing 5-1 to No. 16 North Carolina in the first round of the tournament Feb. 20, the unranked Jayhawks rebounded with a 5-1 victory against No. 18 Duke and completed the tournament with a 6-3 victory against No. 14 South Carolina.
The Jayhawks turned one negative into a weekend of positives as they culminated their indoor season with a 17th place finish Saturday at the USTA/TCA National Indoor Championships in Louisville, Ky.
"I think that's the best back-to-back wins we've had in my 10 years here," Kansas coach Scott Perelman said.
"We had quite a little chat immediately following the North Carolina match," Pereman said. "I thought we were going to either come back strong or roll over, and we came back real strong."
The victories improved the Jayhawks' record to 9-4 overall and 3-3 against ranked opponents this season. Perelman said that losing five matches in straight sets to North Carolina helped the Jayhawks focus in their later matches.
Senior Patrick Han, who plays No. 4 singles for the Jayhawks, said Kansas
played with a fierceness against Duke and South Carolina that the team lacked against the Tar Heels.
Han said he didn't think the team had been ready to face the Tar Heels and that travel problems the day before the match may have been the reason.
"We did to Duke what North Carolina did to us," Han said. "Coach Perelman thought we could have had a little more fire and a little more competitiveness against North Carolina, and the good thing about this team is that we respond."
"We weren't fierce competitors at all," he said of the North Carolina match.
Pereman said that traveling could not be used as an excuse for Kansas' performance, even though it took the Jayhawks seven hours to reach Louisville after the team missed its connecting flight in St. Louis.
"To lose in the first round and then to turn that into a real positive on the national scene is a nice accomplishment for the team."
Pereman said Kansas's biggest task next week would be to make the transition to playing outdoors at the March 6-8 match at Tempe, Ariz. The Jayhawks will be competing there in the Arizona State/Peml Invitational.
SPORTS BRIEFS
'Hawks to face Sterling
The Kansas baseball team's home opener against Sterling College, originally scheduled for yesterday, will be played at 3 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Monday's rain froze overnight,
causing the game to be delayed. The field was able to thaw Tuesday but was still unplayable yesterday.
The game will be nine innings, and sophomore Chris Corn will be the startling pitcher. The Jayhawks have a 16-game winning streak in home openers and have not lost a home opener since William Jewell beat Kansas 4-3 on March 25, 1975.
Academic team named
Missouri forward Jeff Warren was named to the Big Eight All-Academic basketball team for the second straight year.
Warren was named to the six-member team yesterday after compiling a 3.17 grade point average last year. He is a business administration major.
Players had to have at least a 3.0 GPA and earn a letter to qualify for the team.
Also named to the team were Mike Bergman, Iowa State sophomore, 3.15, management; Greg Hester, Iowa State junior, 3.67, mechanical engineering; David Johanning, Kansas senior, 3.18, graphic design; Bruce Chubick, Nebraska junior, 3.07, history; and Brent Price, Oklahoma senior, 3.44, communications.
Switzer libel trial begins
Jury selection began yesterday in Austin, Texas, in the $30 million lawsuit by a newspaper reporter who accuses former Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer of libel, slander and invasion of privacy over allegations made in Switzer's autobiography "Bootleger's Bov."
Jack Taylor Jr., a reporter with the Los Angeles Daily News, and his wife Myrna Lee are seeking $5 million in damages and a $25 million punitive award.
They allgee that Switzer, in his book, falsely linked Taylor, formerly of the Dallas Times Herald, to an alleged scheme to plant drugs on Oklahoma football player Brad McBride in 1988.
Switzer's attorneys said the facts of the chapter dealing with Taylor were "substantially true." Switzer also filed a counter lawsuit for $6 million, alleging that Taylor illegally obtained the former coach's income tax records.
Potential jurors were given a copy of the book chapter dealing with Taylor and a questionnaire asking if they or anyone close to them had suffered mental, sexual or drug or alcohol-related problems.
Testimony in the case, which is expected to last three to six weeks, will come from journalists, law authorities, investigators, former football players and economic experts.
From staff and wire reports
10
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
Oread residents voice parking concerns
By Andy Taylor
Kansan staff writer
Jerry Harper will to pump some air into correcting parking problems in the Oread neighborhood.
ing parking problems in the Oread neighborhood.
"I look at the parking problem like an old inner tube," he said. "When it flat you put a patch on it, but then the tire will bulge somewhere else."
Harper, a member of the Oread Neighborhood Association and a Lawrence attorney, said that while the city had improved some parking situations, car owners continued to violate local ordinances by parking on lawns.
More than 20 members of the Oread Neighborhood Association discussed various parking problems last night with Mike Wilden, city manager, and Don Kearns, director of parking.
"Car owners are jumping curbs and parking on the lawns — clear violations of city ordinances,"Harper said. "They have no pretense. I largely think that it has become a fad."
He illustrated his point with a 30-minute slide presentation showing numerous instances of cars
crowded onto front and side yards.
Harper said the parking situation in the Oread area had three main problems:
n KU students park in the neighborhood because of the proximity to campus.
the proximity to campuses
Some of the Oread homes, which used to house
n There is not enough parking when new apartments complexes are built.
The Oread area is from Ninth to 17th streets and from Michigan to Massachusetts streets, excluding the KU campus.
Wildgen said the current ordinance stated that if a vehicle owner violated an ordinance by parking on the front lawn, the city had to contact the landlord of the property. The ordinance calls for vehicles not to park on the 25-foot right of way.
"Part of the problem is that the violations are zoning violations," he said. "Sometimes enforcing this is difficult because contacting the landlord and tenant is strenuous."
Wildgen said a more effective enforcement would be for the Lawrence police to fine the individual vehicles on a regular basis.
"A ticket written by an officer is much more direct," he said.
Kearns said the KU parking lots could absorb some of the student parked from the Ourea area.
"There are a lot of students who park because it is not only convenient but also it is cheap," he said.
The group discussed a permit parking system which would allow residents to park only in designated areas.
"We have empty parking spaces," he said. "In most cases, it is just more convenient to park in the area between 12th and 14th streets on Tennessee Street."
An Oread resident, Lance Rake, 917 Illinois St., said the parking situation in the neighborhood was caused by students who parked there because it was free
Members of the group said they would continue to discuss possible parking solutions and possibly lobby the Lawrence City Commission for a new ordinance.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
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365
DAYS
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The 100 hourland warto 'liberate' Kuwait ended one year aao.
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SERVICE OF MEMBRANCE
PERSIAN GILLWAR - 1981
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at ECM Center, 1204 Oread
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business and for students
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
11
Attention College students, the Kansas Nat'l Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. To see if you qualify, call DeWitt 842-9233.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boy/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, riffle, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also prepare face maintenance. Saline 10,000 more pailboard. Machee Steg 1765 Maple, Nfdl, 10,000 786-443-2449
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Education offered MIDwes Driving
License obtainable, transportation provided 841
Criminal Defense • Take ID
• FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Leach
DUI/TRAFFIC
16 East 13th 749-0087
Elizabeth Leach Attorney
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to your home or office. Student rates. 842-2344
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding &
Family ID photos, student ID photos ca
k844-1844
Government photos, passports, immigration
portfolios
(B&W color. Call Tom Sawyers 791 101)
www.gov.mn
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 481-8878
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law
and most other legal matters
and most other legal matters Free Consultation
823 Missouri 843-4023
PROFESSIONAL RESUMES Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
927/1 Mass. 841-1071
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-3716
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. E 9th Bath Street. 843
Reliable experienced woman wants to clean your house. Call Nina 841-3640.
FREE
HAIRCUTS
PERMS/COLOR
841-6886
Makeover models want!
For information call...
HairExperts Design Team
235 Typing Services
Work Perfice IBM Compatible Work Processing
In Jk Printer, near Orchard Corners, no calls
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Service : Service 512 E 9th Street & 9th
Avenue, Newark NJ 07106
New Jersey Department of Trade
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor
2-der Woman Word Processing. former editor and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of
3-der Woman Word Processing. former editor
For Laser or Dot Matrix printing of your PCLEe or rental of our PC Lab, Call June 181-831-0311.
From Quality Tipping to Mailing List Entry/Maintenance/Production, and Personalized PC Training. For Experience and Reliability call Louise at 843-4052 with your ideas
nter processing, applications, term paper, dis-
sertation, research paper, academic job,
risky job available Masters Degree 841 6234
Ks Professional Word Processing, accurate and
accurate, call after kk. p. m1. 841-8345
PINK ALA MODE make an edge on the rest. Schedule your appointment for 'unsuccessful' Now! Call
Resumes and cover letters. Fast and affordable, competitive prices, over 80 formats laser printed. Ask about our Referral Discounts! MacResumes 766-3325
305 For Sale
Spring Special 3825-36 MIIZ computer, 4 MR RAM,
1.2 & 1.4 Floppy, 10 MB Hard Drive, "14 Super
MDS Dos", 100 keyboard, mincourt store
MS DOS 5.0, Serial鼠, $14.00, Bargain Bays
832-247
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art antiquies and used furniture, picture frames, rugs and more. Made quilts, primitives, comic books, Playbags, Pentelium, vintage clothing, books, carnival masks, jewelry, doll clothes, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, Royal Doulton, military collectibles, country furniture, toys, and much more. Imported picture figurines, and so much more stuff it will flow you how many 'QUANTATRIC SPLASH' paintings? See our website at www.royaldoulton.com i
Bicycle women's Schwinn 10 speed with Gen. set
889151431-1332
1990 Ford Mustang GT 3.0 eng. Loaded all power,
interior tint, Wind Mirror, $11,599.94-$143.52
Chicago to Kuala Lumpur Two-one way Airline Tickets,
February, March 13, 444 Each, 865-439, evenings.
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and
sorters. $49.00 up on use based. Call Sylvia
1-800-823-0295
Dynacar 80-watt amp, PAT-Y pream, sony
receiver $125.0, Star XN 100 printer, hardy
driver $49.0
FOR SALE Imagewriter Printer Practically
new $2300 / negotiable 1-268-358-398
For Sale. Cheap! Olympic weight set w/bar. Like
new. Call John at 863-065 06
For Sale: Manicure on Caribbean Skin. Fits a 9tiems
shoe. Gray, good condition. $40. Call Howard
723-581-6200.
Guitar & Amp Sale. 20-25% off. Hayes House of Music 947 Mass. 842-5183
841-3494 Ask for Ken
Miracle Video - Adult movies from $9.95
Call811-7064 8903, 8903
New Orleans, Mardi Gras, Plane ticket Feb 27
March kickoff $17.0 negotiable; phone 6-841-814
NOTEBOOK computer, 386x80/20. ZM ram, 20 MH
mouse, software. Steve. 824-935.
Nomore paper worries, new brother WProc 64K +
Storage materialized, 865MB, 950MB
Storage, many extraxis. $400.bu 865.364
One way ticket to Fort Lauderdale Sunday March
One way ticket to Fort Lauderdale Sunday March 11
KC R15 754 KC 841 0144 between
m i c g i a n i s t
Panaonic Impact Dot Matrix Printer, CGA Color
Disc printer - Good Printer. Mint-grade. #829067
http://www.panaonic.com/displays
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
Genuine ROLLERBLADE skates at the GUARANTEED LEWEST PRICES anywhere. Do not buy other brands. Rollerblade brand skates are the best. All models are available. Many colors. 843-212-6
SHARP Laptop Computer 6048 x 3/12 drive 3/14
port SP-IP, Modern Software Manual Expand
Yard Sale- 2 F/S Bed Incl. 1740 Ohio 9A Sat. 2/29
340 Auto Sales
1978 Polemuth V6, 2 DR, AM/FM, Clean, clean runs great $700 BOO, 749-3099
1978 jaguar, XJ6, beautiful car 34,900 miles, Kenwood Stereo system, $780 call; car 814 at 341-4347.
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA B-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA B-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA B-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA B-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA B-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA B-5.0 spd 2 Dr New
Brake, muffler, 118K, A/C Keys 800. Call B2125718.
Brake, nusar Pulsar runs great. Low mileage 64K PS/BP AM/FM cassette. Only $2200. Many new calls. Call 6844-8602. David negotiate.
1865 Ponticiss Grand Am SE, automatic, a.c. 6-2
1870 Mercury LS, automatic, a.c. 4-3
1875 Mercury LY, Automatic, A/C Cassette, 4-2
dorex 256. Excellent condition $3000-963-3232
109 Subscription Only, 30,000 miles or more. 48 mths
Toy Coralina GTSwinCim RS=5.2rd ,3 .spd, pac.
power sun roof,钥匙车 ,s crust=7700 ,994-175
360 Miscellaneous
OH TV, VCR & jewelry; stress, musical instu-
lation
OH TV, VCR & jewelry; stress, musical instu-
lation
OH TV, VCR & jewelry; stress, musical instu-
lation
SUPPORT CLOTHING OPTIONAL RECREATION.
THE CHAPMAN
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Wanted: Good Use of Sporting Goods - Mountain Bikes, Baseball/Softball Equipment - Balls, Balls, Gloves, Golf, Tennis and much more. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS Mission, KS1-172-3600.
Basketball Tickets to O.S.U. and M. U games!
Mon be NON Student tickets! Call 865-7517
370 Want to Buy
Desperately need 3-4 KU-MU tickets. Please call Dave or Linda at 1-492-5667.
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry, rare coins, etc. Call David B41-805-2665
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without changing your eating habits. GMTRITONTION
Wanted: one non-student B-Ball ticket for Kansas
vs Missouri; March 8. Call Lance 794-2085
3 BR apartment available for sublease off. April 15
$355/month. Terms negotiable at 4734 or 8448
or 12 months.
400s
A + House: Sublease 28H 21B 2c car garage on private corner lot adjoined to ACRW. D W/D, Hookup up, Microp. Antifire. Peeerd yard for door. B Gown. Call 641-5841. For ask or Dan for Leslie
合
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
Apple Croft Apartments now living 1 & 2 bedroom apartments in Lafayette. Laundry room, Kitchen, Swim pool. On-site management. Heat, AC; water and trashpaint board! 17414 W. Calhoun St. 17414 W. Calhoun St.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Artya, 2 Bdrm, 3rd floor, wood floors, near campus KS581-STAR (7027)
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, nationality, 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 things advertised in this newspaper are onable on an equal opportunity basis.
Acoustic Room Hapt
* IDRK Kit/Kit Voice Converter
* Kit, cable TV Ports
* Kit, cable TV Ports
* In-Office Meeting
* Office Meeting
(IDRK Kit) (103) E-7524
* 28kW, E of low
* 6kW, E of high
* S, hardwound
* S, soft wound
*(IDRK Kit) E on (298) Si C
* Appointment
* E on (298) Si C
Naismith Place
Heather Wooldock, Apx.
Spacecraft 3 & 4, & requires
available for the nature
student. No leasing for fall.
Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, inexpensive outfits,
on bus route. Fees:
$850, $1,475
summers 8-13; availances
is where the
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Boardwalk apartments
1 & 2 Bedroom apts
Now Leasing for Summer &
Fell Move inc.
Cory, I. Bfrm, wood floors, near campus $295 841.
STAR (7827)
524 Frontier 842-4444
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus. Washday (dryer, microwave, ceiling fan, mim-binids. Call 1st Management, inc-Mon-Fri 3 p.m - 5 p.m 749-156
Open 6 days a week for your convenience
DESPERATELY NEEDED: Person to sublease
DESPERATELY NEEDED: Gas cable, gas pipe
TABLE B: 841-1377
TABLE C: 841-1377
South Quintet
1, 2, 3, 4
Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
- Close to bus route
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apts, to choose from.
- Inexpensive gas heat
2166 W.26th 843-6446
STATE ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
meadowbrook
Come Visit Meadowbrook Arts
Cory Victorian one bedroom, available March 18,
convenient to KU and Downtown. $35/mo. Built in bookshelves, stained glass, garage
available 42-6384
Available now - Spacious 3 DHP Duplex fully
fenced with private access to campus and
hot route 890. 974 Michigan 8624
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Luxurious 2,3 & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
- Garages; $ 1 / 2 $ Baths
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
SUNRISE VILLAGE
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
Close to Campus and on KU Bus Route
It's Time to Step Up To MEADOWBROOK
841-8400
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Free Feb. Rent. two bd. apt. $350 ends Ends July 1st. On busroute B. Call 749-3475.
Get a group! Restored 8bed 8th floor/asterial, wood floors, W/D, near riverfront [RIMA ST287]
华
Park25
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath townhomes
- 2 Pools
- Volleyball Court
- On Ro bus route
4 stones on property
- On KU bus route-
- 4 stops on property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
842-1455
Heatherwood Apartments - 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments can now be made until the end of May. Route 843-744.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
841-5444
Hillview Aps $15 lease signing bonus! 1 & 2 bed
base. On site route, 845-3901 or 769-6008
On site route, 845-3901 or 769-6008
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
Save $$$ with each newdeposit
- Walk to K.U.
- On Bus Route
* Heated Pool
* 3 Hot Tiles*
LOOKINGFORANAPARTMENT?
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and
- Exercise Room
- Laundry Facilities
- Dishwasher
- Microwaves
* Mini Blinds
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
New locations on campus: 1, 2 and 3 bedroom,
apartments. Washer(dryers), microwave, ceiling
fans, mini-blinds. Call now for an appointment.
Mon-Fri 9 p.m.-5 p.m. 749-1856
- Dine Anytime meals
Looking for a place? Copy 2 bed apart in the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July. $395/month + utilities. Negotiable. Call 864-2669
Water Paid
- Basketball Court
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and GradStudents!! --- You can getrid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
Location-Lifestyle
The Best Value
In Town
842-511 11
open 7 days a week
- Macintosh Computer Room
* Weekly maid service
Call now to reserve your room.
- Front door bus service
- Flexible Leasing
Plus...
Louisiana Place Apt 3. Now leasing nice B2R Ap
Place Beautiful 82.710.790.710. Call the city, Doralty 827.100.790.710.
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Sublease July with option for year after, large 1 BH,
Colony Woods. Water paid. B23-0749
Sublease one bedroom apartment at Hanover Place, Water Paid, furnished. From March to August Close to downtown & campus. Call 865-4386
Summer sublease, spacious 2 bedrooms - 2 baths,
close to campus, furnished. Call 749-387-6967
Two bedroom apartment on bus route. W/J/
4400 room + utilities. Call after 5:30 p.m. (m)
916-724-7850.
Very nice 1 bd. apart, near 8 and Kaskad, KU bus
route 8005 m v very spacious. Available 20-92.
Route 8005 m very spacious. Available 20-92.
430 Roommate Wanted
Non-smoking male for 3 bedroom house bordering campground /driver/water or micro. no lease $210.00
New-Roommate Matching Service. For the next 25 registrations, if *i* is free, after that, until 31, it will $5. We check references, give you candidates who meet your requirements. At Dixie At 64228 today.
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $200/mo. 841-1287
Hurry. We need a roommate to share a townhouse on our route. 1/3, 1/7, 1/15 cents; $160/M. Flexible.
FREEBURY RENT FREE - Roommates wanted to share duplex in JBCJ. 35% upfront. Free rent. Free vacations. FREELAUNDRY. Will consider any special situation. Call Mike at 145-6257 for details
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-4631
One female student for a furnished 53btr. Broomhouse, beacon on bus route. W1S, pool, parking $350.
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female wanted to
share 2 bedroom. Have own room with walk-in
closet. On bus route. $240mth + 1/2 utls. Call 865-
0194. Available Now!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Summer roommate needs: quiet spacious apartment 3 blocks from campus. Owned furnished bedrooms.
Two non-smoking female roommates wanted to
have a shower. They plan to go in a yearly
school year. Please call 249-3288 by March 6.
Roommate needed immediately through July $200
admission fee; roommates & amateurs, great
neighborhood $850 per month
ROOMMATE WANTED for townear at Apple-
bay, D/W, DW, PF, all amenities
416 - 847 - 607.
- Policy
Two Smokers Need Roommate Asap For A Townhouse On Bus Route. Call 865-992-862
Words set in **ALL CAPS** & **BOLD FACE**: count as 5 words.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Very nice 1.8R plus staircase left apartment for spring, summer, and or next year $180/mo. plus 42/month insurance.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 2 words.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Prepaid Order Form Ads
Classified Information Mail-in Form
No refunds on cancellation of p.颜 classified advertising.
Blind box ads: please add 84.0 service charge.
on Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication
Just MALE in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must be company all classified ads mailed to the unit number.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Tearsthes are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are 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.
105 personal
125 professional
145 personal
165 personal
185 professional
125 professional service
225 professional service
300 minimum lease
Classifications
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10Days
0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Name___ Phone
A B C
(phone number published only if include below)
Please print your ad and one box耳.
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| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
take checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence,KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
1982 University Press Syndicate
"Eat my apple, will you? LEAVE MY GARDEN!
BEGONE! ... And take all the mole traps with you!"
12
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, February 27, 1992
LSAT GMAT GRE
Forthe THE Call
PRINCETON
Best Prep REVIEW 843-3131
LSAT
GMAT
GRE
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS!
From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course!)
Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area)
GLOW IN THE DARK
842-3232
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
*Open for Lunch*
clip me
Thrifty Thursday Special
Only $3.49 tax+
(carry out only)
for a small
pizza (add.
tops only .75¢).
order 2 or more
for free delivery
PYRAMID
'We Pile It On'
--catastrophic for Native Americans and fairly positive for Europeans," Wildcat said.
FITNESS FOR FUN
FREE Fitness Program - Call NOW for an Appointment
749-2424
SAVE $100.00 by calling NOW NEWLY REMODELED & ADDED EQUIPMENT
- Over 60 aerobic classes/wk
- Step aerobics offered
- 2 aerobic rooms
- Co-ed classes offered
- 10 tans for $20
- Nautilus & free weights
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
925 Iowa · Hillcrest Plaza
Class studies era of Columbus
One evening Columbus
Although it was no secret on the ship that the aerial was nothing short of a freak accident, Columbus boasted thereafter about his athletic prowess (He thought that he played like Rex Walters). One one told him differently for fear of walking the plank.
You see, it all started with Columbus's deranged belief that the world was a mammoth basketball, and that the atrasonphere was its promethean hoop. (Not too far from many KU fans' idea). In trying to prove his point, he used one of his sailors to guard his door from back-stabbing spies on the ship (Columbus was also paranoid), as he sat up late nights sketching models of a huge basketball/earth. However, Columbus hired a fidgery guard, and in his restlessness, he'd swipe at and dislodge pulleys, muck buckets and anything else he could steal from the hands of his shipsmates as they casually entered his territory. If he succeeded, he would then run circles around them and toss the stolen object through the hole of a life raft.
Most of the 35 students, ranging from Haskell students to interested senior citizens, said they took the class because they thought their knowledge of American-Indian history was inadequate.
BUNK FUNK
Instead they became devoted Columbus fans. They made POSTERS with spirit-filled captions of their captain, such as:'Columbus, Among Us!', and,'Chris
Did you know that Columbus discovered the basketball? It's true, with Reagan as my witness.
Cecilia Flores, Haskell freshman,
receives three hours of credit from
Hawk University.
Columbus was intrigued.
Suddenly, a 40 foo
whitewater wave bumped the ship's stern, sending Chris in awkward flight to the top of the poop deck where he did the dunk of the day.
"I realized a few years ago that there was another American history, one that isn't really taught," said Sarah Henderson, a Topeka resident who is taking the class. "I wanted to explore this Native-American perspective."
By Mark Martin
Special to the Kansan
S.O.B.B.
"I went to public schools, and a lot of this stuff is just avoided there," she said. "This kind of class is a start to educate more people."
came out of his study carry
In the 1700s, the Iroquois Indians of North America conducted congresses and democratically elected their leaders. Europe had kings and queens.
BOYS,' and 'BEWARE THE PHOG!'? Well, I'll bet my grand daddy's charm that you don't know just how important those posters can be to you. You see, The Jayhawk Basketball Poster Series Collection is a Keeper. They're collectors' items. If Columbus's boys had had any sense at all, they too would have saved their posters. If they had, basketball history would have surely been rewritten.
ing an obscure model of the bas- jketball /earth, only to find his guard was on the poope deck slam-dunking a pulley through the life raft.
Tonight on SPORTSTALK
(Sailing On BasketBalls)
The influence the Iroquois had on the Constitution is just one topic in a new class being taught this semester by four Haskell Indian Junior College faculty members entitled, "The Columbian Legacy."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Can't Miss.' They seemed a historical clone of KU fans today. Which brings us to the point of the story.
"The thing that we need to discuss in this class is that the contact between these two cultures has generally been
This year is the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' landing in the Americas. The Haskell course explores relations between the European explorers and American Indians.
So just be yourself- a steadfast KU basketball buff, and keep on collecting those KU posters. Columbus would be proud.
"This class re-examines some of the occurrences starting 500 years ago and how these things affect us today," said Dan Wildcat, who created the course. Wildcat is head of the department of natural and social sciences at Haskell and one of the four instructors teaching the class.
The course, which is open to anyone and costs $180, entails reading books and articles about European contact with American Indians. The class is currently discussing "Conquest of Paradise" by Kirkpatrick Sale, a book that studies the different world views of the two cultures and how their ideas clashed. Venita Chitnau-White, professor of social sciences at Haskell, is teaching this section of the class.
So when the founding fathers of the United States began to write the U.S. Constitution, where did they look for advice?
It wasn't Europe.
KJHX 90.7
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
*Patrick Richey
*KU Track Coach
Gary Swartz
*KU Baseball
You know those posters that we use at every KU men's basketball home game. The ones that have the poignant idioms such as 'ROY'S'
hosts Bill Riley and Rich Bennet from 7:00-8:00 on your Sports Authority
Join hosts Bill Riley and
AFFORDABLE RENTALS...of the Best Kind!
MASTERCRAFT
.of the Best Kind!
Whether you prefer to live alone or with roommates, we have a place for you, designed with you in mind.
Sundance
7th & Florida 841-6255
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2
Kentucky Place
1310 Kentucky 749-0445
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Campus Place
145 Louisiana 841-1429
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday February 29,1992 OPEN DAILY 1:00-5:00 P.M.
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company
*CUSTOM FURNISHINGS*
*DESIGNED FOR PRIVACY*
*ENERGY EFFICIENT*
*MANLY BACK-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
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,NO.105
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 28,1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
minority Awareness
I ❤ BEING BLACK
WE NEED Dance FACULTY Who are Sensitive to MINORTIES
Recent demonstrations have not been as violent as the racial protests of the '70s, but participants still strive for more ethnic and racial acceptance.
KU's history mirrors today's race concerns
By Lyle Miedens and Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writers
By Lvle Niedens
In 1970, Marshall Jackson was a senior at the University of Kansas and an ardent member of the Black Student Union.
At that time, the Lawrence community was a hotbed of racial tension, and the organization was a powerful voice in attempting to improve the racial climate for African Americans in Lawrence.
The tensions turned violent in the spring and summer of 1970.
In the early morning hours of April 21, 1970, the Kansas Union burned and fire bombs were thrown through Lawrence High School windows.
Lawrence residents speculated that the actions were in response to a referendum at the Lawrence High School the previous day in which white student council members voted down a series of demands by Black students. BSU members protested the vote at the high school.
The killing set off four days of racial violence in Lawrence that included a gun battle between four Lawrence students and about 50 African Americans.
Small fires and disturbances were commonplace near 12th Street and Fifth Avenue.
That year, BSU members dumped $8,000 worth of Kansans in Potter Lake after the University refused to provide funds for a newsletter.
That summer, Rick Dowdell, a 19-year-old Black man was shot and killed by police in Brooklyn.
The violence ended after the death of another Black man, Nick Rice. He was killed by police in a disturbance.
Black History Month
"It was a really tense time around campus," Jackson said. "There was a lot of tension, distrust and fear."
Robert Shelton, KU's embudsman,
was an assistant professor of religious
studies.
"There certainly was tension, but I don't know that that was necessarily a negative thing," he said. "People expressed themselves who had never expressed themselves before, and people were listening who had never listened before."
After several BSU demands were met, including the creation of the Office of Minority Affairs and the appointment of several African-American staff members, the organization name less active and disbanded in 1974.
Jackson, who now is an administrative associate at KU's student assistance center, said he did not think all the goals BSU was striving for in 1970 had been fulfilled.
"The atmosphere is much better, but we haven't reached a true level of acceptance," he said.
"I don't think the expected results have been achieved," Jackson said. "I don't think African Americans have gotten what they thought they were going to get as a result of their activity."
For that reason, and for the need for social-cultural interaction, the organization was re-established in 1978, he said.
"I think African-American students need to be needed to be yoised." Jackson said.
Marek Jacobs, St. Louis sophomore is an executive board member of today's BSU.
"I am not an activist type," Jacobs said. "But I think there is a need for BSU to get fellow brothers and sisters involved in campus events. We need to unite and work as one on behalf of Black students on this campus."
Jacobs said that there were several things he would like to see the organization accomplish before he graduated: the establishment of a multicultural center, a more dominant position for the Office of Minority Affairs and an increased number of Black faculty and staff.
Increasing numbers of minority students is a large goal of all minority schools.
"The general consensus is that they want more of their ethnic group to be in college," Jacobs said. "Financial aid is really hard to get for Black students. If more Blacks could get the money, then they'd be here."
"I think it is something more under-
lying than something outward," he said. "Racism exists. It's just not out-
wardly present."
Jacobs said that he thought racism still existed at the University but that it was not a problem.
Ex-aide to Iran explains his 1980 hostage theory
Jacobs said the only thing that would wipe out racism was mutual respect.
"The key to solving the problem is to enact some kind of program to get different cultures together," he said. "If we want to culture your, you are going to respect it.
"Until we respect them and they respect us, there is going to be a problem."
By Katherine Manweiler
Kansan staff writer
The Reagan-Bush campaign's involvement in the hostage crisis of 1980 makes Watergate look like a tea party, the former White House aide to Iran during the Iranian revolution and hostage crisis said yesterday.
"If you're going to take on a subject
Sick's book alleges that the Reagan-Bush campaign in 1980 manipulated the Iran hostage situation for political gain.
Gary Sick, the former aide, refuses to back away from the controversy surrounding his new book, *October Surprise*. The 1967 KU graduate spoke out against the often crowd of more than 200 at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
as controversial as this, it's not going to be cost-free," he said.
October Surprise is a phrase originally used by the Republican Party in 1980 to refer to the possibility that President Carter might attempt a surprise rescue of the hostages just before the presidential election.
Sick said his theory of the 1980 hostage release could lead to a different view of some of the governmental actions and actions in the past 12 years.
"If there was a deal done between the Reagan-Bush campaign in 1980 with Iran and Israel, then it was a direct precursor of what happened in the Iran-Contra affair, and you had to look at the Iran-Contra affair in a very different way." he said.
"If nothing happened in 1980, then
you could say it was an isolated sort of abberation, but otherwise, it was simply a repeat of something that had already been done before."
Sick said that both the House and the Senate were beginning investigations into the incident and that the results were scheduled to be announced in July.
"Compared to this, Watergate was a tea party," he said. "If in fact, a party out of power intervened with a hostile foreign power to undercut negotiations that were under way between their government and this other power
"I don't know whether we'll ever prove this absolutely. I do know that the evidence that is there is not easily
especially one that involved the
federation of 50 Americans — that's simi-
ply PIXXI.
dismissed, and it is quite serious."
But Sick's theory does not include a complete distrust of government, he saws.
"There is a tendency now, partly because of the JFK movie and other things, to suggest that everything in government is connected with everything else in a grandiose scheme," he said. "Mostly, people in government aren't that smart."
Sick said his goal for the book was to make people in the United States aware of the need for government offenses made accountable for their actions.
"I believe that the way you deal with political malfeasance is by bringing it out in public and letting people look at it and make up their own minds about it," he said.
Sick's speech drew mixed reviews from members of the KU community.
Tonya Lower, Sublette junior, said she did not think Sick's overall theory was correct.
"There's no paper trail," Lower said. "There are no definite facts to prove that this happened."
But David Gawell, graduate teaching assistant in political science, said that he was happy to work with
"If you put this in perspective, it's really very serious," Gawell said. "There were private citizens gambling with American lives. They played a private foreign policy."
"They looked at the Constitution as a barrier to their goals. This went against a fundamental tenet of democracy, that the ends don't justify the means."
Paul Kotz /Special to the KANSAN
Gary Sick, KU alumnus, talks about his book, "October Surprise".
Spring break warning: measles in Corpus Christi
By Katherine Manweiler Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
If KU students are not careful, they could bring more than souvenirs and a sunburn back to Lawrence from South Padre Island this spring break.
The public health department in Corpus Christi has confirmed 191 cases of measles since January. William Atkinson, representative for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, called the outbreak one of the most forceful outbreaks in the nation.
A measles outbreak in Corpus Christi, Texas, has health officials concerned. They are encouraging college students to make sure their measles vaccinations are current before hitting the beaches of nearby South Padre.
Elaine Housen, immunization charge nurse at the Douglas County Health Department, said a limited number of patients are available at the health department.
Houston said the health department only vaccinated a few college students each year.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said students who had been vaccinated since 1980 did not need to worry about getting the measles. But other students need to be vaccinated immediately, Yockey said.
"We have vaccine for college freshmen who haven't had their second vaccine yet," she said.
Watkins has 560 doses of the measles vaccine. There is no charge for the vaccine for enrolled students.
"The bottom line is that if anybody is going to Corpus Christi on Friday, they need to get in here ASAP and get a shot," he said. "It would only take 10 people to come back with the measles to cause a disaster."
Yockey said restaurants and bars could be risky places for students in Corpus Christi. Students need to take simple precautions such as not using eating and drinking utensils from other people and washing their hands frequently.
Ten students at the University of Kansas were vaccinated at Watkins on Wednesday, and four students were vaccinated yesterday.
"Any place where there's high density of people, that is where you're going to get the measles," Yockey said. "Fortunately, the spread rate is much higher when the weather is cold. Normally, measles spread on this campus in January, but we haven't had any."
"Measles is so common that it would not be hard for students to pick it up if they spend time with local people," he said.
The vaccine could have some effectiveness within 72 hours, but it could take up to six weeks for the vaccine to take effect. Yockey said.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Leap year Catching up with the seasons
Leap year has 366 days, one more day than an ordinary year. Every fourth year has the extra day — but only in years which can be divided evenly by four and not in those years marked by even hundreds (such as 1900). The exceptions are years which can be divided by 400, such as 1600. By custom, the extra day is always added to the shortest month, giving February 29 days
When
Seasons in Northern Hemisphere
Why
A solar year is the time it takes for the Earth to make one revolution around the sun. It takes the Earth 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds to make one complete orbit. Our calendar year is 365 days long. An extra day is added to correct
Spring Summer Winter Autumn
In the Southern Hemisphere, the seasons are the reverse
the difference in time between the solar and calendar years. That keeps the calendar in step with the seasons, which are governed by the solar year. Otherwise, over the centuries the calendar would drift away from the actual seasons.
SOURCES: Charlotte Observer, Discovery Place, World Book
Knight-Ridder Tribune/FRANCOIS DUCKETT
Women arrested more under new state law
Kansan staff writer
By Michelle Betts
Kansan staff writer
Women make up almost 30 percent of people arrested in domestic violence cases since a new Kansas domestic violence law became effective Jan.1. Lawrence police reported.
Lt. Mark Brothers, crime analyst for the Lawrence police, said that before the law was passed, the police expected the percentage of women arrested in domestic violence cases to be about 25 to 35 percent.
"This is not an unexpected percentage to us," Brothers said. "It is unexpected to the folks who voice concerns about this issue."
According to police records, 18 women and 47 men were arrested for domestic violence in January, and 14 women and 37 men were arrested in February.
Brothers said he was concerned with the law's arrest policy. The law says that police "shall make an arrest in a domestic violence case if there is probable cause that domestic violence has occurred or may occur.
If officers were not required to make an arrest, the percentage of women arrested might be lower, he said.
"Without the 'shall,' officers are
Many women are arrested because police are required to arrest the primary aggressor if there is probable cause. Brothers said.
given the chance to look at the long- term situation," he said.
If the woman is retaliating against abuse she suffered for an extended period of time, she still is considered the primary aggressor in the situation. Brothers said.
Connie Burk, staff member at Women's Transitional Care Services, said she had heard about the percentage of arrested women and was disappointed.
She said police needed more training in how to deal with domestic violence situations.
"There are ways to tell a primary aggressor from a woman acting defensively." Burk said.
However, she said that, in most cases, the police were very concerned with domestic violence.
*There is potential for this to be worked out.* *Burk said.*
But Brothers said the Legislature should examine the law for loopholes or a different interpretation.
He said only a small percentage of domestic violence cases that ended in arrest went to court, which gives the police officer a great deal of power without the involvement of the court system.
"It is an encroachment on people's right to trial, and that is veiled by the very heartfelt wish to help out victims of domestic violence." Brothers said.
2
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
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Two armed men rob local S&L
Two uidentified men, armed with a handgun, robbed a savings and loan on Iowa Street yesterday morning, according to Lawrence police.
Warren said the tellers did not know whether the second man was armed.
The men were wearing nylon stockings over their heads, Warren said.
At 10:55 a.m., Lawrence police received a call from Pioneer Savings and Loan, 2301 Iowa St. The caller said two men left the building after taking an unknown amount of money from the bank tellers. The men left on foot in a south to southwest direction, said Sgt. Mark Warren, Lawrence police representative.
Police had not arrested anyone as of yesterday afternoon, but they are investigating the case by canvassing neighborhoods in the area, Warren said.
Kansan staff report
No one was hurt in the robbery.
- Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
Diversion given to KU professor
William Scott, professor of English, agreed to pay $272.8, which included court costs, diversion fees and resitiation costs. The county District Attorney Custodial Fund.
He also must attend therapy sessions at his own expense. Monthly reports of his progress will be sent to the district attorney.
AKU professor who poured glue into a police car door lock in December entered into a diversion agreement Feb. 14.
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Scott agreed to complete a minimum of 30 hours of community service work by August 14 and submit a letter to the district attorney's office by March2.
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75/38 71/40
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60
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Wichita
71/40
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3-day outlook
TODAY
Sunny and springlike with NW winds at 15-25 mph.
TOMORROW
Sunny again with NE winds at 10-15 mph.
SUNDAY
Fair and mild with SW winds at 10-15 mph.
Spring Break Watch
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Hall, Flint Hall, Kanon, K60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. K6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, KC 66045.
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The University of Kansas-School of Pharmacy Department of Health Services Administration
is pleased to present a Merck Centennial Lecture
By
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President, United Hospital Fund of New York
"Health Care Reform: The New Federalism and The Old Federalism"
March 4,1992
Alderson Auditorium, Fourth Floor of the Kansas Union 8:00 pm
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Public is cordially invited
CAMPUS / AREA
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
3
KU starts critique required by board
By Jenny Martin
Kansan staff writer
Departments at the University of Kansas have begin to wade through thick packets of material they received last week signifying the beginning of a program review required by the Board of Regents.
The departments will conduct self-reviews that will be forwarded to their school or college for assessment by the dean and a review committee.
The dean of each school then will send the evaluated information to a University-wide review committee, evaluations and complete a final report.
Final program reviews, along with final mission statement,
firm's mission statement,
finish the project.
Frances Ingemann, presiding officer of University Council, told Council members yesterday that although assessment procedures would not be approved by the Regents until March, the university had begun the assessment using the proposed procedures.
The procedures probably will not change much after Regen's consideration.
In a letter distributed to Council, Chancellor Gene Budig and Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, addressed campus concerns regarding a recent letter from Jack Sampson, head of the Board of Regents.
Sampson's letter to Budig included
questions that the Regents would like to see answered in individual university mission statements.
Some of the questions posed were how the campus would respond to general-use budget cuts, how the issue of program reduction or elimination would be addressed and what schools, programs and disciplines were candidates for elimination or for a merger.
"We believe that periodic review of our academic programs and support services can be a healthy exercise which can enhance our ability to strengthen areas of critical need to the state and nation and build up areas of existing or potential strength," Budig and Shankel wrote in the letter.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Wednesday the review process was not done solely because of the Regents request.
He said that after a planning session last spring, the University decided it needed to assess its own strengths and weaknesses.
"We're making the review fit the Regents needs as well as our own needs." Brinkman said.
He said that completing the review in such a short time period would add a lot of work to faculty and staff who already were overburdened but that they all realized it must be done.
"I think everyone understands and agrees that this is the best way to go about it, not that everyone is happy about it," Brinkman said.
Faculty fear that review may spur program cuts
By Greg Farmer
Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents order that its universities review their programs has sparked concern among professors and department heads in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Some professors and department heads question the Regents goals. But other department heads say the state has a right to make sure its universities are operating as they should.
Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, said she was concerned that the goal of the program review was to cut some programs.
"There is no question that everyone is taking this review very seriously," she said. "I hear a lot of concern that the goal is to cut programs. I wonder if the Board of Regents will recommend cuts based on these reviews."
Banks said that traditionally 20 percent of the University of Kansas' programs were reviewed each year but that 100 percent of the programs would be reviewed this year.
"The general perception here this year is that some changes, meaning reallocation of funds and reorganization of programs, are going to result from this review," Banks said.
She said the state's financial situation demanded a look at where the state spended its money.
"KU, like other universities, is in a difficult financial situation," she said. "We are going to have to be responsible. We are going to have to justify what we do."
Banks said the program review asked each department to prove that it was a quality program central to the mission of the University.
She said she and other professors were concerned that the programs would be ranked from most important
to the mission of the University to least important.
"We just won't accept that," Banks said. "It's impossible for us to rank programs in that manner."
Maggie Childs, associate professor and head of East Asian languages and culture, said she was concerned that the review process would be time consuming and produce quick-fix solutions.
"I would like to think Regents will be rational about this," Childs said. "But people have said that the Regents would use this as a way to implement cuts. There seems to be this vague urge to save money.
"No department is going to say that it is not an essential part of the University. The University is set up the way it is because we think each department is important to the University's mission."
But William Keel, associate professor and head of German, said KU had an obligation to prove that it was a reasonable endeavor.
"The intention of the program review is to determine whether there are any programs in the Regents system that are not really sustainable given the whole economic picture." Keel said. "I think the answer to that question will be no. I'm just not worried about the outcome."
Charles Krider, associate dean of the School of Business, said the professional schools were required to review their programs, just as departments in the College.
"Ithink the purpose is to have all programs reviewed for efficiency." Krider said. "The review will raise some questions about the allocation of resources and will facilitate and encourage reallocation of some resources."
SAT
Kevin Hammers, Prairie Village junior, gets his copy of Playboy magazine autographed at the Trower Cri Bookstore, 930 Massachusetts St., by Kely Harmon, Lawrence freshman, who was featured as one of the "Girls of the Big Eight" in playboys' April issue.
600 meet KU's Playboy entries
Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer
About 600 people greeted three of the women listed as KU students in the Big Eight issue of Playboy yesterday at Lawrence bookstores.
Gretchen Provines, Lawrence senior, Kely Harmon, Lawrence freshman, and Gindy Schuetz, Wichita resident, sign magazines at Town Crier Bookstore, 930 Massachusetts ut, and Hastings Book, Music and Video. 2000 W, 32rd C
One of the four women listed as a KU student in the issue was not at the signing.
Nikki Merle, a pseudonym for the absent woman who appeared in the issue, did not participate in the signings in Topeka or Kansas City, Kan., either.
Merle appeared in the magazine listed as a cheerleader and engineering student at the University of Kansas.
Merle had a personal conflict with the time of the signings and could not participate. Warner Publishers is the national distributor of Plavbo
Phil Wages, district sales manager for Warner Publishers, said
Provines said she had a great experience posing for the magazine.
"It's been a lot of fun," she said.
"I've met a lot of people, and no one has gotten out of line with us."
Her family and boyfriend were supportive of her, Provinssaid.
"My boyfriend preferred I didn't go nude, but even my grandmother is showing the issue to people at her church," she said.
Harmon said her mother was not supportive at first but was getting used to it.
"It's definitely been worth it," she said. "Playboy is a classy company, and they were so professional. It all went great."
However, there were at least two people who were not excited to see Playboy in their town.
Bruce Blanc and Don Knutson
Lawrence residents, picketed outside Town Crier Bookstore. Blanc's
sign said. "Another feminist opposing Playboy dogma. Sex, Lies and Fake KU students."
Both men said they were not against the models.
"Playboy is known for their feminist bashing and accusing feminists of being man-haters and anti-sexuality," Blanc said. "Not only does their editorial stance attack feminists, but they airbrush their models and can't even get the names and schools of the women right."
Women were supposed to qualify for the pictorial only if they were full-time or part-time students when the pictures were taken or by the publication date of the magazine.
Schuetz, who posed but is not enrolled at the University, said she enrolled for this semester but decided to sit out because of personal reasons.
She said she would attend the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita or the University in the fall.
was not sure of what her plans might be.
However. Schuetz said she still
Larry Djerf, midwestern division manager of Playboy Enterprises in Chicago, said the Big Eight and the Big Ten issues always attracted a lot of people.
"They're the two best issues of the year," Diefen said. "That's probably because we're so popular on college campuses."
Djerf said that after the women were done promoting the issue, there were no set plans for them.
He said the women could test to be Playboy playmates if they were interested.
Elizabeth Norris, Playboy representative, said the company never revealed how much money models received but that the students were paid according to the type of posing they did.
She said the nude models received the most, and semi-nude and fully-clothed models received different amounts.
Haitian sanctions needed, professor says
By Erik Bauer
Kansan staff writer
When Bryant Freeman heard that the United States had eased trade sanctions against the provisional government of Haiti, he was appalled.
"In other words, we're letting Hati
hell" said Freeman, of Affinity.
African-American studies
to be allowed into the United States.
Freeman said he had visited Haiti several hundred times since 1957. He has been a consultant to the U.S. Embassys in Haiti.
He also translated Haitian Creole for immigration officials at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba during the semester break. Haitian refugees had to prove personal political danger
The U.S. government lifted the sanctions against the Haitian dictatorship this week. The sanctions had been imposed as a result of a Sept. 30 coup that ousted democratically-elected Jean-Berard Aristide.
"The U.S. is washing its hands of the situation apparently." Freeman said. "I建议你保持清洁。
Freeman said the United States tried to offset the responsibility of the inflow of refugees. He said the Bush administration thought that doing so would curb the number of refugees trying to leave Haiti. But that leaves little hope for Haitians unless a multinational armed force takes over.
the organization of American States could intervene but only at the request of the legitimate Haitian government.
He said the official word of the Bush administration was that the sanctions were hurting workers in Haiti's textile assembly industry.
Freeman said the United Nations or
But according to Freeman, the impoverished Haitian workers said they would suffer toregain democracy in their country.
The United States favors other immigrants over Haitians because Haiti is a predominantly Black country, Freeman said.
"If this was a group of Norwegians, you could be sure that the treatment of them would be radically different," he said.
Freeman said the best solution
would be to offer the refugees temporary protected status until the present year.
After the coup, the United States still allowed U.S. oil tankers to remain in the coastal waters around Haiti, which have been the only occasions mactions may have had, Freeman said.
Deborah Gerner, associate professor of political science, said she agreed the situation in Haiti was becoming worse.
"The human rights situation remains exceedingly bad," Gerner said. "I fear that we're sending the wrong message to Haiti with this decision."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
OPINION
HEY, GORGEOUS!!
HOW DOES A FABULOUS WEEKEND IN ATLANTIC CITY WITH MIKE TYSON SOUND TO YOU?...
JUSTICE
TRUMP
Students suffer from computer science tiff
Once more the Lawrence Journal World has delighted itself on the private infighting of the department of computer science of our University. On Feb. 23, the Journal World printed on its front page a story about a confidential report that recommends closing the department. The morbid interest this paper has in the maladies and faults of the department are not new. During the last months, the Journal World has made news out of the gossip and personal conflicts of the department.
The Journal World has printed with zest a long list of statements, complaints (founded and unfounded), and mutual accusations that administrators, faculty, teaching assistants and graduate students have unwisely and too freely let loose. Of the resulting mess and hostilities, the clear victims have been first and foremost the students, and secondly the entire University. While faculty, administrators, etc. fight their personal battles in the public arena, they have all forgotten that they are here to teach and educate students. It should seem clear to all the parties involved that the sad conclusion of their muddy wars will damage them all.
No one will win. Students, as usual,
will lose the most. I wonder how well a
Manuel
Mendez
Guest
columnist
computer science graduate will fare if his or her prospective employer has been exposed to all these dirty closet wars and the sensationalist reporting of the Journal World. Graduate students also will suffer because they will have to carry the now notorious fame of our department. The faculty and administrators can only further lose the respect of students and the University community. Moreover, if this battle does end with the death of the department, I question whether other universities or the private sector will gladly hire them after their many irresponsible indiscretions. The face and prestige of the University also have been blemished, but I suppose the warriors of this tempest in a tea cup are all too concerned to notice.
The idea of murdering the patient instead of curing him is as outrageous as it sounds. It has been quite unfortunate that the higher authorities at
Strong Hall have only promoted rumors by failing to immediately discard such absurd recommendation. Even if they proceed with this plan (in which, of course, students are not a consideration), it carries no guarantees of success. Should the department be split in two between engineering and mathematics, the problems of the department will simply be exported to the recipients of the spoils.
The right thing to do is clear. The chancellor and the dean of liberal arts and sciences should lead and work together with the department (students included) and restore order in the house. If somebody should refuse to cooperate, it should be made clear that obedience benefits no one. Unwilling parties should be disciplined. Furthermore, a thorough investigation should be initiated to unmask and punish the person who recklessly provided the Journal World with the confidential report that recommended the termination of the department. But above all, the warning parties should resolve their personal differences in private and follow this simple advice: shut up. All of us would greatly appreciate it.
Manuel Mendez is a Mexico City senior majoring in computer science.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Parking dispute ends in truce
Students vocalize their opinion to keep spaces, win respect from faculty members and Regents
Chancellor Gene Budig and interim vice chancellor Del Shankel came up with a truce that should pacify both sides in the dispute over 26 parking spaces.
The University Parking Board, University Senate Executive Committee and University Council wanted all of the 26 spaces in lot 11, which is east of Fraser Hall, to be restricted for faculty members until 8:30 p.m. But students wanted the spaces to remain restricted only until 5 p.m.
Budig and Shankel recommended to the Board of Regents that 11 of the spaces be reserved until 7:30 p.m. for vehicles with blue stickers. By doing this, they showed a willingness to consider students' views. They made the right decision.
Half of a parking lot may not seem like much, but this is a moral victory for students. One of the reasons for the compromise was student opposition to the proposed restriction. This opposition proved that if students
stood up for themselves and voiced their opinions they could make a difference.
At some universities throughout the country student opinion is not highly valued or simply not voiced. This was not the case with the parking spaces. All students involved should be proud of their efforts to assert their will. It is not always an easy thing to do.
Budig and Shankel should be commended for finding a reasonable solution to this problem. Their decision does not place one group's needs above the other's. Faculty and students are equally important. The compromise might not completely satisfy everyone, but at least both sides receive some compensation.
There is no perfect solution to a situation such as this one, unless another parking lot magically appears. But because that is not likely, faculty and students should try to make the best of the compromise and end the battle for parking spaces. If problems persist, all sides should work together for the creation of more parking spaces for everyone.
Amy Francis for the editorial board
Computer science needs help
The department has a duty to enlighten its majors about its problems and try to rectify them
a confidential report about the computer science department that was anonymously sent to the Lawrence Journal World exposed several problems. The department must address these problems. They are not new; they simply have not been dealt with.
The report outlined problems within the department and offered possible solutions. It suggested that unless conflicts between William Bulgren, head of the computer science department, and Zamir Bavel, professor of computer science, could be solved, the department should be dissolved.
In the age of computers, it would be unwise for the University of Kansas to eliminate its program. Bulgren has acknowledged the
national demand for computer science graduates.
James Muyskens, dean of liberal arts and sciences, has expressed frustration that the report was leaked.
But if a department is so plagued with problems that it could be dissolved, majors and potential majors in that department should be made aware of the problems, at least to the extent that they can make informed decisions pertaining to their majors.
According to the report, "The atmosphere of conflict in the department unfortunately affects students as well as faculty."
Although it is not clear where the blame for the department's problems lies, it is clear that students should be made aware of departmental problems when those problems affect the quality of education and threaten the existence of the department.
Julie Wasson for the editorial board
Shooting animals is OK
After reading David Caruso It IS "Don't shoot the animals" in the Feb. 20 Kansan, I thought I'd shed a little light on the subject. Mr. Caruso's vivid description of his 'dream' shows exactly how ignorant of the facts he really is. Caruso mentions to the hunter in his dream that he cannot understand the need to shoot animals when he is not starving. I wonder whether Mr. Caruso feels sorry for the defenseless cows killed to make his tennis shoes and Big Macs.
Caruso also makes the point that animals were surviving for millions of years without human interference. He is exactly right. What he fails to realize, however, is that animals are no longer free from human interference. Condominiums are being built on former forests, and swamps are being drained to create more farming lands. In fact, a great deal of territory still remains for wildlife is supported by hunter's organizations such as Ducks Unlimited. It is not hunters who are destroying wildlife populations; it is the destruction of habitat. Reduced territory can only support reduced wildlife populations.
Therefore, the excess creatures are left to die from disease and starvation. Because natural predators were destroyed by previous habitat destruction, hunters make up the gap.
Hunters are responsible for the maintenance of the animal populations we do have.
Mr. Caruso wants to look at cute fuzzy animals and cry "don't shoot them." What he doesn't want to do is look at the hard facts of habitat destruction and animal starvation. Perhaps an effort to stop territorial destruction would be better directed.
Jennifer Jirak
Burlington freshman
Letters to the editor
Words alienate men
Praise to Andrew Hodges' guest column of Feb. 24, a fine summary of the foolishness demonstrated by the female-partiality-in-language movement.
I was raised in the traditional male-dominated household. I also was indoctrinated with the male superiority beliefs so pervasive in America. I began realizing that as a new student here, and it has been only over the past two years that I have sought to reconstruct many of my previous conceptions of women. I credit the feminist movement for some of this positive change; however, some feminists' bickering over trivial interpretations of our language has grown wearisome.
All feminists who live tranquility should heed Hodges' advice: Chastising men for
usage of solid words such as "history" is vain,
wrong and will not help your cause; it will only
alienate men, especially the ones sensitive to
your objectives.
My advice to all men is simple: Relentlessly question all your preconceived notions about women. So ends my catechism.
Overland Park senior
ASK works for KU
in response to Chris Moeser's editorial in the Feb. 20 Kansan, I would like to assure the students of the University of Kansas that their concerns are being communicated to the Legislature. The Associated Students of Kansas employs two staff members in Topeka to ensure that the voices of students at all six Regents universities are heard. Additionally, when a campus experiences problems such as those KU faced last semester, the other members of ASK step forward to make sure the school's representation does not suffer.
ASK's priorities for this legislative session address the problems of inadequate state financing for higher education. We have targeted capital improvements (including repairing Hoch Auditorium) and restoration of full base-budget financing (including adequate faculty compensation) for particular
emphasis. ASK has also proposed financing mechanisms. As an organization, we have not been silent.
However, the writer is absolutely correct about two points. Students should be furious about the state's neglect of their universities, and they should take an active role in the debate. Students working with ASK have the unique opportunity to directly affect the quality and availability of higher education, but only if they are willing to get involved.
Executive director of ASK
Boss ad is questionable
At the risk of giving KJHK's John Boss more of the notoriety and publicity he craves, we'd like to ask a question regarding his "Boss Plays Cupid" promotion, advertised in the Feb. 18 *Kansan* under a blaring "NoPerverts Please!" heading.
As anyone who's had the dubious pleasure of listening to the John Boss Show a few times knows, Boss regularly makes a matter-of-fact declaration of his homophobia, probably in an attempt to cultivate his self-styled "controversial" persona. This is, we suppose, his prerogative; it's his show, and there is still a First Amendment to the Constitution in this country.
At any rate, any Boss listener seeing the Kansan ad must have been aware that the Bossman's use of the term "Perverts" meant, or at least included, homosexuals. (Perhaps Boss would have preferred the heading "No Homos Please!" if he'd thought he could get away with it, thereby tossing the Kansan's sales staff into a tizzy at the prospect of having to turn away an expensive quarter-page ad.) Obviously the possibility of pairing any gay couples for a St. Valentine's Day dinner at Quinton's Bar and Deli and a movie at Dickinson's Theatres did not tickle the Bossman's fancy.
Our question is this: Since KJHK (including its "John Boss Show") is financed primarily by every KU student's activity fee, why should an estimated 10 percent of the KU student population — plus whoever else doesn't measure up to John Boss' standards for "non-pervers" — be barred from winning a contest aired over KJHK because of their sexual orientation? Would Boss and his producers please find a few minutes to write a letter to the editor, as we have, so that the student body can be apprised of his explanation without having to tune in to his scummy little daily exercise in self-promotion?
Heather MacLaren St. Louis senior
KANSANSTAFF
TIFFANYHARNESS Editor
VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
News ... Mike Andrews
Editorial ... Beth Randolph
Planning ... Lara Gold
Campus ... Eric Gorski/Rochelle Olson
Sports ... Eric Nelson
Photo ... Julie Jackson
Features ... Debbie Myers
Graphics ... Alina Brainard/J Jeff Meesson
Editors
JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Bill LiBengoodg
Regional sales mgr .. Rich Harshburger
Co-op sales mgr ... Joa Johnson
Co-ops sales mgr ... Arnelson
Production mgrs ... Kim Wallace
... Lisa Keeler
Marketing director ... Clintax
Creative director ... Leanne Bryant
JAYSTEINER Retail sales manager
Business Staff
The writer must be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer-Print Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
5
FORD
Mirror, Mirror...
Andy Dreiling, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, graduate student, usually washes his car at least once a week if the weather permits. Yesterday's warm weather gave Drelling an opportunity to wash his car at the Racor Car Wash, 2828 Alma St.
U.S. to cut carbon dioxide emissions
UNITED NATIONS — The United States said yesterday it would reduce its carbon dioxide emissions and donate $75 million to help developing countries do the same, raising hopes for an international agreement to help forestall global warming.
The Associated Press
Negotiations for such a pact resumed Feb. 18 at the United Nations and will conclude today without resolving a European demand that industrial nations reduce emissions to 190 levels by the year 2000.
Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
"It's an encouraging sign of progress, but there's a long way to go," said Brooks Yeager, vice president of the National Audubon Society. "It shows a new desire on the part of the White House to play a constructive role in the negotiations."
Among the measures announced by the United States to curb its own emissions of greenhouse gases were:
Improving energy efficiency by raising standards for buildings and appliances and by encouraging public-private partnerships to improve the efficiency of lighting, computer systems, refrigerators and industrial motors.
The United States said yesterday that it would donate $50 million to the World Bank's Global Environment Facility, which finances efforts by developing countries to address the problem of climate change. $25 million more is to be spent on cooperative studies to help developing countries assess their emissions and devise ways to reduce them.
The United States has refused to agree to specific limits on carbon dioxide emissions, arguing it could impose unreasonable costs on industry.
- introducing measures encouraging the use of vehicles that run on alternative fuels, public transit and research on electric cars.
Encouraging research on more efficient aircraft and trains, new methods of energy generation and promoting industrial waste reduction and recycling.
If so, the United States would be in a position to sign an international agreement in June at the United Nations
But the steps the United States is taking to curb its emissions could bring it into compliance with the demand, environmental groups said.
Most of these measures previously have been announced or are contained in legislation now moving through Congress, according to environmentalists. But they welcomed the changes, which are aimed at reducing
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Most of the women — from 54 percent to 60 percent at the various sites — said they did not want to become pregnant within the next three years. But only 28 percent to 38 percent reported regular contraceptive use, and 37 percent to 49 percent said they never used contraceptives, the CDC said.
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The best predictions now say that carbon dioxide levels in the earth's atmosphere could double in the next century unless steps are taken to reduce emissions sharply. The increased carbon dioxide level would raise the earth's temperature by 2.7 to 8 degrees, causing unpredictable climate disruptions and raising ocean levels enough to threaten coastal areas.
ATLANTA — A study of women at high risk for AIDS in four U.S. cities has found that as many as half never use contraceptives, and up to two-thirds want to have children, health researchers reported yesterday.
Between 41 percent to 64 percent of the women surveyed said they wanted to have children. If such women were
"If we can help them implement their intention not to have children right now, we can help them avoid unintended pregnancy — and preserve their capacity to have children by helping them avoid HIV (AIDS virus) transmission."
U. S. officials have not yet calculated whether the planned emissions will stabilize U.S. carbon dioxide emissions at 1900 levels.
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If the measures do work, the administration will be able to go along with a stabilization goal, removing a significant roadblock to an international agreement, said Alden Meyer, director of the climate change program with the Union of Concerned Scientists.
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Students to voice KU computer science concerns
By Ranjit Arab
The dean of liberal arts and sciences said yesterday that he would hold a meeting for all undergraduate students majoring in computer science.
Kansan staff writer
The meeting will be Monday at 5 p.m. in 120 Snow Hall.
James Muyskens, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the meeting was a result of concerns stemming from a confidential report that suggested eliminating the computer science department.
Muyskens said he held a meeting with computer science graduate students two weeks ago in which the options the department faces were discussed
classic aspects Aside from dispelling many of the rumors that have circulated within the department, the meeting will give students a chance to voice their concerns and questions. Muvksen said.
However, he said the confidential report had not been made available to either graduate or undergraduate students. It will not be made available at the meeting, he said.
Muyksens said he had not yet talked directly with any undergraduate in the department but had spoken to one concerned parent about the future of the computer science undergraduate degree.
The president of the computer science graduate student organization, Mary Frohock, said she was one of about 40 graduate students present at the meeting that was held two weeks ago.
Frohock said the graduate students asked to see the confidential report at the meeting but were not allowed to see it.
"The point of the meeting was to show all students in the department are going to be taken care of first and foremost." Frohock said.
She said she thought the dean was trying to salvage the department.
One of the significant issues raised in the graduate student meeting was Ph.D. requirements. Graduate students wanted an established criteria for qualifying examinations and course selection, Frohock said.
She said the issue of low productivity, which was mentioned in the confidential report, also was discussed.
"As Ph.D. students, we need viable research," she said. "I believe our professors are very capable of doing this research, but some of them they have not received the proper recognition and have stopped researching."
Frohock said the meeting with undergraduate students also probably
would clear some concerns.
"The dean will be reassuring the undergraduates that everything is being done to save the department," she said. "And if the department has to get split, they will still receive a computer science degree and not a math or computer engineering degree."
Martha Novak, computer science graduate student, said she also was present at the meeting.
Novak said Muyskens assured the graduate students that elimination of the computer science department was only one option he was facing. However, she said the meeting with the undergraduate students could contain different information.
"Our meeting was quite a while ago and a lot of things have happened since then." Novak said. "I do not know where he is coming from now."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
7
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFSE
Moscow
Fighting renews in mountains
Shelling by Armenian and Azerbaijani fighters shattered a cease-fire in Nagorno-Karabakh only a few hours after it took effect yesterday, and both sides suffered casualties, officials and news reports said.
The brief cease-fire was among the few formal truces achieved in the bloody, 4-year-old confrontation concerning the mountainous Nagorno-Karabian region of Armenia in an eastern region within Muslim Azerbaijan.
Armenian President Leon Ter-Petrosian sent a special message to the leaders of 14 countries, including the United States, urging them to disband their own army and help work out a peace plan.
The conflict concerning Nagorno-Karabakh goes back centuries but flared in 1880 after ethnic Armenians in the enclave demanding unification with their brethren in Armenia.
More than 1,000 people have died in the fighting.
Pogradec, Albania
Looting continues for third day
Thousands of looters, some armed and drunk, rampaged for a third day yesterday in a western Albanian town, and police seemed helpless or unwilling to stop them.
Mobs also raided a drug store and two goods depots and set them on fire in the central town of Lushnje, said Fadil Dana). deputy minister of health said there was an attack on a plastics factory there. Canaji said.
Unrest has been reported throughout Albania. Europe's poorest country, as citizens struggle to survive a tough winter and the legacy of 46 years of Communist rule.
State radio said Wednesday that two people were crushed to death in rioting in Prague, a city where the Islamic State made an attack.
Yesterday in Pogradec, 10 state warehouses were emptied of everything from Western food aid to wicker baskets and industrial chemicals, said one police officer. Pirro Kacorri.
Paris
Night iob ban on women lifted
The French government has agreed to lift a
nearly closed ban on women working
in early labour laws.
The government announcement Wednesday was in response to a request from the International Labor Organization, which asked in 1990 that the ban be relaxed. The labor organization, as well as the national labor standards, had adopted the ban in a convention that was ratified by France in 1954.
In July, the European Court of Justice said it was conflicted with the principle of equal rights for both.
According to labor union statistics, out of roughly 1 million nighttime workers classified as industrial laborers — mainly factory workers — 95% were required. They obtained exemptions from the ban.
France's overall nighttime work force of 2.4 million includes nearly half a million women,
From The Associated Press
End to war declared by Serbian president
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — President Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia, who led his republic into a ruinous conflict with Croatia in a failed attempt to hold Yugoslavia together, declared the war over yesterday.
In another sign of eased hostilities, Croatian President Franjo Tudjiman ordered the demobilization of 20,000 reservists in his republic, according to a brief report on the Belgrade-based news agency Tanjug. There was no immediate confirmation.
Milosevic's declaration appeared to be a response to mounting opposition inside Serbia to the war's human and economic toll. Many Serbians have turned against the once-popular leader and are demanding his resignation.
"Today we can say that most of the agony in our country is over and that conditions now exist for the peaceful and democratic solution of the Yugoslav crisis," Milosevic told Serbia's parliament as a U.N.-mediated truce stretched to nearly two months.
In a rare speech, Milosevic also seemed to move away from previous insistence that Serbian-dominated regions in other republics be united with Serbia. He said Serbia's union with tiny Montenegro in a smaller Yugoslavia was the best option.
June 25, 1991: Slovenia, Croatia declare independence.
The Yugoslavian civil war
June 27: Fighting begins between Yugoslav army. Slovenian defenders
July 22: Croatia fighting escalates into civil war
Nearly 10,000 people have died
Aug. 3: Federal presidency orders cease-fire, the first at least 14 that fail quickly.
Jan. 3, 1992: U N- sponsored cease-fire takes effect, lasts more than seven weeks.
Jan. 15: European Community recognizes independence of Slovenia and Croatia
Austria
Slovenia Hungary
Serbia
Labljana Romania
Zagreb
Croatia Belgrade
Yugoslavia
Bosnia-Hercegovina
Montenegro
Italy Macedonia
Albania Greece
Map area 0 100 Miles Mediterranean Sea
■ Feb. 21: U.N. Security Council votes to send peacekeeping troops to Curaçao.
■Yesterday: Under pressure from abroad and from war-weary Serbs, Serbian president declares that civil war is over.
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Source: The Associated Press
in six months of fighting before the truce took effect in Croatia on Jan. 3.
Croatia and Slovenia have received international recognition as independent states, and Bosnia-Hercegovina and Macedonia are following that path.
As Milosevic spoke, defense officials in Croatia's capital, Zagreb, reported that about 700 shells had fallen on the eastern Croatian city of Osijek and around nearby Vinkovci.
Drug summit ends in Texas
Bush warns that U.S. finances for fight are running low
The Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — President Bush and six Latin-American leaders concluded a drug summit yesterday with renewed pledges to combat narcotics. But Bush cautioned that at a time of rather sparse resources, the United States could not give its neighbors all the help they requested.
production and money laundering, increase training of law enforcement agents and improve the sharing of intelligence
Bush and the Latin leaders called on European and Asian nations, singing out Japan in particular, to share in both the financial burden of the war on drugs and to inoin cooperative interdiction efforts.
The summit nations will send a delegation, with one member from each nation, to visit Europe and Japan and seek bilateral and multilateral agreements on aid and cooperation.
They also agree to hold annual high-level follow-up meetings to assess progress in the war on drugs.
In the Declaration of San Antonio, the participants agreed to a series of steps that for the most part would expand upon existing efforts to combat coca
"These are not easy times for the United States," Bush said at a news conference.
Bush called drug trafficking "a new kind of transnational energy."
But when a reporter from Latin America asked Bush whether he was prepared to increase assistance, Bush replied, "The responsibility of the president of the United States is first to the people of the United States."
"Make no mistake," Bush said. "Defeat the traffickers, we will."
Bush outlined 10goals, mostly underscoring previously known U.S. objectives.
The goals included reducing U.S. demand, speeding up the legal process against drug criminals, protecting human rights, and continuing financial aid to帮 Andean peasants switch to non-coca crops.
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8
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT
HAPPENINGS
BARS
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill,
1601 W. 23rd St.
Saturday: That Statue Moved, 10 p.m.
1:30 a.m. charge: $2
Bogarts of Lawrence
611 Vermont St.
Saturday Black Cat Bone, 9:30 p.m. -
1:30 a.m. cover charge: $3
The Bottleneck
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Friday: Fashion Tones and Shadowy
Men on a Shadowy Planet,
cover charge $3
Saturday: The Urge and laxion,
10 p.m.-2 a.m., cover charge $3
Monday: Open mike; 9:30 p.m-
2 a.m., no cover charge
Dos Hombres 815 New Hampshire
Wednesday: Karaoke night, 10 p.m.
no cover charge
The Brass Apple. 3300 W. 15th St.
Tuesday: Karaoke night, 9 p.m.- 1:30 a.m. no cover charge
Flamingo Club. 501 N. Ninth St.
Friday, Saturday. top dancers, noon-
1-a.m., cover charge: $2 or
a two-drink minimum
Henry T's Bar & Grill 3520 W. Sixth St
Thursday: Karaoke night,
9 p.m. 2 a.m., no cover charge
International Club 21, 10 N Park St
Friday. African Affairs Student Association
party, 8:30 a.m., cover charge $3
Everyone welcome
Saturday. Steal Mary, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Live jazz, cover charge $1
The Jazzus of Lawrence,
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Friday, Saturday Ida McBeth and
Friends, 10.p.m.-1.30 a.m., cover
charge.$3
Thursday Ida McBeth and Friends, 10.p.m-1.30 a.m., cover charge; free
Johnny's Tavern. 401 N. Second St.
Friday, Saturday. Rhythm Kings,
3:00 p.m. m. cover, $1
The Power Plant, 901 Mississippi St. Friday,Sunday: alternative music night
Riverside Bar and Grill
520 N. Third St.
Friday, Bandlands Bath,
9 p.m. 1 a.m. band, cover charge: $2
Shilah, 1003 E. 23rd St.
Friday: Armie Johnson with Midnight
Special, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., cover charge: $3
Saturday: Dance lessons,
7:45-8:45 p.m.
Band: Over Easy,
9 p.m.-1 a.m., cover charge: $3
The Yacht Club. 530 Wisconsin in St
Tuesday. Karaoke night, 9 p.m.
1 a.m.-no cover. 4 m ockery.
ART EXHIBITIONS
Spencer Museum of Art
Saturday, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sunday, noon-5 p.m.
Beyond the Floating World Japanese Prints in the 20th Century runs through March 15
Mexican Retable Painting The Art of Private Devotion runs through March 8
Documenting the American Dream: FSA Photographs of the Great Depression runs through March 8
THEATER
The Lawrence Community Theater
1501 New Hampshire
"The Road to Mecca"
Friday, Saturday, Thursday: 8 p.m.
Sunday matinee: 2:30 p.m.
tickets: $8 students
University Theater Series
Crafton-Preyer Theater
"Romeo and Juliet"
Friday, Saturday, 8 p.m.
Sunday matinee, 2:30 p.m.
tickets: $3.50-students
MUSIC
Friday: Master's Recital:
Christine Schumann, soprano,
Sawthorn Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Monday: Concert Series: The New
York City Opera National Coal. in "Tosca
Topeka Performing Arts
Center, 8 p.m.; tickets: 10-students
The rise of the CD
tuesday: Winter Concert; Chamber and Concert Choirs, Crafton-Preyer Theater, 8.p.m., free
Wednesday. Winter Concert University and Concert Bands, Crafton-Preyer Theater, 8 p.m., free
Compact discs could mean death for cassettes,just as cassettes killed the album
By Jay Williams
Kansan staff writer
Tape cases may be doing more in the future than simply storing cassettes.
They may become coffins for a forgotten format of music buried under the forward march of technology.
"Cassettes are dying," said Mike Soden, a floor clerk at Streetside Records, 1403 W.23rd St
He said that the burial could be as soon as two years. Then, cassette tapes will be where vinyl albums are today.
"We have about 50 albums in stock and that is it," Soden said. "A lot of older stuff you cannot even get on vinyl."
The cause of this change can be summed up in two words: compact discs.
Soden said that his store sold between 75 percent and 80 percent of all music in compact disc format.
But reports of the cassette's death may be premature, said Brent Hefley, a salesperson at Kief's Discount Records & Stereo Supply, 2429 Iowa St.
"There is no doubt there has been some loss in the market, but cassettes are still extremely strong." he said.
Cassette prices range from $9.49 to $9.99.
Memory
A normal compact disc that plays all your music also can hold data
that a computer can read. But the CD can hold more than 347 times
the data that a normal computer floppy diskette can hold. A
comparison:
one 13-cm-wide
compact disc
= 10 1.44 megabyte floppy diskettes
one megabyte = 1,024 kilobytes = 1,048,576 bytes
A byte is one character of information.
CD Notes
Improving the sound
Although the compact disc’s sound already exceeds the quality of any format widely
available, some audiophiles have been trying to improve the quality. Some of the more
unorthodox methods:
● Freeze your CD in liquid nitrogen. Be careful though. The temperature of the CD must be
reduced gradually or the disc will be permanently damaged.
● Use a green felt tip marker and color the inside and outside edges of the disc.
Note: Industry experts do not recommend either of these methods.
Environmental note:
The approximately 300 million 6" x 12" "long boxes" sold last year placed end-to-end
would circle the globe at the equator more than two times.
cassette prices range from 40 to 160.
Soden said that the average price for a CD was between $13 and $16 and had not changed much since they made their splash on the public.
"The record companies will keep the price there as long as they can." he said.
Soden said that the digitalized sound from digital recordings was good for certain styles of music, such as classical music and some forms of jazz. For other forms, digital recordings, the basis for most CD recording, leaves something to be desired.
The compact disc player uses a laser beam to read the information on the disc. The disc is made up of many different sections. Each space has a special code. The laser beam reflects back to the disc player the pattern of the code, which represents the sound the listener hears.
Compact discs, the leader of the latest wave of entertainment advances, amazed people with their sound clarity, but not everybody is excited about it. The vast majority of computers and digitalized sound. Seda said.
Hefley said that the process basically worked along the same principle as a laver piano.
=
Elvis
R.E.M.
Chicag
Source: Audiothile magazine; Los Angeles Times; Richard Spurlock; Computerland
"I sounds more mechanical, too perfect," he said. "You don't get the feeling of the music."
The sound may be too perfect, but people listening to CDs have other reasons for buying them. Hefley said.
He said that CDs were more durable than cassettes.
"Unless they are physically damaged, they are a lifelong item." Heflev said.
CDs are a more convenient form for listening to music because a person does not need to rewind or fast-forward to find a song, he said.
Disc technology now reaches into more areas than music.
Prices for laser disc players run from $500.00 to $3800.00. Hefley said the major difference in the players was quality of construction.
Laser discs, an older format of discs from the early 1980s, are beginning to become more popular. he said.
One store in Lawrence sells and rent's laser discs.
Miracle Video, 910 N. 2nd St., has between 250-300 movie titles on laser disc, said David Farve, a salesperson at the store.
He said that people liked the high-quality sound and picture a laser disc gave.
"If I had the money, I would buy one." Farve said.
Farve said that about 20 percent of the store's business was in laser discs.
The laser discs have features that cannot be found on video cassettes, he said. Most discs add extra material about the movie, such as interviews with people from the movie and extra footage left out of the videocassette.
For the movie "Aliens," the laser disc includes an extra 30 minutes of footage left out of the original movie.
Jeff Meesey, Daily Kansan
Personal computers have not escaped the touch of dist technology. A new computer system is making its move toward the mainstream of personal computing.
CD-ROM, which stands for compact disk read-only memory, uses a compact disc instead of a floppy disk to read information.
The price tag for an entire system -CD-ROM drive, laser disc player, computer and monitor-costs almost $10,000.
Because of the high price, all sales of multimedia systems have been to businesses, said Richard Spurlock, an employee at Computerland. 2429 Iowa St.
He said that a compact disc stored more than 300 times the amount of information of a regular floppy diskette.
CD-ROM systems are slower than regular computers to load information, but once loaded, they can keep up with more traditional systems, he said.
Laser discs extend the possibilities of computers even more. Spurlock said.
ly combining the storage of CD-ROM with a laser disc, multimedia presentations using high quality sound and video are possible on a computer screen, he said.
"The picture from a laser disc looks just like a TV picture." Spurlock said.
He said that Computerland used multimedia presentations in classes that taught computer skills.
"It is most productive in education," Spurlock said. "It is a teaching tool. It is a teacher."
Seven Romeos for seven Juliets?
Japanese sceneographer uses Western, Asian influences in Shakespeare's classic tragedy
Special to the Kansan
By Rachel Thompson Special to the Kansan
University Theatre has a special treat for theater lovers who have never seen Shakespearean actors with bald heads and colorful masks.
"Romeo and Juliet," directed by Paul Meier, associate professor of theater and film, is a non-traditional rendition of Shakespeare's classic tale for beloved love.
Meier said he wanted to present "Romeo and Juliet" with utmost simplicity, steering away from the play's limited meanings and getting down to the basics of humanity.
"It is supposed to represent all of mankind," he said. "We are all Romeo and Juliet in some sense. We are all young men."
"The effect is to hear all of the inner voices of the characters," Meier explained. "Not one actor owns these roles of Romeo and Juliet. I wanted to focus on the character, not on the personality of the actor."
Meier's "Romee and Juliet" casts 14 members - seven women and seven men. All the women get a chance at playing Juliet, while all the men play Romeo at some time during the play.
Mitsuru Ishi'i, guest sceneographer from Japan, complements Meier's directing with his costume and set designs.
Ishi's costume designs include robes displaying Western and Japanese influences like skullcaps and masks.
"The Japanese characters painted on the masks tell you what role the actor is playing." Ishi'll said. "If you show the actor's face, you see the different actors playing Romeo and Juliet."
"I designed the costumes so that they could be Japanese style, or they could be European style," Ishi's said.
The "Homee and Juliet" set comprises a large blind that covers the back of the stage and silk attached to a black cloth behind the blind. When the actors are not performing the stage, they move behind the blind to watch the performance.
"I use lots of symbolism with the set and lighting, " Ishi i" said. "That way, you get an effect through the blind, with images moving behind the blind. It's very different from European realism."
"There are people who want to see it as they see it in their own minds," he said. "If they are locked into wanting to see it that way, they are going to be disappointed."
CAROLINE JONES
Kristen Petty/KANSAN
Tybalt and Juliet, portrayed by Jeff Orr and Diana Dresser, Lawrence seniors, dance in one of the opening scenes of "Romeo and Juliet." University Theatre's presentation of the Shakespearean tragedy, will run Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at Crafton-Preyer Theater. Tickets are $3.50 for students.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
9
Food Barn announces closing of Lawrence store,13 others
By Svala,Jonsdottir
Kansan staff writer
The Food Barn store in Lawrence is one of 14 stores in Kansas and Missouri that the company plans to close within a month.
Union and industry executives said the buyer was Associated Wholesale Grocers in Kansas City, Kan., thearea's top food supplier. Associated Wholesale Grocers officials could not be reached for comment yesterday.
"They called me on Wednesday morning and said we would be closing." Browning said. "It is possible that I could be offered a job in one of their other stores in Kansas City, but I cannot afford to drive there every day."
"Most of the people who work here will probably lose their jobs," Charles said. "Some that have several years seniority might be able to relocate to other stores in the Kansas City area that Food Barn still operates."
Larry Hodges, president of Food Barn, confirmed Wednesday that the company would sell its warehouse and 14 stores. He said he expected an agreement to be signed within 60 days but declined to identify the buyer or comment on the terms of the sale.
Charles said he heard rumors that the stores would be resold to independent grocers to whom associated Wholesale Grocers would supply food, but he feared the Lawrence store would be closed.
Food Barn, 1900 W. 23rd St., employs about 40 people, including 10 KU students, said Mike Charles, store union steward.
Jay Browning, Lawrence senior, has worked at Food Barn part time for three years.
"My opinion is that Lawrence already has too many food stores," he said. "I do not really think there is a buyer for the
The Etc.
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LAUNDRY BY BAUCO & LOMB
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RAY-BAN
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Gary Toebben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said it was unlikely that an individual grocery would buy the Lawrence Food Barn store.
"A store of that size would typically be bought by a regional or national chain," he said. "I don't know whether any of them would be interested in the store, or whether any stores in Lawrence would want to add another location."
Food Barn has struggled with heavy debt since a management-led buyout in 1988. Although employees repeatedly have agreed to cuts in pay, the company has suffered losses because of increased competition and a 12-week strike last year.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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In Memory of Our Fellow Taiwanese who Died in the February 28 Massacre on Taiwan in 1947
A truck carrying people is being pushed by a group of soldiers.
In 1947, island-wide uprisings erupted against the Nationalist Chinese carpetbagger government in Taiwan after a female Taiwanese vendor was gunned down by a Nationalist Chinese civil servant and after the police fired at the crowds. The popular insurrection was crushed mercilessly after reinforcements from China landed at Taiwan. Around 30,000 Taiwanese were massacred in the ensuing vengeance, including scholars, physicians, lawyers, journalists, prominent businessmen, and students.
Sisters and brothers from Taiwan: No matter what our ethnic identity is, we all are now qualified as Taiwanese. Let us tear down the "Berlin Wall" on our minds and work hand in hand to make Taiwan an "Oriental Switzerland", so that the blood of those martyrs would not have been shed in vain and their souls may rest in peace eventually.
TAIWANESE COLLEGIAN
台湾黎生校
Gwo Hwong-kyl
Gwo Kli-lian
Gwo bobkk
Lyl Khan-bu
Lyl Moo-boeng
Liym Bo-seng
Justice of the Taipei High Court
Editor of Sin-Sung Dally
Mayor of Pingtung City
Councilman of Kaohsiung City
Dean of the College of Liberal Arts,
Taiwan University
Acting County Magistrate of Taipei
National Assemblyman, lawyer
High school teacher
Professor of Taipei Medical School
Presbyterian Hinister
Journalist
High school student
Principal of Tankung High School
Councilman of Chlayi, painter
Assemblyman of Taiwan, lawyer
National Assemblyman, physician
Physician (son of Chiang Chhit-lwong)
Physician (son of Tiuang Chhit-lwong)
University Attorney of Hsinchu
Councillor of Taipei
Lyim Chong-hyian Acting County Magistrate of Taipei
Lyim Lyim-chong National Assemblyman, lawyer
Ngg A-swun High school teacher
Si Kang-laam Professor of Taipei Medical School
Slau Tyiau-kim Presbyterian Minister
Sim Sui-kheng Journalist
Tann Hian-lyeng student
Taan Lung-lyeng Principal of Tankung High School
Tten Teng-pho Councilman of Chiayi, painter
Thng Tek-chiong Assemblyman of Taiwan, lawyer
Thung Chitl-lwong National Assemblyman, physician
Tiu Chong-jyin Physician (son of Tiu Chitl-lwong)
Tiu Tong-Jyin Physician (son of Tiu Chitl-lwong)
Wong Iokk-lyin District Attorney of Hsinchu
Wong Thiam-teng Councilman of Taipei
10
University Daily Kansan / Friday. February 28, 1992
SPORTS
Kansas stomps Sterling 28-0
Warrior pitchers hit nine Jayhawk batters
By Jerry Schmidt Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team received an unexpected pounding in yesterday's game against Sterling College.
But it was not on the scoreboard. The Jayhawk shut out
the Grizzlies and scored at Hoglund-Maup
Stadium and raised their record to 4-2.
Junior second baseman Jeff Berglinger was hit by three pitches, setting yet another Kansas record with a bunt.
The pounding was in the batter's box, where Sterling pitchers combined to hit nine Jayhawk hitters, breaking a Kansas record. Another school record was tied as four Kansas batters were hit in the eighth inning.
"To be a good player you must hang in there on the breaking pitch," Bingham said. "We've asked our guys to hang in there on that pitch to cut off the outside part of the plate."
Bingham said the number of hit Kansas batters was the only unexpected event in yesterday's blowout.
"it probably followed the game plan of what we thought was going to happen," he said.
The Jayhawks pounded out 18 hits, including four doubles and two triples. Junior David Soult also hit a home run.
But the game was not all offense for Kansas. Five Jaya-hawk pitchers combined on a two-hitter. Sophomore Chris Corn, making his first start of the year, pitched five hits he gave up two hits, struck out six batters and walked two.
Although Kansas was filling the scoreboard on offense, corn said he had to keep a high level concentration in the defense.
"It's hard to get any kind of rhythm because you have to sit in the dugout so long," he said. "One thing I wanted to do was concentrate on every pitch. I thought I did pretty good, but I had some concentration breaks in the last couple of innings."
Bingham said pitching coach Wilson Kilmer had the pitching staff on the right track.
"I really liked Corn's effort," he said. "Coach Kilmer deserves a lot of credit. Outside of two innings, we've pitched well all season."
Sophomore David Meyer, Soult and freshmen Brian Smith and Mike Greene combined to shut out Sterling for the last four innings.
Junior Jeff Niemeier led the offensive explosion, going 2-for-4 with four RBI. Junior shortstop Arturo Ayala was 3-for-6 with two RBI and scored four runs.
It was a horrendous afternoon in all aspects of the game for Sterling. In addition to hitting nine batters, Sterling pitches had six wild pitches and walked nine Kansas hitters. The Warriors' defense committed six errors.
Kansas opens a three-game series against Southeast Missouri State at 3 p.m. today. The Indians are 0-4 so far this season. Saturday's and Sunday's games will begin at 2 p.m.
Sterling — 0 R H E
Sterling 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6
Kansas 8 0 3 1 0 5 0 11 X 28 18 1
Sterling 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6
Kansas 0 8 3 1 0 5 0 1 X 18 28 18 1
**WP** - Chris Corn (1-0), LP* - Shawn Carey (0-1),
**KP** - Kanses Dave Smith (1)
Records: Kansas (4-2), Sterling College (0-1)
Baseball game sets records
Kansas record: Most hit hammers in one game — Warriors hit nine Kansershots
Kansas record. Most hit battmen in one innning — four Kansas hitters were hit in the eighth inning.
0
Kansas record: Player hit by pitches in one game — Jeff Herbblinner hit three times.
KU
Almee Bralnard. Daily Kansan
Kansas pitcher David Meyer contributes his effort in the two-hit shutout of Sterling College.
Williams rates tourney over polls
By Lyle Niedens
Kansan sportswriter
Being ranked No. 1 — or not — really does not seem to matter to Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams.
"Eddie Sutton said it was important to students, fans and alumni, and that may be," Williams said. "But it's not anything like it is in football, where that's the only measure that you have. In basketball, we still get to play."
At his weekly press conference yesterday, Williams downplayed the notion of being No. 1. His No. 3 Jayhawks have been close to that ranking for much of the Big Eight Conference race.
the season in the tournament."
"If it's so important, why are they doing a poll again next week? I think the only way to measure that is at the end of
With No. 1 Duke University and No. 2 UCLA losing last week, it looked as though the Jayhawks might have had a chance to move up in this week's Associated Press poll. But the Blue Devils remained No. 1 and No. 7 Indiana moved up five spots to No. 2, leaving the Jayhawks in the No. 3 spot.
Sutton is Oklahoma State's basket-ball coach.
Williams said a conference championship was more important to him at this point than a No.1 ranking.
"I told those kids yesterday, I don't care where we're rated right now. They ought to feel good about what we've accomplished already," Williamsaid.
"And I don't care if we're rated 0, 2, 22 or 52.
The conference championship is the most important goal until the team gets to the Big Eight tournament, Williams said.
After Monday's game against Oklahoma, junior guard Rex Walters expressed the same sentiment about focussing on the Big Eight title.
"We're in the driver's seat," he said.
"We don't have to worry about anyone but ourselves."
"The only way that we could be No. 1 is to win our last three games, and that would mean that we are conference champions regardless."
Williams said that a No.1 ranking after the NCAA tournament would be preferable to a Big Eight title.
"And then, once you get out of that tournament, what's most important is
Of the No. 1 ranking, Williams said,
"If that the only way I can be successful in life, then it's a pretty sorry life. I happen to think there are other ways to be successful and happy and satisfied with what you're doing if you're not rated No. 1."
the NCAA tournament," he said. "So,
it's whatever you're in at that time."
Kansas has not been ranked No. 1 since February 1990. The Jayhawks lost to UCLA in the second round of the NCAA Tournament that year.
Last year, the 'Hawks were ranked No. 12 heading into the NCAA Tournament, where they advanced to the championship game before losing to Duke University. Kansas went into the 1988 tournament unranked but won the NCAA championship.
Jayhawks eye outright title
By Cody Holt Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team is not ready to settle for a share of the Big Eight Conference title.
They want it all.
"We've come too far to lose it now," said senior forward Terrilry Johnson. "We want to win it all."
With only one game left in the season, the No. 17 Jayahaws, 22-4 overall and 11-2 in conference play, are guaranteed at least a co-championship with Colorado, 18-8 overall and 10-3 in the conference. But any combination of a Jayahawk victory or a Colorado loss would give Kansas its first outright conference title since 1981.
Johnson said the Jayhawks did not want to win the title as a result of a Colorado loss.
"We're going to try to win it outright," she said. "We're not going to let up."
Kansas will play its final game against Missouri at 4 p.m. tomorrow at Allen Field House. The Jay-Hawks won, 12-4, at the field house this season.
However, Missouri handed Kansas one of its two conference losses this season. The Tigers beat Colorado 57-56 on Jan. 15 in Columbus, Md.
Johnson said the Jayhawks should not have the same problem with Missouri in Lawrence.
"As long as we all come out ready to play we shouldn't have a problem." she said.
Regarding the coming conference tournament, junior guard Stacy Truitt said she expected the Jawhacks to do well.
"We've had a very good season so far," Truitt said. "If we don't go farther, I'll be very disappointed."
Kansas already has been guaranteed the 1. seed of the Big Eight Tournament in Salina on March 7-9. The Jayhawks gained the seed on the strength of a season-sweep of third-place Nebraska. Colorado lost to Nebraska 75-69 in Lincoln, Neb. The two teams will meet in their season finale tomorrow in Boulder, Colo.
Kansas defeated Oklahoma 73-72 in overtime Wednesday, wrapping up a share of the conference title despite the loss of senior forward Danielle Shareef. Shareef was scratched from Kansas' line-up minutes before the game because of chest pains. She is expected to be back in the starting line-up tomorrow for the Missouri game.
The Jayhawks have broken many records this year, including posting 10 conference victories, more than any Kansas women's basketball team.
Kansas fans also have broken a few records. The 2,500 fans that rooted the Jayhawks to at 67-49 victory against intrastate rival Kansas State was the fourth-fourth in field house history. Another large crowd is expected for tomorrow's game on Senior Day.
Women's basketball probable startere
Game time: 4 p.m. tomorrow at Allen Field House, and will be broadcast 90.7 FM, KLWN
and KKU, and KKU 40 AM.
球
Kansas 22-4 (11-2) Position Year Height PPG RPc
32 Danielle Shareef F F Str. 5-10 9.1 5.9
23 Terrilyn Johnson F F Str. 5-11 7.1 8.8
30 Angela Aycock F Fr. 6-2 10.6 4.9
10 Jo Jo Witherspoon G Jr. 5-7 3.0 1.2
30 Kay Kay Hart G Str. 5-7 9.6 3.5
Missouri (16-10, 7-8)
25 Erika Fields F Sr. 6-0 19.6 10.1
34 Vantree Williams F Jr. 6-1 13.6 7.1
44 Lynette Linneman C Jr. 6-1 17.6 7.1
31 Stacy Williams G So. 5-8 9.8 3.8
24 Amy Fordham G So. 5-9 7.7 3.3
Source: Kansas Sports Information Department
The Associated Press
Ailing Duke likes Hurley recovery
DURHAM, N.C. — Just when opponents thought it was safe to start circling in on Duke's wounded Blue Devils, along comes Bobby Hurley to the rescue.
"This has been a real wacky 24 hours," coach Mike Krzeskiw said after top-ranked Duke's injury picture had him to worse to unexpectedly better.
Having to operate without Hurley, the school ball-time assistele leader, was known.
Then Krzyezewski learned Wednesday that a sprained ankle sustained by Grant Hill, Hurley's replacement at point guard, was worse than originally thought.
It was not the ideal picture for a team preparing for Wednesday night's game against Virginia and Sunday's showdown at UCLA.
But hours after learning Hill could be out for up to four weeks, Krzypewski got an unexpected surprise. Hurley's broken foot was declared healed, and he was cleared to return to action.
Nonetheless, Krzyezwski started sophomore Kenny Blakeney at the point Wednesday, mainly because Hurley had been inactive since breaking a metatarsal bone in his right foot Feb. 5.
Blakeyen had six points, two assists
Blakeyen had six points, two assists
Duke's 76-67 victory against Virginia.
"a real good game under the circumstances," Krzyzewski said.
Blakey ended up playing only 15 minutes for one simple reason: Hurley.
After two brief stints in the first half, it became obvious that Hurley felt comfortable running the team again. Sure, the inactivity afflicted him well enough to finish five of seven field-goal attempts — but the Blue Devils seem to thrive with him at the point.
His final numbers: 26 minutes,
including 18 in the second half, as well
as four points, nine assists, a steal and
a turnover.
Eight of the assists came in the second half, including four in an 11-0 run that helped Duke pull away.
"I haven't really picked up a ball or anything like that in about three weeks so I tried not to do too much and just let it come to me," Hurley said.
Blakeney's and Hurley's performances made a believer of Krzyzewski, who said he likely would start Blakeney again at UCLA and bring Hurley off the bench.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Big Eight track here
Although the Jayhawks are not favored to win the Big Eight Conference Indoor Track and Field Championships this weekend at Anschutz Sports Pavilion, both the men's and women's teams plan on making life difficult for the competition.
"This meet is about beating people," sophomore Michael Cox said. "We are Kansas. We are Jayhawks and we are going out to beat people."
The competition will begin at 9:30 a.m. today with the 60-meter hurdles portion of the women's pentathlon. The women's events will run until 5:00 p.m. men's action will begin at 6
p. m. and run until 8 p.m
Tomorrow's finals will begin at 1 p.m. with the men's high jump and end at 5:10 p.m. with the men's mile relay.
Senior Jason Teal said that having the meet on the home track would be an advantage for the Jayhawk runners.
"We are used to running on it." We said. "We are going to know where we are on the track, how many laps are left."
Senior Cathy Palacios said she also was looking forward to running on the Jayhawks' home track.
Golf team in Florida
"It helps us relax because we are in familiar surroundings," Palacios said.
From staff reports
The Kansas men's golf team will begins its spring season today at the Miami Lakes Invitational Tournament in Miami, Fla. The tournament, which includes 20 teams, 12 of which are ranked among the top 20 in the nation, runs today through Sunday.
Wilt fine after heart trouble
The Jayhawks are led by sophomore Matt Gogel and freshman Tom Sims. Gogel is the defending Big Eight Conference champion. Sims led the team with a 71.5 stroke average in the fall.
The Associated Press
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Hall of Famer and former Kansas basketball player Wilt Chamberlain was in excellent condition at a hospital yesterday, a day after experiencing a slightly abnormal heart rhythm at a basketball game, doctors said.
observation unit. Today, he feels much better."
"Considering he has an arrhythmia, he's in excellent condition," said Chamberlain's personal physician, Ellen Gouldock. "He's in absolutely great spirits. He's laughing and watching TV."
Goudlock said at a news conference that Chamberlain's arrhythmia was merely an abnormal heart rhythm.
Chamberlain will be released within a couple days, Gouldock said.
"He still has a slight arrhythmia," she said. "He's been moved from the coronary care unit to the definitive
Chamberlain, 55, was taken Wednesday night from the Forum to Centinela Hospital Medical Center after suffering an upset stomach.
However, a longtime friend of
"He appreciates the concern of many fans, and he'll still be himself after he's released from the hospital," the doctor said.
Anthony Reid, a Centinela hospital cardiologist, also appeared at the news conference. He said there was no indication that Chamberlain had suffered a heart attack and no indication that he had suffered an arrhythmia
Chamberlain, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Chamberlain had complained of an arrhythmia since he was 23 and thought he was going to die of heart failure at some point.
"There's no evidence of structural damage of his heart," Reid said. "Recently, President Bush had a similar problem due to a thyroid disease. We're waiting for test results."
Chamberlain was being honored Wednesday at the Forum as a member of the 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers.
Chamberlain retired in 1973 after 14 seasons as the NBA's all-time leader in scoring (31,419 points) and rebounding (23,924). He was later surpassed by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the NBA's all-time leading scorer.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
11
Trouble mars Huskers
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — A series of unrelated incidents has smudged the image of Nebraska, considered by coaches one of the cleanest programs around.
A running back awaits trial on charges of beating a woman. Some football and baseball players got into brawl. A basketball player was suspended for disciplinary problems. And the Big Eight Conference will decide next month if Nebraska should forfeit games for using a football player who might have used up his eligibility.
"We've looked at eachother, some of us, and wondered, 'When is this going to stop?' assistant athletic director Don Bryant said yesterday.
The longtime Nebraska official and former Lincoln sports writer said the chain of events that began shortly before Nebraska's Orange Bowl appearance had been embarrassing to the university.
"The public will have to judge us as they see us, some good, some bad," said head football coach Tom Osborne.
The rash of incidents began when backfill Omar Sato was ruled ineligible to play in the Orange Bowl against Miami. The senior apparently had used up his eligibility in 1990 because he took part in a presseason scrimmage at a California junior college he never officially attended.
In January, junior running back Scott Baldwin was charged with the assault of a Lincoln woman, who suffered serious head injuries and was hospitalized for almost two months. Osborne visited Baldwin at a mental hospital, where the normally mild-mannered player underwent psychiatric testing, and in jail. The coach also sat in court Wednesday when Baldwin pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity.
Friday, police cited seven football players for a fight with six members and a former member of the school's
baseball team at a house party in Lincoln. No formal charges have been filed, but the players are scheduled to appear in court.
Osborne kicked two football players involved in Friday's fight off the team. The others face suspension from part or all of spring practice.
"They had been told to avoid trouble. "Osborne said.
On Tuesday, basketball coach Danny Nee suspended starting forward Carl Hayes for one game for unspecified disciplinary problems. Hayes did not make the trip to Stillwater, Okla., Wednesday night in No. 25 Nebraska's 72-51 loss to No. 14 Oklahoma State.
And in that game, sophomore point guard Jamar Johnson and Oklahoma State guard Darwyn Alexander were ejected for fighting. Johnson automatically was suspended by the Big Eight for one game, meaning he will be out of tomorrow's home game against Colorado.
No.4 UCLA loses at USC
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Harold Miner had 29 points as No. 13 Southern California swept UCLA for just the second time in 50 years with an 83-79 victory last night.
Southern Cal seemed to have taken control of the battle of intra-city rivals early in the second half, taking a 59-45
lead with 15:08 to play
The Southern Cal Trojans (20-14, 12-2) moved into a first-place tie in the Pac-10 with the fourth-ranked UCLA Bruins (21-12, 12-3), who lost their second straight and will play top-tranked Duke University on Sunday.
However, UCLA, which lost to Southern Cal for its only other conference loss this season, chipped away at the score and was within six points with 10:05 to play.
But Miner, the Trojans' all-time leading scorer, then scored on the next three possessions, offsetting UCLA baskets each time.
Yamen Sanders scored on a break dunk and a rebound around a 3-pointer by UCLA's Tracy Murray, who had 28 points, and the Trojans led 74-66 with 5:59 to play.
Southern Cal had just one field goal the rest of the game but managed to make seven of 12 free throws in that span. Miner's last, the first of two with 1.5 seconds left, sealed the victory.
Miner had scored 30 or more points in his last four games and missed extending the streak by one point.
Southern Cal dominated the offensive boards in the first half and took a 48-41 halftime lead. The Trojans outrebounded UCLA 23-15, 11-on the offensive end, as Miner converted three out of five rebounds into baskets.
AFFILIATION & SCHOOL FRIENDSHIP ASSOCIATION
周末电影
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The Return of
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On February 2,1972, noted feminist, Robin Morgan spoke to an overflow crowd at the Kansas Union where women publicly voiced their dissatisfactions. Two days later,20-30 women known as the February Sisters, occupied the East Asian Studies building and presented the KU administration with a list of demands.
Now, twenty years later, Robin Morgan, currently editor of Ms. magazine, returns to the University of Kansas to discuss the progress of the women's movement.
Friday, February 28, 1992 - 8 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan / Fridav, February 28, 1992
Different faiths congregate remember gulf war's effects
By Janet Rorholm
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence religious community sponsored a service last night on the eve of the one-year anniversary of the Persian Gulf War cease fire.
Representatives from Jewish, Christian and Islamic faiths spoke and prayed at the service at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Away
"In terms of remembering, we're concerned about people on all sides," said Conn Conrad, Lutheran Campus director. "We know that died, but for those that suffered."
Hamed Ghazali, Iman of the Islamic Center, said that it was not enough for people to pray but that they also needed to understand and help.
"For most of you, the suffering has ended. But for the Islamic people, the suffering in many ways is just beginning," he said.
After the service, a taped interview with Carol McLean, a Mennonite Central Committee worker, was played. She spent six weeks in Iraq working with children. The committee is one of the largest relief agencies in the world.
"So many people found this a time to be proud and wave flags," McLean said. "I think we should know what we've done."
McLean said that there were about 100,000 Iraqi casualties from the war but that three times that many still might be killed by malnutrition.
"We in the United States have a feeling that the war is over, but we're still killing," she said.
Some people who attended the service said McLean's interview was emotional.
Near the end of the interview,
McLean asked for economic sanctions
to be removed so Iraq could sell its oil
to buy food for its people.
Brenda Funk, Lawrence resident, said: "That was really powerful. It sensitized me a little more. I wasn't part of the victory celebration, so I didn't need to be shaken, but I was starting to think it was over."
Funk said she was pessimistic about what could be done to help because the feeling in the United States was not sympathetic toward the Iraqi people.
Parking Board reviewing proposals
- Change the blue parking zone restriction from 8:30.pm to 7:30.pm.
Kansanstaffreport
Patrick Dillick, a new Student Senate representative to the KU Parking Board, yesterday presented the follo- ws of recommendations on board for improving campus parking.
Create a large satellite parking lot off campus, with free bus transportation to campus. The board discussed this topic earlier in the meeting.
- Build a new parking garage east of the Snow Hall at lots 61 and 62.
- Remove the 24-hour parking restriction on spaces behind Strong Hall. The suggestion was to open parking on Saturdays, Sundays and late evenings.
The board did not act on any of the suggestions.
Don Kearns, director for parking services, said the rules subcommittee was re-evaluating the evening parking situation.
Derek Nolen/KANSAN
MERRY GO roundabout
Shiny happy people
During their lunch break, Courtney Angermeier (left) and Hemant Bhana, both Lawrence High School juniors pass time in Veterans Park, 19th and Ohio streets. Angermeier and Bhana do not usually visit the park, but the nice weather gave them a perfect opportunity to get away from school. "This is my first time to play here," Bhana said, "but it is better than sitting in school."
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13
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2 FOR 1 WELLS
140 Lost-Found
LOST black leather "organizer"
LIVESTRONG Help I will wout i wont it!
Quadra 81497
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
ATTENTION STUDENTS Earn hundreds weekly staffing envelopes at home. Local businesses will provide all materials. SEND SALE TO Homelining Box 1822 Box 1824 Olsen K56002 immediate response.
*ATTENTION STUDENTS Full-time post-pos.
Students must be 18 and pass a first-class class of 100+ starting 1st year, flexible around class,
work hard and be willing to work in a team.
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fishermen
The Alaska Department of Agriculture & Board. Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or Female. Get the early start that is necessary. For employment program call Student Services at (360) 252-7900.
Control Desk Operator, Jaybowl. Fridays 6 p.m.
ia. m $4.25 per hour. Must be 21 years old, have
previous experience in a bowling center know
principles and rules of bowling, be self-motivated
and able to work with large groups of people. Prefer
to be able to work on multiple teams. App-
soned Office. Level 5. Union Building, EOE
Attention College students. The *Kansas Nat'l* Guard has 30 positions open in the Lawrence area. We have paid training in various career fields. To see if you qualify, call De Witt 824-9283
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan girls/boy's summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camp fishing, horseback riding, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen office maintenance. Salary $19,068 per week. Job location: Mckinley Carser, 176 Maple Hill, IL, 61093. 708-446-1248
Cruise LINES NEW HIRING. Students Needed!
Earn $25,000 each month.
Caribbean Cruise, Cruise Staff, Gift Shop,
Tour Guides, Waiter/Waître, etc. Holiday, Summer
and Career Employment available. New Experience
Required.
HELP WANTED! Adding computer technician
Seeking experienced technician to repair, install,
maintain, or replace a computer growth position with an established company,
attractive salary. Send resume by March 9 to
Director of Client Support, Connecting Point 818
Maryland Avenue, Lawrence, Kissimmee 6044.
EOE/M/E/F/H
Looking for dishwasher. P-M; and pantry or prep sink. Adams Alumni Center. phone calls EOI 806-241-9785. phone calls EOI 806-241-9785.
Need extra cash? Earn $1000 weekly processing
mail at home for your spare time. It works! Send
SASE. Erickson, 3421 M St, NW, Suite 1308, Washington,
DC 2007
PART TIME. Intramural referees needed for both Floor Hockey and Soccer. No experience necessary. We will训. Attend meeting Tuesday. In m, 14th Robinson. Reception Services. 884-3546.
Part Time Help Wanted. Must be 21 hours/27 mins.
Work in Dental Bleach Bed Diet 90, E4 208.
Lawrence K598 158-385.
Part-Time Help. Greywater Athletic Club week
services, or college sports, science or related experience needed. 749-1288
Roommate wanted Furnished apartment 1780
Kentucky 1824 m +/- 1 unit(s) Cable 84 h
Secretary 12-30 p.m. weekdays. General office
duties are typing 15 min., record keeping, filing,
recording meetings. Must be proficient in
public and young children. $4.30 hr. Apply at
children's learning Center. 331 MAIN EOE
Spend the summer in the Catskill Mina. of NY. Receive a warm summer experience with an annual clinical course for developmental disabilities. Positions are available for Counselors, Program Leaders, Cabin Leaders, and other staff members; those who are majoring or considering all health fields. Season dates: June 12 to August 21st. Attend orientation and/or allowance. Will be on campus Mar. 19 for interviews. Sign up in Picem-Cement Center. Call Camp
SWIMMING LESSONS MANAGER - City of Eudora is taking applications for swimming lessons manager. Applications are available at Eudora City Hall, 75th and Maine Avenue
POOL MANAGER - City of Eudora is taking applications for city pool manager. Applications are available at Eudora City Hall, 7th and Maine Eudora.
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years,驾 license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law DWI/Traffic and most other legal matters
Driver Education offered midwet Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
823 Missouri 843-4023
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vISA, senior portraits, modeling & art portfolio.
www.gov.gov/nps/photos
Make the most of your P.C. Have a tutor come to
sacking schools. Student rates, 842,734.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD ST.
DONALD G. STROLE
st 13th Attorney
842-1133
16 East 13th
Model Photography, Model Portfolio, Wedding & groom, instant ID photo, student prices call us!
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 480-6028
DUI/TRAFFIC
- Criminal Defense •Fake ID's
- FREE Initial Consultation
Elizabeth Lough
Attorney
Former Prosecutor
16 East 13th 749-0087
PROFESSIONAL RESIN MES - Consultations
formatting, typesetting, and more
Graphic Ideas, Inc.
9271/2 Mass. 841-1071
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Reliable experienced woman wants to clean your house. Call Numi 841-3640
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 521 E 98th Street
8430
235TypingServices
Leder Woman Word Processing. Former editor of *The Journal of the History and Punctuation, grammatically correct pages of the American Law Review*.
For Laser or Dia Matrix printing of your PCUes or rental of our PC Lab, Call Julien at 814-0311
From Quality Tipping to Mailing List Entry Maintenance, Production, and Personalized PC Training* For Experience and Reliability call Louse at 843-402 with your ideas.
KS Professional Word Processing, accurate and affordable, call after 1 p.m. 814-6345
PINK A LA MODE Get an edge on the success! Sch-den-
ment for improvement in the rest! Now' Call
MUNCHER
Resumes and cover letters. Fast and affordable,
competitive prices, over 80 formats laser printed.
Ask about our Referral Discounts! MacResumes
766-3235
Word Perfere IIM Compatible Word Processing
Word Perfere IIM Compatible Orchard Cards. No calls
in after m4134.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tributions, resumes. Editing, composition, rush
writing, proofreading.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1991 Trek mtn. bike F Front Suspension, new tires, onza
bike. Exec. cond $75 0832-0372
**Spring Special 368-25 MIZ computer, 4 MB RAM,**
1. 2 & 1.4 Flippy, 10 MB Hard Drive, 14" Super
w/ 1 MIB RAM, 101 keyboard, minitower case
w/ 3 Serial mouse, $143.90, Bargain Bays
832-2472
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, lime art and used furniture, picture frames, tableware, primitives, comic books, Play-Doh made qualls, primitives, comic books. Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising items clocks, watches,desks, antique toys Royal Boxes, games, desk organizers, baseball cards, insulators, wholesale imported sculpture figures, and so much more. MARKET 811 New Hampshire, open every Fri.
Bicycle women's Schwinn 10 speed with Gen. set
$809.143-1132
imported picture figurines, and so much more stuff it will show you away! QUANTRELL'S FLEA STUDIO will show you away! F17, Sat and Sun 0-5. For booth rental call 842-8625 Visa and Mastercard welcome.
gather information. Tint wind #11, 34514, 34512
Friday, March 14. Birthday #11, 34514, 34510
Friday, March 14. Birthday #11, 34514, 34509
every week. March 14. Birthday #11, 34514, 34509
1996 Ford Mustang GT 5.0 eng. Loaded all power.
State of Kansas Trade-ins. Excellent condition.
Some with automatic document feeders and sorters. $490.00 up on usead. Call Sylvia
1-800-825-0295
Dynace 80-watt amp. PAT-Y preampl, sony recorder, $250. Star XN 1000 printer, hardwired
Far Sale! Cheap! Olympic Weight set w/bar. Like new. Call John at 865-016-65.
For Sale Men & Kids Ski Roofs Fit a size *9 tenni*
shoe, Gray good condition, *40*. Call Howard 789-263-8100
Guitar & Amp Sale. 20-25% off, Hayes House of
Music 944 Mass. 842-3183.
KU-MIZZOU HOOPS. Need non-student tickets.
841-3494. Ask for Km.
FOR SALE INFORMATION Printer Practically
new. $300/unit (1-568-5500)
TOYOTA COROLLA N5- sps 1 Dr. New
brke, muffler, 118K, A/C 4800- K9 B132- 6187- 1234
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
ROLLERBLADES
340 Auto Sales
Miracle Video - Adult movies from Sale. From $9.95
641-7504, 841-9003
Phone: 804-7941-9910
Manuscript for sale from Ft. Smith #691
@ 7941-9910
Panasonic Dot Matrix Diprint, CGA Color
1881 TOYOTA COROLLA H-3, SR5. 3spd 2 Dr. New brake makeup. 118R, A/C/BMW 6129-8571 Neglize BMw 1237-8571 1824 Nissan Pulsar runs great. Low mileage 6149 KM. Very good drive. Many new parts. Call 864-8424, David negotiate.
card, Graphic Printer Port. Make offer. 842 0070
ROLLERBLADESROLLERBLADES
Yard Sale-2 F/2F/BedIncl 1740 Oho; 9ASat; 2/29
1966 Pontiac Grand Am SE, automatic, a.c. 6 speaker stereo, load Wheels, hot Wheels, 749-7685.
1045 New Jersey BJ's IMPORTS
843 VOLKSWAGEN 9494
24 Years of Experience
1045 New MC/Via
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Blank lines count as 7 words.
360 Miscellaneous
Toy. Corolla GTS twin Cam*85-2ed. 3-pd. spad.
power sun roof, fire suppression*cruzto, $7300, 99-4175
187 Mercury Lynx - Automatic, A/C, Cassette,
door 65, door 106. Excellent condition $300-983-3232
187 Subcompact. Only 21,000 miles. get 41m gm
insulated condition $900 cash. Must sell soon.
842-2316
On TV's, VCR's, jewelry, stereos, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MC/AMEX. Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 180W H. 749-1919
Weight Loss. Lose weight for Spring break without loss you eat eating cats! MORTITION INTRODUCTION
Basketball Ticket O S U. and M U games!
Be non NON-Student tickets! Call 865-5211
Call 865-5210
370 Want to Buy
SUPPORT CLOTHING OPTIONAL RECREATION.
BUY SELL LOAN CASH
Desperately need 3- KU-MI) tickets. Please call Dave or Linda at 1-892-4967.
Cash paid for 2 non-student student for O.S.U or M.U B-M.B-games. Call Brady 864-6267
$$$$$ Fast cash for used and broken Gold jewelry,
rare coins, etc. Call David B414-8065
Wanted: Good Used Sparting Goals! Mountain
Bulls, Sparting Bulls, Glow Gods,
Glove Gods, Nymph and much more.
PLAY IT UP!
Wanted: one non-student B-Ball ticket for Kansas
vs. Missouri; March 8; Call Lance 294-2685
400s
Real Estate
图
A - House; Sublease HR21R 2tth2r garage on garage corner lot adjacent to creek. C A, P, D, W, D W, DHook up. Micro, Mice infra. Fenced yard for dessert. N 248. Call: 841-1806 and ask for黛 Leslie
405 For Rent
3 BR apartment available for sublease eff. April 11
$853/month. Terms negotiable 8473-4754 or
8473-2058.
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, national origin, handicap, immigration or national origin 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.
Apple Croft Apartments now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Accessed from KU. On route home. Fully furnished. Refrigerator, dishwasher, pool. On-site management. Heat, AC, water and trashpan. Cheap bills! 1/741 Kuhn Galli Chesapeake
Artys, 2 Bdrm, 3rd floor, floor floors, near campus
$58041*STAR (7827)
Cory, J. Bdrm, wood floors, near campus $265 841-
STAR (2827)
Boardwalk
Now Leasing for Summer &
524 Frontier 842-4444
Fall Move-ins.
AVAILABLE NOW New 2 Bedroom Apartment close to campus. Washers/dryer, microwave, ceiling fan, mini-bins. Call 1st Management. Mon-Fri. 3-pm - 5-pm. 749-1566.
Available now Spacious 3 BDR Duplex fully equipped kitchen hard floor, deck close, to campus and private school.
Open 6 days a week for your convenience
IBD from $300
IBD from $100
iMb to KIU busage
iMb to KIU busage
iMb to KIU busage
Pic monitor TV/Pers
Pic monitor TV/Pers
Onsite management
Ousdial & CSC, B41 (815)
Onsite management
2 onsite dial
2 onsite dial
(60-298) N (C)
(60-298) N (C)
Call off 6018 Campus
Call off 6018 Campus
DESPERATELY NEEDED NEEDEI to Sublease
partage de l'armoire, Gas, cable paid with NEGO
NEGO 181-1537
EDDINGHAM PLACE
South Quint
Naismith Place
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Office Hours:
4-6 pm M-Thur.
1-3 pm Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
- Pool & Volleyball
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc.
2166 W.26th 843-6446
Cory Victorian one bedroom, available March 18,
convenient to RU and Downtown, $35/month. Built in bookcases, stained glass, garage available.
842-6384
- Close to bus route
- Small pets OK with deposit
841-5444
1, 2, 3, 4 Bedrooms
- Inexpensive gas heat
- Central air
Open 10-5,M-F
- Quiet location
Part25
Park 25 is now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 21/2 bath
--centered lines count 4 word
Blank lines count as 7 words.
- 2 Pools
- Volleyball Court
- On KU bus route-centered lines count 4 word
Blank lines count as 7 words.
- On KU bus route...
4 stops on property
- 4 stops on property 2 Laundry Rooms
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer hookups
Call or stop by today!
2401 W 25th Apt. 9A3
614-755-8888
--centered lines count 4 word
Blank lines count as 7 words.
*Get a group!* Restored 8 bed 4 bath fireplace, wood booths, W.d. near riverfront. B413-RST (7827). Hillview Apts $50 leave signing bonuses. *1 & 2床 bath room*. On-site laundry. 843-349-749 649-569 on-site. Laundry. 843-349-749 649-569
---
meadowbrook
Visit Meadowbrook Arts
Come Visit Meadowbrook Apps.
We are now signing for the fall and have a wide variety of studios, 1,2, & 3 Bedroom units to choose from
Enjoy the 2 pools & 3 tennis courts. Basic cable service and water are paid in the apartments.
NOW AVAILABLE
NOW AVAILABLE
Studios and Two
Bedrooms
Sorry No Pets
Mon-Fri 8-5:30 Sat 8-5 Sun 14
Close to Campus and on KU
Bus Route
It's Time to Step Up To
MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline 842-4200
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT?
CALL USFIRST
1st MANAGEMENT INC
New locations on campus: 1. 2; and 3 bedroom
living quarters. Call now for an appointment
for a custom-built, multi-binds unit.
Get Rid of Your Roommate!
Hey Juniors, Seniors, and GradStudents!! ---- You can getrid of your roommate by getting a single room at Naismith for the same price as sharing a room with our "Upperclassman Special". That means all the space and freedom you need without the hassles of an annoying roommate!
Plus...
- Front door bus service
- Dine Anytime meals
- Macintosh Computer Room
* Weekly maid service
Call now to reserve your room.
Naismith Hall
Looking for a place? Cox 2 bedroom apt. in the West Hills Complex. Available now for sublease through July. $395/month + utilities. Negotiable. Call Security 844-2669
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 (913)843-8559
Sublease. One big room, own bathroom. $230 + Electricity only. Available now. keep trying. -841-795-6700
Louisiana Place Apt 3. Now leasing nice RRAP App.
Bordering Beautiful景观 of the city. Call
804-756-1290.
Sublease Jubilee with option for year after, large 1 BR,
C沼洋 Woods, Water paid, B32-0749.
Sublease one bedroom apartment at Hanover
University, subletting on August 4.
August. Close to downtown & campus. Call 866-270-1135.
"The Woods" is a great place to live.
Two bedroom apartment on bus route. W/D/
$400 month + utilities. Call after 3:30 p.m. (914) 527-8260.
Save $$$ with each new deposit
Colony Woods Apartments
- Walk to K.U.
- Dishwasher
• Microwaves
- Heated Pool
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Microwaves
- Mini Blinds
- Exercise Room
- Basketball Court
- Water Paid
- Flexible Leasing
In Town 842-5111
Location-Lifestyle The Best Value
is where the
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Spacious, 1.2 & 3 bedrooms
available for the mature
student. Now leasing for fall.
Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, inexpensive utilities,
on bus route. Summer subleases available
2040 Heatherwood *843-7454*
Very nice 1b. apart, near 7 and Kaskol. KU bus
very large; Kaskol. water, traphl. 623-0977.
very large; Kaskol. water, traphl. 623-0977.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female to share 3 bedroom furnished apt. Rent is negotiable. Call 842-4631.
One female student for a furnished 5 Bdm Town house on bus route W/1, pool, parking lot.
Non-smoking male for 3 bedroom house bordering campaver Washburn/dryer & micro, no lease $210.00
ROOMMATE MATTED for towneb at Apple-
tone W, D/W, DW, F, all amenities
841.81 - 647.66
- Policy
Two non-smoking female roommates wanted to
have a home for them. A 16-year-old
school year. Please call 79-3284 by March 6.
FURNISHED APARTMENT: Female wanted to share 2 bedroom. Have own room with walk-in closet. On bus route. $240mth + 1/2 utls. Call 865-0194. Available Now!
Roommate Needed ASAP 3 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $200/mo. 841-1287.
Hurry. We need a rostmate to share a townhouse on our road, W7/ 1/ 3 utilities; $160/M *Flexible*
New-roommate Matching Service. For the next 25 registrations, it's free! After that, until 31st, it $31. We check references, give you candidates who meet your requirements. Call Dixie at 540-2342 today!
Roommate need immediately through by July $200
+ 1/2 utilities. Townhouse & amenities, great
location.
Roommate wanted to share nice 2 BRT apt. 1 call from campus at 6:00 pm 1/2 utilities. 1 call at dak
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Summer roommate needed: quiet spacious apartment 3 blocks from campus. Owned furnished bedrooms.
Very nice 1-BR plus staircase loft apartment for spring, summer, and/or next year $180/mo plus tax
$35/mo per room per week
Two Smokers Need Roommate Asap For A Townhouse on Bus Route. Bk5-965 892
Words set to all CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Gentle text score as 5 words
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Shortest words are based on consecutive
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in **Bold** CAPS count as 2 words
Classified Information Mail-in Form
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Deadlines
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
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 Univ.
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16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
105 personal
120 personal
140 personal
160 personal
180 announcements
225 professional services
300 minutes interview
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Name Phone
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Please print your ad one per box.
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Make checks payable to University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer Flint Hall Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Okay, Johnny. Your turn!
Ready? Now keep that tail up!
Okay, here I come, Johnny!
Scorpion school
14
University Daily Kansan / Friday, February 28, 1992
FREE!
FREE!
KANSAS
6
Roy Williams
SIXTH MAN
BEWARE OF THE PHOG
Back
With the purchase of any KU sweatshirt or any two KU tee-shirts
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KS Union 864-4640
Burge Union 864-5697
Sale items not included. Not valid in conjunction with any discount coupons. All items available while quantities last.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
Students debate traffic signs at mock commission meeting
SCHWERTNER
Chris Lowe, Lawrence junior, far left, tells a mock city commission why he wants a traffic light at 17th and Massachusetts streets.
By Andy Taylor Kansan staff writer
A pseudo-city commission gave the green light to placing a traffic signal at a controversial intersection, but the decision was not as easy as stop and go.
Nalbandian, who also is a city commissioner, said the issue had been a center for controversy because it involved many people.
Students in Democracy and Professionalism in Local Government, taught by John Nalbandian, professor of public administration, filled the roles of city officials at city hall yesterday at city hall. The topic was whether to put a pedestrian-activated signal at 17th and Massachusetts streets.
The student commissioners voted 6-1 to place a signal at the intersection, which is near Babcock Place, a retirement complex at 1700 Massachusetts
"It is an issue where you clearly have professional staff recommendations that are not consistent with the will of the people," he said. "This issue is nice because it is understandable. It doesn't take time to understand the pros and cons of a stop light."
Nalbandian said that because the issue had troubled the Lawrence City Commission for more than a year, the city has begun to complexities of the democratic process.
"I wanted to put the students in the place where they were needed." *Nalbandian said.*
He said the 31 students in the class chose seven classmates to act as commissioners. Other class members acted as reporters and citizens.
Lawrence neighborhood associations and students in the class presented arguments for and against the stoplight. The Babcock Tenants Associations and Shirley Martin-Smith, a Lawrence city commissioner, gave background information about the interaction to the class before yesterday's meeting.
Jay Lewis, Prairie Village junior who acted as mayor, said his opinion shifted when each group presented its arguments.
"My opinion swayed with each person," Lewis said. "It showed what concerned citizens can do when they push and fight for (the stoplight). "
Lewis said the meeting showed the political aspects to decision-making.
"It is interesting that the topic was non-partisan, and people were not looking after individual interests," he said.
Kristen Naney, St. Louis junior and a commissioner at the meeting, said the discussion proved that the intersection needed a signal.
"I would have voted for the light no matter what the traffic studies said," Naney said. "I think there proved to be a need for the light."
Malcolm X PG
Cosponsored with
WESTERN COAST HOSPITAL
7.00, Tuesday, Feb. 25
7.00, Wednesday, Feb. 26
1.00, Saturday, Feb. 29
THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST R
7.00, Thursday, Feb. 27
4.00, Saturday, Feb. 29 plus
Friday, Feb. 28 at 7:30 & 10:00 at Hashinger Hall
Films are screened in Wooldruft Auditorium
Tickets are $2.50 at the SUA Box Office
Cosponsored
red AGU
ANIMAL COLLECTOR'S GROUP
ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA
PRE-SPRING BREAK price break!
Get Pyramid Quality for "cardboard" pizza prices!
BEER
ONE LARGE one topping pizza and a liter of Pepsi $7.99 + tax DELIVERED must present coupon Hurruil offer expires 3/15/92
PYRAMID
TRUE PACE IT ON!
FAST. FRESH. DELIVERY!
es!
BEER
PUERTO RICO IT ON
must present coupon Hurry! offer expires 3/15/92
(Pyramid wants to help you save more money for your Spring Break! We're lowering our prices in an effort to help boost the economies of MEXICO, FLORIDA and COLORADO!)
TWO SMALL
one topping pizzas
$7.99 + tax
DELIVERED
must present coupon
Hurry! offer expires 3/15/92
WIN $$$$
Pyramid Pizza Photo Contest!
Bring us your most outrageous spring
break photo (must include a Pyramid
Pizza box) and if yours wins
we'll give you $100!
COUPON
One large one topping pizza and a liter of Pepsi $7.99 +tax DELIVERED!
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
two small one topping pizzas $7.99 +tax DELIVERED!
PYRAMID PIZZA
PYRAMID
PIZZA
One large one topping pizza and a liter of Pepsi $7.99 +tax DELIVERED!
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
Two small one topping pizzas
$7.99 + tax
DELIVERED!
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
not valid with other offers; offer good with coupon only;
03 expires 3/15/92
LIMITED DELIVERY ONLY! WE DO NOT DELIVER TO CANCUN, THE ROCKIES, FLORIDA OR PALM SPRINGS...YET!