THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.101.NO.145 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FRIDAY,MAY1,1992 ADVERTISING:864-4358 (USPS 650-640) NEWS:864-4810 Death toll rises to 27 in Los Angeles riot The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Riots, arson and looting raged in the Los Angeles area yesterday, and the death toll rose to 27 as National Guard troops moved into neighborhoods hooded by outrage over the Rodnev King verdict. Gunfire erupted after two dozen Guard soldiers arrived at a video arcade threatened by looters. The machine-gun-toting soldiers did not return fire Bands of people roamed the streets long after a dusk-to-dawn curfew took effect. Police said there were no immediate arrests. About 900 people had been injured and 378 arrested in the outburst of destruction that terrorized vast parts of the city for a second day, from downtown to the suburban San Fernando Valley. At nightfall yesterday, violence had spread into San Bernardino, 60 miles to the east, where one person died in a gun battle between a security guard and a motorist that police said was riot-related A gang in Long Beach, a city south of Los Angeles, pulled two motorcyclists from their bikes last night and robbed, beat and shot them. One died and the other was critically injured. Vandals descended upon historic Hollywood Boulevard west of downtown, setting fire to at least one business. Fire officials said 68 fires were burning at mid-evening. Arizona Gov. Fife Symington said California Gov. Pete Wilson had asked him for National Guard equipment and told him: "It's out of control." Wilson declared a state of emergency and headed to Los Angeles from the capital. Sacramento. Much of the city shut down. Bus service was halted, professional sporting events were postponed, thousands of businesses and schools were closed, and some flights were rerouted around columns of smoke. Santa Monica, to the west, closed its beaches. Shoppers stocked up on batteries and candles, fearing power outages as night approached. The Rodney King case A summary of the verdicts in the Rodney King beating case, and a look at what's ahead: "Why tear down something you | | Sgt. Stacey C. Koon | Officer Laurence M. Powell | Officer Timothy Wind | Officer Theodore Briseno | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Assault with a deadly weapon | Not guilty | Not guilty | Not guilty | Not guilty | | Excessive use of force | Not guilty | Mistrial | Not guilty | Not guilty | | Filing a false police report | Not guilty | Not guilty | | | | Accessory after the fact | Not guilty | | | | What happens next Wednesday's verdict did not close the Rodney King beating case. Here's a look at remaining lawsuits and investigations: LAW ENGINEERING $ FE May 15 hearing in Superior Court on whether to retry Officer Laurence Powell on excessive-force charge that resulted in mistrial. Wave Federal civil rights lawsuit filed by Rodney King is pending. FE $83 million claim billed by Rodney King against city of Los Angeles is pending. FBI civil rights investigation of the officers is being conducted. own? We all have to make a living here. I just don't understand it," said Miles Taylor, 49, an African-American man who has lived in South Central Los Angeles since 1965, when the Watsts屯exploded in riots. Police Department hearings to determine whether disciplinary action should be taken against SgI, Stacey Koon, Officers Laurence Powell, Theodore Briseno. Officer Timothy Wind has been fired. Pollice departments confirmed 19 deaths in Los Angeles, one in San Benito County. Most of the riots were African-American, but whites, Asians and Hispanics took part in some of the violence. Marty Westman, Knight-Ridder Tribune By 9 p.m., firefighters had responded to 1,231 structure fires. Two firefighters were wounded by gunfire. Students infuriated with Los Angeles trial results Police arrested six youths in suburban Compton and said they might have been part of a youth gang that was trying to torch 10 buildings an hour. By Jay Williams "To them, it's a free-for-all," said California Highway Patrol Lt. Bud Kansan staff writer The images of Wednesday night and early yesterday morning spread through Kansas like a grass fire jump-started by the gasoline used to set alzace city blocks in Los Angeles. As four white Los Angeles police officers who were acquitted of beating African-American motorist Rodney King walked out of a California courtroom Wednesday, modern technology brought the verdict and its aftermath to the nation. Rallies in Kansas City, Mo., and Topeka attracted several hundred people who protested the acquittal of the Los Angeles officers by a predominantly white injury. In Lawrence, KU students said their reactions ranged from surprise and shock to pain when they learned of the decision. Students said the California jury did not make the right decision when it decided to acquit three of the four officers of all charges. The fourth officer's case ended with a hung jury. Chris Hamilton, Kansas City Kan., sophomore, said the decision hurthim deeply. Hamilton sat in front of Wescoe Hall as friends stopped to speak with him. The focus of the discussion turned to the events in Los Angeles. "The decision shows that in America today, a Black person's life is not of any value," he said. "Until white people suffer, nobody will care." Hamilton said the acquittal sent a dangerous message that police could attack anyone they wanted to, regardless of ethnic background. "It was a legal lvnching," he said. Reports that law enforcement officers and other government officials were slow to enter predominantly African-American neighborhoods did not surprise him, Hamilton said. "If the riots had been tearing up Beverly Hills, it would not have taken the National Guard five hours to get there," he said. Carlos Fleming, Cleveland junior, said he was disappointed in the division between African Americans in Los Angeles Wednesday night. He said he hoped the community could unite to effect positive change "They kept saying on the news just "small pockets of violence," "Fleming said. "It is a sad statement on the Black community in Los Angeles." Fleming said it was difficult to unite different forces to push toward positive change, as occurred in the civil-rights movement of the 1960s, because of proliferation of gangs in Los Angeles, for example. Kris Swanson, McHeerry, Ill., freshman, said he could understand the frustration of the people in Los Angeles. While he did not condone violence, Swanson said, "If this is working, they should keep it up, so somebody will listen to them. "They've got to limit what they're destroying, but if I was out there, would be out in the streets, too." Carrie Grant, Burke, Va., freshman, said she had not seen footage of the destruction in Los Angeles, but had seen the videotape of the incident that led to the charges. "I saw the tape of the beating, and it looked like they were guilty," she said. "But I don't know if the violence is good. That really doesn't solve anything." The Associated Press contributed information to this story. Shields. Near downtown, a security guard was fatally shot in a gun battle with looters outside a store. More than 100 Korean-owned stores were burned, looted or robbed. Racial tensions between blacks and Korean-Americans have seethed for several years. About 1,000 National Guard soldiers armed with M-16 rifles and pistols were on the streets by mid-evening, and another 1,000 were preparing to go to troubled areas to patrol and protect firefighters, said Lt. Stanley Zezotarski, a Guardrepresentative. Wilson ordered the deployment of 2,000 more, and hundreds of Highway Patrol officers were flown in from Northern California. Demonstrations were held in cities across the nation to protest the acqui- tal of the four police officers whose beating of King was captured on videoeographer by an amateur photographer. The protests turned violent in Atlanta, where African-American youths smashed windows and attacked a few whites. In San Francisco, demonstrators blocked the Bay Bridge and major highways. See related story, Page 6. Haskell will not lease JRP Hall Department of Interior denies funding request, disappoints both universities By Andy Taylor Kansan staff writer Joseph R. Pearson Hall will not be leased to Haskell Indian Junior College because Haskell's funding request was not approved by the Department of the Interior, KU and Haskell officials said yesterday. The officials said that despite the decision, JRP would not be used as a Hannes Combesh, education assistant to the president of Haskell, said the department's decision was a disappointment for both schools. "We are all disappointed,"she said. "We are currently examining every option to accommodate our students." The Department of the Interior is in charge of approving financial requests for American-Indian institutions and reservations. Combest the U.S. Congress appropriated $3 million for construction of a residence hall at Haskell. But that money did not include financing the JRP lease. The initial agreement to lease JRP for 10 months was about $800,000, which included transportation costs. "The decision was simply a funding issue," she said. Design and plans for the new hall have not been determined. KU officials announced in March that the University would lease JRP for one year because Haskell was renovating two residence halls and planning to build another. Haskell currently has seven residence halle three men, three womens. "We are sorry the agreement was not approved by the Department of the Interior," he said. "It would have served the needs of both institutions. But we are going to continue to work together on a variety of issues." Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor at KU, said cooperation between the two schools would continue even if Haskell could not lease JRP. He also said KU decided to close JRP as a residence hall because fewer residents were living on campus. "One of the major considerations is that occupancy is down in the residence halls," he said. "We are too far down the runway to turn around and go back in the Ken Stoner KUdirector of student housing hangar"” Although Shankel said he could not speculate as to the future plans of JRP, he said the University might make use of the space. Ken Stoner, KU director of student housing, said it was too late to reconsider using JRP as a residence hall. "We are too far down the runway to turn around and go back in the hangar," he said. "We'll be taking a hard look at future uses. We're looking for space needs for the University." Jason Van Hecke, president at JRP, said the government's decision and KU's announcement shocked JRP residents. "I guess these things can happen," he said. "We have been told that the arrangement between KU and Haskell was a done deal and that they were just waiting for final approval for funding." Van Hecke said the department of housing worked with JRP residents to find housing for next year. "The housing department left a couple of wings open for JRP students in each of the residence halls," he said. "But a lot of the guys here like the location to campus." Rich Heap, a belleville III., freshman and a member of JRP's executive board, said JRP residents would contact KU officials this week to try keep the residence hall open next year for KU students. "It was the intention of the Pearson family to have a residence hall in a prime location close to campus," he said. "We have a valid purpose in trying to work with the University." THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES Eca Edmands speaks about her family's flight from the Nazis. Edmands spoke to a group of people observing Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, at Smith Hall last night. See related story, Page 3. State senator will terminate legislative career after this session By Gayle Osterberg and Greg Farmer Kansan staff writers After State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, announced yesterday morning that he would not seek re-election, State Rep. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, said she would run for his Senate seat. Accompanied by his wife and three daughters, Winter announced his retirement at a morning press conference in Lawrence. He rescinded his decision with teary-eyed colleagues. "The discharge of my professional, legislative and family responsibilities has required a number of compromises," Winter said in Lawrence. "The growing demands in the future, Winter, who is ending his legislative career after 10 years in the state Senate, said he needed more time for his family and law career. Winter, a KU alumus, has been a vocal advocate for the University of Kansas. During the current session, he pushed for full state financing of Hoch's reconstruction and 100-percent fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants. with respect to all three areas, would not allow me to avoid unacceptable compromises if I were to continue to serve. I look forward to not having to choose between my wife and children, constituents and clients." In a prepared statement, Chancellor Gene Budig said: "The University of Kansas has no better friend than Wint. Winter. He has stood with us through good and difficult times. He has been an informed and effective advocate for higher education in Kansas." Praeger, who is serving her first two-year term as a representative, said she also would miss Winter. "Wint has been such a leader," she said. "He will be missed. I hope to be able to fill that void. There are some issues, particularly higher education and children's issues, that I have tried to address in the House of Representatives and would like to address in the Senate." Winter was not available for comment after Praeger said she would run for the seat he was vacating, but he said during his morning announcement that he would be delighted if the candidate were Praeger. "I think she would do a tremendous job," he said. In addition to representing the University, Winter has taken the lead on many issues of statewide interest, including investigation and reform of the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System. State Sen. Richard Bond, R-Overland Park, is a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which Winter heads. He also has affected the state's criminal sentencing and parole laws and the recently publicized abortion bill, which the governor signed "Wint has been an outstanding senator," Bond said. "He is a hard worker and a very sensitive guy. I feel very close to him as a friend and a colleague. It hurts a lot to lose him in the Senate, but it hurts more for me to know I will continue in this body without him here." "Wint and I seldom agreed," Bogina said. "But he tried to represent the University and his community the best he could. You can't take anything away from him for that. He was zealous in his efforts." Even one of Winter's long-time rivals, State Sen. Gus Bogina, Sh-Rawnee, said the Senate would be left with a hole that would be difficult to fill. Bogina heads the Senate Ways and Means Committee, of which Winter is a member. Winter said that although he was retiring from the Legislature he was not retiring from public service. He said that he was not considering any other office now but that running for attorney general in 1994 was a possibility. Winter, who attended KU on a football scholarship and graduated from the KU School of Law in 1978, is a second-generation Lawrence lawmaker. Wint Winter Sr. was a lawyer, judge, state senator and banker. The elder Winter once considered running for governor but decided against it because he said his family was more important. Following his father's example, Winter said the decision to retire from the Senate was something his whole family had considered sinceomas and he was comfortable with the choice. --- CAMPUS/AREA University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1900 3 MADRID Cheristine McFarland/KANSAN Practice makes perfect With only a week's worth of practice left, Lillian Sengpiehl, Topeka senior, and Victor Bogado, Asuncion, Paraguay, graduate student, perfect the dramatics of a difficult scene in "The Restoration Show." Combo packages are still available He said that if police saw someone with a bottle of wine, champagne, liquor or beer, they would ask the person to pour it out. "But with the advent of the ordinance, even if you are 21 years old, you can't consume 3.2 beer either," Mullens said. People could drink beer if it was 3.2 percent alcohol and they were older than 21, he said. *If they were actually drinking it, we Lt. John Mullens, KU police representative, said that in past years police asked graduates to pour out their alcohol and beer that was more than 3.2 percent alcohol. However, KU police will be enforcing the new drinking ordinance that went into effect the last week of March. The ordinance prohibits the consumption of alcoholic beverages, including 3.2 beer, on university property. "You only do it once in your life, and I'll be having a couple of cocktails on my way down," said the Aurora, Ill., senior. McKinney will be one of about 6,000 students who are eligible to go through commencement exercises May 17. Many will be carrying alcoholic beverages with them as they walk, or they may catch cans of beer thrown to them by spectators. Alcohol policy is not popular Employees of the athletic department will be standing at the entrance of the stadium to check graduates for alcoholic and nonalcoholic drinks, which will not be allowed in the stadium, Mullens said. They also will check for live animals. could arrest them, but everyone has complied pretty much," Mullens said. "People are laughing behind our backs as they pour one beer out and take three more out of their gown, but it is all part of the process." Beginning today, KU students get a second chance to apply for tickets to all regular-season home football games, home basketball games and the Kansas Relays. Applications were first taken during main enrollment, which ended Tuesday. By Cody Holt Kansan staff writer "They usually weed out the dogs, and we had people try to bring in 3 or 4 snakes last year." he said. Alisa Nickel, Independence senior, said she was disappointed that she had reached graduation and that the ceremony had been taken away. No one has ever been arrested for drinking at commencement ceremonies, hesaid. But she said that she had not planned on drinking at graduation. At least one student said he missed out on tickets last year but was able to apply for them this year. Ticket windows open at 8 a.m. today At the Allen Field House ticket office. However, applying for the package does not mean a student will get tickets. Demand for basketball tickets will determine the number of compa包装备 sold. By Michelle Betts Kansan staff writer "Last year, I didn't realize that you had to sign up at enrollment," Jim Reeves, Olathe senior, said. "I took it for granted that I could get them when Diana Miller, ticket office manager, said that if the number of students applying for the combo package exceeded the 7,039 seats allocated to students at the field house, a lottery might be necessary. In that case, undergraduates enrolled in seven or more hours and graduate students enrolled in six or more hours for next fall would get a chance to apply throughout the summer months before an undetermined cut-off date. "It's not an exact science," he said. "The numbers fluctuate every year." Mullens said there had not been problems in the past with graduates who refused to pour out their drinks. Bob Frederick, athletic director, said that the student ticket policy established by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board allocated 45 percent of the 15,643 seats in the field house to students. Some graduates plan to drink despite rule The number of student seats has dwindled over the last seven years. From 1985 to 1988, the number of student tickets sold surpassed the number of seats allotted to students. However, for the last four years students have received fewer than the 45 percent of field house seats that are guaranteed them. "I just kind of assumed that the police would make a point of enforcing it." Nickel said. Jason McKinney plans to celebrate on the day he walks down the Hill for KU commencement. "The first time you do anything, you're going to miss some people," he said. "I fully expect some people to come to me this year and say they didn't know they had to buy the tickets at enrollment." He said that his office made an attempt this year to advertise the facts that tickets were available throughout main enrollment. The tickets will remain available until late August or early September. David Hardy, assistant director of organizations and activities, who is in charge of tabulating the enrollment ticket applications, said there were communication problems between his office and the ticket office last year, causing an early end to ticket sales. That meant that 6,275 tickets, not 7,039, ended up in students' hands. However, he said that the student body did not always receive all the 7,000 seats. He said that the students who applied often didn't meet the requirements to receive the tickets. Those seats are then sold elsewhere. Nanette Cabrera, McPherson senior, said that she was the last of seven children to graduate from KU, and that her family would be giving her beer at the ceremony. Continued on Page 12. Basketball seating at a glance "I'm still expecting them to throw me some beer, but I'm disappointed," she said. Statistics show that Kansas is among the Big Eight leaders in student seating allotment. However, the numbers have decreased since 1985-86. Here's a look at seating allotment in Allen Field House and student seating in the Big Eight: Seat allotment in Allen Field House 20,000 7,346 7,145 7,308 6,921 5,945 6,306 6,275 Student Faculty/staff Public 1,823 1,685 1,847 1,543 1,682 1,854 1,494 5,126 5,497 5,667 5,748 6,365 6,725 6,835 85-86 86-87 87-88 88-89 89-90 90-91 91-92 Student seating in the Big Eight Capacity seats to students (percentage guaranteed) Colorado 11,199 36 Coors Events Center Iowa State 14,020 32 Hilton Coliseum Kansas 15,643 45 Allen Field House K-State 13,500 45 Bramlage Coliseum Missouri 13,300 28 Hearnes Center Nebraska 14,302 36 Devaney Center Oklahoma 10,894 23 Lloyd Noble Center Oklahoma State 6,381 25 Gallagher-Iba Arena Source: University of Kansas Athletic Department Business Office, Big Eight ticket offices Alaina Brainard Daily Kansan Jewish community recalls Holocaust By Shelly Solon Kansan staff writer Students and Lawrence residents last night remembered Holocaust victims during a community Yom HaShoah or Holocaust Remembrance Day, service. But Hillel members say this generation needs to remember what caused the Holocaust as well as its victims. Carrie Fleider, president of Hillel, said the burden of remembering was not only on the generation that lived through the Holocaust. "Now people look at the Holocaust as far removed from us, but what it stands for still exists," she said. "It represented apathy, and that's exactly what we have in society. We live in a society with hunger, homelessness, racism and anti-Semitism. We still allow these things to happen." Gretter said today's young generation had a responsibility to fight against bigotry and social problems. "We cannot let people get comfortable with their hatred," she said. About 60 people attended the service last night at 100 Smith Hall. Hillen had has its own service for about six years. Hillen members, other students and Lawrence residents recited the service, which included songs, prayers and a short story by Eva Edmands of Lawrence, who fled with her family from Vienna, Austria in 1938. "The Holocaust was not an event that affects Jewish people but an event that affects human beings." she said. "Our generation of Jewish people is very aware of the effects of the Holocaust, but non-Jewish people have to be more aware." Junner Marck, Hilul member, said young people had to realize that the Holocaust concerned more than just Jewish people. Marck said there was not enough recognition of these issues. "Racism is on the rise everywhere," she said. "It seems to be a problem for many Americans, one said, if we don't learn from history, we are doomed to repeat it." The Holocaust has had certain effects on Jewish people today, Marck said. "It probably brings us closer together," she said. "On holidays especially, I think everybody remembers and thinks about how lucky we are to have the freedom to practice our religion." Bill Tuttle, professor of history, spoke after the service about the effects of the Holocaust and World War II on U.S. children, specifically Jewish-American children. "The home-front children are the last generation to have been alive during the war," he said. "Soon they will be gone. Who will remind us then? That's why I think it's important to have these services on college campuses." POWER PLANT Tonight Cinco De Mayo 3rd Annual Fiesta! Sponsored By: HALO Hispanic American Leadership Organization Tickets Available At: 421 Kansas Union Spanish Dept - 3062 Wescoe Saturday Coors Dry Night! CHILL STATION LOCATION $100's in Prizes Alternative Stop Day Party This Sunday (18 & Up These Nights Only) MEMBERS & GUESTS FRESH HOT! RPM PIZZA By The SLICE CALL# THE-CLUB (843-2582) 9th & Miss. POWERLINE 4 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1997 OPINION I TOLD YOU THAT EURO-DISNEYLAND WOULD BE A 'CIVITAL CHERNOBYL.' TAPH 4-92 UDK Police acquittal exposes racist U.S. justice system The four Los Angeles policemen must be lynched now. That's exactly right! I didn't say they "should" have been lynched, although I would have been right in saving so. I meanRIGHT NOW!! String 'emup and let 'em hang on some tree where everyone can see, as a symbol of the new and just criminal justice system, because there is no justice in the white-controlled system. If anyone had any doubts as to who runs this country, the Rodney King trial should have cleared that up immediately. Four white policemen in Los Angeles savagely beat a Black last spring. This satanic beating was videotaped and shown to the entire world as a demonstration of how police brutality is more prevalent than it is believed to be. It also showed how Blacks are unjustly "handled" in the hands of the law. There was absolutely no doubt in my mind that these four white police officers (although there were many more present) would do some jail time. I was not, however, so naive as to think that these four policemen would be sent to jail for 30 years for brutalizing a black man. Of course not, this is AmeriKKKa. But I did expect at least some form of punishment. Marc Ettrick Guest columnist Yesterday, after receiving the news, I was filled with hatred, disgust and utter rage. These four policemen were acquitted of almost all charges. According to this verdict, which was submitted by a 12-member, predominantly white jury, the policemen did absolutely nothing wrong. This is a travesty that sends a very clear message to the Black people in this country. BLACK MEN AND WOMEN, YOU HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO PLACE TO TURN! You can't turn to the police because they're nothing but corrupt, racist pigs. You can't go to the "judicial" system because it's racist. Where does the Black man and woman turn? I say, take this racist country to trial. Take it to the World Court. Let's go to the United Nations and present our case to the other 90 percent of the world's population (who happen to be people of color). Let's present our case to India, China, Japan, South America and all the countries of Africa. All these countries are victims of AmeriKKKa's racist and capitalist system in some form or another. They would surely be receptive to any plan that would bring "The Great Satan" to its knees. In the meantime, however, something must be done about the great miscarriage of justice that took place in Los Angeles. These four policemen and their families deserve nothing less than death. I advocate their deaths in any shape or form. Let there be no mistake. Black people are annoyed and tired of sitting back and taking notice. Singing "We Shall Overcome" and marching in peace is a thing of the past. Brutality will be met with brutality, injustice with injustice. I understand the violence in Atlanta as I understand the violence in Los Angeles. It won't be long before they get started in my beloved New York City. The verdict in the Rodney King trial is the most blatant and dishearming display of injustice imaginable. Anyone who has the audacity to hold this country as the symbol of honor, justice and equality is absolutely sick. I strongly urge that the end of the Pledge of Allegiance be changed to "...one nation under Satan with liberty and justice for WHITES." Marc Etrick is a Brooklyn, N.Y., junior majoring in political science. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A year-end review of events The end of the spring semester lends an opportunity to recall the good and the bad events. good and the bad events As the spring semester ends and many students get ready to leave the University of Kansas for the real world, whether for graduation or for other good reasons, it becomes incumbent on us to review the previous four months' highs and lows. First the good news. On campus, the surprise-of-the-semester award went to Gov. Joan Finney for her announcement that $18 million of an out-of-nowhere $185 million windfall would be allocated for the replacement of Hoch Auditorium. The University had to compromise in other areas. Graduate teaching and research assistants requested that their fee waiver be increased from 75 percent to 100 percent. The Kansas Legislature, after consulting a mathematician, settled on 87.5 percent. More good news was the administration's plans to begin mail-in fee payment in the fall semester and to create a multicultural center. In sports, the men's and women's basketball teams brought home Big Eight trophies. And Roy Williams was named Coach of the Year by The Associated Press. Contributing to the marketplace of ideas was a new student newspaper, the Oread Review, which has made up for its lack of content with expensive-looking paper. Students made advances on the fronts of AIDS awareness, racial tolerance and ending sexual harassment—advances made difficult in a world where Fred Phelps continues to breathe, where white New York teen-agers assault and spray white sneaker polish on a 12-year-old African-American girl and where violators of the faculty code of conduct are punished with a year's paid vacation. In national news, David Duke's political career died at the hands of Pat Buchanan. Membership in women's groups surged in the months following Clarence Thomas' appointment to the Supreme Court. And the sleeping U.S. electorate at last began to stir and scare deadbeat members of Congress fromrunning again. And now the bad news. In a nation where 30 percent of the budget is spent on the elderly and only 2 percent on education, things became more unbalanced. Libraries suffered, and tuitions increased nationwide. Atthe University of Kansas, heralded professors announced their plans to leave because of lackluster state support. Graduate teaching and research assistants were told over and over again that they were not employees but recipients of a strange type of financial aid. And in a move that will save thousands of lives and ensure world peace, the Lawrence City Commission banned beer on campus. In an unrelated move, Sen. Bob Dole went on the warpath to withdraw federal financing from public television after hearing a disturbing rumor about Ernie and Bert. The lack of leadership in our nation was exemplified once again by President George Bush, who said he was sorry for raising taxes because it caused him political grief. In A Higher Education Map for the 1990s, Chancellor Budig lamented the faltering public image of higher education. But it's not just the image of higher education that is in trouble. It's the image of college students, too. What does the public think of us? We rarely vote. We light things on fire when our basketball teams do well. With bloodshot eyes, we in hand our term papers. We drink out of boredom. And now we walk down the Hill to seek employment in a nation where the entry-level positions are being taken by 40-year-olds, where 15,000 applications were requested for a graffiti-cleaning job in San Francisco, where the president took a year to get the word "recession" out of his mouth. We should remember those who came before us as we contribute our individual shares of $3,800 to pay for the savings and loan party. We should also remember those who came before us when we look at the destruction of the environment and the ozone layer. The future's so bright, you goawwear shades. And hats. And sunscreen. Martin Scherstuhl 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. Givers are not selfish Members of the editorial board are: Alexander Bloemfohn, Jim Brown, J.R. Clarbome, Mark Coatney, Amy Francis, Tiffany Harness, Tiffany Lasha Hurt, Kate Kelly, Julie Eileen Litt, Stephen Martino, David Mitchell, Chris Moeser, Beth Randolph, Martin Scherstuhl, Jill Wasson, Frank Wilson, Sarah Zercher Catherine Morris Lawrence sophomore I'm writing this in response to Michael Leich's letter. I think Mr. Leich is missing the point; a real philanthropist doesn't give time or money and then whines when he newspapers and television stations didn't notice. He needs to decide whether he is doing these things for those who need it or to make himself look good. Death penalty is wrong I was upset when I read the column concerning the death penalty in the April 27 Kanson. The statement upsetting me the most was the justification of the death penalty by putting yourself "into the victim's families" shoes." I was put in those shoes when my sister, Joan, was murdered by Richard Grissom. I am offended when people put themselves in my position and assume that because of this I support the death penalty. But I do not speak for all victims' families. In my opinion, killing Grissom, or any killer, is not the answer to the problem. To take certain criminals' lives because they have murdered would be sinking to the level of a killer. Even the Bible states "do not repay evil with evil" (1 Peter 3:9). I do not believe "our society coddles criminals" as Monday's article read. As much as I resent Grissom's right to due process, I have faith that the judicial system will ensure that justice is carried out. Although Grissom is appealing his sentence, I am comforted knowing he will spend the rest of his life in an overcrowded maximum-security prison. I am much more willing to appear periodically before parole hearings than to have a vengeful death on my conscience for the rest of my life. If society truly feels the death penalty is a deterrent, why is there a debate as to which means is more inhumane? The result is always the same. Therefore, the argument against capital punishment is not about money, but morality. I am glad the Kansas Legislature has not passed the death penalty, only the hard 40. Killing Richard Grissom as a form of punishment will never bring back my sister. Letterstotheeditor Greeks get bad rap Wichita senior How ironic it was that the editorial board comments on Hands Across Campus ended by accusing the KU campus of perpetuating racism. I was shocked that in an article trying to promote student harmony the Kansan made such sweeping generalities about the "scheme of things" in the Greek system. In years past, problems did occur that were well publicized that no one in the Greek system would attempt to deny. Rather than trying to forget these things happened, however, the leaders of the Greek community have made conscious and earnest efforts to increase cultural awareness among their chapters. It is also true that the composition of Greek chapters is not as racially diverse as would be ideal. However, efforts are being made to improve this as well. Greeks face problems in finding minorities who are willing to join their chapters because of unfair stereotypes exactly like Frank Williams' statement that "If you do not fit into a certain scheme of things, you will not be admitted to the ranks of the greeks." How are we to recruit new members from different backgrounds when our own student newspaper, without any knowledge of how our members actually interact, is telling people they will not fit in? Like the rest of campus, the Greek system has changed with the times. The changes have apparently gone unnoticed by the Kansan, whose continued negative comments and coverage about Greek activities are only contributing to campus ignorance. It is time for the Kansan and the editorial board to act responsibly to become a part of the solution to a problem we would all like to see corrected rather than being a source of the conflict. John Gollier Ottawa junior Not all killers insane I wish to comment on David Mitchell's 'April 27 column. I have no quarrel with Mr. Mitchell's assertion that serial killers such as Tundy Buddy and Jeffrey Dahmer should suffer the death penalty. I do take issue with Mr. Mitchell's assertion that these people are "psychotic serial killers." They are serial killers, but they are not psychotic. Many serial killers are thought to have an antisocial personality disorder, characterized by a lack of guilt and an inability to empathize with others. There are serial killers who are psychotic, but they tend to be the exception rather than the rule. People who are psychotic are not necessarily violent. Some research has shown that people with schizophrenia, one type of psychosis, exhibit a lower incidence of violence than the average population. Also, in many states, antisocial personality disorder cannot be used in an insanity plea. It just this kind of uninformed stereotyping of serial killers as psychotic that contributes to the aura of fear and disgust within which people with psychosis are viewed. The media tend to connect psychosis with violent acts like serial killings, which leads to assumptions like Mr. Mitchell's. Have been interacting with people with psychosis for eight years. I have never been attacked or threatened, either verbally or physically. I do not have the time or the space to debunk every myth or stereotype about people with psychosis, but it only takes a little investigating to do so. I am disappointed that Mr. Mitchell did not research the facts before writing his opinions. Jennifer Snyder Lawrence graduate student KANSAN STAFF TIFFANY HARNESS Editor VANESSA FUHRMANS Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser Editors JENNIFER CLAXTON Business manager Editors News Andrew Editorial Beth Randolph Planning Lara Gold Campus Eric Gorski/Rocheille Oleson Sports Eric Nelson Photo Junior Jacobson Feature Debbie Moore Graphics Alina Brainstorm/Jeff Mewes JAY STEINER Retail sales manager JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser Business Staff Marketing director ...Kim Claxton Creative director ...Leanne Bryant Classified mgr ...Kip Chin Business Staff Campus sales mgr...Bilie beibengo Regional sales mgr...Rich Hashburger National sales mgr...Scott Hanna Co-op sales mgr...Aroh Johnson Production mgrs...Kim Wallace Lisa Keeler Marketing director...Kim Claxton Creative director...Leanne Bryant 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. The student should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansas reservoirs the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stuart Faint Hall. Stick DO YOU THINK THAT THIS IS THE WORST-DRAWN COMIC STRIP IN THE HISTORY OF THE KANSAN? I DUNNO. I'LL CHECK. I DUNNO. I'LL CHECK. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by DICK AIBER CIRCA 1916 - c. 1958 GRIFE AND THE UNICORN by DAVID SOWLOFF CIRCA 1929 - MAY 19, 1978 HUTCHIN' by PAT MAYO CIRCA 1923 - NOV 19, 1973 FOOLS AFLOAT by PAT MAYO CIRCA 1922 - FEB 20, 1974 W.K. D.C. by WESTERN HOLY COUNY CIRCA 1924 - SEPT 15, 1976 STATE U. by TOM. ASLA CIRCA 1924 - APR 5, 1979 ABB BY GAL WYLIE JANUARY 14, APR 28, 1982 MR. BADGER by A.D. LONG MAR 19, 1986 - APR 10, 1988 KATZ by K.T. THORMAN FEB 2 - DEC 7, 1987 GOERBOOWER HALL JANUARY 14, NOV 2, 1988 PLAIN BANanas by TOM SOLLINER MARCH 28, 1988 CAPPER by TOM MICHAUD APR 6, 1988 CAMP UNWEELY by SCOTT PARTY SEP 6, 1989 - MAY 4, 1990 HOME REMEDIES by TOM MICHAUD APR 8, 1990 - MARCH 8, 1991 THREE IMAGINARY GIRLS BY TOM AMERY AUG 22 - DEC 10, 1990 CALL OF THE WILD BY JOHN WITCHETT AUG 22 - DEC 6, 1990 CLAMED TO SHOW ENGLISH BY BRAIN GWINNING JANUARY 16 - MAY 3, 1991 SKETCH BY TOM ROSENFIELD JUNE 17 - MAY 2, 1991 DOUBLE TUXEDO BY TOM AMERY JUNE 17 - MAY 2, 1991 LOCK LOCALS BY TOM MICHAUD MARCH 19, 1991- TAKE TWO BY TOM AMERY JUNE 5 - JUL 21, 1991 STEPING OUT BY SYDNEY THANK AUG 30 - DEC 491 NOT TO MENTION: ETTA HETT. POCO. BLOOM COUNTY. THE FAIR SOUE ALL SHOPLED. Hmm... by David Rosenfield AND THE FAIR SIDE (ALL SYMBILODICED) Hmm... NOT TO MENTION: ETTA KETT. POGO. BLOOM COUNTY AND THE FAR SIDE ALL SYNDICATED yup. Hmm... University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 199> LOS ANGELES RIOTS 5 Rioting in South Central Los Angeles Rioting in South Central Los Angeles Most of the violence that broke out in Los Angeles within hours of the verdict in the Rodney King beating case occurred in predominantly black South Central Los Angeles. Santa Monica Fwy Western & 35th Firefighter shot Western Ave. Normandie Ave. Normandie & Florence: Site of fires Harbor Fwy. Harbor Freeway temporarily closed Florence Ave. Manchester Blvd. WATTS Site of videotaped beating of Rodney King Los Angeles 10 Santa Monica 405 Pacific Ocean San Pedro Long Beach COMPTON Artesia Fwy. 91 Long Beach Fwy. 0 MILES 10 Knight-Ridder Tribune Bush condemns LA destruction The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush condemned murder and destruction by Los Angeles rioters yesterday but at the same time said the Justice Department would intensify its investigation of police conduct in the taped-bearing case that ignited the violence. Bush met at the White House with Attorney General William Barr, who raised the possibility that the four officers acquitted of brutality charges in state court could face federal charges if his investigation shows they violated the civil rights of the motorist they beat. The president also appealed for an end to the street violence that followed the acquaintances on Wednesday and continued yesterday. mind, yesterday. "The murder and destruction on the streets of Los Angeles must be stopped," Bush said. Barr said the federal government will move as quickly as possible to determine whether there are grounds to charge the four white policemen with violating the civil rights of Rodney King, who is African-American. Barr sent Associate Attorney General Wayne Budd, an African-American former U.S. attorney in Boston, to Los Angeles to meet with officials there. The attorney general said investigators will try to determine whether there was intentional infliction of excessive force against King by the officers who had stopped him for speeding. "In the American conscience there is no room for bigry and racism." Bush said in a brief statement at the White House. Arson and looting erupted again yesterday in Los Angeles. Nine people were killed there Wednesday night. Neither Barr nor Bush would characterize the acquittal verdict by the California jury in the case. However, White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said Bush felt the same frustration everyone else does. "He saw the videotape and it's hard to compare that to the verdict and not wonder what happened," Fitzwater said. When the videotaped beating of King was made public last year, Bush said, "What we're going to do is look into violations of the law and prosecute any people that are violating the federal law and speak against police brutality, because what I saw made me sick." Justice Department officials made it clear that the investigation was not limited to the four officers. It will also include an examination of the conduct of other officers at the scene of King's beating. Federal civil rights laws carry a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for convicted violators. FBI Director William Sessions joined Barr at a Justice Department news conference in which the attorney general said that since October 1988, his agency has filed charges against 123 law enforcement officers for police brutality, and has won convictions against 75 percent of them. The Department of English Congratulates the Winners of the Spring 1992 English 101/102 Essay Writing Contest Jennifer Briscoe Matthew Caldwell Scott Gillaspie Amanda Jo Harkins Amy Houghton-LaRue Selena Martin Liz Parker DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS THRIFT STORE NOW OPEN! Quality merchandise at low prices. DONATIONS NEEDED ·Serviceable Clothing ·Appliances ·Furniture ·Misc. Household Goods --- FREE PICK UP CALL 749-4900 or Bring by: 1601 W.23rd, Suite 116 south side of Southern Hills Mall between 9 and 4. Hours: 9 a.m-6 p.m. Mon - Sat $10 Lawrence Donor Center Donor Center Receive $10 cash when you donate plasma! BRAHMS $10 Receive $15 the next time you donate! $10 Lawrence Donor Center 816 W.24th (Behind Laird Noller Ford) Open Monday-Friday 8 am - 6pm, Saturday 9 am - 1 pm TEN DOLLARS $10 REVOLVING AROUND HAIR XANADU DESIGNS YOUR NEEDS A Commitment to Everything Beautiful. 2429 IOWA 842-6555 Xanadu is leading the way in addressing the 3 R's in waste management. - Xanadu only uses and prints on Recycled paper products. - Xanadu buys Bulk-packagedperms Reducing up to 90%of waste. - Xanadu Reuses packaging and refills products. - And of course, Xanadu Recycles. coasts a concerned customer. You too, can make a difference as a concerned customer. Make your choice an Environmental one. BRITCHES CORNER BRITCHES CORNER GRADUATION SALE! 1st SUIT PURCHASED $199 2nd SUIT PURCHASED $179 3rd SUIT PURCHASED $159 Exclusively at... GRADUATE TO BIGGER SAVINGS! Guaranteed Lowest Price on the Highest Quality American Made Single & Double Breasted Suits. (Reg. $300-$425) 843 Massachusetts • 843-0454 FREE MOVIE ON CAMPANILE HILL RAIDERS of the LOST ARK. SINCE IT RAINED OUT... SATURDAY MAY 9 9:15 P.M. "Capture a KU Memory " The University of Kansas Commencement Video The KU commencement video will capture highlights of the year, the scenic campus and the commencement activities, rain or shine. Cost: $28.46 per VHS tape, including shipping and handling. Name (Kansas residents add $1.49 sales tax. Total: $29.95). Address___ Make checks payable to: The University of Kansas City/State/Zip___ Phone Mailto: Main to: The University of Kansas Continuing Education Media Services Continuing Education Building Lawrence, KS 66045-2630 Allow 6 to 8 weeks after commencement for delivery 6 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 EARN EXTRACASH FOR SUMMERVACATION! Participate in one of Clinical Research Foundation's pharmaceutical research programs. You can earn approximately $300 to add to your summer vacation fund and help develop new medicines! All projects are unique in qualifications and time commitment. Some are as short as two days! If you meet the following criteria: *male, 18-65 *near ideal body weight *physically healthy *have a flexible schedule Clinical Research Foundation CRF Call Clinical Research Foundation now at 894-5533 to find out how you can qualify to participate in a research study BEETLEJUICE ME SHINiNG BEETLEJUICE THE SHINiNG Double Feature Drive-In Fri, May 1 9:00 $5 a carload Lot 91 behind the Union Bring your radio! STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SUMMER Summer Is Almost Here? Make Sure You're Ready! FREE Aerobics Class - Call NOW for an appointment NEWLY REMODELED & ADDED EQUIPMENT SUNNER from now until the end of school $139.00 OFF $21.00/month One Summer Membership for only $90 Exp.6/1/92 - Over 60 aerobic classes/wk SWEETER - Step aerobics offered - 2 aerobic rooms - Co-ed classes offered - 10 tans for $20 - Nautilus & free weights BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 749-2424 9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza 2 2515 W. 6th St. BECERROS 841-1323 A Specials Sunday $1 Margaritas $2.99 Dinner Specials A 图 Monday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Margaritas 75¢ Draws $1 Margaritas $1.50 Imports $2.50 Pitchers Dinner $7.99 16 oz. $6.99 Fajitas 1/2 off All $4.95 Enchilada Specials T - Bone Appetizers w/ entree Dinners Free Appetizer Bar M-F 4-7 pm Come In For Our Daily Lunch Specials! Hours: Sun. 12-12 M-F 11-12 Sat. 12-12 Party On Our Patio! L HORSE COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST FOR GRADUATES AND THEIR FAMILIES SUNDAY, MAY 17 KANSAS UNION BALLROOM 8 A.M. BREAKFAST 8:30 A.M. PROGRAM THE CHANCELLOR'S STUDENT AWARDS AND THE CLASS GIFT AND BANNER WILL BE PRESENTED DURING THE PROGRAM. FOR TICKETS, RETURN THE CARD FROM YOUR COMMENCEMENT PACKET. CONTACT THE ALUMUNI ASSOCIATION, 864-4760, IF YOU'VE LOST YOUR CARD. LIMIT 4 TICKETS PER STUDENT. Graduation Cap THE COMMISSION BREAKFAST IS SPONSORED BY THE KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, THE STUDENT ALUMNI ANSORSIATION AND THE 1992 BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS. ROM SAA Some gay fraternity men fear coming out of closet Kansan staff report For three years, Eric laughed at his fraternity brothers "bfg" jokes. In the next week, he plans to tell them he is gay. He does not expect them to laugh. Eric, who asked that his real name not be used, said he was one of many gay KU fraternity men who is keeping his sexuality a secret from his chap- Eric said that at least two other members of his fraternity were gay, and that he knew of gay members in eight other KU fraternities, as well as gay men who were recent graduates of the fraternity system. "Those are just the ones brave enough to venture out to a (gay) bar," he said. "Any fraternity member is naive to think there aren't any gays in his house." But gay men in KU fraternities seldom tell their chapters about their sexuality for fear of alienation, loss of reputation or worse. Mike Sullivan, former co-director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said, "I tell all my gay and straight friends in fraternities, especially the straight ones, that if they went to a gay bar in Kansas City, they'd be surprised at all the people they knew. Troy Aldafer, co-director of GLOSK, said national surveys estimate that 10 percent to 15 percent of the population is homosexual or bisexual, and that he assumed the figure is the same for Greek houses. "Homosexuality has no bound-aries." he said. Eric, who will graduate this month, said his plans to out himself and speak to the entire chapter about his sexual orientation are tentative. He said he had frequently resolved to do it in the past. He said that he would like to be honest with everyone. "It wouldn't be the constant wondering: 'Does he know? Would he care if he knew?'" Eric said. He said that some fraternity brothers would want him kicked out of the chapter, but that others would support him completely. Eric is relatively confident he would not be expelled from the fraternity because he will graduate this semester, he said. The chapter also elected him to four positions in the house and once gave him the highest award possible in a chapter vote. Brad is another gay member of Eric's fraternity who has not told the chapter about his sexuality. He, too, asked that his real name not be used. Eric said that the three men were once the only housemembersaware of each other's sexual orientation but that now about 11 members of the house knew and accepted them. Brad said many others would not accent them. "If you're in a fraternity, you're not going to be open, for God's sake, unless you want to be beat up or kicked out," he said. Brad said he didn't think he would be kicked out. "I might sound arrogant, but everybody in my fraternity really likes me a lot," he said. "Some might be pissed off that I've fooled them all this time, which they have a right to be. Others might be pissed off that I'm gay, which they really don't have a right to be. "I certainly haven't disgraced my fraternity atall." "I personally feel that homophobia is not something that is just one faction of the University," he said. "It's not exclusive to fraternities." John Gaffney, Interfraternity Council adviser, said men's living groups tended to be homophobic. Art Satterfield, graduate teaching assistant in psychology and a member of GLSOK for three years, said an almite living group had the potential to be extremely homophobic, partly because of the myth that gay men were hypersexual and wanted to have sex with any healthy male. Satterfield said he had heard about beatings of gay men by members of their fraternities nationwide. Eric, who said he joined the fraternity for the social and leadership opportunities it offered, had planned to keep his sexuality a secret throughout college when he joined his fraternity. Eric said even the members of his chapter who would accept him might be concerned about the reputation of the fraternity. Margaret Miller, KU's coordinator of greek programs, said she knew of many gay fraternity men and had been working with members of the gay community to set up a support group for them. "I knew I was gay when I joined," Eric said. "I remember that I asked myself if it was important enough for me to join a fraternity that I would keep myself cloested for the next four years." "I know a lot of houses are afraid of being called 'a fag house,'" Eric said. He also said he worried that recruitment at his fraternity might suffer if it got a negative reputation or that the University might punish the chapter if it excelled him because he was gay. However, $ 2^{1/2} $ years ago he slowly began coming out, and he had his first homosexual experience at age 20. Eric said that before his first experience he believed some of the stereotypes about gay men. "I thought I was the only normal-looking (gay)," Eric said. "I didn't want to wear leather. I didn't want to wear women's clothing." "The feelings started taking over," he said. "It was something I couldn't deny anymore." Brad said he did not fit into any gay stereotypes either. "I'm by no means effeminate, and I'm by no means eccentric," he said. "Fraternities have always had gay people in them," he said. "Fraternities always will have gay people in them." Most of his fraternity brothers do not expect he is gay at all, Brad said. SUNGLASSES Hip However Vogue you want to Cool define it, Sharp we do it with style. Headmasters. 809 Vermont 843-8808 1 The University of Kansas School of Education will honor its graduating students at a Convocation at seven o'clock in the evening Saturday, May 16, 1992 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Graduates who completed their degrees in October and December 1991 and candidates for degrees in May and August 1992 will be recognized. Academic regalia will be worn. Participating graduates are asked to arrive at 6:40 p.m. For further information, contact the School of Education, 117 Bailey Hall, 864-3726. NATION/WORLD University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 7 NATION/WORLD BRIEFS Chicago Driver hits children, kills one A car jumped the curb and plowed into a crowd of third-graders on a field trip at O'Hare International Airport yesterday, killing a 10-year-old girl and injuring 88 other people, authorities said. At least seven victims were injured critically. The 87-year-old man driving the car told police he thought he hit the brakes, but the car accelerated, and he was unable to stop, said Sgt. Thomas Swayne. The children had just got off two school buses between airport terminals at midday when the car ran onto the sidewalk where they were gathered, witnesses said. Police said the driver was taken into custody for questioning. Eighty-eight people were injured, said Mike Cosgrove, a representative for the Chicago Fire Department. Sarajevo, Bosnia Masked commandos blew up the last two bridges linking Bosnia-Herzegovina with Croatia, and reports yesterday said that at least 10 people had died in the explosions. Commandos blast last bridges The bridges were the only links left to the relatively safe haven of Croatia for thousands of refugees fleeing embattled northeastern Bosnia. Fighting meanwhile eased in Sarajevo between Serb militias seeking to carve off part of the city and Muslim defenders of the Bosnian capital. Clashes continued elsewhere between Serb forces opposed to Bosnian independence and Albanian forces. Three people were killed, and seven were wounded in Mostar, where federal forces shellled the southwestern city, the Belgrade-based Tanjung news agency reported. Santa Monica, Calif. Bisexual sex passes AIDS also Many men who have sex with both men and women don't consider themselves bisexual, so they may not realize that they risk getting AIDS and spreading it to female lovers, according to a Rand Corp. study. According to the study, AIDS-education messages may be more effective if they are targeted at men who have sex with other men rather than gay and bisexual men. Thirty-eight percent of men in the study reported having at least one homosexual experience during adolescence; one in eight said they had one homosexual experience during adulthood; one in 22 considered themselves bisexual. From The Associated Press New Islamic leaders try to restore order in Kabul KABUL, Afghanistan — The new Islamic government consolidated its command over Mujahedeen factions yesterday, trying to end looting and restore order in Kabul. The new government drove its rivals from the city and prepared to clean up. The Associated Press The rival forces, under fundamental leader leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, still controlled areas around the capital. But they were far outnumbered by various Muaheeda groups loyal to the new government. President Sigbhatullah Mojaddi's government held its first session at the Council of Ministers building and agreed to centralize the command over the guerrilla groups which overran Kabul Saturday and ejected the remnants of President Najibullah's government. Ahmed Shad Masood, one of the most powerful guerrilla commanders and now the defense minister, attended the council session in Kabul, but was seen leaving before it ended. Delegates later said the council failed to decide on its position regarding Hekmatvar and would meet again today. ne attacks, there be a response, "Khan said. Masood and Hekmatyar are bitter enemies from different ethnic groups and disagree on the future Islamic government. Hekmatyar favors strict imposition of Islamic law. Masood and Mojadidi likely would apply it moderately. Before the council arrived in Kabul on Tuesday, Hekmatyar was elected prime minister of the transitional government, but rejected it, said Gen. Mohammad Khan, a military aid to Mojaddidi. would apply a rule of thumb. The new government consists of 20 rebel leaders who fought a succession of Soviet-backed governments for 14 years. Massood appeared in complete control of Kabul after hard fighting with Hekmatav. "Additional measures will be taken to provide for the safety and security of Kabul's residents and for foreign diplomats and emissaries," presidential representative Ahmed Ghazharay said. Looting and indiscriminate shooting have terrorized Kabul*i $1.5 million residents, although life in the capital was slowly returning to normal after three days of internecine fighting in its streets. "We're not worried now," said 18-year-old Abdul Sabor, manager of a tiny grocery store in the city center. A few stores reopened on the street. Despite the relative calm, about 20 rockets hit the Kabul airport, about three miles east of downtown Kabul, about 5p.m. Guards said they were fired from Hekmatyar's positions on mountains south and southeast of the city. No injuries were reported. Navy report says admirals sexually molested women WASHINGTON — The Navy's inspector general issued a report yesterday that described in graphic detail the sexual molestation of 26 women at a 1991 convention of naval aviators and charged that Navy admirals had approved of such activity for years. The Associated Press The Naval Investigative Service said its seven-month investigation showed that the women, more than half of them naval officers, suffered varying degrees of sexual assaults. The alleged misconduct occurred at a convention of Navy and Marine Corps aviators in Las Vegas. In an interview, Undersecretary of the Navy Dan Howard said no disciplinary action against senior Navy officials was contemplated. The issue, he said, is "to teach our people ... the difference between acceptable and unacceptable behavior." Navy investigators interviewed women who complained of being subjected to a hotel hallway gantlet, a nightly event that involved up to 200 men. According to one woman, the event involved eight nights involved 40 to 50 women and lasted for two hours. "The attacks ranged from being patted on the buttocks to having other portions of their anatomy groped and grabbed," said the report, which included more than 2,000 pages of testimony. The inspector general, Rear Adm. George Davis, said closing ranks and obfuscation on the part of the officers who supposedly had knowledge of the incidents had made it impossible to know the nature, severity and number of incidents that occurred. Howard said the senior Navy leadership was "disgusted, very frustrated that we did not receive the full cooperation of everyone in the investigation." The report said similar activities apparently had taken place at the annual conventions since 1986, all with the knowledge of senior Navy officials. The report said that when one female officer attempted to report her experience, she was told that she should have expected such activity on the part of drunken aviators and that her career would be ruined for raising a complaint. One victim was the aide to Rear Adm. Jack Snyder, who was relieved of his command in December by the chief of naval operations, Adm. Frank Kelso. Noother Naval officers have stepped forward to take responsibility for the incident, which Kelso has called an embarrassment to the Navy. Attention Business and French Majors! Washburn University is offering FR 300 French for Business MWF1-2 p.m. Along with this course, you will have an opportunity to take the Chamber of Commerce of Paris Examination for Language Expertise Certification This course and the examination will not be offered at the University of Kansas. This is your only chance to take this relevant and valuable course during the coming academic year. It will be offered this fall (August 1992) at Washburn University in Topeka. For more information, call Modern Foreign Languages (913) 231-1010, ext. 1508 Congratulations Graduating Seniors From Johnny's Classic Burgers Johnny's Classic Burgers would like to thank you for your patronage over the years. Finals Special! 99¢ 1/4 lb. Hamburger CLASSIC BURGERS no limit - coupon required expires May'92 Come see us during finals! Mister Guy Darts for Discounts Everything in the store 10% off with a chance to get up to 30% off. Bulls-eye specials throughout finals. $19.99 30% off And much more--all week long! Knits Ties MISTER GUY MENS & WOMEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 Mass. 842-2700 It'sPEARLJAM Weekend... at DayOn The Hill... andatKIEF'S. PEARL JAM TEN including: ALIVE ONCE WHY GO BLACK CassetteOnly $6.97 CDOnly $9.99 Sale Good Thru 5-4-92. The Best Selection. The Best Sale Prices. KIEF'S CDs & TAPES 24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence,Ks. 66044 CDS & TAPES ~ AUDIO/VIDEO ~ CAR STEREO 13842 1544 913 842 1811 913 842 1438 913 842 1544 913 842 1811 913 842 1438 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 SPORTS NCAA rule will eliminate coaching jobs By Jerry Schmidt Kansan sportswriter Kansas pitching coach Wilson Kilmer said he has worked hard to get to the position he is in. An NCAA rule that will go into effect next season may erase that hard work. The rule, passed during the NCAA Convention in Jan. 1991, will limit college baseball coaching staffs across the nation to one head coach, one full-time assistant coach and one restricted-earnings position, which is limited to a salary of $16,000. The rule will eliminate graduate assistants. Kansas has two graduate-assistant coaches, Rob Hole and Scott Dwyer Kilmer, 35, will be demoted to the restricted-earnings position. Hitting coach/recruiting coordinator Brad Hill, in his second year at Kansas, will be the full-time assistant coach. Wilson Kilmer "Obviously, I'm not too thrilled about it," said Kilmer. "I have worked hard to get to the point where I am. This is a KJ good situation here and it is kind of disheartening to kind of limit your livelihood like that. "It has been a tough decision for me," Bingham said. "He wants to stay in college coaching and wants to get what he is worth. He has a good track record." State in 1984. Kilmer, who has a 3-year-old son, said he will try other ways to make up for the income he stands to lose next season. "We've looked at some different avenues like cambs." he said. Kinner is currently the director of the Dave Bingham Baseball Camps and clinics. Nearly 800 kids attended lastyear's sessions. Bingham said the rule will put an extra burden on the existing coaching staff. "It is already a difficult job," he said. "The sad thing is that they didn't look at baseball. This will limit the development of programs and baseball was not treated fairly." Kilmer said coaches around the country have begun a letter-writing campaign to college chancellors concerning the rule. He said Chancellor Gene Budig has received some letters in regard to the rule. "The cutbacks were to help the students," Kilmer said. "What young men are looking for is to be coached and the rule has cut back this ability." Dwyer and Hole, the Jayhawks' graduate assistants, are in a worse position than Kilmer. They will be unemployed at the end of the season. Dwyer, in his second year at Kansas, said it will be much harder to find a job now that there will be so many coaches in the job market. He said that he is willing to take a restricted-earnings position somewhere or a position at a junior college. Dwyer, a graduate of Menlo College, said the rule will hurt college baseball in the long run. He said others won't have the opportunity to be graduate assistants and gain valuable experience in college coaching. "When I came here I thought I knew a lot about the game." Dwyer said. "I have learned a lot here and it is a shame that other people can't take advantage of it. I hope some things happen so this sort of thing won't happen to the Wilson Kilmers' around." Hole, a graduate of Emporia State in his second year at Kansas, said he plans to interview for the head coaching job at Pratt Community College. He is also certified to teach and coach at the high school level but he wants to stay in the college game. KANSAS VIBE ON Up, up and away Jenni Schmitz, Salina junior, throws the discus during track practice near memorial Stadium in preparation for the final regular season meet this weekend. Softball seeded No.1 in tourney BvCodvHolt Kansan sportswriter "We're going in with the attitude that we have to win," said senior shortstop Christy Arterburn. "We don't want to put it in anyone's hands." Despite a 40-7 record, a No. 9 national ranking and the No.1 seed in the Big Eight Conference tournament which begins today in Oklahoma City, the Kansas softball team isn't taking anything for granted. At stake is a bid to the NCAA regional tournament May 15-17. The winner of the conference tournament receives an automatic bid, but the losers are left to await an at-large bid. Of all the teams in the tournament, the No. 9 Jayahaws are in the best position to receive an at-large bid. But Coach Kalum Haack remembers two years ago when Kansas finished the season No. 13 in the nation but placed second in the post-season conference tournament and did not receive a bid to regionals. "I don't think we're guaranteed of anything," he said. "We're going to have to play well and win the dadgum tournament." Haack said he has his team confident and ready to take on all competitors. "Bring 'em on and we'll play 'em," he said. "And hopefully we'll come out on top." Junior outfieldter Ty Saxby said the reason for the Jayhawks' success is strong leadership from the four seniors, pitching and team defense. "Everyone is contributing," she said. Kansas coach Kalum Haack was named Big Eight coach of the year. Sophomore outfieldier Kelly Bongatti, senior shortstop Christy Arternburn and senior third baseman Camille Spitaleri were all named first-team all-Big Eight. Postseason a possibility for KU By Jerry Schmidt Kansas sportsunter Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team is still alive in the race to make the postseason Big Eight Conference tournament. Kansas plays host to the Missouri Tigers in a four-gameseries this weekend. The Jayhawks and Tigers will play at 7 p.m. onnight with a doubleheader scheduled for 2 p.m. tomorrow. The series will conclude with a game at 1 p.m. Sunday. Kansas, 24-25 overall and 7-13 in the conference, are two games behind fourth place Missouri, 27-19 overall and 9-11 in the conference. For the Jayhawks to make the conference tournament, which takes only the top four conference finishers, they must win three of the four games this week Big 8 Overall Okahama 14-6 33-18 OSU 13-7 35-13 Nebraska 9-7 28-19 Missouri 9-11 27-19 K-State 8-12 27-23 Iowa State 8-12 18-20 Kansas 7-13 24-25 Baseball standings end. Plus, Oklahoma State would have to take three games against Kansas State in their weekend series for the Jayhawks to make the tournament. Kansas coach Dave Bingham said he doesn't think the Wildcats can beat the Cowboys twice in Stillwater, Okla. "Wehave a legitimate chance," he said. "The question is if K-State wins two games at Okla homa State. But they will be playing for the conference championship. So it is very realistic." The Jayhawks must concentrate on tonight's first game as they will be facing last year's co-conference player of the year, Misssouri's ';' senior pitcher John Dettet. Dettet broke his own school record for most strikeouts in a season with 127 last year. "He's not having the kind of season he had last year," Missouri coach Gene McArtor said. "But you can't get much better than what he did last season." Dettmer is 4-3 with a 5.37 ERA and has 81 strikeouts this season. He was 9-4 last season with a 2.63 ERA and 127 strikeouts. A selfish sport Rigorous schedule enables triathlete to succeed By Chris Jenson Kansan sportswriter The day began at 5 a.m. for professional triathlete Clark Campbell. It is a routine he won't break. His jobs as a professional triathlete, full-time student and coach don't accommodate time in the sack. "My life is the ultimate in time management," he says. "If I ever do have dead time I'm catching up on homework or reading." The crisp morning air on whips against the runner's tall, lanky body, as he runs down an isolated gravel road northwest of Lawrence. Dew on the bean fields sparkles as the sun begins its ascent. "Clark is an incredible time manag er," says his mother Kay Campbell "He is very focused." Time management and selfishness are key words for the professional triathlete. Campbell is no exception. Triathlon was conceived, in part, by John Collins, a boisterous and big-headed navy-man who, after a few too many beers, proposed the race. It is now a fixture in its beginnings, the sport attracts eccentric and loose-screw personalities. "This is a very selfish sport," he said. "You, you, you and doesn't involve me." Campbell, a senior from Coffeeville, is neither. He is driven. At the age of 6 he was inspired by watching Mark Spitz swim and win multiple medals in the Olympic games. Drive and focused Campbell to athletics at an early age. 10 a.m. Clark is waiting on Wesco Beach for his exercise physiology class to begin. He is catching up on some reading and laughs when he overhears a conversation between some fellow students. "When he was young he would draw pictures of himself swimming in front of crowds," Kay Campbell says. "He loved the thrill of winning." In 1983, at the age of 16, Campbell entered his first trial. He had been swimming competitively since the age of 14 and was 14, but he had just started cycling. "I like being on campus and hearing I would have done it, but I just didn't have the time." he savs. "I am very mediocre in all three events," he says. "But I had a strong desire to succeed. When I put all three together I was pretty good." During high school Campbell began sacrificing for triathlons. But Campbell has always known what he wanted to do and where he wanted to go. He finished second overall in that race. He was hooked. "The big thing to do when he was in high school was to go out drinking." Kay Campbell says. "He did it once and saw the futility of it. He knew he had to give up some things to excel in sports." In 1894 Campbell entered the University of Kansas. He was an exercise science major and a member of the team. But his mind was elsewhere. "Iwas a horrible student," he said. "I didn't realize the importance of education. When I was in class I was always thinking how I would rather be riding bikes." "He would never really hang out the guys," she says. "He was always too shy." Giving up his social life was easy for Clark, his mother says. After his sophomore year in college it was obvious that Clark was serious about becoming a professional triathlete. He dropped out of school so he could spend his time training and racing. "I was not into being a student. I was into being a triathlete." "I'd always dreamed of being an elite athlete," he says. "Triathlon was His parents weren't surprised. "We weren't disappointed when he dropped out because he had a reason," says Kay Campbell. "He got so busy with his training and racing. Triathlon 3 Continued on Page 9 McFarland/KANSAN Clark Campbell, Coffeeville senior, shares his experience as a triathlete-by coaching the KU triathlon and swim club. Jayhawk athletes dominate in '91-'92 1 David Mitchell Staff columnist The Kansas women's tennis team captured the Big Eight Conference title Sunday. The title marked the team's first championship in 13 years. Indeed, for Kansas athletics, 1981-92 was a championship season. The year began with the Kansas football team marching to its first winning season since 1981. With 40 returning lettermen, the team will be aiming even higher in the fall. The fall semester also brought prosperity to the Jahaykw volleyball team. After finishing third in the Big Eight, Kansas was invited to the National Invitational Volleyball Tournament. It was the team's first appearance in a postseason tourney. Coach Frankie Albitz was honored as the conference coach of the year. The men's cross-country team also made it to postseason play. The 'Hawks made it to the NCAA's and were ranked 15th in the nation. Senior Cathy Palacios and junior Julia Saul made it to nationalas well. Palacios also was dominant in the indoor track season. After winning two of three 1,500-meter runs, she earned All-American honors. For the men's basketball team, 1992 brought both glorious triumphs and unbelievable defeat. The team won its second consecutive Big Eight title. And Coach Roy Williams was honored as the conference's top coach. Kansas dominated the conference and the conference tournament, but fell victim to a second-round jinx against Texas-El Paso in the NCAA tournament. However, the loss could be a good omen for the Jayhawks. The last two Kansas teams that lost in the tourney's second round, 1985 and 1990, advanced to the Final Four the following year. The Jayhawks will return two first-team All-Big Eight guards, Adonis Jordan and Rex Walters. The last time Kansas returned two all-conference performers was with Jo Jo White and Rodger Bohnenstiel in 1968. That Kansas team finished 22-8. Kansas also continued its domination of Kansas State in 1992. The last time the Wildcats beat the Jayhawks in Manhattan was 1983. To put that in perspective, freshman Greg Gurley was 11 years old. Basketball success was not limited to the men's varsity team. Coach Mark Turgeon guided the junior varsity squad to a 19-1 finish. Yet another Big Eight Championship was claimed by the women's basketball team, Coach Marian Washington was honored as the conference coach of the year after guiding the team through an injury-plagued season. Swimming coach Gary Kempf also was honored as the conference's top coach. The Kansas women's team finished first in the conference, and senior Barb Pranger earned All-American honors for the fourth straight year Heading into this weekend, the kansas softball team was ranked first in the nation. Every new season brings remem- brances of the one that precedes it and the one to come. Things have not gone as smoothly for the baseball team. After winning14 of their first 18 games, the Jayhawks have dropped to 24-25. The team can take some comfort in the fact it will lose just one senior, pitcher Curtis Schmidt. David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism. Track team to compete The Kansas track and field team will be competing against two of the Big Eight Conference's top teams this weekend at the Husker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb. But coach Gary Schwartz says he isn't going to be disappointed if the Jayhawks finish third. *Sometimes you gain things by coming in third just because of the caliber Both Nebraska and Kansas State finished ahead of Kansas at the 1991 Big Eight outdoor tournament. But the Jayhawks are hoping to turn the tide at this year's event. The meet will be the first meet of the outdoor season that Kansas has "It's a good opportunity to get in a scoring meet before the Big Eight championships," Schwartz said. Kansan staff report 1 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 9 Schedule enables triathlete to succeed Continued from Page 8. is a lifestyle. We knew at some point he would go back to school." In the summer of 1985 Campbell entered his first triathlon as a professional in Dallas. He was racing against people he had read about and who had been his heroes in the sport. "I was like a kid in a candy store," he says. "I would cream them in the swim and then get blown away. It was beyond anything I've ever comprehended." Campbell managed to finish 13th and was on his way to the top. 5:30 p.m. The cold water in Robinson Natatorium makes Clark's eyes open wide. His evening swim is a nice way to freshen up after an early morning run and a full day of classes. Tonight he'll swim 10, 100-yard sprints to help prepare him for an incoming race. In 1986 Campbell was at the height of his career in the sport. He won the National Long Course Championship and was able to compete for the United States team for the International Cup. When Clark began racing the pro triathlon circuit in 1985, triathlons were just beginning to boom and prize money at races was plentiful. The sport was at its zenith. But the success didn't come without training. An average week of training, at that time, consisted of 30,000 yds. of swimming, 410 miles cycling and 75 miles running. His daily routine consisted of a morning run, breakfast, relax, bike, lunch, nap, swim, eat, sleep. Day in and day out. "The lifestyle leads to selfishness more than anything, and the wear and tear on your mind is worse than the wear and tear on your body," he says. As a result of his success, the International Training Center in San Diego invited Clark to join a select group of athletes at the center. But the year in San Diego also meant a year of sacrificing his relationship with his wife, Ursula, and being away from his roots in the Midwest. in the university. Ursula and Clark met in 1984. She knew him through mutual friends he dated during high school. She remembers her friends that had dated Clark saying he loved his bike more than he loved them. That hasn't been the case with Clark and Ursula. She never knew Clark when he wasn't training and devoting the majority of his time to triathlons. "If he had picked up triathlons in the middle of our marriage it would have ended in divorce," she says. "But I don't know him any different." Clark made the decision to devote himself to triathlon and to a marriage at virtually the same time. He says marriage helped bring stability to a life that can get very hectic. "Marriage has brought me a lot of stability because I am no longer being pressured from 4,000 different sources," he says. Now, triathletes have learned better and more efficient methods of training and the long hours he once put into training are over. "My training now is minimal, but smart," Clark says. "To compete at the elite level now, it's not a question of how much you do, but how smart you do it." "I use my body as a laboratory," he said. "It's important to know your body and to find out what is good and bad for you." Campbell now puts in 12,000 to 20,000 yds. of swimming, 5-8 hrs. of cycling and 3-5 hrs. of running per week. The sport too has slowed down. Although participation in triathlons is still strong, the prize money for the top professionals has been cut drastically. Races that used to pay $15,000 through the top seven finishes now pay $5,000. Only the top two finishers at a given race can break even on travel and lodging expenses for that race. This has caused top triathletes, including Campbell, to pursue other avenues for sources of income. For Clark, the obvious answer was coaching. 7:30 p.m. Time for the change from athlete to coach. Twelve members of the KU triathlon and swim club are preparing for their workout. The club's athletes are just a few of the many people Clark has been coachi- In 1898 Campbell began his own coaching business, Sci/Tri. He had been turned on to coaching during his year in San Diego and it was a nice way to supplement his income. In 1989 he had eight clients. Now he have 47 clients in 11 states and spends 12-15 hours a week designing personalized training schedules for athletes. "Clark has made training a lot more fun," says Sean Roland, president of the KU triathlon club. "Because he is a pro you would think he would only be interested in people that are good. But he is interested in everyone. Good or bad. He wants to make everyone better." Clark says he enjoys working with athletes from a coaching standpoint more warmth than acting, he says. Campbell says that his coaching also has been a good stabilizing force for him. "I like to race, but coaching is much more rewarding than racing." he says. "Coaching has taken away the selfishness of triathlon because I don't have to dwell on myself," he says. "I can see the success from my athletes. It means more to me than doing well myself because I know I had a hand in it." Clark has also immersed himself in his studies. He is taking 18 hours of classes this semester and will graduate with a degree in exercise science in December. But he still enjoys toeing the startline at triathlons around the country. Saturday he will attempt to give the University its first National Championship in the sport of triathlon. Asa full time student Clark is allowed to represent KU at the National Collegiate Championships at Lake San Antonio, California. The race will be the first national collegiate triathlon championship. "This will be my first and biggest race of the spring," he says. "I'm really confident that I can win the championship." Nine p. m. The day is winding down and Clark and Ursula have some time to spend together. Finally. "We still hardly see each other," Ursula saves. Clark usually hits the bed early, but only if he has finished his daily training and tasks. He's been a professional triathlete for eight years and the routine has stayed virtually the same. "I've been doing this so long I don't really know any different," he says. For all the sacrifice, Campbell has nothing but appreciation for the sport. "I've seen things I've never seen, experienced things that I’ve never experienced," he says. "I'm thankful for what triathlon has given me." He does have one small regret. 10 p.m. The head hits the pillow and it won't be long before a deep slumber will follow. It is a well-earned rest. After all, another day will begin at 5 a.m. "I miss being able to eat a Johnny's burger or a Joe's doughnut," he says. "But after eating one, I'm glad I don't eat them every." BOOK SALE at J. Hood, Booksellers over 2,000 Hardcover Books $1.00 each Entire Stock 20% OFF May 1-18·1401 Massachusetts WHILE SUPPLIES LAST FREE 1 9 9 2 OLYMPIC GAMES T-SHIRT 36 USC 380 WITH PURCHASE OF The Etc. 928 Mass. Shop 843-0611 Ray-Ban Sunglasses by Bausch & Lomb Hit the deck! Friday: $2.50 Margaritas $1.00 23 oz. Beer ON THE DECK! 615 Mass. 842-6560 Parking in rear Quinton's BAR & DELI PUZZLED ABOUT HOW TO SPEND YOUR SUMMER? - Pick up a freshman or sophomore requirement. - Take a tough course while you can focus on it. - Get an elective out of the way. - Take a course you want to take,but can't fit into your schedule. Enroll in summer school at HCC! Session 1--4 weeks, June 1-26 Session 2--4 weeks, June 29--July 24 Enroll Now! Call 1-800-289-3501 MIDDLEBURY COMMONWEALTH HUTCHISONS COMMUNITY COLLEGE I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY. Orchards Corners 15th and Kasold 749-0440 TWO LOCATIONS NOW SERVING LAWRENCE Louisiana Purchase 23rd and Louisiana 843-5500 A Small, Medium or Large Cup or Cone With This Coupon AΔΠ Seniors: RIDE - Friday and Saturday May 29-30 THAT STATUE MOVED - Thursday June 4 MATERIALISSUE - Friday June 5 FLATDUQJETS ΔΠ Seniors: Hope is the little voice inside your heart that keeps telling you everything will be all right. Dreaming helps give your life direction and believing helps make your dreams come true. Best of luck Seniors! We'll miss you! ... Love, your sisters - Thursday May 21 SINCITY DISCIPLES - Wednesday June 17 ALIEN SEX FIEND 510 WESTPORT ROAD KANSAS CITY MO. (816) 561-2222 STUDY BREAK When You're Ready for a We'll Be Here 50$ OFF Shadow The Shadow in KC welcomes all of our Lawrence friends back to Kansas City for the summer coming events. BUNGEE JUMPING A - Saturday May 16 PALE DIVINE - May 7-9 SYMETRIX * Tuesday May 12 From England **RIDE / SLOWDIVE** $59.00 ONE 140ft. JUMP Including BUNGEE VIDEO JUMPING $89.00 TWO 140ft. JUMPS Group Rates Available VERTICAL ADDICTIONS INC. CALL FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS 841-1211 1-800-321-JUMP Marie's Bouquet of Flowers Flowers for all occasions... - corsages - - boutonnieres • - green plants- Flow - green plants - - balloon bouquets - - wedding service - - wedding service - delivery service - delivery service - - wire service • - funeral service • ALLMAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED 1822 W. 23rd (Next to Yello Sub) HOURS: M-F-9, T-S-9 749-2212 10 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1. 1992 Hoch rebuilding plans are unveiled Kansanstaffreport At the last meeting of the academic school year yesterday, University Council members were given the full run-down on the University plans to rebuild Hoch Auditorium. Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, and Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, described the architectural plans for the new building, which they said they hoped will be ready for students in three years. Shankel said the plans included providing an equal amount of space for both classrooms and library areas. The teaching space will include a 1,000-seat hall, two 500-seat halls, four 50-seat classrooms, and office space for faculty and graduate teaching assistants. Fifty percent of the space will be used for library stacks and storage space. An overhead skywalk will connect the library space in Hoch with the Anschutz Science Library. Shankel said. Some faculty questioned the use of Hoch for library space instead of for the proposed multicultural center. The administration announced plans for a multicultural center at 14th and Louisiana streets last week. Beazaleel Benjamin, professor of architectural engineering, said, "I share the concern of losing prime Jayhawk Boulevard space to library storage when the multicultural center is going to be on Louisiana." Shankel said that the library space was needed, and that placing the multicultural center near the Kansas Union on Louisiana Street was beneficial for the students. HALO-sponsored fiesta honors Cinco de Mayo Although Cinto de Mayo is a celebration of a Mexican battle victory and of Latin American culture, members of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization say that many nationalities joint the festivities. "There are Latin American students that come, but people from the Lawrence community also do," she said. HALO members also will participate in a parade Sunday Cineo de Mayo, which literally means "May 5" is celebrated as a traditional fiesta with food and dancing. Kelsey Williams, historian of HALO, May 5 was the day of the Battle of Battlefield XII. The parade, which will start in Kansas City, Kan, and continue on into Kansas City, Mo., will celebrate Hispanic culture. Although most people may have heard of Cinco de Mayo, many are not aware of its meaning. Williams said that France had invaded Mexico. When the French tried to take the city of Puebla, Mexican troops pushed them back. Classified Directory 100's 200's Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business personal 120 Entertainment 130 Entertainment 140 Lost & Found 100s Announcements Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 235 Typing Services 105 Personal Dear Addies: MICHAEL JACKSON JULIANNE BROWN Did you ever Dance with the Devil in The Pale Moon Light. Love The Toad. P. Happily Borrowed Love. "Gooo! I'm not taking a mock. Ball is in your hands." "Christmas of 92 could be reality." "Sweetest day of the year." Happy Birthday Briah H! Even though we won't be bridesmaids we'll always be friends forever POLICE JOHNSON Bill H. *Happy* H. 22 this $40 for 4 you do man Bill H. *Happy* H. 22 this $40 for 4 you do man Bill H. *Bite* H. 07 you do man Bill H. *Bite* H. 07 you do man PETRA JOHNSON Boomer. Be thankful I did use the T-word. I love visiting Washington. These seven months have been worth it. Kathi. Ask Randy M. where he was last Sunday night. The answer will amaze you. D J F «Crankie» Harvard School of Law in looking for you to teamfarmamen together. Here's to logbooks, the "Big" 1.0., and strict deadlines- NOT! We'll miss you! Love, the Production Dummies Rafael, what about dinner and the Cutting Edge?! Rebecca. I can’t believe it’s over. We finally lived together, and we’re still best friends. Have a great time in Hawaii. I miss you too. Love you! 8-4-F 110 Bus. Personal Ski Fingers! Finally you can relax for a day or two (I hope!) Way to go. Have a great summer! Love Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban Sunglasses The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. 843-0611 1045 New MC/Vise 843 VOLKSWAGEN 9494 24 Years of Experience IMPORTS X TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE 400's 16 East 13th 842-1133 300's FREE Olympic t-shirt with purchase of Ray-Ban Sunglasses by Bausch & Lomt Eic. Shop The Etc Shop 928 Mass A Real Estate 405 For Rent 430 Roommate Wanted Merchandise 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full-service auto repair shop. B.C. classifies to computerized. American motorcycle repair and accessories. 310x Nbh 6th-844-6955. Master's, Awardcard & Discover cards accepted. Sexual assault is on the rise in Lawrence? Call DWEitness-843-209. Do you walk alone to your car at night? Call DYE witness - 843-206-96 Hairport announces that Joe Hockock has joined the staff at Harperp, 925 Iowa. He features 1/2 feature haircuts and professional services by mentioning or for the month April & May of 1989. Call 842-1978 "New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Cik. Makes it useful to use! Aviary, Great and Town Cic Bookstores. PRINTED name cards quick. Carr Lettress Press. 842-2313. SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP Basic Tune up: $29.98 Road $34.98 ATB Lubrication, true wheels. check all cables, adjust brakes and derailleurs, headset,bottom bracket both hubs and wine down Tune up plus cleaning of drive train and bike, plus a rebuild of two of the following: bottom bracket, headset, front hub, rear hub 804 Massachusetts 843-5000 SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP SNOWPALACE IS OPEN!!! Bicycle Maintenance and Basic Roadside Repair Clinics Sensational summer in Hawaii hawaiian ice, 78 favors. Now in our fourth wonderful season. 25% and 19%. - Job Interviews 804 Massachusetts 843-5000 - Affordable International Fares The cooperative way of doing business is an active expression of peace and justice. Join us in our mission to promote cooperation, personal and environments health. Stop by the Community Mercantile Co-op and find out what you can become a member. We need your support! 700 Rivers Rd., #8544 - Student Discounts AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117 Sign up now for our clinic and learn how to SNOWPALACE ISOPEN!!! 3:30 TODAY - Summer Vacation Saturday morning from 10AM to Noon. Cost $7.50 keep your bike running smoothly. Clinics offered every Saturday morning Packages - Lowest Air Fares to Get You Home!! TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 W. 23rd M-F 9-5.30 Sat 9:30-2 pm Located By Perkins 120 Announcements Going home to the "Big City" for the summer! Call @dadee or of "dadee" call DYE@w84-8299 Can't identify your attacker? Call DYEwitness 843- 2096 Hillel Events of the Week Final Shabbat Dinner Hillel House 6:00 pm Friday, May 1 Sunday, May 3 Thursday, May 7 & Monday, May 11 Annual Hillel Awards Brunch Sunday, May 17 Hillel House 9:00 pm Hillel House 4:00 pm Graduation Open House Come to the DRIVE-In this Friday Night Double @ THE BEST LANDING BEFORE BUNCHED @ THE & THIING $1 per hour at BUNCHED Art Museum. Bring your friends. Bring a date. Brought to you by your students at Student Union please call 864-3948 Douglas County Rape victim support service provides on-going peer support groups. For more information please call Headquarters Counseling Center 841-2435 or R V S 842-1626. Last chance to take a break before final! OAKS has a picnic on Day May, 7th. We will be at Centennial Park. Starts 11:30 a.m. Call OAKS 864-7317 For anonymous info and support for AIDS concern, call 841) 2424. Headquarters 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 Learn Audio Engineering This Summer. Red Learn Recording School for information, call 141-680- 2370. GRADUATION CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH* C SUNDAY,MAY17,1992 10.00am-1.00tm 10. 00am-1.00pm Glazed Ham. Free Party room at Johnny's Tavern Up & Under across the bridge on Massachusetts. Call 842-7877. Quality Inn 130 Entertainment You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support You're not alone! Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual support For confidential contact Custom-Carved Roast Beef $10.95 adults, $8.95 Seniors, Baked Breast of Chicken 215.395 Children Bath & Iowa Reservations 842-7030 recommended Quality Inn HIP HOPS PARTY AT THE TEPEE 2 FOR 1 WELLS JACKOPIERCE TABLE TEEPING Saturday nite, May 16, 1992 All you can drink on the house 10:30 m till AT BENCHWARMERS Friday May 1 Found half-eaten Twinkie on Potter's Lake Bridge picked up at Lawrence Police. (Banaghannaphy Found - Glasses on 11th street next to stadium. Call to identify 843-797. Leave message the last person leaves Found: long haired black cat. Found at 621 Gate Creek. Smoke from male tabby dog barking. Smoke from smoky male tabby dog barking. 200s Employment Found. Smoky grey male tabl cat dodging traffic 2000 block Mass 843-578 205 Help Wanted $4.25 per hour part time Summer Semester 7 a.m. - 11 a.m. 1-2 days/week The University Daily Kansan has a position available for a student to proofread advertising during the summer semester. You'll work every Tuesday morning, checking advertising for the Wednesday paper. You'll also proof ads for back-to-school sections on an as-needed basis, so you'll need a flexible schedule. Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar and a fundamental understanding of the aesthetics of layout. Contact Jeanne Hines Sales & Marketing Adviser 8 a.m.-1.30 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WAREHOUSE 20 Openings; 55 Hour, 40 Hours Week, Apply on Monday from 10 a.m.-Noon at 901 Kentville. 201 A. Kentucky #204 A Applications now being accepted. Immediate party time openings, all shifts. Apply at add Sb & Staff. Please contact us at info@cbsm.org SUMMERJOB 50OPENINGS $4.50-$7 per Hour. We have a large number of clerical & light industrial positions in Johnson County. For more information call: 1-362-5793 Certified nurse aid and nurse assistant position offered by Woods Retirement Community 1501 Inverness Ave., CRUISER SHPRS HIRING Earn $2,000 + money. Summer and Career employment available. No experience necessary. For program call 1:206-545- 4135 ext C022 I'm looking for seven people to work with me in my business this summer. Avg. $485+/wk Travel & Experience Call 1-800-824-7129 Dormean needed Part time weekends. Apply in person 7:10 p.m, Thursday. Just a Playhouse on Friday. Experienced maintenance person needed for permanent care of a 15-year-old girl in atrium of Richard Square Apartments 509 College Street, Los Angeles. Earn $10 per lecture. Now nuring Jon's Notes for Fall 92 - Need notakers for a variety of topics. See course website or email us at info@uc.edu. Female help was needed for housekeeping Mondays and Wednesdays at 12 to 843-3366. Full time bus pass Part间走水隙 or waitress Top of the Tower Topoka Bank IV Tower Apply Summer Jobs - Gain experience Sales-Outside *Top income *Earn up to $4,000 - Top income - Earn up to $4,000 Long & Short-term positions available on all three Longs in the following areas: sorting, packing, transporting and warehousing (avoid the city congestion and just use minutes from Lawrence). Ideal candidates should be responsible, hardworking. MUST HAVE PHONE AND BLANKET. Apply or call today! Manpower Temporary Serve 301-849-2600, EOE, 749-2600. Serving Lawrence since 1977 Massa's pizza is now accepting applications for its summer and fallSummer, and apply at Mascala at 23th and 24th Street. Medical Office seekees for fall 2019. * must be Kansas career work/study eligible, *B145-84758* MODELNS & ACTORS USED. Professional 79-80 TVs, Television sets, DVDs, and other entertainment (for TV) from 79/10/79 to 54/10/90. Keyboard lessons - Professional keyboardist has boarded 614-800-9999, Jon Woolley Eagles and 841-800-9999 New England-Summer Camp for Girls. Tennis Enthusiasts. Instructors needed for excellent summer teaching opportunity, 11 courts, competitive salary, room/board, and travel allowance. Call Westminster School. Westminster School, Montville, NJ 07948 or call: 827-785-8066 for an application or more information. Naisimh Hall now hiring dining room help. Start May 14 to 18 per hr. Apply on the front desk, Nai- simh Hall. New owners seeking amenable, honest mature part-time employees for clerking, marketing, inventory management & daily duties. Apply at 2447 W. 5th (Quik Grocer) Non-smoking student to babystay one year old boy in our large air conditioned room. 6 hours per day, as few as or as many as five days each week. Flexible schedule. Start date: 6/19/2002 - 09/06/2007 Part-time aide at licensed home day care. Experience necessary 842 2150 Personal care attendant for May '92 & summer evening assists former Professor, age, male 89 w/transfers to and from wheel chair and all activities of daily living. Prefer background in nursing, occupational or physical therapy or related help. Frequent Fluent English required. 483-570 after 6 p.m. Student Volunteers for Political Campaign - Get involved - Build a resume - Gain experience If you are going to be in Johnson County this summer, call 383-9058 for more information. Person wanted to drive small truck to Calif. end May. Must be 25, Call 749-1729 STUDENT MONTHLY NEWESTLEY EDITOR DEADLINE 5-4-192. Salary $500/month. Duties include creating and managing planning, writing, editing, photography, layout and mailing list maintenance. Apply to sub-committee of the Communications reference, a current transcript, and a sample of your expository writing in a newsletter or technical newsletter. Position requires Manager, Department of Telecommunications, University of Alabama Lawrence, Kennesaw, GA 35076 or AAEMOEMPLOYER Student Microcomputer Programmer position available in the College of LA&S Systems Analysis beginning May 1, 2016. Utilize training and preparation programs; Installation and configuration of hardware & software; Troubleshooting departmental microcomputer problems; Maintenance of software & programming on MS-DOS microcomputers; Experience with installation of boards in microcomputers; Responsible for technical staff. Preferred Qualifications: Familiarity with Telnet/Z� Microsoft Windows, Web Server, Oracle Database, weeks/year during summer with possible half-time during academic year. $6.00/hour. Complete application form in Room 207 Strong Hall. Deadline: July 31. Student with car to care for two girls age ten to summer. Basis hours to in, to in on weekdays. SUMMER WORK! SUMMERSTITTER/TUOR Weekdays/dayly Flies for kSU student. Boy, T10 2:17, easy going Nicehome. J. Hawk bookstoreearl. Have care &relax on weekdays. 4:00 a.m. p10. weekly day any weekdays. School's out! Temporary work's in! The paying assignments are waiting for skilled students who need immediate summertime work. Learn all about the process and position requirements for temporary. Positions available for word processing, general office, data entry, general labor, light industrial and shipping/receiving. Please call or stop by our office or call for more information. 211-894-3808. Manpower Transfer Services EOE This Summer You Could Earn $5.300+ Experience Cash Experience Advancement Travel Challenge For more information call 842-0924 PARTTIME POSITION Long term temporary position available. Monday through Thursday 11:30-14:30 or work for research company help with phones and lunch. For more information, call Temporary Services at 749-2800, 211 E 8th Ave. 军人架 job. Kansai City Mac and Jnanw府 job. Karasu Summer position open. Farm experienced necessary. Apply in person at Webster's, 801 North 2nd Dr. SUMMERWORK - International Firm - $9.25 starting - Excellent advancement potential - Training provided - Coop & internship opportunities - Openings in Lawrence. - Openings in Lawrence, Kansas City, Omaha, Wichita, St. Louis, Chicago, Topeka - Interview Now! Start before or after finals - Call 832-3610 for an interview 225 Professional Services Yacht Club - Now accepting applications for cooks, barman, and barge crew employment. Please apply in person at $8W. Please contact us at 1-800-432-6570. Wanted summer companion daily M-5 for 9-9t girl. Must be 18 yrs old, licensed driver, swim instructor, and has a boat license. Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749. JON'S NOTES For final exams... Buy single lectures or full subscriptions Located in Jayhawk Bookstore Jon's Notes hours 9:00:50 M-F Call 841-1737 Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749 RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law DWI/Traffic and most other legal matters Free Consultation 823 Missouri 843-4023 Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping. Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street 843-4600 Thesis & Dissertations For better grades, call PAPER PRIS. Editing, organizing, source evaluations, proof reading. Reasonable rates. References available. Very experienced in literature and humanities. Becky Getting married at Dandfonn this Spring? Organist with years of experience will play at your wedding. Government photos, passports, immigration, veterans portrait, modeling & art portfolios. www.marysart.org Elizabeth Leach Attorney - FREE Initial Consultation - Criminal Defense -Fake ID's DUI/TRAFFIC Former Prosecutor 1031 Vermont 749-0087 PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services Overland Park (913) 491-6078 - Receptions Prompt contraception and abortion services in 'awrence' 841-5716. - Dinners - Breakfast for Two Impeccable Tastes - Special Events - Breakfast for Two Call 865-3928 Providing fine food for the Lawrence Community 1 + Typing/WP Letters, term papers, resumes, 842-4754-430 5.30 wks anytimes wkends 235 Typing Services Accurate typing by former Secretary $12/$0.50 Maitress M.Attila M.D. Correcting Selective. Call Mrs. Matiliaa M.B. 184-129 A + Word Processing turns your frys into Rana pan pies. Special characters don’t upset you. P.C. fries! For professional typing of term papers, reports, resumes, etc., call FAST & Accurate Word Processor to create the document. Hardware iMIM Compatibility Wood Protection Bord Perimeter iMIM Compatibility Wood Cancellation iMIM Compatibility Wood Word Processing Word Perfect Laser Printer Word Carving $1.50 per double-spaced page 842 Laser Printing $1.99 per double-spaced page Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes, Editing, composition, rash words. 300s Merchandise Merchandise 305 For Sale 100 Watt Magnavox receiver/w/remote, 2mths old sakings $12, is-rated raised platform, in-room for large spaces. Pioneer tapecked $50, Queen size bed frame 15, 919 white modern bride wedding dress, lace bodice size 14-16, $75 used once, new cost $400. Call 843 2463. 87 Panasonic road bike 22" Shimano components, touring pack mounts, extensive tune up $150.00 A great deal Tascam pera studio 60s &rackt in brandness condition will include Shure microphone $450.00 .TR5 360 LAND Drum machine /harmon composer -$95.00 Chris81-8435. Dark blue soft/bed made condition 75.00 ± 85.43 cd DTK 80266 M Ram 28 MB HD with WPWS i windows and other softwares. 700 OBO Call 842-7279 after 5p.m. Five seats left on GRAND CANYON Trip May 18-24 Celebrate the beginning of summer on this multilingual, multi-cultural adventure through Dena Simonsen's campus. Explore quarque, and Colorado Springs. $25/person for coach bus and housing. Sign up in Internation Business Students, Room 2 Strong Hall 1644 36471. For Sale. New match new chest of drawers and TV./Brilliant/restore. Very reasonably priced. Will fit most brands. for sale 2 couches and color T. V. other furniture 842-3166 or leave message University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 11 Full size fusion. Black. 4-inch foam core. Excellent card. $100.098-7227. 727 Kingise mini-semi-waveled waterbed with hoater, toilet, bed rail架, and sheets, all for $75. Catch 10 lbs. of water per day. Kingize waterbed, new $100 obo. Sublure 2 bedroom, garage,床本, $695, $843, act! fast obo Call 842-8878 MUST SELL. Mac Powerbook 140, new 4M, ram 40M hard drive, all manuals, Full warranty, $2199, Call 842- 826 ask for Paul. oracle Video Adult Movies for sale. From $9.95 841-7944 841-8903 nintendo* System and cartridges Cheap Call Bruce 749-2033 evenings New 823; $44.549 Sony CDP-1000 player for sale. Excellent condition $275.00 TREK 800 mountain bike. 18" w/ accessories, like new $235 841-549. Two1082 HRCA Urban Express Mopeds. Excellent condition. 842-3143/after 50:00 Rollerblades. Hardy worn. Mens 81/2 with pads. $120 Scott 892-6718. Waterbed, king-sized, hrt new mattress, $100 Speed racer 2.5x6 callo4999, T/ T/ $1,849 speed racer 2.5x6 callo4999, T/ T/ $1,849 centibit desktop computer, 20 meg, hard drive, 3.5 inch floppy disk, various software, must sell $15.95 340 Auto Sales 1979 Corday, excellent condition, excellent motor color, white red, yellow green. 1980 Corday, excellent condition, excellent motor color, white red, yellow green. 1981 Corday, excellent condition, excellent motor color, white red, yellow green. 1984 Honda Hurricane 600 runs/looks great $290 Wildlife Sanctuary 1993 Nipa 2400 x 720 miles Hume/looks great $250 1994 Nipa 2600 x 720 miles Hume/looks great $250 1979 RS-7, run well, automatic, excellent cacheset of RAM. Works well in 256MB or larger. And Surf7, Very clean, dependable '80 Mazda RX 7 X$750 Call Dan 841-5684 **28" Toyota Celica, sunroof, free rear wiper with** **Whole package only $159!** **Jeep Wrangler JL 4x4** **$3,500*** 83 Honda Civic, Burgundy, 2.0DR hatchback, speed, AM/FM (Cassette) ambient condition, fuel efficiency 84 "Bellica GTS Mts condition 110k, all options, all records, white, 5000 abc 804-1155 c. chev, Spectrum, auto, AC, cassette, $1475-842- 7169 or 1-774-2000 *@Datamax 280 Z, 1296, A/C new tires, battery* *@Datamax 280 Z, 1296, Mechanic's refrig.* *@Datamax 280 Z, 1296, $149 800 205* Honda Hurricane 87 - New tires, battery, lots of lots, runs excellent, $29000 B O R 84-2747 Marda pick up,1998, 3spd, AC warranty, 20,000 mi, FM; MAP Tape, mobile phone, 8601-841-2600 Motorcycle (95) 10Hock Shire 199c. Has hastras motorcycle (60) 8Hock Shire 192c. Must appraise appreciable MUST SELL. 78 Old Cults, ugly but runs great. $500. Calls morning: 749 2032 360 Miscellaneous BUY SELL LOAN CASH on TVs, TVCs, jewelry, sternos, musical instrument VCA, MOEM, AMEX, Jayhawk VCA & Jewelry, VCA/MOEM. CORRUGATED BOXES 370 Want to Buy Moving storage & trash boxes Lg. quantities at discount prices & small quantity Wals ins welcome Call 843-8111 Ask for Services Dept Cash & carry free peeps, unique! 1/2 pup/1/2 German Shop book. Must find. Meet Fred. Call/Read 843-7900 Want to buy broken moped. 843-4728. Please leave message $ Will Buy $ Brokend VCR/stereo. Pay up to $30 $ 315-105 Message. Keep this EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 405 For Rent Help! I need 18" Mt bike, two man tent big backpack. I want to ask all of these, call me Katie. 1136 Louisiana. 2/bd Summer sublease/option to lease in fall. Call Travis Tom. 842-8390 & 1.2 BDHM Apt near campus. Available June | No Pets. Ask for Dick #842 8971 1 Bdrm available now. Washer/dryer, $150 Call 841-569 合 1 Bedroom House Available June 1 Near campus ask for Dick 824 8971 1900 NAISMITT 3 or 2 BRB 2 bath large rooms total kitchen (inc microwave) cable & phone in all bedrooms. Cable paid free Storage on site coin-op laundry Noptes 841-1336 or 266-769 This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. I Bdr. Xiem Cond, Furnished, Central Air. 1224 1018 Sage Hill May or June 1822-5172 1 Bdnr Apt furn. pool sublease avail Mid-May $333 month 832.0630 1 Bdrm studio for summer, 1018 & Ohio A/C/la- nzer, off street parking, $150/month, 430-906- 2765. 1 bdmr house $250 or 2 bdmr for $300 Close to campus. *N*194 Mississippi 184-7803 I bedroom, Waker /Dryer, Extra clean and quiet Microwave M56 Available now 794-413 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 color, race, gender or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." 2 large Bdsm, 2 bfh Meadowbrook Apt available for summer sublet: 749-166-860 negotiable 3 BD Summer sublease May 15, basement 1 bath, 2 bedrooms from Crossing, close to din- cal Bell-1845-06. 2SUBilese-Summer 3BR TBownhouse W/D/13dil Kasold $600/mo neg 4 BR House near 23rd & Lawrence Ave, W/D, garage, fenced bkyd -nice $800/mo den 841-295 3 Bedroom duplex, summer sublease, beg May 15 2 Bedroom duplex campus. Beg nag C or leave among students 841-807-6193. APPLECROFT APARTMENTS Now leasing 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Water, tracht, heat, A and C paid on KU bus route. Dishwasher, microwave and disposal. Laundry furniture, pool furniture ($400-$500) Call: Christian 843-8220 Attractive 2 BR unfurnished apt. 15th - Tennessee Availability June 1. Lease $200 + mo. deposit. 48k+ avani Aug. 19 - yr-old bt townhome; 2bath; 2car garage; 1garage; Jeans租费 $700/mo west side of garage; 2garage; Jeans租费 $80/mo east side of garage; vault. Auat - 33B pt in nice older house 1300k black pillow. Auat - 29B pt in nice old house 840k blue amn blinds. 85c mats. No petp. 841-1074 No pillow. 841-1074 Available Aug. 1 Berm Apm. in renovated old house. Window A/C; O off street pikng. Modern kitchen & bath, walk to KU or downstreet. No pets $329 841-1074 3 Bedroom LENXa Townhouse 2/12 baths, garage. $700.刀镣 /uplus.刃 + usages 84-105. No Pet's 3BR Apt. New 2 full bath, 2levels, close to campus. May visit MW. D microfilm, 5% wortil m with swirl. 4BR Apt. New 2 full bath, 2levels, close to campus. 3 bd. house near downtown & camp. $252/mth + 12 mth lease of house June, 1 Depn. $25. No pets. No smokers Call Rachel 842-2540 or Harold 1-800- 842-5960. 5 bd. house near camp $650/mth - util 12 mh lease June 19, 2005 - camp $650/mth - util 12 mh lease August 19, 2005 - camp $650/mth - util 12 mh 6075 Apartment for $500 sublease. On营运 (1144 6075) 3 Bedroom 2 bath. Brand 921-812-012. www.madisonmortgages.com Absolutely Steel, Subleather 31R, 28A, microwave, dishwasher, and reduced for $400/mi Walks to KU or Downtown. Small I Bdrm apt available June or Aug. Large private deck. Window A/C, Ceiling fan, off street pking, no pets $235. 841-1074. Available May 15a 2 bedroom apartment between downtown & campus. Close to GSIP/Corbin. No pets. $470 plus deposit. All utilities paid. Call 841-207-3630. Available Aug. small B2d Rip Apl. in nice old house 100 block of Vermont. 2 ceiling fans. room A/C/ off street parking. Large kitchen, large bedrooms nothing living. No pets. $730.841-1074 Available August small cuft 1 bmr basement apartment in old house 3200 black Vermont. Water paid. No tax. Classic 8 BR 4 bath ear riverfront. Newly restored inside. carpet floor, laundry, June 15th. $279.00 darring Star Studios 1, 2, 3 BR in older well-kept builtups (BAST MR287), ... EMERYPLACE Now leasing for summer and fall sacpious studios and 1 bedrooms, some with utilities paid. Only 1/2 blocks from campus. Private parking. Launceston facade. 1438 4123 IU Oshawa. Call 847-6844 for appointment. Excellent Location, near campus. 2 bd apl. at, 301 University Drive, June and July $460 (134) Our. Call 842-576-9581 Beverage & Foodsupplies supplied for your first party. Great quality. 8oz bottles. 12 oz cans. Garage, on hrs BT 1C8412772 www.metrofoods.com For Summer sublease to graduate or upperclass student. One bedroom furnished apartment one block from Union. No pets. Refs $250 mo. Call Bells 823-1410. Furnished room with shared kitchen and bathroom. Most unitities paid. Nopets 814-5500 Great Deal! ONLY $1000 4 BR Supper Sublease. Available mid-May "Large kitchen, large W/D, D/W, living areas 2 bath, vanity/cabinet, sink, park- ing area" spareskryer system, motion lights. Call 865-0925 Great location! 1801 Mississippi I BR basement location! A, equipped kitchen. Avail June 1. No parking. Groove bedroom apartment to sublease $183 but negotiable location. Sundance Suite Call 7929 Hey! KU Med Students. Rainbow Tower Apartments in lean & gether 1&8 KSU. Basketball, tennis, swimming, Water & Water paid, pool, spa, jacuzzi, aa, spa covered parking. 350 Lexington Rd. K C KS 6135. Across Hillview Apts $15 lease signing bonus! * 1 & 2 bedroom apartments * 1 Bedroom apartment (841-543-7900 or 840-685-8988) * 841-543-7900 or 840-685-8988 LEASE FOR NOW FALL. Extra nice 2 BR GACT, AC laundry/storage, fireplace, New yard/nighborhood. No pets lease & fees req. after a single small family or 465.875 after. LEASE FOR NOW FALL. Possibly available sooner. Extra fee for room. Good loca- tion. Free on-site MARR garage. Bathroom, nice ward. No pets. Lease & Refs. req. Couple. Single or small family pref $220 mo negotiation $85. Leasing for summer and fall - furnished 1, 2 and 4 rooms on campus root camp with off-street parking. Nearest 50 blocks. Lorimar townhouses 3801 Clinton Parkway available June 1st. 3 bedroom townhouses 12-14 month lease. 2 baths. All kitchen buildings including a laundry room, including basic cable. 841-789-843-1433 One and two bedroom apt. now leasing for summer & fall. Call 841-835-9458 is where the ❤️ Heatherwood Valley Apts. Spacious i, 1 & 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 *843-4754* Most must submit cheap 38pt氨 | Meadowbrook must substitute cheap for fall, A$40 + elec for F-1118 1849 66 Jice bedroom apt. and studio apt. Available June 1 for students. 790-666. Lots of window covers or doors. 790-666. Pin Oak Townhouse for Rent Aug 1. 2 and 3 BR, 470-430/mi Call 649-8249 after May 31 fust rent, summer sublease. Will negotiate rent 2 baths, 2 baths. W/D. New appliances, park- ing lot. Nice 2b Sublease, $360/mo. Call Josh 823-0076 904 Arkansas Run your own runet or sorority 6-bedrooms, 2baths, living room, dining rm, laundry, AC, self-cleaning stove, garbage disposal, W/D, paved parking room, kitchen, bedroom, bath, outdoor MTa. Topeka 906 Wichita, KS 67214 Read for privacy? Big clean studio available June 1 - option to sign fall leave. A/C, $265, summer rent $139, winter rent Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 Now losing for West Hills APARTMENTS - 1 bedroom apts. 735 sq. ft $295 to $350 per month - 2 bedroom apts. 950 sq. ft. $365 to $435 per month Great Location - Near Campus OPEN HOUSE IDEAL LOCATION Place Campus *3 bedroom* *2 bath* *Dishwasher* *Rentmateglobale Call 832-1177 (Ask for Steph) OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs. 1:00-4:30 p.m. no appt. needed (othertimes / appt.) This ad for original building only Short-term or long-term 3-month, 7-24hour, bath, fully furnished, apartment for phone or phone card. Spacious two bedroom apartment, cheap utilities $255 monthly, on bus route 841-406R or 832-2332 Available June 1st 2-month, or 1-year lease This ad for original building only includes Physell STUDIO APARTMENT : Summer sublease, very quiet, clean, close to library, perfect for graduate students. Cheap. Gas and water paid. Call 832-1774 or 865-0176. South Pointe APARTMENTS LIVING ROOM BEDROOM BATH SHELTER FLOOR 1 FLOOR 2 FLOOR 3 FLOOR 4 FLOOR 5 FLOOR 6 FLOOR 7 FLOOR 8 FLOOR 9 FLOOR 10 FLOOR 11 FLOOR 12 FLOOR 13 FLOOR 14 FLOOR 15 FLOOR 16 FLOOR 17 FLOOR 18 FLOOR 19 FLOOR 20 FLOOR 21 FLOOR 22 FLOOR 23 FLOOR 24 FLOOR 25 FLOOR 26 FLOOR 27 FLOOR 28 FLOOR 29 FLOOR 30 FLOOR 31 FLOOR 32 FLOOR 33 FLOOR 34 FLOOR 35 FLOOR 36 FLOOR 37 FLOOR 38 FLOOR 39 FLOOR 40 FLOOR 41 FLOOR 42 FLOOR 43 FLOOR 44 FLOOR 45 FLOOR 46 FLOOR 47 FLOOR 48 FLOOR 49 FLOOR 50 FLOOR 51 FLOOR 52 FLOOR 53 FLOOR 54 FLOOR 55 FLOOR 56 FLOOR 57 FLOOR 58 FLOOR 59 FLOOR 60 FLOOR 61 FLOOR 62 FLOOR 63 FLOOR 64 FLOOR 65 FLOOR 66 FLOOR 67 FLOOR 68 FLOOR 69 FLOOR 70 FLOOR 71 FLOOR 72 FLOOR 73 FLOOR 74 FLOOR 75 FLOOR 76 FLOOR 77 FLOOR 78 FLOOR 79 FLOOR 80 FLOOR 81 FLOOR 82 FLOOR 83 FLOOR 84 FLOOR 85 FLOOR 86 FLOOR 87 FLOOR 88 FLOOR 89 FLOOR 90 FLOOR 91 FLOOR 92 FLOOR 93 FLOOR 94 FLOWER GARDEN BATH FLOOR 1 FLOOR 2 FLOOR 3 FLOOR 4 FLOOR 5 FLOOR 6 FLOOR 7 FLOOR 8 FLOOR 9 FLOOR 10 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87 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 88 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 89 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 90 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 91 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 92 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 93 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 94 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 95 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 96 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 97 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 98 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 99 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 100 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 101 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 102 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 103 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 104 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 105 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 106 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 107 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 108 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 109 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 110 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 111 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 112 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 113 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 114 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 115 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 116 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 117 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 118 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 119 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 120 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 121 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 122 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 123 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 124 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 125 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 126 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 127 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 128 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 129 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 130 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 131 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 132 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 133 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 134 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 135 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 136 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 137 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 138 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 139 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 140 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 141 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 142 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 143 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 144 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 145 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 146 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 147 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 148 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 149 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 150 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 151 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 152 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 153 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 154 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 155 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 156 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 157 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 158 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 159 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 160 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 161 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 162 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 163 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 164 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 165 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 166 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 167 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 168 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 169 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 170 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 171 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 172 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 173 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 174 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 175 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 176 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 177 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 178 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 179 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 180 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 181 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 182 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 183 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 184 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 185 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 186 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 187 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 188 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 189 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 190 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 191 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 192 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 193 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 194 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 195 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 196 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 197 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 198 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 199 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 200 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 201 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 202 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 203 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 204 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 205 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 206 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 207 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 208 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 209 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 210 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 211 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 212 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 213 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 214 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 215 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 216 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 217 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 218 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 219 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 220 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 221 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 222 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 223 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 224 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 225 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 226 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 227 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 228 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 229 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 230 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 231 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 232 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 233 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 234 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 235 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 236 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 237 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 238 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 239 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 240 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 241 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 242 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 243 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 244 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 245 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 246 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 247 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 248 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 249 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 250 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 251 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 252 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 253 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 254 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 255 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 256 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 257 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 258 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 259 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 260 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 261 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 262 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 263 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 264 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 265 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 266 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 267 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 268 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 269 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 270 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 271 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 272 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 273 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 274 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 275 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 276 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 277 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 278 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 279 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 280 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 281 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 282 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 283 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 284 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 285 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 286 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 287 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 288 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 289 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 290 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 291 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 292 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 293 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 294 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 295 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 296 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 297 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 298 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 299 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 300 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 301 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 302 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 303 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 304 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 305 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 306 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 307 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 308 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 309 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 310 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 311 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 312 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 313 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 314 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 315 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 316 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 317 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 318 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 319 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 320 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 321 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 322 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 323 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 324 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 325 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 326 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 327 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 328 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 329 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 330 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 331 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 332 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 333 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 334 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 335 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 336 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 337 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 338 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 339 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 340 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 341 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 342 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 343 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 344 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 345 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 346 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 347 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 348 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 349 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 350 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 351 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 352 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 353 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 354 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 355 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 356 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 357 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 358 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 359 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 360 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 361 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 362 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 363 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 364 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 365 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 366 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 367 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 368 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 369 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 370 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 371 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 372 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 373 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 374 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 375 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 376 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 377 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 378 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 379 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 380 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 381 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 382 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 383 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 384 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 385 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 386 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 387 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 388 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 389 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 390 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 391 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 392 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 393 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 394 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 395 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 396 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 397 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 398 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 399 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 400 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 401 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 402 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 403 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 404 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 405 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 406 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 407 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 408 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 409 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 410 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 411 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 412 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 413 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 414 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 415 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 416 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 417 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 418 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 419 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 420 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 421 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 422 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 423 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 424 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 425 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 426 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 427 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 428 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 429 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 430 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 431 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 432 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 433 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 434 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 435 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 436 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 437 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 438 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 439 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 440 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 441 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 442 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 443 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 444 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 445 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 446 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 447 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 448 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 449 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 450 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 451 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 452 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 453 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 454 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 455 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 456 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 457 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 458 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 459 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 460 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 461 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 462 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 463 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 464 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 465 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 466 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 467 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 468 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 469 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 470 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 471 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 472 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 473 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 474 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 475 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 476 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 477 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 478 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 479 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 480 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 481 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 482 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 483 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 484 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 485 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 486 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 487 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 488 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 489 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 490 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 491 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 492 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 493 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 494 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 495 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 496 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 497 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 498 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 499 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 500 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 501 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 502 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 503 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 504 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 505 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 506 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 507 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 508 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 509 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 510 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 511 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 512 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 513 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 514 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 515 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 516 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 517 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 518 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 519 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 520 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 521 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 522 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 523 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 524 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 525 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 526 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 527 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 528 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 529 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 530 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 531 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 532 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 533 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 534 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 535 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 536 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 537 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 538 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 539 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 540 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 541 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 542 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 543 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 544 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 545 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 546 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 547 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 548 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 549 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 550 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 551 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 552 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 553 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 554 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 555 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 556 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 557 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 558 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 559 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 560 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 561 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 562 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 563 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 564 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 565 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 566 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 567 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 568 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 569 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 570 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 571 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 572 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 573 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 574 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 575 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 576 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 577 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 578 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 579 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 580 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 581 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 582 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 583 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 584 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 585 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 586 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 587 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 588 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 589 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 590 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 591 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 592 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 593 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 594 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 595 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 596 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 597 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 598 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 599 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 600 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 601 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 602 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 603 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 604 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 605 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 606 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 607 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 608 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 609 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 610 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 611 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 612 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 613 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 614 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 615 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 616 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 617 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 618 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 619 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 620 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 621 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 622 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 623 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 624 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 625 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 626 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 627 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 628 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 629 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 630 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 631 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 632 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 633 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 634 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 635 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 636 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 637 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 638 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 639 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 640 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 641 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 642 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 643 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 644 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 645 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 646 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 647 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 648 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 649 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 650 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 651 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 652 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 653 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 654 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 655 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 656 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 657 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 658 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 659 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 660 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 661 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 662 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 663 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 664 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 665 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 666 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 667 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 668 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 669 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 670 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 671 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 672 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 673 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 674 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 675 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 676 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 677 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 678 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 679 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 680 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 681 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 682 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 683 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 684 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 685 FLOORDWATER BATH FLOOR 686 FLOORDWATER Bath FLOOR 687 FLOORDWATER Bath FLOOR 688 FLOORDWATER Bath FLOOR 689 FLOORDWATER Bath FLOOR 690 FLOORD WATER Bath FLOOR 691 FLOORD WATER Bath FLOOR 692 FLOORD WATER Bath FLOOR 693 FLOORD WATER Bath FLOOR 694 FLOORD WATER Bath F 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH FOR SUMMER OR FALL $455 & $479 2166 W. 26TH #3 843-6446 STUDIO SUSELEAY 1228 & Oread 4173 water pd, deck woods, NEC. N41-5773 Huge remedied a bedroom apartments 60 U-KUJE. Also room for responsible female. 841-6254 SUMMER SUSELEAY 1 bedroom close to cam- pus, low utilities. $280/month 841-5797 SUMMER SUSELEAY 1 BDRM furnished Apartment. An hour close to Union. Off administration. $333-748-2900 SUMMER SUBLAGE LARGE 3 bdmr apt w/o pool, water paid,$30.00 841 .9607 FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE KVM Apartments 841-6080 Sublease for June/July 2 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $360 per month with option for next year **houseatee** 4bedrooms, furnished, AC 13th and 13tent. **Callee* now-operators standing by** 865-0174 **Subleases wanted** $100-$130 rent negotiable. Ask for K94-75060 - Close to campus •Spacious 2 bedroom •Laundry facility •Swimming Pool •Waterbed allowed VILLAGE SQUARE apartments 9th & Avalon 842-3040 Sublease Meadowbrook female furnished,衣 caid paid, $600 / m³ or utilities available. May to buy. Summer Subware 2 bedroom, paid cable. Free microwave, low utilities, Jacuzzi, dishwasher low electricity. Subnet1/Bedroom apt. available June 14. Close to Sydney, wood floors a la Mode, Wi-Fi. Call Mike; Call Mike; 863-1000 Summer Sublease 2 bedroom 1/1/2 bath close to busi- rent, remit罚款 Call 832-246. or 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES NEDES to fill new 3 IRDhomestowns175.000 each + utilities 863.975 ans 348.625 each - B&M from $180 * B&M from $360 * tuxedo bus discounts * tuxedo平板 TV (pres.) * tuxedo tablet TV * On-site management (Occupancy) 8/15 - 8/24 * B&M of Iowa * B&M of Wisconsin * B&M of Canada * B&M of Scotland * B&M of France * B&M in St. Francis * Call office at 107-722-1127 Summer Sublease: 2 DBM $60/mo. close to campus, air conditioning, microwaves, microcomputers. Summer sublease 2 bedroom, AC, oth and Oho Close to downtown RENT NEGOTIABLE, B41 897-256-8030 Office Hours: 1-5 pm M & Wed - Fri 3:30-5 pm Tuesday 9-12 am Saturday 树 EDDINGHAM PLACE Summer sublease bedroom, 2bath, house close to campina, no pets! Reference & deposit required. Park25 24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers) Naismith Place professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc. ommer subleave 4 Bdrm up, W/D, Micro A, ommer house 6 Bdrm up, W/D, Micro A, ommer negligible Call 749-749-749 Summer sublease 4 Bedroom, 2 bath, furnished. pool. May pay. Rent very negotiable. Call Jeff. @wildlifeadvisor.com Summer sublease large studio apartment on bus- side parking. Water-cable paid. 2020 month, $68.34 Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!! Submarine sublease. Furnished studio near campus. £500/月, 142-562 --designed with you in mind! We have a few apts. - Volleyball Summer sublease. spacious 2 bbrm. 1/1/2 bath, pool, near campus, call Bill or Dan at B4-8763. Just a few left 1 BR -- 748 sq. ft. 2 BR-- 1012 sq. ft 2 BR -- 1,012 sq. ft. - On KU Bus Route - Laundry Rooms - W/D Hook-ups avail. DON'T DELAY ACT TODAY! Please Call for an appt. Please Call for an appt. 2401 W.25th St Summer sublease Sundance 2. Bibm, furnished, pool &洗衣 & dyer in facilities on bus route. Summer sublease 3 person apartment 2 RD Masterson bus route $172/person,ph 86-1370 Summer saline bleach 6/7-8/11 litho/hhV Very clean, L Uterm 8/mm Call 841-208 or 841-5797 841-5444 Summer sublease great location Campus Place, 4 bed, May rent first? Call 841-892 Summer sublease 2 bedroom townhouse, garage, move in May 2017 Buyer contact: 842-596-8419 or 842-596-8419 Summer sukulease - nicely furnished 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartments - blocks from campus and on bus. --designed with you in mind! No appointment necessary MASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished Campus Place-841-1429 1145 Louisiana Hanover Place-841-1212 Kentucky Place-749-0445 Orchard Corners-749-4226 Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas MASTERCRAFT Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida Summer sublease w/pOOLL!!! Lg B! Enruf for 3 Great location, Dishwasher, A/C disposal, Laun- dacity facilities, Balcony MUST SEE! $290/mo H20 pq. 84-3000 Summer sublease. 2B Apt. Surprise Place. Rent negotiable, low util. Bk41-1233. Summer townhouse with 3 guys $125/mo. + utilities. Washer (Dryer) May pay Pool Patrice $285/mo. Boardwalk apartments If You Can Find A Better Deal, TAKE IT!! You can share a room for as low a $3318.* low a $3318.* - With applicable "Move-In Bonus" - These rates include the following - Dine Anytime Meals Open House Everyday!! - Weekly Maid Service - Call Now To Reserve Your Room. - Semi-private Baths - Computer Room Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 The summer sublease $280/month. 2.bdmr. Close to campus and downfall, call 841-6487 On Trailridge Bus Route Sunflower House Student Co-op has opening for summer and fall. We offer friendly living at fantasy rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0484 or stop by 1406 Tennessee. We'll Take the Hit! 2 B 4 FLX in Residential Neighborhood for summer sublease. Hall of May free then $295 per month. 2 miles from KU Call 865- 4211 anytime. "The Woods" is a great place to live. Save $$$ with each new deposit - On Bus Route * Hented Pool - Walk to K.U. - Heated Pool - 3 Hot Tubs - On Bus Route Summer & Fall Rentals Available Now. 1&2 Bedrooms Laundry Facilitie • Dishwasher • Microwaves • MiniBlinds • Water Paid Location-Lifestyle The Best Value In Town 842-5111 seven days a week - Flexible Leasing open 7 days a week 430 Roommate Wanted I bedroom available for next semester in new bree room furnished townhouse on busine. Fireplace patio and tenni $240/month plus 1/3 utilities. Ca Mr. Fréderic 833-493-3490. 1 Female roommate needed till August. 4th and Michigan. Roommate, rent negotiable. 5th and Michigan. Roommate, rent negotiable. 1 Female roommate needed + No-smoker 3bm-2600 $mo+1/7 usl= 39-93 years, Call 848-6753 I no smoking Female roommate for summer and annual party. Call after 9 a.m., 841-367-0811, Bush House, Calif. after 9 a.m., 841-367-0811. 2 roommates needed to share large 3 bdrm. townhouse. Very nice. Super close to campus. Very cheap! 841-1648 or 2 roommates needed for summer subside with option to rent. Nice place, good location. Rented. (561) 734-8500. or 2 roommates needed starting August, 10 month in Tennessee & Tennessee. 749-4767 524Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience. 2 bdm house, summer and/or fall $250 + m/1/2 + good neighborhood, bush. Call Dusty 832-769-4050 THE FAR SIDE 3 Female roommates need for 1992-1993 Academic year-brand new College Hill Condominiums • Completely furnished - Washer and Dryer - on KX • $195/month + $19/month + Call. 641-8242 message. *Amazing Roommate* wanted to room floor house room 320ma/ + 1 / utility Place *Nice Place* Bedroom ready for summer with possibility for a guest room. 800-no/ults bp 800-3211 extra £200/no ults bp 800-3211 Desperately need female roommate from May 15 to August 15. Large bedroom and close to school. May and August rent paid by me $84/month plus 1/4 utilities. (negotiable) Bk-804-702 Fall- Need female, non-smoker to share house; campus = $150 + 1 / 3 adults Call Debbie Dahlberg 877-254-9777 Bedroom apt. $1,250 Female non-smoker Roommates wanted for summer sublease. Own Bedroom. Bathroom $175 *month 1 utilities $86-3822 Female roommate wanted. want in after May graduation. Own, share bath $5/12/hour. Roommates are welcome. Female roommate, very nice apt. in fourplex. $187.50 + 12 utilityts Walk to campus: 882-3244 Female non-smoking roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom room/month including utilities. 822 Female non-smoking roommate needed to share 2 room apt. 185/0 b/o LB. Leave message. Female roommate required for nonsublease at Orchard Cormers. $138/month utilities. Call Adula at 843-275-3960. Female roommate need for summer sublease Ana Cidarne, 21, 845-7370, onegr walder/shawn Shawen 842-2977 Female roommate wanted June 1 | spacious Wet room with designer dryer room with patterson garcia wallpaper. FUN/UFN/FUN / FUN in the summer sun in Sundance API, next to meet the building roommate Rent from Item $18 & $14.95 $187.23 + 1/2 utilities. Walk to campus. 842-3724 Female wanted to share four bed apartments at Orchard Corners. $150.00 rent plus 1/2 utilities for June and July. Call 865-2821. Graduate or non-trad. student needed for clean quit two bedroom apartment beginning June. Three minutes walk from campus. $199/mo + 1/2 utilities 865-0955 Japanese — speaking roommate to share McWade, the summer — rentable. Call Kirsten 864-1300. Kirsten 864-1300. Male roommate to share huge 3 Bedroom duplex in Wanted Lawrence. Wash/Dry器, Fireplace, Garage. Available on loan. $245 mo/plus 1/2 of low utilities. Call Camera or Brian 865-0915. Male or female needed for summer sublease in very nice, very clean brl house. CHEAP rent. $105 month plus 1/3 utilities. Rent negotiable - Jaime 865-3864 Male roommate needed to share two 28-airport mall with all the extras for the summer. May rent paid. $185/mo + 1/2 utilities. No Deposit. Call Bell 841-2385 Male roommate may May 15-Aug. 1830 entire male everything covered. Any questions 749-296. www.careers.howard.edu One roommate needed, ASAP. 3 bedroom townhome in W. Lawrence $12/month, + 1.8 full baths. Mature, female roommate required for summer stay. Nine bedrooms. 2Bedroom Ridge Ride Apartment Call (Carris) 841-9895. Non-smoking male to share 6+4 bedroom townhouses on bus route 82 to campus from May-98. avantage needed for summer sublease May-July, location 21524, space 3, IHF 182-096 location $21524, space 3, IHF 182-096 Roommate needed to share 3 BR Townhouse Washervier garage, new build. $2600 until march. noonmate wanted to share nice 4 Rroom, 2.1/2 house bath, badee 2 & Onsudahl. Beginning Fall 14. lease on leo. on bus route $200 m + 1 / utilities. Non-renewable. Heavy. Hesy. 864 1277. Non-renewable. 864 1256 Shared housing Call Tues. There 9:00 12:00 12: info a. 814-6544. References required Roommate wanted to share 3 bedrooms house 2 baths from campus. $175 per month / 1 unit/ACH Smoking Female Roommate for summer $175/month + 1/2 utilities. Available late May. Laundry/kitchen, own bedding, baby chopping. Call 464-348 MWF 1-5. Ask for Kiwi. Sublease for June, July for a female at 826 Kentucky $125/mo Call Daniela 865-1394 Summer Roommate Wanted to share furnished duples in OP. 35 min. from KU/w car pool. Avail. May 1 to Aug 15 w/option to renew. Call Mike at (816) 536-4027. Summer sublease - Female to share beautiful house W/D/A/C very reasonable. Anne 814-182 Transfer student seeks female christian room host. Contact Fri Schieper 8161-785-7000 x321 Contact Eric Schieper 8161-785-7000 x321 ONE FEMALE NON-SMOKER ROOMMATE needed to share 2 BBMD duplex, w/grad student Summer Sublease. Nice location, W/D, W/D, rent-negotiable. 483-9343 Wanted responsible, non-smoker, for large clean close to campus, share utilities, water/dryer, microwave, private parking 542-720R 542-2345 By GARY LARSON K. WATERS "LASSIE!...COME HOME!...LASSIE COME HOME!" 12 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 Big Daddy's 34oz mugs $2.00 7 days a week! Big Daddy's Monday Special Open - Close • 3 dozen Buffalo Wings and a pitcher of beer $10.00 $10.00 (every Monday) plus... Two 52" TV's! Two 52" T.V.'s! 1/2 lb Big Daddy Burger ...$4.50 Original Style Buffalo Wings ...$3.50 Chicken Breast Sandwich ...$4.75 Big 8 Pork Tenderloin (fresh & hand breaded) ...$4.75 (All prices include tax and fries) BIG DADDY'S 925 Iowa • Hillerest Plaza Kitchen hours: 11am-1am 749-4748 SUNDAY, MAY 3... HOLLYWOOD RECORDING ARTISTS BILLY GOAT • ALL SHOWS 18 & OVER • TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR ALL SHOWS AT ALL • DOORS OPEN AT 8 PM • SHOWTIMES FOR ALL SHOWS IS 9 PM Liberty Hall Lawrence, KS 66044 • 913-749-1912 1980 CRACKER VIRGIN RECORDING ARTIST MONDAY MAY 4 at the BOTTLENECK Fans get a second chance Continued from Page3. Students get another shot at applying for sports tickets I came back in the fall, but I wasn't able to. I was pretty disappointed." However, Miller said that students had had ample time to apply for the tickets. She said that she would be accepting ticket applications through the summer but that students should not take it for granted that they would be able to apply when they returned to the University in the fall. She said that combo-ticket sales would end sometime before the first home football game. Students will be notified as soon as the ticket recipients are known, and refunds will be given if any of the students who applied are not awarded tickets. Football tickets will remain available after sports-combo sales end. Miller said that the number of students who received tickets would not necessarily equal 45 percent of the seats in the field house. The 7,000 student seats include seats for band members, student-athletes and cheerleaders, none of whom buy tickets but who must sit in the student section. The ticket office does overbook student seats in the field house. Miller said that in the past, the ticket office had sold more student tickets than the number of actual student seats that exist in the field house, gambling on the chance that not all students would show up for any given game. She said that it was a "guessing game" as to how many students would show up for a game and that her office sold tickets to the public in the student section during holiday breaks and other times that the office thought students would not show up. "I hope the place is packed," she said. "I don't care who is out there." Miller said that she could only remember one game when three students came to the ticket office because they couldn't find a seat in the field house. They were refunded the price of their tickets. She said that even though there was a great demand for men's basketball tickets, the student seats were not always filled. "People see Kansas play on national television and there are empty seats, and they call me up and gripe," she said. Miller said it seemed as though fewer students were coming to basketball games, but she still had to try to fill the field house. "But we're not trying to take away seats from students to give them to the public," she said. GRADUATION SALE! 1st ITEM PURCHASED 10% 2nd ITEM PURCHASED 20% 3rd ITEM PURCHASED 25% Seniors aren't the only ones graduating this time of year, so are the discounts on great spring fashions at HUNTER'S! 919 Massachusetts 842-6069 CORRECTLY GUESS THE NUMBER OF MURDOCH'S SPOTS AND BE THE WINNER OF A STANLEY H. KAPLAN PREP COURSE Competition for graduate school, medical school or law school is tougher than ever. If you want to get in you must have distinguishing marks. Kaplan can show you how to convert your weak spots into BIG points when it comes to the GMAT, GRE, LSAT or MCAT. The nation's leading test prep organization is giving you a chance to prepare for graduate entrance exams absolutely free. Correctly guess the number of spots and be the winner of a Stanley H. Kaplan prep course. Cast your vote today when you see Murdoch or stop by the NEW Kaplan Center. We offer prep courses for the PSAT, SAT, ACT, LSAT, GMAT, GRE and MCAT tests at over 150 locations worldwide. DALMATIAN The Dalmatian is a breed of dog known for its distinctive white coat with black spots. They are often used in racing and as working dogs due to their intelligence and agility. 1000 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 842-5442 The winner will be announced today. Winner to be selected from correct entries. If no entries are correct winner will be selected from the closest guess. Spots will be counted from the neck down. Positive identification required to claim wins. Winnings are non-transferable and not retrospective. The 1900 W. 75th Street Shawnee Mission,KS 66208 (913) 262-TEST 1900 W.75th Street STANLEY H. KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances V The Rush Is On! Don't be left in the Cold... Saturday, May 2 1:00-5:00 p.m. OPEN HOUSE Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415 Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212 - CUSTOM FURNISHINGS - DESIGNED FOR PRIVACY - ENERGY EFFICIENT - MANY BUILT-INS - AFFORDABLE RATES - PRIVATE PARKING Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226 - LOCALLY OWNED - LOCALLY OWNED * LAUNDRY FACILITIES* - LAUNDRY FACILITIES - CLOSE TO CAMPUS - CLOSE TO CAMPUS - LOCALLY MANAGED - CLOSE TO SHOPPING - CENTRAL A/C - ON SITE MANAGERS* * POOL* - MICROWAVES* *available some locations Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Kentucky Place 1310 Kentucky 749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255 offers a wide variety of furnished apartments in numerous locations near campus. Whether you prefer to live alone or with 1,2,or 3 roommates, we have a home for you. We offer Studios, 1, 2, 3, and 4 bedroom apartments, 2 and 3 level townhomes, all designed with you, the K.U. student in mind. Affordable Rentals Call or visit our leasing offices MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN SECTION TWO FRIDAY.MAY1.1992 Defending a people, preserving a way of life Attorney specializes in American-Indian affairs, battles for Kickapoo By Andy Taylor Kansas staff writer He rarely wears a suit or a silk tie. He likes turquoise boie ties and flannel shirts. He wears hips boots instead of Gucci lappers. And Lance Burr does not work in a new office complex with smoke-colored glass. He goes to work in a cramped studio or story-house near downtown Lawrence. It is a lifestyle that Burr, attorney general of the Kickapoo Tribal Council, says he prefers - no frills, casual life as a Lawrence attorney. "I believe in the Indian way," he said. "I think it is the appropriate way to reach things." He said the American Indian way of thought centered on basic needs, a concern for nature and life without worries. Butattimes,hisworriesinvolvestubborn lawmakers and the federal bureaucracy. As the legal leader of the Kickapoos, Burr travels several times a week to the tribral office in Horton, about 50 miles north of Lawrence. And when he is not talking with tribal officials, he is debating tribal issues with state lawmakers in Tooeka. Burr's biggest legal battle, the Kansas Legislature's ongoing efforts to prohibit casino gambling on the Kickapoo reservation near Horton, is what put him in the headlines. But colleagues say he is known for his knowledge of American Indian legal affairs. "He is one of the leading authorities in the area, " said Don Bread, professor of tribal law at Hassell Indian Junior College. He says his uniqueness in the field of tribal law." Gov. Joan Finney signed a compact with the Kickapoos in January that gave them the authority to build casinos on their reservations. The compact was refused by Secretary of Interior Manuel Lujan, who examines treaties between tribes and state governments. Before Lujan gave the Kickpoop plan a thumbs down, the Kansas Legislature intervened and passed a bill that would prohibit casino gambling in Kansas. Burr, 49, is a leader in the fight to bring equality to reservations, part of a national effort by American Indians who use their sovereignty to raise revenue on native lands. He now devotes most of his practice to American Indian legal affairs. "We have the situation where the powerful senators are calling the right people and telling them not to sign the compact," he said. Burr, who has represented the three other American Indian tribes in Kansas, the Sac and Fox, Potawatomies and Iowa tribes, said he was frustrated with moralists turning into decision between good and evil. "Our governor wants to honor the treaties, and she is doing everything possible to honor them," he said. "As soon as that happens then we hear people wanting to raise a moral issue out of it. Burr said lawmakers were not grasping the scope of the issue. "If they are going to argue about morality, let's talk about some real morality like General Dynamics, Lockheed, Boeing, Columbia Savings and Lincoln Savings," he said in reference to government contractors and savings and loans that were investigated for various crimes. "I don't want to talk about mobsters. There aren't any mobsters in Indian gaming." His voice grows louder as he continues to talk about dealing with state legislators. He takes a long pause and asks his frustration with a cup of water. "Those people make me mad," he said cuilytely. PETER T. WOOD Continued on Page 9 file photo/KANSAN Lance Burr is attorney general of the Kickapoo Tribal Council Germany struggles with transition to reunification The Associated Press BERLIN — Not long ago, the newly united Germany seemed to have so much going for it — size, economic strength, new global influence — that some people feared its potential power. Now a nation known for order and efficiency has trash in the streets, trains that won't run, a budget deficit, political chaos and a chancellor criticized by his own Cabinet. What happened to the country that seemed, just a year ago, to be on the threshold of becoming an impact player in the new world arena? War's end. "I keep thinking about why things turned so sour," said Heinrich Vogel, director of the German Institute for International Studies in Cologne. "Now everybody pites us." Vogel said Germany, like other Western nations, was having difficulty adjusting to the fiscal and philosophical realities of the Cold "We have approached the end of an era, the end of the old Germany being part of the Western system as it was, deeply embedded and defined by the Cold War," he said. "Now, it's the morning after. It's a new ball game and nobody has figured out the rules." Germany's problems start at the top, where Chancellor Helmut Kohl faces unprecedented dissent and turnover in his fractious, three-party governing coalition. On Monday, Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher — who helped thaw the Cold War with his overtures to Moscow, but was criticized for being out of touch with its aftermath — abruptly announced he was resigning after 18 years The head of the Free Democrats, the coalition partner responsible for filling the Foreign Ministry, immediately nominated Construction Minister Irmgard Schwaetzer to fill the post. "Now, it's the morning after. It's a new ball game and nobody has figured out the rules" Heinrich Vogel German Institute for International Studies She was dumped the next day by the other Free Democrat leaders, who instead nominated Justice Minster Klaus Kinkel. That choice was then opposed by the Christian Social Union. also part of Kohl's coalition. Kinkel has been criticized as a technocrat without the vision needed to define Germany's new responsibilities as it becomes less and less dependent on the United States, diplomatically and economically. This dispute — which some Cabinet members have used to take their own shots at Kohl's weakened leadership — comes at a time of economic problems for a nation that last year seemed recession-proof. Just as the Foreign Ministry debacle was unfolding, public employees began an escalating series of strikes that have halted mass transit, garbage pickup, mail deliveries and other services throughout western Germany. The public sector unions are demanding 9.5 percent wage increases to cope with the relatively high 4.7 percent inflation and tax increases imposed last year to help troubled eastern Germany. Hans Tietmeyer, vice president of the powerful central bank, the Bundesbank, warned this week that the government must urgently cut spending and said current wage talks would determine whether Germany was sent spinning into a dangerous and unnecessary wage-price spiral. He also said Germany's once-nonexistent budget deficit was exceeding acceptable limits. All these problems come on the heels of elections in two western Germany states that saw surprising gains by far-right parties opposed to the increasing number of foreigners living in Germany. Kohl has been accused of pandering to such sentiments by pushing for tighter restrictions on refugees. Wheee! 4 (Above) Climbing out of the EVAC rescue chute, Lawrence firefighter Shaun Coffey is helped by Douglas County Ambulance paramedics, Larry Deters, left, and Scott Dieker. The rescue chute is designed to safely evacuate trapped people from the upper floors of burning buildings. The chute, demonstrated at Nalsmith Hall, reached 90 feet to the roof of the building. The outer layer of the chute is made of a special material, GENTEX, that is heat resistant up to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit. (Right) Holding onto the EVAC Rescue Slide, Mike Ferris, left, vice president of marketing for EVAC Systems Inc., and Douglas County Ambulance paramedic Larry Deters, twist the chute to prevent the people inside from falling too fast. Although the people inside the chute can control their rate of descent, twisting the chute is used as a preventive measure. The demonstration was for the benefit of the Lawrence Fire Department, which is thinking of purchasing a slide. NOW LEASING FOR EARLY AFFORDABLE SUITES & OME IN & TOUR OR CALL 855 TOUR OR CALL 855 Deaths unsolved two decades later Dewey, an agent with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, had helped crack the infamous Clutter family murders in 1938. The unidentified Trump Capone's thruurer in Cold Blood. ENSIGN — When Richard and Clara Anton were found shot to death in 1974 inside their burning home on a southwest Kansas farm, Al Dewey rushed to the scene to investigate. No arrests have been made in the June 30, 1974, slayings, and few clues were ever found. But the case still is open and investigated three times yearly, said Janet Henning of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. But although the Clutter case was solved in case the Inconte case puzzel 1234567890000000000 The Associated Press A passing motorist saw the fire that night and called the Gray County sheriff and fire departments. The bodies of Richard Anton, 48, and Clara, 47, were found in the basement, where they were living while their home was being remodeled. Investigators disregarded an early murder-suicide theory. An investigation of the couple's five children — Greg, Mark, Dave, Margo and John — was stalled because authorities could not find a motive for the slavings. The investigation then focused on a Richard Anton found a rattlesnake—without its rattle — in the back window of his car. A garage that housed a train destroyed by fire, along with the trains. Richard Anton also told the county sheriff that once all but one of the lug nuts were removed from truck. The biggest clue may have been in Richard Anton's collection of antique and modern trains, which was valued at $30,000. Some rumors mentioned organized crime, said Judge Jay Don Reynolds, who was the Gray County attorney when the slayings occurred. Richard Anton installed coin-operated elevator music in motel rooms in Kansas City before he moved to Ensign, Revnoils said. series of threatening incidents leading up to the killings. After those incidents, Richard Anton told the sheriff that somebody may be out to get him, the Dodge City Daily wrote in a story after the Antons were killed. "Many people thought since music is a crime-controlled business, he must be more sensitive to the music." No leads were developed on that theory, and Reynolds stressed it was only a theory. Other rumors continue to float around about the case. "Any sort of glimmer gave us a lot of false hope," he said. 'Doonesbury' cartoonist plans summer furlough The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Fans who depend on a daily fix of the comic strip "Doonesbury" may be in for a rough summer. The strip's distributor, Kansas City based Universal Press Syndicate, says artist Garry Trudeau is taking a vacation. But to avoid causing Trudeau's followers to go cold turkey while he's away June 1 through Sept. 5, the syndicate will supply its 1,400 subscribers with reruns. Trudeau "wants some time away from the drawing board," Lee Salem, editorial director at Universal, said of his work. "I don't say what the artist sketched were." It's not the first time "Doonesbury" has been furioused on the strip began in 1970. Trudeau took a 20-month leave of absence in 1983 and 1984 to update his characters and work on other projects. That caused avidfanidin Milwaukee to form the Society of Addicts of Doonesbury. The group is grateful for the reruns, said Mordecai Lee, a former Wisconsin state senator who's a spokesperson for the group. But, he added, "We know it won't provide the recommended daily adult requirement." In the strip's absence, he said, "We will try to find satirical amusement by simply reading news stories about George Bush and Dan Quayle — that should offer some form of entertainment." Bush and Quayle are among Trudeau's favorite targets. 2B University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 Storyand photos by Justin Knupp I'll be here to help you. I'm ready to assist you. (Above) Paramedics arrive with a patient. (Above right) Nurse Mayme Rogers and Thomas McCormick, physician, discuss treatment. (Below) McCormick walks to the emergency room. MARSHAL ROBERTS Trauma teams fight against time, fatigue The countdown begins when the ambulance reaches the emergency room door. For the doctors and nurses who work in trauma centers, like the one at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., it happens everyday. "Many times, the first minute dictate whether a patient lives or dies," says veteran trauma nurse Mayme Rogers. However, time is not the only foe trauma teams battle. Fatigue, boredom and burnout become problems after the teams work 12, 16 or 24-hour shifts. "There are times when you will go 12 hours with nothing to do, and then within 15 minutes, there are serious cases waiting in line in the halls," Rogers says. Twelve hours into one of Rogers' 16-hour shifts, an ambulance delivers a burn victim to Rogers and the waiting trauma team. Third-degree burns cover most of his body. The trauma team goes to work After 20 minutes with the trauma team, and more than two dozen examinations, the patient is headed for the burn unit upstairs. "Often in serious cases the only thing you can do is stabilize the patient and move them to a specialty unit," Rogers says. "We're here to see that they make it upstairs alive and with a chance." Rogers goes home after 16 hours of dealing with drunks, victims of fights and car wrecks, gang members and personal exhaustion. "All in all, it was an easy shift, Rogers says as she walks out the door. (Right) Nurse Rogers relaxes after more than 15 straight hours on duty. (Above) The trauma team carefully examines a patient with third-degree burns. QUICK CATHS TAPES needles stopcocks hepacks spines needles SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISING WORKS! THE PRINCETON REVIEW strategy for success LSAT GMAT GRE 843-3131 - Editorial Board - Columnists - Cartoonists The Kansan is now accepting applications for Pick up your application today! Kansan News Room,111 Stauffer-Flint. All students are encouraged to apply. Applications due 5 p.m. May 5th. Asparagus (You pick it or we'll pick it for you.) Bedding Plants (Annuals, Perennials, Herbs) Rhubarb Pendelton's Country Market E. 15th Street N 1730 E 8450 E DO Co. #462 K-10 DO Co. #462 E. 23rd Street TO LAWRENCE TO EUGORA Open Mon.-Sat.: 8am-6pm • Sun.: 1pm-6pm 843-1409 Now open! Pendleton's Country Market Celebrate Cinco de Mayo with Pendleton's! WANTED CD'S RECORDS TAPES REWARD $5.00 & down on CD'S $2.00 & down on records & tapes Ride on into Alley Cat Records and trade in those old tapes, records and CD'S. It's a great way to earn extra cash! U Alley-Cat RECORDS WE'VE MOVED The Etc. Shop Check Out our NEW LOCATION! 717 Mass.865-0122 Male Fashion Model Female Fashion Model WE'VE SHOWER The Etc. Shop 928 Mass 843-0611 Ray-Ban® SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses! DON'T TRASH 'EM USE 'EM TO SAVE CASH! If the college bookstore doesn't want 'em we will give you $2.00 OFF! lany CASSETTE or COMPACT DISC regularly priced $7.99 and up 30% OFF! Publishers suggested list price on ANY BOOK For your non-refundable textbooks These textbooks will be donated to the local library excludes Sale Items • One item per book redeemed hastings We're Entertainment!! 2000 W.23rd St.- Southwest Plaza www.ibm.com 9 37117 65922 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 3B Line Your Pockets With Our Cash! Top Dollar For Books Now Through Finals! Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd., Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 843-3826 Hours 8 - 5 30 M - TR 8 - 5 Fri. 9 - 5 Sat. 12 - 4 Sun. Your book professionals at the top of Naismith Hill Don't Forget to Pre-Order Your Books for Next Fall! The BuyBack Professionals NOW THROUGH MAY 15, 1992 GET AN EXTRA BUCK BACK WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU SELL YOUR BOOKS AT Jayhawk Bookstore Limit One Coupon and One Buck per visit 10 美 The BuyBack Professionals NOW THROUGH MAY 15, 1992 GET AN EXTRA BUCK BACK WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU SELL YOUR BOOKS AT Jayhawk Bookstore Limit One Coupon and One Buck per visit. $40 STREETSIDE RECORDS Ivan Gadovich PETER MURPHY HOLY SMOKE The brilliant new album from Peter Murphy The brilliant new album from featuring "The Sweetest Drop," "You're So Close," "Our Secret Garden," "Low Room" and "Hit Song." On the Beggars Banquet-RCA Records Label - cassettes and compact discs. HOLY SMOKE the charlatans UK IT'S NOT JUST A SECOND ALBUM IT'S "BETWEEN 10TH AND 11TH" On the Bagpipes Bengal NCA Records Label The new album from The Charlatans UK features "Weirdo." "I Don't Want To See The Sights." "Tremelo Song" and "The End Of Everything." Produced by Flood dinner performance LUC THE MICHAELS Everything But Ice Omega Festival Specials Queen-size airbed $24 Tent $9.99 each CD featured $6.99 each Cassette featured 8'x10' Tent $49 936 Mass. STREET LIGHTS The Etc. Shop 928 Mass 843-0611 Ray-Ban' MAKERS OF BALANCE To order theurgents Paradise Café & Bakery Good Real Food Every Day NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 MTech Pro 386/33 JAYHAWK Special Prices for KU Faculty, Staff and Students Paradise Cafe & Bakery 728 Massachusetts • 842-5199 - 33MHz 386DX CPU - 64K cache - 4MB RAM, expandable to 32MB - 1.44MB TEAC floppy drive - 125MB IDE HD with disk caching - SVGA video adapter - 14" SVGA color monitor, 0.28dpi - 2 serial, 1 parallel, and 1 game ports - 101-key enhanced keyboard - MS-DOS 5.0 - Windows 3.1 - High resolution mouse - 1 year warranty 1403 W. 23rd Street 842-7173 SALE ends 5/5/92 STAY STREETSMART, SHOP STREETSIDE! MTech Talent 386SX/25 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 $ 1554.00 2019 - 25MHz 386SX CPU - 25MHz 386SX CPU * 2MB RAM, expandable to 16MB * 1.44MB TEAC floppy drive * 52MB IDE HD with disk caching * SVGA video adapter * 12" SVGA color monitor,0.28dpi * 14" game, 1 parallel, game * 101-key enhanced keyboard * MS-DS 5.0 * Windows 3.1 * High resolution mouse * 1 year warranty $ 1158.00 Optional 1.2MB/360K floppy, 100/125/200/300MB hard disk, CD ROM, Tape drive, 14" non-interlaced color monitor, 1MB SVGA card, 15" color monitor, Co-processor. Above systems are under State Microcomputer Contract State Contract prices for the University are available at KU purchasing dept. or call Microtech at 841-9513 Ext. State Contract dept. Over the years, Microtech has delivered thousands micro-computer systems to Federal, State, Local governments and Universities. Please call for details on 5 different Desktop and Notebook computer contracts currently offered by Microtech. MICROTECH COMPUTERS, INC. 841-9513 Technical Support line: 841-9533 Fax: 841-1809 2329 Iowa St DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS Postscript Power OR Laser Quality NEC SilentWriter Model 95 32 Font PostScript Laser Printer • Auto Switching - Mac/IBM • Dependable NEC Quality • 6 Pages per Minute • 2Mb RAM ONLY $1,699 ONLY $1,699 NEC 30 Hewlett-Packard DeskJet 500 Printer - Support of leading software HEWLETT PACKARD - Three-year limited warranty ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER Free parking in rear of store·Open M-F:10am-6pm,Sat:10-5 813 MASS ·DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE ·843-7584 NEC hp 2 11" Medium Pizzas 2 Toppings 2 Cokes $7.99 Every Single Day. 京翔速 RPM Pizza & Movie Express 842-8989 4B University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT HAPPENINGS BARS Benchwarmers, 1601 W. 23rd St. Friday: Jackioplace 9:30 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. Bogart's of Lawrence. 611 Vermont St. Saturday; Let's buzz with Dan Bliss and Ralph Ybarra; 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.; cover charge: $3 The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Friday: Nic Cosmos 10 p.m. - 2 a.m.; cover charge: $3 Saturday: Common Ground and Cryout; 10 p.m. - 2 a.m.; cover charge: $3 Monday: Crackers with Mahoots 9:30 p.m. - 2 a.m.; advanced tickets: $7 Ages 18 and older admitted Tuesday: Seaweed with Sleez Stax 9:30 p.m. - 2 a.m. Ages 18 and older admitted Wednesday: Ebbing Brothers Band 9:30 p.m. - 2 a.m. Thursday: Fang O'Love 9:30 p.m. - 2 a.m. The Brass Apple: 3300 W, 15th St. Tuesday: Karaoke night 9 p.m.-1.30 a.m; no cover charge Flamingo Club, 501 N. 9th St. Friday/Saturday; topples dancing noon-1 a.m. cover charge: $2 or a two-drink minimum Henry T's, 3520 W. 6th St. Thursday: Karaoke night 9 p.m. - 2 a.m.; no cover charge International Club 21, 106 N. Park St Friday: Veronica's Room cover charge: $3 Saturday: Sub-genius cover charge: $3 Sunday: Reggae with Ras Mike no cover charge Monday: Movies and Beer: "Boyz N The Hood." no cover charge The Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St. Friday/Saturday: Soumasters 10 p.m.-1.30 a.m. cover charge $3 Thursday: Camberwell Green 10 p.m.-1.30 a.m. cover charge $3 Johnny's Tavern 410N. 2nd St. Friday/Saturday. Lonnie Ray and the All-Stars. 9:00 p.m. - 2 a.m. cover charge $1. The Power Plant 901 Mississippi S. Ages 18 and older admitted Friday/Saturday Dance Party 9 p.m. - 2 a.m. Sunday Alternative Music Night 9 p.m. - 2 a.m. Riverside Bar and Grill, 520 N. 3rd St Friday: Badlands; 9 p.m.- 1 a.m. cover charge: $2 The Vacht Club 530 Wisconsin St. Tuesday: Karake night 9 p.m.-1 a.m. no cover charge MUSIC Friday Master's Rectal: Amy Clark Beal, piano: Swarthout Rectal Hall 8 p.m. free Saturday: Student Recital: Nathan Wegner, trumpet Swapout Recital Hall 8:0 m; free Student Recital: Woodwind and String Chamber Music it Recital Hall; 8 p.m.; free "The Day on the Hill" featuring Pearl Jam Campanile Hill; 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.; free Sunday: Student Recital: KU Saxophone Quartet Swarthout Recital Hall; 8 p.m.; free Lawrence Chamber Players Concert: "Prelude to Summer"; Haskell Indian Junior College Concert Hall; 3.30 p.m. Saturday, May 9: River Valley Music Festival featuring Blues Traveler; west of Kansas City off Highway 10 4 to 11 a.m. 25 to 25 advance; $25 at gate THEATER University Theatre Series: "Festival of Renewal" Crafton-Preyer Theatre Friday/Saturday: 8 p.m. Sunday: 2:30 and 8 p.m. reserved tickets from SUA ART EXHIBITIONS Spencer Museum of Art Tuesday-Saturday: 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. closed Monday Sunday: noon-5 p.m. Cameras as Weapon: German Worker Photography Between the Wars Kress Gallery until May 10 Albert Bloch, South Balcony Gallery until May 24 Ceramics by J. Sheldon Carey North Balcohy Gallery until August 2 J. S.G. Boggs: Smart Money White Gallery A lesson in culture African drama features dance, rituals of village life THE BETHEL OF THE SOUTH Jennifer Attocknie, left, and Toi Willis practice their roles as jesters in "Festival of Renewal." By Cameron Meier Special to the Kansan "Festival of Renewal," the African drama that premiered last night at Murphy Hall, was five years in the making. But for Nigerian playwright Omofolobo Ajayi, most of that time was spent waiting. She wrote the play in 1897 for the convocation ceremonies at the University of Ife in Nigeria, where she earned her doctorate. It tells of the struggles and cooperation between the citizens of two Nigerian villages and the political turmoil threatening to tear them apart. However, university administrators chose not to stage the play, she said, after they perceived political overtones in the script. Ajayi came to KU in 1990 as an associate professor in theater and film and in women's studies. At that time, she had no idea Uii- versity Theatre would be interested in her play, but after other faculty members read the original script, they adopted it as the last show of this year's theater season, which concentrated on international works. Whether the wait was worth it, KU has never seen anything quite like Ajayi's work. And she can still only speculate why the play was originally rejected by her university. "They thought it was too political. And since the head of state was going to attend, they thought it was too explosive," Ajayi said. She said the administration might have seen the collapse of relations between the two villages in the play and the incompete- tence of its leaders as symbolic of the "pandering to politics" at the university. "They felt it addressed what was going on at the University," she said. The production features native dance choreographed mostly by Ajayi and original music by a Boston-based Nigerian musician, along with some traditional African music. The festival refers to the traditional, unifying celebrations between the villages of Igbinae, which derives its power from the sea, and land-locked Opiakarauan, with its heritage tied to the soil. This festival, though, is torn apart by the intrusion of outside forces that threaten to destroy the villages' unity. The village women also choose to challenge tradition by playing a more active role in the festival. Dolores Ringer, associate professor of theater, suggested the play to the play selection committee and designed the set as well. The set is meant to capture the feel of a Nigerian village. The detailed patterns and sharp peds and blues give an appropriately exotic flavor to the piece. The technical design, however, may have been the easiest part of the entire pro- The original play was meant to be performed with the audience seated in a circle around the action, not on a proscenium stage, so some revisions were necessary. Also, a scene had to be rewritten, original music had to be composed, and Ajayi fell ill during rehearsals. She had to rely on Jack Wright. University Theatre director, and others to help prepare the play. "It's about people coming together." Sean Holland Actor She said, however, that the play-within-a-play aspect of the original script involved the only major revision. It was removed to simplify the plot and make it less confusing, she said. "Overall, I just touched up a few things," she said. "It's what you do when you have a working script." She said she still was not satisfied with the play's ending but thought the audience would be able to understand the rituals presented in the play. "it's part of my culture that is dying," she said of the traditional, ritualistic festival. "It's not going to disappear, it's just changing to change face. It's very religious overt and disappearing." Ajayi cast 20 actors, almost half of whom are African Americans. The casting reflects Nigerian heritage and the coming together of the two different villages. Sean Holland, Kismet junior, who plays a citizen of one of the villages, said students would get a valuable lesson in foreign culture and appreciate the racially diverse cast. "It's about people coming together, and the interracial cast is very symbolic of that," he said. "Festival of Renewal" will play at 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday and at 2:30 p.m. m. Sunday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Sam Shepard play produced and paid for independently Special to the Kansan By Julie Wasson Special to the Kansan If you want to know what's sospecial about the relationship between Eddie and May, you'll have to go see "Fool for Love." Director Donna Kane will say just this: "It's an obsessive love story. To say any more would be to give away the whole story." "Fool for Love" is a Sam Shepard play. It's intense drama set in a run-down motel room in the Mojave Desert. There will be a preview of it tonight and a performance tomorrow night, both at 8 p.m. in the auditorium at Hashinger Hall. The performances will be free, but there will be a donation box. The play is an independent project, not a Hashinger production. The cast is comprised of three students and one faculty member, Ron Willis, professor of theater and film Kane, who has directed several plays at the University, said the play was financed entirely by members of the cast. "It's really been a labor of love," she said. "The money has come out of our own pockets." "I's really exciting to have Ron working with us because he hasn't performed at KU for a long time." Kane spends most of his time directing." Willis said that taking a break from directing was important to him. Eddie, played by John Abramson, talks about love with May, played by Diana Dresser, left. "I think it's important for directors to get a sense of who they're talking to, who they're working with," Willis said. "Acting lets me do that. It lets me get some perspective." John Abramson, Holton senior, plays Eddie. He said that the opportunity to work with Willis was one thing that drew him to this production. "He's a good friend, and working with him is a dream come true," he said. Bernie Cox, Palatine, III., freshman, said the play had provided him valuable experience. Donna Dresser, Lawrence senior, plays May. She said that the plot of the play was conducive to the intensity she and Abramson portrayed. "It's written to develop toward the final mental state at the end of the play," she said. "This has been great for me, to get work with two very experienced performers, and of course with Ron," Cox said. "I've learned a lot in a really short period of time." Becky Shear, Lawrence junior and assistant director, said that the crew had gotten scenery through a fortune coincidence. Bob Donlan, Lawrence graduate student, recently finished his master's thesis in design, and his thesis was designing the sets of two Sam Shepard plays. Shear said. Beastie Boys blur boundaries between rap and rock and roll " 'Fool for Love' was one of those plays, " Shear said, "and we're really lucky to get to use his sets." By M. Olsen Special to the Kansan The Beastie Boys, along with for-Dejam label mates RUN-DMC, Public Enemy and LL Cool J, brought hiphop to a wider and wider—whatever audience in the mid-80s by articulating the similarities between rap and rock-and-roll. With their latest effort, "Check Your Head," the Beasties further blur the boundaries between these genres, showing how ridiculous these imaginary musical boundaries are. All that really matters is that it's for real and it's 'rockin', whether it's old-school hip-hop or hardcore rock-and-roll. As Beastie Boy Mike D. said, "We're exercising our constitutional This time the Beasties rely less on sampling and actually play their own instruments. Returning in part to their hardcore roots (an early incarnation of the band was known as The Young and The Useless), the main instrument is guitar, bass and drums. While "Check Your Head" will probably be categorized as rap, it a diverse effort that incorporates elements of hip-hop, fuzzed-out hardcore, funk-and svrpv 706 soul. MUSIC REVIEW Beasties' surprisingly nuanced production work. Two of the three Beastie Boys spent time during their teen years apprenticing at New York City recording studios, and their skills behind the boards show it, especially in the sound they give the live drums. Instead of the cold, metallic sound that drums usually sound like on hip-hop records, the Beastie Boys give the drums a clean, booming sound like the neighbor's kids bashing it out in the garage next door. One of the album's highlights is the right to be fresh." As for the rap's, they are left high in the mix with the tinny, distorted sound of a Mr. Microphone. This is the perfect compliment to the brash, in-yourface style of the Beasties' delivery. On the whole record has a deliciously low-tn sound,the instruments blending together to create fuzzed-out sounds not unlike a worn eight track of "Shaft." The Beastie Boys were once called "an accident of pop history." They also have had to bear frequent accusations of being mere puppets for their original producer, Rick Rubin. With "Check Your Head" they prove once and for all how innovative they can be on their own and that they truly are for real. Whether you want to admit it, they are among the most influential groups of our time, helping to open hiphop to a rock-and-roll audience and changing the face of suburban culture. In many ways, they are living out our fantasies, and they know it. 'The Day on the Hill,' River Valley Music Festival fill outdoors with music By Ranjit Arab Kansan staff writer For the next two saturdays, music lovers in Lawrence want to spend the day outside listening to some of the best national and Lawrence bands need not look any further than their own back vards. Brad Roosa, live music coordinator for Student Union Activities, said the Seattle-based band, PearlJam, would headline "The Day on the Hill," Saturday. The event, which is sponsored by SUA, will begin at 11:30 a.m. and last until 6:30 p.m. It is free to the public. Among the other acts performing Saturday will be Tribe After Tribe, from South Dakota. From the band's ackhand hand in Fresno, Calif., The event will feature intermission acts ranging from Big B, a KJHK disc jockey, to the Cicada Rhythm Band, which features six percussionists and a saxophone player, Roosa said. Lawrence bands Zoom and Trademark also will perform. The free event was a way to thank students for supporting SUA activities throughout the year, he said. "We just want to have quality music, give local bands some exposure and provide entertainment." Roosa said. On Saturday, May 9, five bands will gather just west of Kansas City off Highway 10 for the first River Valley Music Festival, which will begin at 4 p.m. and last until 11 p.m. Reed Brinton, organizer of the festival, said the event Brinton said he expected about 10,000 people to attend Festival features Indians was created in part to showcase the New York band, Blues Traveler. The band, which has released two compact discs and appeared on "Late Night with David Letterman," has played before in Lawrence. the festival. He said he thought the new event was appealing because it brought together a wide variety of nationally known bands. New York He said other major acts would perform at the festival. Among them are: The Samples; Big Head Todd and the Monsters; Col. Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit and D.I. He said plenty of tickets were still available from Ticketmaster outlets. Tickets cost $22.25 in advance and $25 at the gate. "This is something that has never been done before," he said. "The caliber of entertainers is just impeccable. They attract a lot of the same crowds but also have a lot of diversity." Festival features Henkel Twenty-eight films and videos created by American Indians are scheduled for the first Indian-produced film festival ever presented at Lincoln Center. ENTERTAINMENT BRIEFSE "Wind and Glacier Voices: The Native American Film & Media Celebration" opens June 3 with an exhibition featuring contemporary Indian artists. Presented by the Association on American Indian Affairs and other organizations, this festival serves as the focal point for a series of seminars on American Indian artistic, social and political concerns. Los Angeles Pink Panther strikes again Four-time Academy Award-winner Henry Mancini has been signed to score Blake Edward's "Son of the Pink Panther" for MGM. The soundtrack will feature Mancini's famed Pink Panther theme, as well as original music composed for the film. "Son of the Pink Panther" continues Mancini's long association with Blake Edwards, for whom he has scored almost every film, including "Victor-Victoria," "Skin Deep," "S.O.B.," "10" and every Pink Panther movie to date. From The Associated Press University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 5B TO BE USED ONLY BY PUBLIC AUTHORITY. NO RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS PHOTO MAY NOT BE REproduced, Published, or Used in Any Way Except by the Authorized Subsidiary. PARKER Ostrich ranchers harvest bucks from big eggs About five years ago, Gene and Dorothy Mohr's son Greg was working on a cattle ranch in Texas that also produced oil. Because of the decline in the oil industry, the ranch went bankrupt and Greg found himself headed to another job, at an exotic animal farm that happened to be one of the top ostrich ranches in the country. bother of the top boss in the company. When Greg returned to his parents' farm in Ottawa, he brought home two ostrich eggs and an idea for a business. Greg built a little hatchery made of chicken wire for the chicks, but they needed better shelter than the hatchery could provide. The chicks did not live, but the seed of interest in the animals had been planted. The Mohrs decided to start the Rock Creek Ostrich Ranch off Highway 59 in Ottawa. Three months after Greg returned to Ottawa with the chicks, the Mohrs bought three more eggs. Of those three original eggs, one male and one female are still on the farm and are now a breeding pair named Partner and Daisy. Across the country, there are more than 600 exotic animal farms, and Rock Creek is one of only 40 ostrich farms in Kansas. With about 30 ostriches and five pairs who mate, the ranch can produce hundreds of healthy chicks each year. The Mohrs begin selling pairs of chicks at four months of age for $6,000. With each month that the chicks are buyers are charged another $1,000. Ostrich hens typically lay an egg every other day, usually about the same time of day. Once the eggs are laid, Dorothy collects and weighs the eggs and marks its parental identification on the shell. On the average, an ostrich egg can weigh between four and five pounds. Because they want to care for all the chicks at the same time, the eggs are placed in a refrigerator set at 60 degrees so the embryos are unable to develop. The eggs must be kept in an incubator to begin the development procedure. one only chick to survive the last hatching has been placed in a brooder to keep it warm until it is strong enough to survive outside of a temperature-controlled environment. Chicks tend to be strong enough by their fourth or fifth day and are moved to an indoor brooder room, which has several pen areas that hold as many as 100 chicks at once. The chicks stay in the brooder room for three weeks. About two months later, an ostrich is ready to be moved outdoors. Although the climate in Kansas would not appear conducive to the health of the exotic bird, Dorothy Mohr said that the birds had adapted and that every precaution was taken for their security. Although the two-month-old birds are placed in a common pen with other birds, they are not ready to be mated. In most of the mating pairs, alfalfa grows wild so they eat the grass along with their normal ostrich feed. The only time the weather poses a real threat to the ostriches is in the winter when snow and ice cover the ground. If the birds are not watched carefully, they can slip, fall, break a limb and have to be put to sleep. Five pairs of ostriches are being mated at Rock Creek although only four are laying eggs. Last year, the ranch successfully hatched and bred about 40 chicks to sell. This year they expect to triple the number. An ostrich ranch in Kansas may seem like an implausible business, but the Mohrs are doing quite well. Rock Creek is a partnership between Greg and his parents that successfully supports their two families. VOL 49 NO. 28 Story and photos by Peggy Woods Dorothy weighs an egg and marks the shell with its parents' identification before placing the egg in a refrigerator. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 ... PENNELLE'S OSTRICH FARM Dorothy Mohr shares several daily visits with the ostriches in the common pen area on her family's Rock Creek Ostrich Ranch off Highway 59 in Ottawa. 6B University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 AMERICAN BISTRO In the Eldridge Hotel 814-8349 Brunch 10-2 every Sunday only $9.95 Breakfast & Luncheon Entrees Salad Bar • Fresh Fruits Desert Bar • Coffee & Juice Your Summer Vacation Starts Here! Your Summer Vacation Starts Here! London $315* Paris $415* Madrid $385* Costa Rica $235* Bangkok $470* *Visa are each way from Kansas City based on a roundtrip purchase. Taxes not included and restrictions apply. Call for other destinations, both one way and round trip Council Travel 1634 Orrington Ave. Evanston, IL 60201 1-800-475-5070 Bottleneck 913 841 - LIVE 737 New Hampshire Lawrence Kansas FRIDAY 1 Bottleneck 913 841 - LIVE 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas FRIDAY 1 Nic Cosmos SATURDAY 2 Common Ground SUNDAY 3 Private Party MONDAY 4 from L.A. Adv. Tix 18 & over Cracker Mahoots TUESDAY 5 from Seattle 18 & over SEA WEED Sleez Stax Mother's Day Mother's Day The perfect gift for Mom Diamond Earrings start at $43.00 Kizer Cummings jewelers 833 Mass 749-4333 Kizer Cummings jewelers Summer Employment Johnson County Clerical Positions File Clerks Typists Word Processors Data Entry Receptionists Bank Tellers (exp) Packers Assembly Warehouse General Labor Lawn Maintenance Production Call Ann (913) 491-0944 11015 Metcalf CallJoanne [913]384-6161 6405 Metcalf Applications accepted Mon-Fri 9-3D.m Bossler Hix TEMPORARY SERVICE 11015 Metcalf Overland Park, KS THANKS HAWKS FOR ANOTHER GREAT YEAR Need a gift for the folks back home? KU FITTED HAT FOR DAD KU MESH SHORTS KU FITTED HAT FOR DAD KU FITTED HAT FOR DAD TEES CREWS HATS SOCKS GIFT ITEMS KU MESH SHORTS KU BUTTON DOWNS FOR ALL Golf Club Covers Golf Towels KU Phones KU EMBRIDERED TEES FOR MOM KANSAS SPORTS CLUB Hours M-Th 9:30 - 8 F, Sat 9:30 - 6 Sun 12 - 5 837 Mass 842-2992 KU MESH SHORTS TEES CREWS HATS SOCKS GIFT ITEMS KU FITTED HATFOR DAD KU MESH SHORTS KU BUTTON DOWNS FOR ALL KU BUTTON DOWNS FOR ALL KANSAS SPORTS CLUB KU EMBROIDERED TEES FOR MOM National magazine honors KU jazz group By Andy Taylor Kansan staff writer A national jazz magazine has recognized the singers as one of the five most influential jazz musicians (1820-20). Down Beat Magazine, based in Elmhurst, Ill., will give the publication's Outstanding Performance for a college jazz choir to the jazz singers in its June issue. Elaine Raizerz, an editor at the magazine, said only one other college beat the University of Kansas. She would not release the name until the magazine prints the issue after May 20. "An Outstanding Performance is still very good," she said. "There were numerous entries, and Kansas was one of the top entries in the jazz choir category." razierzias said that for the group to compete for *Down Beat's* awards, it had to send a tape of three songs to the magazine's judges. The KU group recorded two a capella songs, "Surrey with A Fringe on Top" and "My Shining Hour," and a song with the title "A companion, a accompaniment, 'A Night in Tunisia.'" THE NATURAL SONGS ORCHESTRA Down Beat also gives awards in other musical categories for high school and college musicians, Raizer said. Dan Gailey, KU director of jazz studios, said the award would put the University in an elite group of universities. "It is a major accomplishment," Gailey said. "For us to be with some of the top jazz schools, like the University of North Texas State, is quite a thrill." Gailey also said the group was told about the award last week when it sang at the Wichita Jazz Festival. Susanna Ternella, Wichita senior and a member of the jazz group, said the band's name is *Wichita*. "It was quite a shock," she said. "We didn't expect to win this award. We did expect to win one of the magazine's awards." Terrell said next year's jazz choir would be full of new voices. "All but two people are leaving," she said. "And everybody has sung in jazz ensemble or chair for four years. So next year will be rebuilding year." The jazzchoir is currently recording a compact disc for promotional and recruiting purposes. "It's not going to hit the record stores," Terrell said. file photo / KANSAN Down Beat magazine has recognized the KU Jazz Singers as one of the nation's top jazz ensembles. D "For We Accept VISA Don's Auto Center "For All Your Repair Needs" • Complete Auto Repair • Machine Shop Service • Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street We Accept VISA MARSHAL DEPOSIT ASE FREE MOVIE ON CAMPANILE HILL! NATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE SPONSORED BY STUDENT SENATE FRIDAY MAY 9TH 9:15 P.M. KJHK IS SPINNING TUNES! SUN RUDY'S PIZZERIA Taste The Rudy's Difference Q. What is Rudy's? A. It's the best little pizzeria in Lawrence. Q. Where is Rudy's? 749-0055 620 West 12th (behind the Crossing) THIS IS 12th Ready! THE CROSSING adjust a driveway 12th Street CROAD AVG. I NEED PLEASE MAY! A. Rudy's is at 620W.12th. Right behind the crossing. FREE Delivery -Rudy's Pizzeria offers a large selection of Diverse Toppings like: ·Zucchini ·EggPlant ·Spinach ·Broccoli ·Artichoke Hearts ·Feta Cheese ·Pineapple and of course all the traditional toppings. -Ask about our great daily specials. -Delicious salads and tasty bread stix -Pizzas are available in both original thickness or ultra thin St. Louis style. -Try a Pocket Za. three of your favorite toppings folded neatly into a pocket pizza. -Our pizzas are prepared with a classic spicy wine sauce and served on honey whole wheat or traditional white crust. University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 7B Christine McFarland / KANSAN ARTIST IN SCHOOL A different perspective Working on an advanced drawing final project, Jessica Small, left, and sits on the corner of 17th and Louisiana streets. The drawing project is Kasi Brown, right, Lawrence High School seniors, sketch a house that a study in perspectives. The continuing saga Group sues for JFK autopsy photos The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The private advocacy group Public Citizen sued the National Archives yesterday for the release of more than 250 autopsy photos and X-rays of assassinated President John F. Kennedy. The group told reporters the material could help resolve lingering doubts over whether Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the gunshot slaying of Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963 in Dallas. In the suit, Public Citizen charged the government with wrongfully withholding public documents by claiming they are the private property of the Kennedy family. "The photographs and X-rays are government records," said Public Citizen attorney Theresa Amato. Neither the government nor the Kennedy family, she said, can deny the public the right to see them under the Freedom of Information Act. Founded in 1971 by consumer advocate Ralph Nader, Public Citizen pursues a variety of consumer, environmental, public disclosure and health-related issues. The group filed the suit in U.S. District Court on behalf of author and photo historian Mark Katz after the archives rejected his request for the materials under the Freedom of Information Act. Some of the grizzly autopsy photos, showing the Kenneth family p. xxiv. The photos and X-rays of the president's body were taken at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland the night of Nov. 22 and on Nov. 23, 1963. The record includes 14 negatives and 29 prints from X-rays, 131 prints, 27 slides and 27 color negatives from the autopsy, and 25 envelopes containing other prints and negatives. The government turned the material over to the Kennedy family along with his bloodied clothing. On Oct. 29, 1966, Robert F. Kennedy deeded the photos and X-rays out to the government on condition that they be kept out of the public eye while the late president's immediate family members were alive. murdered president's blank stare, tracheotomy scar, and massive head wound, have been published in assassination books and tabloid magazines. But the bulk of the photographic record remains under lock and key at the archives, available only to qualified forensics experts and pathologists who gain Kennedy family permission. Archives representative Susan Cooper said attorneys were still examining the law suit and the agency would have no immediate comment. Melody Miller, representative for Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., said the family considers the photos to be private but had allowed qualified experts and government investigators full access to the material. "Unrestricted public release of the autopsy materials would obviously be very painful to the Kennedy family." Miller said. Katz, the author of two books featuring historical photographs, said he wanted to settle the debate over whether the few autopsy photos that had been published were doctored to support various assassination theories. "I'm very sensitive to the Kennedy family. This is nothing personal," Katz said. "It's just to get to the truth." If Katz wins the lawsuit, the archives would have to honor any request for the material, even if it came from a supermarket tabloid seeking to exploit the photos for their shock value. But Amatsoa said that Public Citizen might convince the court that the photos were public documents, rather than Kennedy family property, yet fail to gain their release. The Freedom of Information Act contains a privacy clause that "balances the public interest against the private interest," she noted. Legal precedent is on the side of the Kennedy family. In 1972 a federal appeals court in Denver upheld a lower court ruling displaying a pathology professor's request to examine X-rays and autopsy photos. In recent years, however, the act has been amended in favor of disclosure, Amato said. Printing is our only business! Order your Graduation Announcements • Newsletters • Thesis Binding • Brochures • Soft Cover Book Binding LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE INC. Call 843-4600 512 E. 9th Street LP BUM STEER GRADUATION CATERING AS EASY AS 3+3 CHOOSE 3 MEATS CHOOSE 3 SIDE ORDERS - Beef - Turkey - Pork - Burnt-ends - Ham - Sausage - Chicken - Baked Beans - Mashed Potatoes - Relish Plate - Au Gratin Potatoes - Cole Slaw - Potato Salad - Tossed Salad - Fruit Salad BUM STEER WILL PROVIDE TABLEWARE, BREAD, SAUCES, DELIVERY & SET-UP •DAILY FRATERNITY MEALS CATERED (LOW RATES) Serving KS Over 10 Years 841-7665 FREE DELIVERY Moving? Lighten your load by selling or storing your possessions. 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Office: Apt B1 Located just east of the Holidome at Iowa and 2nd St. 843-0011 Where Else But Muncher Bakery ... Graduation • Receptions • Weddings • Birthdays Hillcrest Shopping Center A STUDENT PLEASE READ BELOW THE DESIGN. Birthday 749-4324 The University of Kansas Theatre Presents the World Premiere Production of + 6 FESTIVAL RENEWAL Written and Directed by OMOFOLABO AJAYI 8:00 p.m. APRIL 30, MAY 1 and 2, 1992 2:30 p.m. MAY 3, 1992 Crafton-p.Meyer Theatre/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Floor Office, KU student tickets available at the SUA Office, Kansas Union, all seats reserved; public S7, KU students: $3.50 senior citizens and other students 86 to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard; call 913-648-3982 This production is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fund Neville Brothers will release album NEW ORLEANS - The Neville Brothers are busy these days. The Associated Press Take the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival for instance. Today, Charles Neville appears with his group Diversity. Later in the day, Cyril and the Uptown Allstars will be on the Congo Square Stage. Then Sunday they all get together to close out the Festival. Add to that a couple of appearances at Tippitina's, the uptown music club, to perform and to push their latest album, and the rehearsals for a six-month tour of the United States and Europe. "We are really busy," said Art Neville, who with brother Aaron round out the group. "You won't hear me complaining, though. I remember when we weren't busy at all. I've been waiting for this for a long time. It's fun, real." The versatile brothers, who combine the sounds of jazz, Caribbean, African, Cajun, rock and funk in a uniquely New Orleans sound, brushed against fame and fortune for over 30 years. "We're New Orleans people. When youre New Orleans people you want to be here for certain things, like Mardi Gras and Jazz Fest." In 1962, when "All These Things" was climbing the charts, Art Neville was operating an elevator at a New Orleans department store. "Tell It Like It Is" sold 40,000 copies the first week it was released in 1966. Aaron Neville listened to his hit while working as a longshoreman, loading coffee and cotton at the docks. "You may be a great singer, but if you don't eat, you Art Neville musician don'tlast," Artremembers. The Nevilles have lasted and triumphed, but like so many New Orleans musicians it was a long, arduous "It's a tremendous album," Art said. "There's some songs on it that are going to make people sit up and listen." The Neville Brothers grew up hard and grew up singing Raised in the tough Calliope Housing Project, Art, 54, the oldest, said kids learned to do two things early — fight and sing. "Icould fight,but Iliked singing better." he said. Aaron and Cyril both used drugs. Aaron and Charles both did time in jail. And, even while they made music, they worked at other jobs. Art said they all started singing on the concrete benches of the project and by the time they were out of school they had their music and their troubles. Art worked as a television and radio repairman. Aaron drove a truck, worked in construction and on the docks. Cyril delivered for a drugstore and cleaned graveyards and boxcars. "We made music, but we couldn't live on what we made from it," Art said. "It was funny, I used to be sitting at work sometimes and listening to one of us on the radio." About 16 years ago that began to change, Art said. The brothers still work separately at times, but now the team works together. And, he said, Jazz Fest is like home to his family. "The main thing is the Neville Brothers. This is family, it's what counts," he said. "Us being family is what has kept us strong over the years." An, he said. jazz is like nice to his family. "We're New Orleans people. When you're New Orleans people you want to be here for certain things, like mardi Gras and Jazz." Fest. "I said. And when the Neville Brothers are at Jazz Fest, people want to be there for it. "It's a special place," Art said. "You look out and all you see is happy, smiling faces — people having fun. Then Aaron can sing a ballad and 30,000 people will be so quiet you can hear a pin drop. It's a blessing." U. S. Department of Transportation U.S. Department of Transportation AQI Council DRINKING AND DRIVING CAN KILL A FRIENDSHIP JEEP SHE'S back better than ever and on SALE! 2000 W.23rd St.-Southwest Plaza hastings We're Entertainment! TRACY CHAPMAN MATTERS OF THE HEART BANG BANG BANG DREAMING ON A WORLD THE RACING SCHOOL Ee TRACY CHAPMAN Jayhawk Bookstore "at the top of Naismith Hill" JBS Briti-Bus Call for Special Charter Rates Mon-Thurs • 843-3826 Prices good thru 5/14/92 Save $2.00 or More discount Exercise your Right to Save! 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Cadue met Burr more than 20 years ago when they built homes for underprivileged children. Cadue said he continued to have a good working relationship with Burr, whose legal advice is sought by other American Indian tribes and lawyers. "There is not a day that goes by that we don't check with him on a some legal matter," he said. "Whether it is gaming, taxation, sale of gasoline, roads or school matters, he knows the law." The casino's revenue would help build schools, roads, houses and utilities on the reservation. Cadue also said attorneys specializing in American Indian legal matters were in demand. "When the Indian Self-Determination Act was passed by Congress in 1975, Indian tribes began pressing for more sovereign rights," he said. "The Constitution requires more independent requirements more legal authority." Cadue said Burr appealed to the American Indian community because of his concern for the well-being of a native person. "He has a deep appreciation for the environment and the conservation of natural resources," he said. "With that being a guiding principle, he associates with the Native American people." The Kiekapoon tribe is the only American Indian tribe in Kansas to have an attorney general and an established court system, Cadue said. Dan Watkins, a Lawrence attorney and legal counsel for the Sac and Fox Tie in Kansas, said Burr was respected because of his knowledge of state and trivial laws. "He is uniquely positioned because of his relations with the Kickapoos and because of his experience in state government," he said. "There are only a handful of attorneys in this part of the country with specialized interest regarding Indian law. And Lance is one of them." Burr, a graduate of the KU School of Law, said his involvement with American Indian affairs stemmed from his seven years as an assistant Kansas attorney general. "That's how I got my education," he said. "I didn't learn anything at KU." After dabbling in state politics and an unsuccessful bout for Kansas attorney general in 1974, he moved to California. He said he saw a state government run by legislators who lived inhumane lives. "They are hypertensive when they are in Topeka, they eat bad food, and they are always rushed. Burr said, "That's no way to live." He said his experience in state government showed him that American Indian tribes in Kansas were being neglected. "I have to speak up." Burr said. "I have to do something. The treaties have been broken. We "And the Indian way is still powerful... Sure we are dealing with a white man's world. But I am not going to walk off and see a race of people die." Lance Burr Attorney genreal of the Kickapoo Tribal Council Another of Burr's crusades is the case of Gregg Sevier, a 24-year-old Lawrence American Indian who was shot and killed in April 1991 by two Lawrence police officers. A coroner's inquest one week later ruled the death a justifiable homicide. are taught in law school to have ethics. I see no ethics by professionals that should be protecting Indian peoples' rights." "One of the problems that we have with modern day, non-Indian people is that they have the tendency to look in the past," he said. "That takes the focus of modern day stuff, things like why so many Indians have become alcoholics, why they have low literacy rates, why they suffer from severe depression." Burr said he thought people who made judgments on Sevier and on casinos were relying on past histories of American Indians to make decisions that affected the present. Lance Burr's office floor is a makeshift file cabinet. Dozens of file folders are stacked across the floor. Even the tops of desks and bookshelves are full of the manila folders. It's his way of working, and friends say his way works. "That is just Lance's style," said Craig Stancliffe, a Lawrence attorney and friend of Burr. "If I had to call anybody for an issue about Indian law, it would be Lance." Even Burr's girlfriend says she is not bothered by his lifestyle. "I would never have been with him if he was a regular, three-piece-suit lawyer," said Patty Boyer, a paste-up artist at Allen Press. Boyer said she met Burr about 12 years ago when Burr would meet with other friends and play guitar in garage bands. "My roommate wanted me to go meet this ladner named Burd," she said. "I was thinking later." Boyer also said that prior to their meeting, Boyer had been called "City Slicker and Country Boy." "Lance worea straw hat and bib overalls while the other gore wore a tuxedo," she said. "They would play their gigs at places by bus stations." Boyer said Warr was not worried about finan- "He is not concerned with status," she said. "He likes to take the cause of the little guy, which I think is considered old-fashioned in lawyer circles." Burr, a native of Salina, said his concern for American Indians was a result of his conservative background. "My mother was very conservative," he said. "She told me not to show off. And I had an aunt that saved everything. She would cut old coffee cans and use them to patch her buildings. Those are things that stick in my mind ever since I was a boy." Boyer said although Burr was a conservative financial planner, his ideology was everything but conservative. "That doesn't mean he is low key," she said. "He sometimes lets off some steam." Burr said he did not mind conserving resources and being a non-traditional attorney. Besides, that is his goal for work. His devotion to American Indian culture is evident in the numerous pictures and paintings of famous American Indians hanging on his office walls. "That's why the Indian way is a backdrop to my work," he said. "And the Indian way is still powerful. They are still around. Sure we are dealing with a white man's world. But I am not going to walk off and see a race of people." 'Manny' the mechanical man approaches finishing touches The Associated Press DUGWAY PROVING GROUND. Utah — Someday, when Army scientists ask "Manny" what's doing under that bulky gear providing protection from chemicals, they'll only have to ask "My right leg is getting warm," the mechanical man may reply. The clipped, electronic voice is robotic but the startlingly lifelike movements of the $10 million IBM computer After years of preparation, Manny — a 5-foot-11, 165-pound robotic mannequin — is nearing initial tests at this remote Army installation in Utah's western desert. Researchers wanted to start using Manny three years ago to test military protective garments but met delays over related chemical defense projects. Then came the Persian Gulf War, and the specter of chemical attack loomed larger. By late last year, renewed financing and more staff put Manny back on track, officials said. The robot's operators recently received a burnished stainless steel testing chamber. Meantime, civilian computer expert Jimmy Barnes added a few new tricks to a mechanical repertoire that lets Manny breathe, sweat, walk, talk and keep a uniform skin temperature of 98.6 degrees. Instead of a flashing light, for example, Manny's voice can be programmed to announce problems. Scientists are also contemplating recasting the plastic sheathing that gives the machine human form to bolster the attachment of its complex instruments. Atop the plastic is a double layer of dense black rubber fitted with sensors to detect any penetration of as little as one-billionth of an ounce of chemical or nerve gas. This means Manny is practically ready for work, said project manager Capt. Mark Subsinsky. Manny was conceived in 1985 by Lothar Salomon, a chemist and Dugway's then-scientific director. Salomon, now retired, was looking for something more realistic than ordinary mannequins and stand-in poisons to test garments for warfare. The mannequins and substitute chemicals were used because there was no way perform sufficient tests in a sealed environment. Ideal testing mimics human movement like walking, squatting, sitting, crawling and manipulating tools. Manny not only moves, it can move hour after hour so analysts see how the protective clothing wears in repeated use. That couldn't be done in the presence of lethal chemicals until the test chamber was completed by Manny's maker, Battelle's Pacific Northwest Laboratories in Richland, Wash. The hermetically sealed cube is fitted with windows. Inside, Manny is supported at the small of the back by a steel arm attached to a control unit housing hydraulics and electrical systems. The chamber is stored in a sealed building that keeps chemicals from leaking into the atmosphere. Besides the Army's uses, Manny potentially could be hired out without leaving the premises On a recent visit, workers were knocking out a cinder-block wall to install windows in a room for Manny's computer and instrument panel. Upstairs, more windows will let observers watch Manny at work. for testing protective gear for the Environmental Protection Agency as well as civilian hazardous-materials handlers and fire departments. A ski manufacturer has even inquired about running flex tests on its skis. "From concept to actuality," said Capt. Tim Moore, who works in Dugway's chemical laboratory. "Manny's potential hasn't been touched." But the Army's current and primary concern, is using Manny to secure the safety of soldiers who, despite treaties banning chemical warfare, could face lethal agents on the battlefield, officials said. "It's good for the troops," Moore said. This year Manny will continued to undergo tests. It will be year's end, if then, that actual chemical tests begin. 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Student Loans In 24 Hours. The academy has been operating since 1979 and some of its graduates have gone on to become bodyguards for Gadhafi, often appearing at his side at conferences. The Associated Press This is not a five level class. It is part of a show staged for Western media at the Tripoli Military Academy for Girls nearly two weeks after U.N. sanctions were imposed on Libya over its refusal to surrender suspects in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. TRIPOLI, Libya — Rows of women in army uniform adjust their shoulder weapons in firing position. A female officer shouts orders to operators of an anti-tank weapon. Indoors, more women officers decode Morse-code messages. This is no live exercise. "We are ready to fight imperialism, American interference and Zionist plots," said Soad Bashir, a middle-aged instructor at the academy. "We need more revolutionary women in Libya. We are aiming for 5 percent of the female population," she said. Libya's has 4.2 million people. She said she had sacrificed marriage and a family to devote her life to Col. Moammar Gadhafi's revolution, appealing to young girls to devote themselves "like nips" to the revolution. Libyan women fight for equality Reporters for Western news organizations, barred by Libyan officials from news coverage for 10 days in the wake of the U.N.-imposed sanctions, were suddenly taken on a visit to the academy Tuesday. We specialize in giving fast, friendly service on Stafford, PLUS, and SLS loans. In most instances, once your application is received, we'll give you an answer the next business day. Come down to the main bank at 9th and Mass or, call Carol Wirthman at 865-0278. Out of town? Call toll free 1-800-377-LOAN Carol and her staff understand that when you need a student loan, you can never get it fast enough. So "when daylight come, you'll know if you got a student loan". "We are ready to fight imperialism, American interference and Zionist plots." 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But Gadhafi has said the West could wage war against Libya over his refusal to hand over the two suspects in the 1988 Pan Am bombing, which killed 270 people. Tensions between Libya and the West rose when the United Nations on April 15 banned air links and arms sales to Libya and urged countries to order reductions in Libyan diplomatic abroad. While pointing out the basic differences between men and women, he also said there must be equality between the sexes. "We must protect the revolution," she said. "It gave a lot to women." In his "third universal theory," also known as the "Green Book," Gadhafi laid down the structure of Libyan society. But overall school attendance for girls remains low and Libyan women are still expected to marry and run a family rather than join men in the work force, according to Egyptian teachers and Western diplomats in Libya. ATHENS, Greece — They say it with lapel pins. They plaster it on lamp-posts. They even advertise it in strip joints. The Associated Press In any way they can, Greeks are trying to spread their message that Yugoslavia's southernmost republic shouldn't be allowed to call itself Macedonia. In another, about 30 women dropped to one knee and aimed their rifles from the shoulder. They did not fire, saying they had their live-fire exercises outside the academy. In one demonstration at the academy, five women dressed in fatigues stood around an SPC-10n-tank tank. Greeks upset by Yugoslav republic Indoors, women with headphones decoded messages in Morse code that an officer was supplying. Others operated computers, opening and closing programs. Both states want use of name 'Macedonia'; military intervention suggested What angers Greeks is that the Yugoslav republic is agitating for independence — under the name Macedonia. But Macedonia is also a territory in northern Greece. The Greeks refer to the Yugoslav republic as Skopje, after its capital. Greeks say that Yugoslav Marshal Josip Broz Tito usurped the ancient Greek name of Macedonia in 1944 and gave Yugoslavia claims over the northern Greek territory. with the former Yugoslavia now breaking up, the Macedonian question has taken on a life of its own. A few Greeks have even called for military intervention if Macedonia is granted international recognition. One leading conservative daily. Eletheros Typos, ran an editorial April 13 stating: "Maybe we should make it clear in all directions that if need be, we will send a couple of divisions and a few elite commando units to restore justice." Conservative Premier Constantine Mitsotakis has ruled out military force, which he describes as adventurism. He says Greece would prefer good relations with the republic. But the issue of Macedonia has gripped people here like no other since Turkey's 1974 invasion of Cyprus. In February, for example, more than 1 million people took part in a demonstration against recognition of Macedonia. Thousands of consumers and dozens of supermarkets joined a boycott against Dutch and Italian products after the two governments were perceived to favor Macedonian recognition. The slogan "Macedonia is and has been Greek for over 3,000 years" has sprung up on posters, stickers, taxi cabs and postage meters. Lapel pins with the star of ancient Macedonia are all the rage in government offices, businesses and trendy Athens night clubs. "I've given out more than 200,000 since the end of February. We are working day and night and even weekends to make them," jeweler Makis Michalis said. He does not charge for the gold-plated pins. There is now a Macedonia airport in northern Greece, a navy firing called Macedonia and a state-run Macedonian News Agency covering northern Greece and the Balkans. The state mint issued a coin with the head of Alexander the Great, the ancient Greek warrior king who ruled Macedonia in the 4th century B.C. A popular strip joint in Athens strung up a "Macedonia is Greek" banner over its dance floor. In the United States, a group calling itself "Americans for the Just Resolution of the Macedonian Issue" took out a full-page article in The New York Times on Sunday. It called on President Bush not to recognize the Yugoslav republic unless it changes its name. Some conservative and socialist politicians say the Macedonia issue has restored Greek pride in the nation's heritage and patriotism. nation's hereditary and poised himself. But some leftist parties are worried it may have tapped a vein of long-suppressed nationalism. "There are members of the extreme right and the socialist party who talk about military pressure — something that could lead to an explosion in the region," Maria Damanaki, head of the small Left Coalition, told Parliament. Macedonia has proved to be Mitsotakis' toughest challenge since his visit. He received a vote of confidence April 17 after firing Foreign Minister Andonis Samaras for his uncompromising stand on the issue. Mitsotakis accused Samaras of attempting to force the government to say that Greece will close its borders and isolate the republic if it is recognized. But Mitosakis immediately adopted Samara's hard-line approach. He may be banking his political future on his ability to convince Greece's EC partners at a May 11 meeting not to recognize the republic unless it changes its name. HEYKU... REMEMBER, DRINKING & DRIVING DON'T MIX!! PLEASE DRINK RESPONSIBLY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Jazzhaus 926 1/2 Massachusetts - 749-3320 Thursday, May 7 Camberwell Green Thursday, May 14 Chubby Smith and His Orchestra Friday & Saturday, May 8 & 9 Homestead Grays Friday & Saturday, May 15 & 16 That Statue Moved Sunday, May 17 K.U. Gradsl NO COVER Celebrate graduation with the Jazzhaus Big Band Mondays & Wednesdays $2.50 Pitchers & 50¢ Draws Open 7 days a week--4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. Friday afternoons--chow line starts at 5:30! University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 11B Population projections A new report estimates the global population will climb to 8.5 billion in the next 33 years. Population In billions 10 8.5 World 8 Less developed nations 7.2 6 More developed 1.4 2 0 01111111111 fertility rate Children born per woman ☐ World More developed nations Less developed nations 2.8 6.2 5.0 1950- 1985- 2020- 1955 1990 2025 Young adults young adults 15 to 24 year olds in millions, by continent 1990 2025 North America 39.7 39.5 Central America World population affects environment The Associated Press LONDON — World population, rising faster than ever and headed for 6 billion, is a crucial factor in environmental destruction and must be considered at the Earth Summit, the U.N. Population Fund said yesterday. Nafis Sadik, the fund's executive director, said that summit documents barely mentioned population growth. She said she understood the Roman Catholic Church was involved in blocking inclusion of family planning. "Unless you really deal with population, you can forget about environment or about development," she said. Sadik said the first pre-summit meeting, last year, had put population on the agenda, but the second meeting, this year, had diluted everything in its proposed programs and in the Earth Charter, to be signed by heads of government. "All mention of family planning has been removed. In fact, family planning has been addressed in the most round-about fashion. ... that was, I understand, at the very active participation of the Vatican and by one or two governments. ... Argentina and the Philippines," she said. According to the fund's annual report, the State of World Population 1992, the population will increase by about 97 million annually until the year 2000, the equivalent of the population of the United States every 2 1/2 years. "If we carefully husband them, world resources are adequate for the sustained development of the planet," Sadik said. The report came five weeks before the June summit in Rio de Janeiro, called the U.N. Conference on Environment and Development. Sadik said fund officials had been talking to summit secretary-general "Unless you really deal with population,you can forget about environment or Knight-Ridder Tribune about development." Nafis Sadik U.N. Population Fund Maurice Strong and to governments with strong population programs to see what could be done about adding to the agenda. She did not identify the governments. "I think the population issue will be addressed," she said. The report publishes long-range population projections from the U.N. Population Division. According to the projections, the world population will be 5.48 billion in mid-1992, climbing to 6 billion by 1998—two years earlier than previously forecast. The next decade's projected growth, about 97 million annually, is the highest ever, with nearly all the growth in Africa, Asia and Latin America the report said. It said more should be done for the world's 1.1 billion poorest people. It also indicated a need to improve health and education, and to raise the status of women. Special attention should be given to Africa and South Asia, where more than half the population increase occurs, it said. Japanese workaholics get relief The Associated Press Through a haze of cigarette smoke, they recount feelings of powerlessness and the overwhelming desire to conform and be accepted. TOKYO — The middle-aged men sit on folding chairs in a small, barren room, taking turns talking about their addiction and the agonizing downward spiral that led them here. They are not talking about drugs or alcohol. Work is their addiction, and they call themselves Workaholics anonymous. "For 17 years I did whatever the company wanted of me," said one man in blue jeans. He recounted how he went tens of thousands of dollars into debt wining and dining prospective customers, just so he could be his firm's top sales representative in the region. "I was on the verge of divorce; I'd lost touch with my children, but the company was everything to me," said the man, who has since quit and opened a noodle shop, where he still works 10-12 hour days. "It was all that mattered." Privacy is paramount in the group of about 10 people. Members spoke on condition of anonymity, and no photographs were allowed. According to Satoru Salto, who founded the group three months ago, workaholic tendencies are widespread among Japanese because of the intense pressures on them to conform and to identify with their corporate "family." "Like alcohols, workaholics feel they have no control over the situation." Saito said. "What I am doing is putting the label of sickness on something that before had been considered normal and healthy in our society," Saito said in an interview. "To vary degrees, workaholism is a problem shared by all Japanese adults." Heart attacks and strokes — both often stress-related — are the second and third most common causes of death in Japan after cancer. Surveys suggest more than one-third of all workers fear they will fall victim to "karoshi," or death from overwork. "Karoshi is the modern version of seppuku," said one of the Workaholics Anonymous members. "It is considered an honor, the ultimate sacrifice." Seppuku is ritual suicide. South Pointe APARTMENTS - Pool & Volleyball BATHROOM SATB KITCHEN LIVING ROOM ONE BEDROOM BEDROOM BEDROOM BATH BATH KITCHEN LIVING ROOM BALCONY TOWER BEDROOM 1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms - Small pets with deposit - Central Air & Gas Heat - Disposal & Dishwasher BEDROOM 1 BEDROOM 2 MUTE ATTICERY LIFTING ROOM BEDROOM BALCONY - Frost Free Refrigerator - Popular Carpet Colors NESTROOM NESTROOM BALLET LAPT LIFT KITCHEN LIFETIME 2004 BALLPAD TW BALLPAD Available For Summer & Fall 2166 W.26th 843-6446 BEDROOM 1 BEDROOM 2 BEDROOM 3 BEDROOM 4 BEDROOM 5 BEDROOM 6 BEDROOM 7 BEDROOM 8 BEDROOM 9 BEDROOM 10 BEDROOM 11 BEDROOM 12 BEDROOM 13 BEDROOM 14 BEDROOM 15 BEDROOM 16 BEDROOM 17 BEDROOM 18 BEDROOM 19 BEDROOM 20 BEDROOM 21 BEDROOM 22 BEDROOM 23 BEDROOM 24 BEDROOM 25 BEDROOM 26 BEDROOM 27 BEDROOM 28 BEDROOM 29 BEDROOM 30 BEDROOM 31 BEDROOM 32 BEDROOM 33 BEDROOM 34 BEDROOM 35 BEDROOM 36 BEDROOM 37 BEDROOM 38 BEDROOM 39 BEDROOM 40 BEDROOM 41 BEDROOM 42 BEDROOM 43 BEDROOM 44 BEDROOM 45 BEDROOM 46 BEDROOM 47 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St. Put some spice into life! - 15% off Gift Baskets and - 15% off Laurel Burch earrings, mugs and T-shirts - 15% off Natural Body Shop A 841-0100 ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PIZZA PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 Just ask for the #1 Special 2 - PIZZAS 1 - TOPPING $600 Additional single topping pizza - $3^{00} Additional toppings .50¢ A "no coupon" special DELIVERY HOURS Offer good through May17, 1992 FRI-SAT MON-THUR 11AM-2AM Open at 11am everyday 11AM-3AM 11AM-1AM SUNDAY Dine-in available We accept checks! VERYDAY TWO-FERS PRIMETIME SPECIAL PARTY "10" 2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 2-COKES 4-COKES $30^{00} $9^{00} $1150 ATTENTION KANSAS CITY STUDENTS UMKC PUTS THE CHOOL BACK IN SUMMER SCHOOL Need to finesse coursework around your work schedule? No problema. We've got four-week terms, six-week terms and a catalog-full of courses going night and day. Going home to KC and want to keep working on your degree? No sweat We'll give you special visiting student status that makes enrollment easier than ever. 校园生活 Want to cool off between classes? Why not study poolside at our spec- Want to cool it between classes? Why tacular indoor-outdoor pool? Or stroll down to the Plaza or the Nelson and just hang out. At UMKC we try to take the sweat out of summer school and put the chool back in. To find out more, please call: (816) 235-1111 UMKC an equal opportunity institution 12B University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 1, 1992 BENCHWARMERS SUMMER SPECIALS Sundays Mondays•Tuesdays $3.00 Pitchers Wednesdays $1.00 Double Draws (24oz) No Cover Thursdays $2.00 Pitchers Fridays·Saturdays 2 For 1 Well Drinks Check the Deck! Live Music All Summer Keeping animals clean and using sprays may thwart summertime flea outbreaks Pest-free pets By James Reece Special to the Kansan when a parasitic insect such as the flea gets off its host, it is gambling on how soon it will find its next blood meal. However that next host — maybe a household dog or cat — could become the place where that flea, and probably some of its friends, waits. That is an important consideration during a Kansas summer, especially for net owners. George Byers, professor of entomology, said adult fleas could go as long as 127 days, or about four months, without feeding. He said that during the Kansas summer, even pest-free trees stood a chance of finding a bunch of hungry fleas waiting for them, either in the outdoors or in their bedding. Killing the adult flea is fairly easy, and Byers recommended two natural powder or spray ingredients that are parchment to the pet. Byers said ideal weather for fleas to thrive, in both breeding and egg-laying, was between 60 and 80 degrees with humidity about 70 percent. He said some products might not be meant for use with cats or in combination with other products. Root, a Central and South American tropical plant, is a common ingredient in some powders, Byers said. Another safe, yet less effective natural ingredient, ovrethrum, comes from the daisy. Rotenone, a derivative of the Derris But another problems lurks after the death of the flea: the eggs each dead flea leaves behind. Unhatched eggs are virtually immune to insecticides, he said. The eggs, however, can and should be removed from the house and sleeping quarters of the pet with the use of a vacuum cleaner. Vacuum cleaner bags should be removed and emptied regularly or thrown away because eggs can hatch and infest the bags. Byers said another way to prevent eggs from hatching was to burn the pet's bedding. per se beating. The life cycle of the flea is much like the butterfly, with its four stages: the egg, larva, pupa and adult. After feeding for four to eight days, the larvae spin cocoons, and the adult flea may emerge in as little as five days, often bring the entire life cycle of the flea, from egg to adult, to a finish in as few as 10 days. Herschel Lewis of the Lewis Veterinary Clinic said the most effective method to stop flea outbreaks was to stop the initial infestation by keeping pets, homes and yards clean. He said that at his clinic he prescribed a product called Proban, an oral treatment that helps curb flea infestation. The pill does not actually kill fleas or stop fleas from biting, but it stops the fleas from laying eggs. He said the product could not be used with cats, some breeds of dogs or with other treatments that were not compatible. Lewis said that eggs could not be destroyed but that fleas in the larvae stage could be killed by the use of yard and house sprays that linger among the eggs until the larvae emerge. Although many solutions work, the best way to protect pets is to keep them free from fleas before an infestation starts. But with flea problems differing in each house and neighborhood, in both severity and treatability, sometimes it can be helpful to seek help from a veterinarian or a pet shop employee. Trevor Lyon, of the Animal House Pet Shop, 2201 W. 25th St., said several severe flea experiences with his own dogs led him to understand that sometimes pets could be overtreated. "In the summer, baths can dry their skin, and if you spray too often, it will make your dog sick," he said. Lyon said that one year the problem was so bad that he called in professional fumigators. Country music thrives in Branson The Associated Press BRANSON, Mo. — Their chart-topping years behind them, many country stars have found a road that leads not to obscurity but to Branson. The names are getting bigger and the lines of traffic longer at the Ozark Mountain town that drew some 4 million people to Missouri last year. Today Willie Nelson and Andy Williams will join the crowd, with grand openings at their music halls on the Las Vegas-style strip. theme park. Williams is the first noncountry entertainer to have a hall. Next to his Moon River Theatre, Louise Mandrell, Glen Campbell and Randy Travis will be hosts at the opening of the Grand Palace, a glitter 4,000-seat theater owned by Silver Dollar City Construction delays prevent Johnny Cash from opening his theater Friday. Roy Clark of "Hee Haw" fame was the first star to lend his name to Branson theater — in 1983 — but he made only rare appearances. As the theme park and surrounding lakes grew more popular, Clark did more shows and brought in more entertainers. "It's given new life to an old career," said Tillis, who opened a theater in March in the town of 3,700 just north of the Arkansas line. Mel Tillis, Box Car Willie, Moe Bandy, Mickey Gilley, the Gatlin Brothers, Cristy Lane, Loretta Lynn, Conway Twity, Ray Stevens, Jim Stafford, Sons of the Pioneers and fiddler Shoji Tabuchi now have their own halls or appear as guests. you can go to church every Sunday and put your underwear in the same drawer every night," the 59-year-old Tillis said. "I've been on the road for 35 years, I saw a chance to get off the road, and I cut out the middle man. "I went back to Nashville, and I guess I spread the word a little too good. I said, 'Boys, there's gold in them there hills.'" Visitors many on bus tours pump1.5billiona year into Branson's economy There are two dozen theaters, and the most expensive tickets, at the Grand Palace, are less than $25. Hotel rooms generally go for around $40 a night. Dozens of restaurants offer all-you-can-eat for under $10. FIVE DOLLAR FINALS FEEDING FRENZY! PARK RANGER you do the crammin'... we'll do the jammin'... ... Large Pizza With 1 Topping, JUST $500 Additional toppings only $1.00 each. DOMINO'S PIZZA Tobacco Dinner Box This Offer Absolutely Positively Ends: May 17,1992 841-8002 832Iowa SPORTS: Former Jayhawk Lynette Woodard is vying for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOL.101.NO.145 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1992 ADVERTISING:864-4358 (USPS650-640) NEWS:864-4810 图 VIEWS & NEWS Culture construction Construction of Lied Center, KU's new performing arts building, should be completed for a scheduled September 1993 dedication, officials said. The $14.7 million structure will be home to the concert series, SUA events, Rock Chalk Revue and faculty lectures. Story, page 3. GTAs battle for status University of Kansas graduate employees are preparing for an October hearing with the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board. The board will determine whether graduate student employees are classified as public employees or as students.The graduate employees cannot vote to form a union until the board recognizes them as public employees. Story, page 6. Center selection starts The selection process is under way for the committee that will decide the mission of the new multicultural center at KU. Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said he was hoping to have the committee chosen by the end of the summer. Story. page 5. Story, page 5. New vice chancellor prepares to face issues By Kristi Klepper Kansan staff writer After six years as dean of education, Edward Meyen will assume the position of executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas on July 15. Meyen will take over the position from Del Shankel, who has been serving as interim executive vice chancellor since the summer of 1990. To prepare for the new job, Meyen is going through an informal orientation process with Shankel. By attending the executive vice chancellor's meetings and briefings, Shankel said that Meyen would have the opportunity to participate in decisions on issues that he will deal with when he takes office. Meyen said he also was doing his own research for the position. "I'm holding conversations with different people on campus to try to determine perceptions and expectations of the job so I have a better understanding of campus-wide concerns," he said. Meyen said that he would wait until he got into office to determine his personal goals for the position but that he hoped to enhance administrative efforts that are already under way. Shankel said that the executive vice chancellor was expected to be involved in all aspects of the Lawrence campus, from the budget to controversial issues. Meyen said, "It presents new challenges in the broader range of university-wide responsibilities." Looking back on his tenure in the School of Education, Meyen said he would miss working closely with colleagues to accomplish goals that yielded quick and visible results. In his new role, Meyen will be dealing with more people and with projects that require long-term attention. Meyen said he recognized that as executive vice chancellor he would face more complicated problems and issues, which would take longer to resolve. One of these is the review of the University's degree programs required by the Board of Regents. "I'm looking forward to the opportunity to play a role in helping the institution address significant issues." Meyen said. "This is a good institution, and we should be able to draw on resources from faculty and students to meet the challenges facing us." Meyen came to KU in 1973 as chairperson of the department of special education. In 1978 he was named associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. Since 1986, Meyen has served as dean of education. Meyen earned his doctorate from the University of Iowa Fee payment off to late start 30256 DougHesse/KANSAN Students gather in front of Wescoe Hall and wait for the distribution of fee payment cards, which was delayed by a tangle in the printing process. Because of the slow start, the lines of students stretched onto Jayhawk Boulevard. DON'T LET ME BE NEXT... Daron Bennett/KANSAN Lucas Packard, 2, holds a sign as part of the protest against the outcomes of both the Christopher Bread and Gregg Sevier cases. Protesters decry verdict in American-Indian death Rights group 'Walks Across America' from N.Y. to protest racial injustice About 50 demonstrators gathered at the Douglas County Courthouse Friday to protest the outcome of the trial involving the 1990 hit-and-run killing of Christopher Bread, an American-Indian man. The jury failed to reach a verdict on a felony count of aggravated vehicular homicide but convicted the defendant, Marvin Schlaif, 19, of Lawrence, Kansan staff report The protesters attended a press conference organized by Walk Across America, a group that is walking from New York City to the Nevada desert to protest racial injustice and mistreatment of the environment. The group stopped in Leavenworth Thursday, and when members heard of the local trial they decided to come to Lawrence, members said. on a misdemeanor charge of leaving the scene of an accident. Kati Punnett, St. Louis resident and member of Walk Across America, said she had attended Haskell Indian Junior College in Lawrence for more than a year. "The reason I left Lawrence was because I was afraid," she said. Her view was echoed by Ruth Kyleo. Lawrence. "There are a lot of Native Americans in Lawrence who don't feel safe here," she said. Kyle said she was outraged by the recent trial involving Bread's death and by the 1991 Lawrence police shooting of Gregg Sevier, also an American Indian. She said the incidents were examples of police negligence and brutality, and she compared Lawrence to the recent situation in Los Angeles. She said she would continue to try to focus attention on the issue. "This is not a local story any more," she said. "You can't kill us right now. Everybody's watching." Printer's error causes delays, upsets students By Anne Grego Kansan staff writer Yesterday, Claudia Bussman-Burris went through fee payment for the first time at KU. She arrived in front of Wescoe Hall at 11:50 to make sure she was there in plenty of time to pick up her fee payment card at noon. Unfortunately, her card did not arrive for another hour. "I think it's rude. They could have taken care of business before," said Bussman-Burris, graduate student in social welfare. By 12:05 p.m. the crowd flowed down the steps in front of Wescoe Hall, down the sidewalk and out onto Jayhawk Boulevard. Police were called to move waiting students off the street. The tables were moved closer to the windows in front of Wescoe's auditorium so more people could get on Wescoe's sterrace and out of the street. A computer printer problem caused the fee payment cards to arrive late at Wescoe. Yesterday, employees at the computer center realized the fee cards would not be ready. They had the cards printed at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, said Wes Williams, dean of educational services. One batch of cards made it to Lawrence at about noon, and were sorted and being distributed to students by 12.10. The second batch, with higher KUID numbers, came later, causing students like Bussman-Burris to wait up to 50 minutes, said Williams. About 20 extra staff people from the department of educational services helped with the situation, Williams said. Administrators and Office of Admissions staff walked through the crowd, trying to explain the situation to students and answer any questions. "We don't like lines any more than the students do," said Jobe Rademacher, assistant registrar. While students had questions about what lines were for which KUID numbers, most were tired of waiting in lines. Others accepted it as just part of KU's system. Within an hour and a half, the long lines in front of Wescoe had cleared and moved to the Union. Students with high KUID numbers waited in a line that at times stretched across the Jayhawk Room and through the Kansas Union Ballroom. When lines got long, extra personnel helped get the line moving quicker. Williams said. The new mail-in fee payment system is expected to eliminate some of yesterday's problems, Williams said. A typographical error in the Summer 1992 Timetable caused few problems during Monday's new, readmitted and residual enrollment, according to Brenda Selman, assistant registrar. The error, which reported that enrollment began on June 2 rather than on June 1, appeared on pages six and 13. The error was found in March before timetables were distributed to students. The registrar's office quickly went to work to inform students of the problem. Corrections were distributed next to the timetables in the unions. Fliers were posted on the bulletin boards on campus and at the enrollment center. CAMPUS SNAPSHOT Because a boat can cost more than $14,000. Crew is the most costly sport club at KU. More than $9,000 of the crew budget provides rent for the boat house. Campus fees help KU's 31 sports clubs Kansan staff report Sports clubs, although founded on the spirit of fun and play, can be big business at the University of Kansas. Part of the student campus fee paid during registration each semester is earnured for recreation services, which in turn finances the clubs, some of which require more revenue than others. According to the 1992 University budget, the top 10 clubs in terms of money received have a combined support in excess of $45,000. KU Crew received the most money, with an allocation of $14,360. Gordon Kratz, assistant director of recreation services, said that there were 31 sports clubs registered at the University, with about 25 of them receiving student campus fee financing. He said that revenue for sports clubs allocated from student fees during fiscal year 1992 totaled $69,450 but that not all that money necessarily was given to the clubs right away. "We try to spend as much as we can," he said. But any undistributed funds are placed in a reserve account. He said he would not know for about another month how much of the $69,450 had been disbursed to clubs. kratz said that during the fall and spring semesters, $9 of each student's campus fees went to finance recreation services. Of that amount, $1.50 goes to sports clubs; $4.50 goes to maintenance of the recreation services office, and $3.00 goes to maintenance of Robinson Center. During the summer, those amounts are half of the fall and spring intake, he said. Even though the student fee money is allocated according to the Student Which club costs the most? Senate Rules and Regulations, the amounts actually allocated do not match the amounts specified in the rules, according to Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer. Section 7.2.1 of the 1991-92 Student Senate Rules and Regulations calls for a total of $13.50 in student campus fees to be paid to recreation services, with $2.25 for sports clubs, $7.50 for maintenance of the office, and $3.75 for maintenance of Robinson. These amounts are in error, Sigourney said, the actual recreation services allocation being $9. according to the 1992 KO budget: The ten most expensive sports clubs according to the 1992 KU budget: $0 5000 10,000 15,000 Crew $14,360 Sailing $5,090 Rugby $4,875 Soccer (men's) $4,200 Waterskling $4,043 Fencing $3,067 Volleyball (men's) $2,960 Equestrian $2,831 Cricket $2,448 Raquetball $2,046 --- Source: University of Kansas Budgot, 1992 Sean Tevis/Almee Brainard, Daily Kansas 2 Wednesday, June 3, 1992 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE WEEK IN BRIEF A SUMMARY OF THE WEEK'S NEWS THURSDAY/FRIDAY According to government reports, the nation's factories released more than 4 billion pounds of toxic chemicals in 1990. This figure is down 11 percent from 1989. A federaljury found Yahweh ben Yahweh, a radical Black supremaeist, and six of his followers guilty of conspiracy. Scientists announced they thought they had made a step toward isolating the cause of Lou Gehrig's disease. They suspect the cause to be a lack of a specific protein necessary to prevent the death of nerve cells in the spinal cord and brain. Mortar fire ripped Mortar fire ripped through a crowded marketplace in Sarajevo, killing at least 20 people and wounding at least 100 more. Local officials called the attack the bloodiest single action in the factional fighting in Bosnia. Gov. Joan Finney signed a compact with the Sac and Fox nations that could allow a gambling casino in Kansas City, Kan. The compact, however, must first survive a Supreme Court challenge. The U.S. House of The U.S. House of Representatives voted to lift a ban on federal financing of fetal tissue research. The votes in favor of lifting the ban, however, were not enough to overturn the expected veto from President Bush. Trans World Airlines announced that it would start laying off 300 workers at its Kansas City overhaul base sometime in June. SATURDAY/SUNDAY The government announced that the number of food stamp recipients continued to grow in March, reaching a record high of 25 million people. Organizers of the Ross Perot petition drive in Missouri decided to throw out all signatures they had collected and start over because of possible inconsistencies with the signatures. The defending NBA champions, the Chicago Bulls, won the Eastern Conference finals 4-2 with a 99-94 victory against the Cleveland Cavaliers. The Bulls face Portland in the NBA finals beginning tonight. imposed strict trade sanctions on Yugoslavia. President Bush ordered the seizure of the Yugoslavian government's assets in the United States. The United Nations Security Council The Kansas City Royals ended the Texas Rangers' seven-game winning streak with an 8-2 victory in Kansas City. University of Missouri basketball guard Anthony Peeler was arrested in Columbia after a woman accused him of assaulting her and threatening her with a gun. See story page 10. Wichita State lost to third-ranked Pepperdine in the first round of the College World Series. MONDAY The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 3,400 for the first time in history. Despite a mistake in the Summer Timetable, residual enrollment for the summer session at University of Kansas began. The timetable had wrongly stated that enrollment would begin yesterday instead of Monday. Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan addressed the Sunflower Girls State in Allen Field House. TUESDAY An early-morning blaze in a Detroit home for people with mental and physical disabilities left 10 dead and two injured. Los Angeles police arrested 20 alleged gang members for interrogation in an investigation of a conspiracy to loot a Korean business during the riots following the Rodney King verdict. ON THE RECORD Two tires, rims and lugnuts,the total valued at $582,were taken off a car in the Ellsworth Hall parking lot and replaced with two old tires Sunday or Monday, KU police reported. A computer and monitor,valued at $1,299, were taken between Oct.1,1987,and June 1, 1992, from an office in Wescoe Hall, KU police reported. XXX VIDEO Gag Gifts • Magazines 1420 W. 23rd SL • 843-9200 A Bible, valued at $350, was taken between Friday and Sunday from Danforth Chapel, KUpolice reported. Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving by BASCH & LOMD 732 Massachusetts Available at The Ec. Shop The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045 SUPER SALE! 486/50 MHZ 486/50 MHZ • Intel 486/50 MHZ Processor w/256K cache • 130 MB Hard Drive 14ms • 4MB RAM • 1.2 MB & 1.44MB Floppy Drives • Super VGA Color Monitor • SVGA w/1MB Card • 2 Serial, 1 Parallel Ports • Enhanced Keyboard • 1 Year Warranty DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1 & Mouse--$125 CENTRAL DATA COMPUTER SYSTEMS SPECIAL $2395 843-DATA (3282) 745 New Hampshire 25¢ Draws Tonight & Every Wednesday - plus - Tuesday 50¢ Draws 75¢ Electric Jello No Cover Thursday Dance Floor Sunday $2.50 pitchers It could only happen at... THE HAWK 1340 OHIO A Campus Tradition Since 1919 A PRIVATE CLUB - MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE $25 FREE Accessories Sunday $2.50 pitchers It could only happen at... THE HAWK 1340 OHIO A Campus Tradition Since 1919 A PRIVATE CLUB - MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE plus 么 BRIDGESTONE on SALE! 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DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE SUNSHINE DRINK SPECIALS Monday: $6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $1.25 Domestic Bottles Tuesday: $3.25 Pitchers of Beer $9.95 Well Drinks FREE CHEESE OR BREAN DIRT AFTER 11:30 FREE CHEESE OR BEAND DIP AFTER11:30pm Wednesday: $5.95 Magnum Margaritas $1.00 Margaritas $1.50 Tequila Shots 25c DRAWS and a patio blowout Thursday: $1.00 Margaritas $2.50 Long Island Iceed Tea Friday: $8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas Saturday: $1.50 20oz, Jayhawk Draw Sunday: $2.00 Mexican Imports KARAOKE on the patio every Wednesday night The fun starts at 10:30 pm! 815 New Hampshire • 841-7286 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 3,1992 3 Summer driving slowed by construction Lawrencemotorists derailed by detours throughout city Doug Hesse / KANSAN by Anne Grego Kansan staff writer W. A. Dunbar and Son employees work on widening Ninth Street. They are also making the hill near Iowa Street less steep by moving dirt from the top of the hill to the bottom. The construction should be completed by September 4. Al Cinelli, Lawrence graduate student, is having trouble getting friends to his house. Cinelli lives in the neighborhood adjacent to the closed section of Ninth Street between Iowa and Michigan streets. He said that although getting home took him only two seconds longer than usual, giving directions to his friends was complicated. Doughease Road construction at Niti. Street and some other areas of Lawrence could slow down many drivers this summer. City engineer Therese Gorman said the city's main project was the Ninth Street work. The road will be closed between Iowa and Michigan streets except to local traffic until September. The intersection at Emery Road and Ninth Street is closed to all traffic. Gorman said the city was making the hill on Ninth above Emery Road less steep and taking out a retaining wall. 15th Street at Crestline Drive will be reduced to one lane of traffic in each direction so a traffic light and She said the city was detouring traffic around the construction to Sixth Street. left-turn lane can be installed. Work should run from early June until mid-August. Other construction this summer includes: lowa Street between 25th and 31st streets will be reduced to one lane of traffic in each direction while an island is removed and the street is resurfaced. Construction areas in Lawrence Three bridges spanning the drainage ditch along Naismith Drive between 19th and 23rd streets are being replaced. Crews are working on the bridges at 21st Street Terrace and 22nd Street. They will start work on the 22nd Street Terrace bridge when they reopen one of the other bridges. Work should continue until September, according to Ralph Griphka of the Source: Dept. of Transportation and Lawrence City Engineer **Sean Tevis**, Daily Kansan These are the road construction areas in Lawrence this summer. 9th Street Michigan Street Crestline Drive Crescent Road Jayhawk Bivd. 15th Street Sunnyside Ave. Iowa Street Naismith Drive 23rd Street N 1/2 mile 31st Street N 1/2 mile 31st Street Kansas Department of Transportation. Along with road construction in Lawrence, some highway construction is planned. portions of Kansas Highway 10 from the Lawrence city limit to the Johnson County line will be reduced to one lane of traffic in each direction. Three-foot shoulders will be added, and the road will be resurfaced, Grippa said. During July and August, different KU and Haskell strive for better relations despite JRP leasing plans In the wake of disappointment after the Joseph R. Pearson Hall lease fall through, KU and Haskell Indian Junior College officials are maintaining good relations between the schools through shared KU programs. By Ana Kostick Kansan staff writer Although Joseph R. Pearson Hall will not be leased to Haskell Indian Junior College this fall as previously planned, University of Kansas officials said they expected good relations between the schools to continue through other channels. Haskell had proposed to move 400 students into JRP during the 1992-93 school year while two of its residence halls were being renovated. Haskell officials said the proposal failed because the Facilities Management Construction Center, part of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Albquuerque, N.M., denied the funding request. Besides leasing JRP to Haskell, Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, said administrators had planned to open KU resources to the Haskell student body. Weinberg said he hoped the proposed list of joint ventures would not die because the housing contract did not work out. He said the KU administration could still allow Haskell students to use programs such as Student Union Activities, recreational services, University library facilities, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, placement center programs and student orientation. "The loss of JRP is unfortunate." Weinberg said. "It was the catalyst for us to do what we should have done. Everyone is saddened by the loss, but there is much good that is still going on." Ken Stoner, director of KU student housing, said JRP would not re-open for use as a residence hall this fall and that he could not speculate future plans for the hall. Stoner said KU students who had requested to live in JRP in the spring were given the option to live in the other residence halls on campus so that JRP would be available for Haskell students. Stoner said it was too late in the planning process to re- cover RP to KU students. opportunity to make Haskell officials said the proposed 10-month, $800,000 lease included the cost of transportation to and from Haskell. Stoner said the University would not lose money because of the failed proposal, but it was necessary for the University to find an alternative use for JRP. "This was not a money-maker, 'Stoner said. "But now the building needs to be in use in some capacity." Stoner has enough room to house all students living in the residence hall system without the use of JRP because the number of students wanting to live in the residence halls was decreasing, he said. Stoner said he was not concerned about the decrease, which he thinks resulted from demographic changes, such as smaller high school graduating classes. "There are approximately 1,150 fewer freshmen and sophomores than four years ago." Stoner said. "Although the enrollment has stayed the same, the mix has changed." marvin Buzzard, dean of students at Haskell, said the request was denied by the Bureau of Indian Affairs because of lack of funds. He said Haskell still planned to renovate two residence halls, but the earliest the construction would begin was January. Students will live in the residence halls while minor construction begins. Extensive work will be done during the summer. Buzzard said there was a "natural disappointment" on both sides. He said that a cooperative relationship between KU and Haskell had been going on for some time. Buzzard said Haskell officials felt badly that the proposal had fallen through and were grateful to KU officials for considering the joint venture. "We are very hopeful and confident that the failure to execute the lease won't interfere with the relations between the schools," he said. The opportunity to lease JRP originated a year and a half ago in meetings of The Haskell-Ku Inter-Institutional Task Force. The committee consists of five members from each school who deal with all issues that affect the students, faculty and staff at both institutions. It is through this task force that the possible implementation of KU programs will be discussed this month, Weinberg said. University undergraduates merit research scholarships Students mayuse $1,000 award to fund individual projects By Ana Kostick Kansan staff writer This summer, 20 University of Kansas undergraduates will use their experience and $1,000 research schoolships to support original, independent projects. The students, selected by the Undergraduate Research Awards Selection Committee this spring, were awarded the scholarships based on the merit of the proposal, academic record and recommendations from faculty members. Forty-three research proposals were submitted. "The strength of the applicants was very high," said J. Michael Young, director of the honors program and chairman of the UGRA committee. "Half a dozen more also deserved funding." Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program, said the students may use the scholarships for any research costs. Afaculty member will oversee the progress of each student's project. Wick emphasized that all students interested in research should apply for the 20 scholarships worth $1,000 each and the spring scholarships worth $250 each that also are available. The 20 students' research areas include theater and film, sociology, English, economics, political science, business, chemistry and potany. Young said the selection committee chose scholarship recipients based on the proposal's potential contribution to knowledge and the arts and on the student's qualifications, which are based on the student's ability to successfully complete the project. "A student with a lower grade point average may win over a student with the higher GPA." Young said. "Whether the proposal is feasible and original is more important." Jackie Gordon, Hays junior, is studying the effects of sexual harassment on KU students. Gordon said she received 481 of the 670 questionnaires she passed out to a sociology class at the University this spring. The next step for Gordon is to code the responses, a process that will enable her to find out the mind set of the questioned person. Gordon estimates she will put in 25 hours a week toward the project before the data will be compiled and analyzed in an article she hopes to have published in a professional journal. Students who receive summer UGRA's must file an interim report on their progress in October and a final report on their completed research in February. Young said students interested in 1993 scholarships should be thinking about proposal ideas and discuss them with faculty advisers. "Although it's difficult to get published at the undergraduate level, it is our goal to see them published," Young said. "Whether in print or as a presentation, this research greatly contributes to knowledge." Tonight NO COVER alternative DRINK SPECIALS The Place to Party 92 Summer Tonight NO COVER DRINK SPECIALS No Cover for Ladies until 9:30 Ladies Night!!! 3 draws / $1 Bikini Contest! 11 p.m. LADIES OF THE MIDWEST SWIMWEAR SHEERY $400 All Contestants Cash and Prizes receive prizes Hot Hits! $1 COVER TIL 9:30 Dance to the Hottest Hits! The Place to Party Summer 92 THE POWER PLANT POWERLINE THE CLUB (843-2582) 9th and Miss. Members and Guests No Cover for Ladies until 9:30 Ladies Night!!! 3 draws / $1 The IPlace to Party 92 Summer Bikini Contest! 11 p.m. LADIES OF THE MIDWEST SHOWWEAR & BEAUTY $400 PAGEANT All Contestants Cash and Prizes receive prizes Saturday HotHits! Saturday Hot Hits! $1 COVER TIL 9:30 Dance to the Hottest Hits! The Place to Party 92 Summer THE POWER PLANT POWERLINE THE CLUB (843-2582) 9th and Miss. Members and Guests 4 Wednesday, June 3, 1992 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FROM THE EDITORS Kansan adopts new look to improve readability Change is inevitable. Without the ability to change and adapt, stagnation occurs. We decided to put the Kansan through a redesign process. This was the situation the Kansan was in at the end of the spring 1992 semester. We discovered many areas of the Kansan where stagnation had established a solid foothold, and others where it was just beginning. Clearly change was needed. We examined many different areas: design, layout, type styles, the overall look, the purpose of the Kansan, and the way it presented the news. We looked at other publications to discover new trends in newspaper design. We also examined the internal working structure of the Kansan to find areas for improvement. In the end, we came to several conclusions. Newspapers across the country are becoming more and more visually oriented. Stories are being written concisely. We decided that the Kansan, too, must follow these trends. Granted, initiation may be the highest form of flattery, but it does not provide individuality. We wanted to create our own publication, not a congenialization of other newspapers. We feel that the new look of the Krasnan accomplishes that task. Our goals were to make the *Kansan* easier to read and understand, to make the news easier to find, and to make it more pleasing to look at. We hope we have accomplished these goals, but ultimately that is for you, the readers, to decide. In many ways, this summer's *Kansan* is an experiment. However, we don't want to limit our changes to just the design and visual areas. We want to try and make improvements in our coverage of campus and minority issues. We would also like to cover local news and provide an insight into the happenings of Lawrence. Unfortunately, the staff during the summer is very small, and we can only do so much. At the end of the spring semester, a friend told me that no one really expected anything from the Kansan in the summer, so I shouldn't worry about trying to impress anyone. I find this very difficult to accept. There are still students at KU in the summer who deserve a functional newspaper. As we go through the process of making changes and trying new ideas, we can only ask that you bear with us. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Racism erodes the heart This is no time for divisive dogma, ignorance and racism. Mr. Etrick. You stated in your article that the Rodney King verdict filled you with hatred, disgust and rage. Do you believe that you stand alone in your anger and disillusionment over the verdict? Or that only people of a darker skin color feel powerless and frustrated by the forces of racism that plague our great nation? Ifyoubelievevo,Mr.Ettrick,youarewhollymistaken. Certainly not, Remember, Mr. Ettrick, as Americans, all of us are in this together. We can choose to burn and die together. It's that simple. An overwhelming majority of whites, not just Blacks, were taken aback by the Rodney King verdict, and they believe, too, that action must be taken to correct the injustice. But murder and lynching? Is that going to help us of toward a more integrated, cooperative and just society? No doubt, Mr. Ettrick, that after the violence in Los Angeles the dream of a racial harmony seems far off and unobtainable. But then again, the Black vote seemed equally distant in 1954. However, if you will recall, Mr. Ettrick, the destruction of the Jim Crow laws was spearheaded by Black and white Freedom Riders and marchers. Jeff Gardner Graduate student Black and white Americans put their safety, and sometimes their lives on the line to build an American in which all people might be judged by their character, not the color of their skin. They stood together, as we must now stand together, in opposition to the fact that hatred and racism is not a disease of the skin, but of the heart and soul. Lollipops and diplomas?-NOT! Statements from the Human Relations Committee get goofier each week. The latest is a renewed attempt to affirm the importance of free speech while "recognizing that 'hate' speech is intolerable at KU." The committee needs to recognize that "acceptable free speech" is a hopeless contradiction of terms and do the campus a favor by disbanding. Human Relations Committee head Maggie Childs said, "The last one (statement) focused solely on speech and what's kind of 'good' speech and 'bad' speech. That was kind of a delicate question — it was too much of a vague judgment." Apart from the befuddled syntax (this committee desperately needs a logician on board), there is a glimmer of insight here. There is no way to proceed on this matter without making vague judgments, which reduces the issue to someone's idea of what is right and wrong. This whole "politically correct" idea is just one more expression of the bankruptcy of liberal thought on our campuses, which, along with "deconstructionism" and "multiculturalism," is turning our colleges into moral and intellectual kindergartens. Any university that, to please the feminist with contingent, would substitute "I Am lisis" for the Declaration of Independence is not just serious about education. Why doesn't KUhand out lollipops with its diplomas each year? THE FLAG IS IN THE MIND OF A MAN WHO WAS ALWAYS READY TO SAVE LIFE AND LAND. After walking 20 miles in 85 degree weather, Acacia Berry, Chapel Hill, N.C. takes a break along the 1700 block of Massachusetts St. She is a participant in the Walk Across America For Mother Earth, which started in New York in January and passed through Lawrence Saturday. She plans to finish the walk October 12. If you have a yen for a perfect double, then Japan has the answer, for a price It's along hot summer in Lawrence. You've got classes, a job and social responsibilities. Your parents, already upset that you didn't come home for the summer, think you should come home for a visit. Like you havetime to drive cross country, cross state, across town. Where did you say you were from again? No matter, Japan Efficiency Headquarters has the solution. That's right, after gaining the advantage in economics, trade and technology, Japan now has the latest addition to the nuclear family. Rent-a-relative. You don't have time to spend the weekend at Mom's? No problem. For a mere 150,000 yen, or $1,150, you can rent a stand-in for three hours. It just goes to prove that some people will do anything for money. For just a little more than a grand, they let your grandma pinch their cheeks and tell YEAR 2013 them they need to eat more. They get to now your dad's mammoth back yard and clean your old room. The stand-in does the visiting with distant relatives whom they know just as well as you do. You've heard your mom's jokes before? The stand-in hasn't. Yes boys and girls. Japan has the jump on us once again. Career men and women have become so goal-oriented in the industrial islands that this latest craze is a booming business. In the company's two year existence, 80 families have been visited by stand- ings. The waiting list is just as long In post-World War II Japan, the nation has dedicated itself to increased productivity and efficiency. The once-ruled elderly of Japan must now settle for entertainers. Thus, Japan Efficiency Headquarters is merely supplying a demand. Who says you can't buy love? The uses that American society has for similar services seems endless. Are you too out of shape to go to your class reunion, and don't have time to lose the weight? No problem. Send an actor who looks better than you ever did. Have him tell people you joined a gym. What the heck, send a beautiful actress with him to play the wife. David Mitchell Staff columnist Summertime often brings the worst family nightmare — family reunions. No problem. If your family is not very close, and none of you want to go anyway, imagine 100 strangers standing around making meaningless chit chat. Tell them to send you the video. Your friends want you to go to the Royals game and you just can't bear to watch. No problem. Of course, it will cost an extra $1,150 to get your stand-in through the evening (tickets, parking and concessions.) But you won't have to see Tom Gordon give up 10 runs in two innings. Stay home, watch the news and live to laugh about it. Your girlfriend wants you to have dinner with her family. Yipes, call the stand-in. Your parents are paying your tuition. They don't want to mail the check, and you don't want to dive all the way home just for money? Hey, come on, this is your family we're talking about. David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism. Sound bites plague presidential elections While the sun is heating up the pavement outside this summer, the presidential candidates will be inside adding to the fervency. There is only five months until the general election, and potential voters can look forward to a barrage of sound bites, video blips and slanted campaign rhetoric. Sound bits, those pithy nine-second messages to influence the public — I wonder how much time speech writers spend mulling over the perfect word or phrase. It is rare to find expanded versions of the candidates' speeches. Fully answered questions are not common. We have been left to wade through the pool of election-year witticisms. Coaches of the sound bite stress the need for grammatically unusual statements, something to make the receiver say, "Huh?" They have to be short, too. Like any other bite, they cannot be too big, or the candidate chokes . Dream on. Overtime, men have learned that it is not what you do, it is what you say and how you appear. From Caesar's "i came; I saw; I conquered," to Ronald Reagan's (or should I say Clint Eastwood's) "make my day." As Ben Bagdikian wrote in a recent Mother Jones' article, "left on his own with reporters, Reagan would have revealed himself to be one of the most ignorant men ever to be elected president, beating out Calvin Coolidge, whose picture Reagan proudly remounted in the White House." But we cannot blame the candidates alone. The media has a few knots in this noose too. Reagan may have been good at the sound bite too, but he shone when it came to the video blip. It's all there: the unusual grammar, the raised voice and the brief pause to confuse the listener. News is not a natural phenomenon. Information has been diced, spliced and ground up to be easily digestible. It is a by-product of reality, and the mainstream press has been muddled by political and economic manipulations. JUSTIN KNUPP Editor Top editors of leading news organizations are hand-picked. They're sent to business schools where they are taught to tote the corporate line. All too often people have had their quotes taken out of context or not noticed at all. The competition for dollars is fiercer than ever before, and the control of most of the world's broadcast stations, magazines and newspapers will soon be in the hands of only a few corporations. Media giants do not survive on scraps. KANSANSTAFF The immediate scare in this money grab is the bulging pocket of Ross Perot. Will he take the grassroots path that many are hoping for? Probably not. Powerful television ads can help decide a close election. KIM CLAXTON Business manager Yes, we should be. This might be the year of the photo finish. During histerm is president, Reagan brought new meaning to the term "photo-op." When it became clear to his media advisers that he could not answer all the media's questions accurately, the advisers called the various JENNIFER BACH Managing editor news bureaus and ordered them to send only photographers to the White House when Reagan was to meet with foreign dignitaries and other high-rankers. When reporters tried to get in, they were quickly called back by their managers. Right now George Bush may be the king of the sound bite "Read my lips ... no new taxes," said the candidate. TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser BRIAN WOLF Director of Client Services Campus ... Gayle Osterberg Assst. Campus ... Doug Fliackbach Contributing ... David Mitchell Photo ... Derek Nolan Graphics ... Aimee Brainard Editors Potential voters might choke on it too, because their minds are clogged with the hundreds of ads they see and hear every day. JEANNEHINES Sales and marketing adviser Special Promotions ... Mellissa Tettl Production mgr ... Brad Breon Retail Support mgrs ... Ashley Largford Hillary Witcox Production mgrs ... Mary Ellen Regional support mgr ... Jane Henderson Classified mgrd ... Kate Burgess 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 letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.** The bison reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the bison newsroom. 111 Staffer Fint Hall. Dan Janousek is a senior majoring in journalism. Loco Locals WE'RE BACK! UNIVERSITY HOME OF K.BLAB 109.7 FM 6-342 MICHAUD COWL UNIVERSITY HOME OF K. GLAB 109.7 FM 6-3-92 MICHAEL EDWARDS "PSYCHOLOGY NOW" IS A UNIVERSITY EMBARRASS- APP... EMBARRASSOR TO YOU - THE STUDENT - HELLO? CAUSE? CALLER, ARE YOU THERE?... I ENROLLLED IN TWO SUMMER COURSES!!! WHAT WOULD POSSESS ME TO DO SUCH ATHING!? ... I NEED ANSWERS! WHAT DO I DO!?!. 105 by Tom Michaud BUMMER!...LISTEN, I GIVE THE MESSAGE TO DR. REED, AFTER HE GETS BACK FROM SUMMER VACATION. SUMMER VEHICLE!! NEXT CALLER? EXCLUSIVE ADVERTISING UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 3, 1992 5 University begins to seek committee members for multicultural center plan By Chris Moeser Kansan staff writer The process has begun to select a committee that will decide the mission of the planned multicultural center at the University of Kansas. Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said he was working with David Ambler, vice-cancelor for student affairs, and with Barbara Ballard, acting dean of student life, to select members of the committee. "At this point, the only progress we have made is to make the announcement and start collecting names of interested people." Thompson said. Thompson said he hoped to have a committee made up of students, faculty, staff and administrators by the end of the summer. The committee is designed to be a cross section of campus that will represent every facet of University life, he said. Interested students should contact the Office of Minority Affairs. Plans for the center were announced April 22 at Student Senate's final spring meeting. The center, which Thompson said could be completed by Spring 1993, will be located in an existing campus office building at 1400 Louisiana St. Thompson said that because the committee would develop the mission of the center, it was difficult to say exactly what the goals of the center would be. But one initial goal is to find a way to promote multiculturalism on campus, he said. "We realize that in order to be a progressive community we must strive to build a multicultural community, and the center is one component of that," he said. Thompson said he was satisfied with the University's commitment to the center. "I am convinced it will be done properly," he said. James Baucom, president of the Black Student Union, said he was working with Thompson's office to develop ideas for the center. Baucom said he was looking at multicultural centers at other universities to see what might work best at KU. Baucom, who initially was pleased with the administration's quick response in approving the center, said he was anxious that the center might not be financed properly. "If I go into the committee and find they don't have any money, my concern would be to make sure the administration provides some start-up money. It's frustrating when you don't get funding." he said. The University will finance one half-time employee and provide $10,000 to begin programs at the center. Lance Wright, student body vice president, said that Student Senate was expected to consider allocating money to the center in the fall cannondale on sale What to drive when you're the engine! RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642 Concerned, Confidential & Personal Health Care For Women SAFE AND AFFORDABLE ABORTION SERVICES GYN CARE -- FREE PREGNANCY TESTING BIRTH CONTROL -- INCLUDING NORPLANT IMPLANTS ORGANIC & TREATMENT OF SEXUALITY DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH FOR WOMEN COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH FOR WOMEN Toll Free 1-800-227-1918 Providing quality health care to women since 1974 VISA, Mastercard and Insurance plans accepted AEROBICS SESSION I JUNE 8TH - JULY 1ST $10.00 SESSION II JULY 6TH - JULY 24TH $10.00 MON., WED., & FRI. FROM 5:15 PM - 6:15 PM AQUACIZE SESSION I JUNE 8TH - JULY 2ND $15.00 SESSION II JULY 6TH - JULY 24TH $15.00 MON.,- THURS. FROM 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM SIGN UP IN KU RECREATION SERVICES OFFICE 208 ROBINSON 864-3546 RECREATION SERVICES SUMMER OFFICE HOURS MONDAY - THURSDAY 8 AM - 5 PM FRIDAY 8 AM - 12 PM M. C. Escher's incredible graphics on T-shirts, mugs and other provocative products available at NATURALWAY M C Escher Heirs c/o Cordon Art Baarn, Holland SMART ART from ANDAZIA INTERNATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820-822 Mass. St. Intellectual Escher-tainment Hair Experts Design Team AUVA Discover Our Difference. Holiday Plaza - 25th & Iowa 841-6886 $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer 27 Expires 7/31/92 Connecting Point offers dependable Auva computers at special discounts to students, faculty, and staff! Each system comes with: 鼠标 V - 100Mb Hard Drive, 4Mb RAM AUVA Educational Discounts - One Year On-Site Warranty 386/33...$1,769 - Microsoft Compatible Mouse - SVGA 14" Color Monitor - 5.25" & 3.5" Floppy Drives New Product ... 386/33 NOTEBOOK! - 101 Key Keyboard - ATI SVGA Card 386/33...$1,769 386/40...$1,789 486/33...$2,199 . 386/33 DX AUVA - 4Mb RAM - Exp. to 16Mb - 100Mb Hard Drive - 1.44Mb Floppy Drive - Backlit VGA Display - Numeric Keypad, DOS 5.0 ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER - Numeric Keypad, DOS 3.0 * Lightweight 7 lbs (without battery) - Light(weight / lbs. (without battery) - Intel & Witek Math - Co-Processor Sockets - Lightweight 7 lbs. (without battery) - Width of Mitch Only $2,499* DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 813 MASS • 843-7584 - Must have current KU I.D. Prices subject to change. FREE Single Vision Prescription Lenses with the Purchase of Frames. (Extra charge for UV, Scratch-cost and tinting) SAVE $35 ON MULTI-FOCALS WITH PRAME PURCHASE 4 EAST 27th DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 841-1113 VALUABLE COUPON Expires June 30, 1992 what WILL I WEAR NOW? Find everything you need at... WHAT WILL I WEAR NOW? Find everything you need at... Arizona trading Co. 734 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence Open everyday to buy, sell & trade Quality Men's & Women's Recycled Clothing and Accessories 749-2377 BARGAIN BARGAIN HUNTERS!! HUNTERS!! EVERYDAY3,000ITEMSARE SHIPPEDTO OURSTORE. SAVE SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE 1818 MASS. Our futon sofa sleeper is a comfortable couch by day... LAWRENCE W. HARRIS and comfortable lounge or bed by night... - manufacturers of top quality futons - 8 different styles of futons to choose from - over 150 cover choices of beautiful fabric - more than 20 different solid wood frames - end tables coffee tables lamps screens - wonderful bedroom groupings - pillows, comforters and feather beds - no Rainforest woods - TERRIFIC SERVICE! --- BLUE HERON Futons & Home Furnishings 937 Massachusetts 841-9443 6 Wednesday, June 3, 1992 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED Ray-Ban BOROUGH OF BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunwear™ Find your style at The Etc. Shop 732 Massachusetts USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED KU Information Summer Hours Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses Find your style at The Etc. Shop 732 Massachusetts Effective June 18, KU Information reduced summer hours: 7am-11pm Call us for the facts: 864-3506 DENON THE FIRST NAME IN DIGITAL AUDIO STRAIGHT Talk.. is a result of 32 years of straight thinking DENON THE FIRST NAME IN DIGITAL AUDIO CD PLAYERS ON SALE! FOR 32 YEARS ONE OF AMERICA'S FREW REAL AUDIO/VIDEO STORES! Acurus - Adcom - a/d/s - Alpine - Audio Prism - Audio Quest - Audio Control B&K - B&W - Boston Acoustics - Chicago Skp - Denon - Eosteric Audio - Forte Fireline - Kel - Kimber Kable - Kiplach - Martin/Logan - Lexicon - Mitsubishi Monster Cable - MAD - Niks - Nakamichi - Onkyo - MKE - Haradigm - Epike Phase Tech - Phillips - Snell - Revox - Seminheiser - Signet - Sony - Sony ES - Stax Sumiko - Target - Threshold - Tara Labs - Velodvine Yamaha - Quality manufacturer carefully select their dealers. It is no accident that virtually every credible audio producer has chosen Kelx A/V as its authorized dealer THESE AND (62) MORE KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO 24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES 913 842 1811 913 842 1428 913 842 1544 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 10478 INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 10478 CD PLAYERS ON SALE! FOR 32 YEARS ONE OF AMERICA'S Few REAL AUDIO/VIDEO STORES! Acunus - Adcom - a/d/s/l - Alpine - Audio Prim - Audio Quest - Audio Control BBK - BK - Boston Acoustics - Chicago Skp - Denon - Ecotek Audio - Force Fireline - xel - Kimber Kabie - Kirsch - Martin/Logger - Lexicon - Muhishu Monster Cube - NAD - Neil Tettle - Denon - DynaMix - Parnegid - Parne Phase Tech - Philis - Revel - Sennerheer - Signet - Sory - Sony ES - Stax Sumiko - Target - Threshold - Tara Labs - Velodyna Yamaha - Quality manufacturers carefully select their dealers. It is no accident that virtually every credible audio producer has chosen Kef's AV as its authorized dealer. THESE AND (62) MORE KEEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO 24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs &TAPES 913 842 1811 913 842 1438 913 842 1544 KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO The audio components we stock are all "A-Stock units selected from our 106 "Award Winning" brands. Only a few audio stores in America can make this statement and virtually all of us are located in hi tech college towns. We search for the best schools with comparable units in their price class. Our prices range from modest value units (approx $175) to world class State-of-Art systems in excess of $50,000. DOING BUSINESS WITH KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO THE EQUIPMENT THE COMPANY We are 34 people who try to make honest commercial sense. We sell what we modestly think are the best audio/video products; speakers, amplifiers, deck decks, cables, and compact disc players currently produced at very competitive prices. Our tape and CD selection is in fact "awe-some". We own and occupy one of Americas finest and largest specialty audio/video facilities, adjacent to the University of Kansas, in Lawrence, Ks. We are not aware of any one facility that has the depth of inventory, and number of quality lines to complement our innovative approach to display, demonstration and sales. Tens of thousands of our customers over the past 32 years have graduated, and become professional athletes, doctors, lawyers, entrepreneurs, etc. from all walks of life, yet many of them continue a business and social relationship with our people, our store, and the university. Many of our current clientele are now second generation and referral friends of our past satisfied customers. We always buy direct at maximum volume rebates yes, we pass on any savings to our customers, and provide a point of our pre-tax profits on environmental and social causes, not because its fashionable, but because we started doing so 32 years ago. PURCHASING Ask us if you have questions. Our people are knowledgeable, friendly and the students tell us our prices are nationally competitive. We have a tremendous array of instruments and other equipment in describing audio in a way that photography and specification sheets can not. Open your eyes to the beauty of the WOODS Open your eyes to the beauty of the WOODS Colony Woods Colony Woods offers you more than just an apartment. Heated pool Laundry room 3 hot tubs Dishwasher Exercise room Microwave Mini blinds Basketball court Water paid Flexible leasing On bus route Hurry! Limited time $200 security deposit. Location and Lifestyle: Colony Woods has the best value in town. 842-5111 GTAs prepare for union vote, seek rights of public employees October meeting to decide status of graduate assistants by Ana Kostick Kanean Staff Writer KU graduate teaching assistants will spend the summer preparing for an October hearing that will determine whether they are eligible to form a union. The biggest obstacle to forming the union stems from opposing views of the University administration and graduate students about GTAs employment status, said Dan Murtaugh, graduate teaching assistant in English and member of the Steering Committee for Graduate Employee Unionization. The KU administration had taken the position, contrary to that taken by student and faculty governing bodies, that graduate employees were not real employees and did not have the legal right to organize a union until they were recognized as public employees. Under Kansas law, a group cannot vote to form a collective bargaining agent unless they are recognized as public employees. A meeting in October with the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board will determine the graduate employees' status. Unionizing would provide graduate student employees with the opportunity to lobby for higher salaries, increased health benefits, improved gravence procedures and multi-year renewable contracts if they are successful in forming a The committee already had made progress by winning a 100-percent fee waiver authorized by the Kansis Legislation. Open your eyes to the beauty of the "WOODS" Colony Woods Colony Woods offers you more than just an apartment. - Heated pool - Laundry room - 3 hot tubs - Dishwasher - Exercise room - Microwave - Mini blinds - Basketball court - Water paid - Flexible leasing - On bus route Hurry! Limited time $200 security deposit. Location and Lifestyle: Colony Woods has the Best value in town. 842-5111 Not for honor. Not for country. For his wife and child. HARRISON FORD PATRIOT GAMES PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A MACE NEUFELD AND ROBERT REHME PRODUCTION HARRISON FORD-PATRIOT GAMES ANNE ARCHER-PATRICK BERGIN-SEAN BEAN JAMES FOX WITH JAMES EARL JONES AND RICHARD HARRIS JAMES HORNER EXECUTIVE PRODUCTION CHARLES H. MAGUIRE THE WORK OF TOM CLANEY SCREENPLAY BY W. PETER ILFF AND DONALD STEWART PRODUCTION BY MACE NEUFELD AND ROBERT REHME DIRECTED BY PHILLIP NOYCE PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY (IN A COPYRIGHT THROUGH MAHL AMERICA, INC) THE GAMES BEGIN JUNE 5 "This has clearly been a step forward with the fee waiver, but the progress is lagging far behind that at other universi- In a written statement about the unionization of KU graduate employees, Dave Reidy, head of the graduate student steering committee, stated that graduate employees taught about half of the undergraduate course load, often putting in 20 or more hours per week. "While pay equity largely motivates the current efforts to organize KU graduate employees, these efforts are consistent with a concern for higher education generally," Reidy stated. "The quality of both graduate and undergraduate programs at KU depends on attracting and retaining the best graduate student employees possible. KU simply cannot do this without paying a market wage." According to data from the KU 'Office of Institutional Research and Planning, several of KU's peer institutions Currently, KU offers a 9-month salary of $7,645 to halftime GTAs. The average salary ranks KU fifth on a list of six comparable schools, including the University of Colorado and the University of Oregon. Only the University of North Carolina, which offers no tuition waiver, ranks below KU on the list. offer higher salaries and health insurance benefits to their GTAs. The steering committee at KU was formed last fall, as a result of frustration, when efforts to increase health insurance benefits and competitive wages were ignored, Murtaugh said in another written statement. The first step for the steering committee was to determine the interest of the GTAs, graduate research assistants and all other graduate student employees. Murtaugh said the steering committee found that over 50 percent were interested. The Kansas Public Employees Relations Board (KPERB) requires that 30 percent of a group show interest before the group can vote to form a union. Unionization is the only form of organization that legally forces the University to bargain with graduate employees. "This is truly a strong showing of solidarity among graduate employees, and a clear message to the Legislature and the Board of Regents that we intend to make ourselves heard." Murtaugh said. Reedy said he was confident that the KPEER would recognize graduate student employees as public employees in Howard Mossberg, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said the administration shared the same concerns of the GTAs. "There is little question that the concerns are legitimate." Mossberg said. "Resolutions are on both of our agendas." He said the administration was preparing for the scheduled hearing in October with the KPERB to discuss the facts concerning the graduate employees' status. "We see them as students first and employees second," Mossberg said. "Student status is the key because this is not a problem." Mossberg said he thought the GTAs would have more success through the existing administration/student relationship than through unionization efforts. Murtaugh agreed that the administration wanted to see progress made, but said they had "challenged our status as a state." Murtaugh said the administration was in a difficult situation because it was forced to juggle budgetary concerns and not everyone with requests could be satisfied. "We are not trying to undermine the administration's efforts, but if we improve our situation the University will improve as a whole," Murtaugh said. The Associated Press Bus crashes into casino, at least 13 injured LAS VEGAS — Abus crashed into a casino restaurant last evening, injuring at least 13 people, authorities said. The bus rammed into the side of the restaurant at the Barcelona Hotel-Casino, stopping nearly halfway inside the small building. Clark County fire department spokesperson BobLeinbachsaid At least 13 people, including the bus driver, were taken to four hospitals. Their conditions were unknown, but none of the injuries were believed to be life-threatening, paramedics said. Most of those injured were inside the restaurant, Leimbach said. The bus driver was believed to be the only one on the bus. He was trapped for about 20 minutes before authorities could rescue him. HARRISO FORD PATRIOT GAMES PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A MACE NEUFELD AND ROBERT REHME PRODUCTION HARRISON FORD-PATRIOT GAMES ANNE ARCHER-PATRICK BERGEN SEAN BEAN JAMES ECK WITH JAMES EARL JONES AND RICHARD HARRIS JAMES HORNER ENGINEERED BY CHARLES H. MAGUIRE BASED ON TOM CLANCY SCREENPLAY BY W. PETER LIFF AND DONALD STEWART PRODUCED BY MAZE NEUFELD AND ROBERT REHME BRINCIED BY PHILLIP NOVCE SHIMRABACK ANN ANN AKE ON NCA NEWORDER LABOR LICENSED IN MARYLAND, AMERICA, USA A PARADIUM COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY FOR A CAPTION OF 200 MARKET PREMISES IN AMSTERDAM R REQUIRED READ THE BENEFIT APPLIANCE PROVIDERS THE GAMES BEGIN JUNE 5 Not for honor. Not for country. For his wife and child. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 3, 1992 7 Wednesday, June 3,1992 Detroithousefirekills10 Early morning inferno strikes home for disabled,called worst fire in thirtyyears The Associated Press DETROIT—A fire roared through a boarding house early today, killing 10 people, many of them handicapped, and seriously injuring two others, authorities said. The blaze broke out about 2:30 a.m. and gutted the three-story brick building. It was extinguished about three hours later, fire officials said. Sixteen people were believed to have been inside the house, called New Way Development, Fire Chief Harold Watkins said. He said four of them escaped without injury and two others, a man and a woman, were hospitalized in serious condition. The 10 other residents were found dead inside, most were in their rooms, Watkins said. Many of the residents were physically or mentally handicapped, "I had been asleep when they said, 'it's a fire, it'a fire,'" said Willis Darnell, one of the residents who escaped. "I couldn't walk. I fell down the stairs." authoritiessaid. "I grabbed my blanket and put it over my head and I got out. I walked fast," said Delores Strempeck, 60, another resident. Watkins said it was the most deaths in a single fire in the more than 30 years he had been on the Detroit force. The cause of the blaze was unknown, the chief said. Caretaker Tyree Fluckes, 37, said he heard a fire alarm and he and a resident, Glenn Gregory, tried to wake up the other residents, knocking on their doors. But the smoke got so thick that he and Gregory finally had to flee, he said. "Those people were like family to us," Fluckes said. Fluckes said the fire started in the kitchen. Wat-kins said he could not confirm that. Janie Nelson, 69, who with her husband, Robert, has owned the home for 33 years, said the house undergoes annual city inspection and licensing. "Some of them have been there 27 years," she said. "It's terrible." Nelson said she was on her way to the site. Her husband is recovering from a stroke and unable to go. Chuck Peller of the state Department of Social Services in Lansing said the home had at one time been licensed for hairdiacapped care but bad lost its license. He said he could not immediately provide details. Nelson said residents left homeless in the fire would go to an emergency shelter she and her husband run across the street. Four women and six men, ranging in age from mid-40s to an 89-year-old, were killed, Watkins said. The home is in Detroit's New Center area on the city west side. At dawn, the building was still standing, with little sign from the outside that 10 people had died there. Smoke damage was visible around the windows. Diana Leone, nursing supervisor at Henry Ford Hospital, said the injured man and woman suffered from smoke inhalation. Fighting breaks out between Serbia and Bosnia as another Yugoslavian cease-fire disintegrates The Associated Press BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Residents of SARqevo rushed to cellars yesterday as Serb-led forces clashed with Muslim Slavs, making a mockery of yet another cease-fire in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Serbia, despite the defiance of its president, began to feel the pinch of UN sanctions imposed last week over its involvement in the war in neighbouring Bosnia. Serbia said it was halting foreign debt payments. Artillery shells raned on Sarajevo Monday night and yesterday from Serb positions overlooking the embattled Bosnian capital. Muslims and Serbs fought on the city's west side. nearby Bosnian border. AUN-sponsored cease fire in Sarajevo, one in a long serries ignored in newly independent Bosnia, was to begin late Monday afternoon. Fighting also was reported yesterday around the medieval Croatian port of Dubrovnik, where Croat and Serb artillery traded fire across the Bosnia's Muslim-dominated government said two Yugoslav warplanes attacked the area around the central Bosnian town of Tuzla Monday. No details were given. Since Bosnia's majority Muslims and Croats voted overwhelmingly for independence on Feb. 29, more than 2,200 people have been killed in fighting between them and Serb irregulars backed by the Serb-dominated Yugoslav army. Serbas have seized about two-thirds of Bosnia in the fighting. The United Nations blame Serbia and its small ally, Montenegro, for the war. The world body imposed tough sanctions Saturday on the two states, which formed the new truncated Yugoslavia after Bosnia, Slovenia, Croatia and Madenia each broke away. But Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, the dominant politician in Yugoslavia, spoke defiantly. Milosevic told Belgrade radio that parliamentary elections Sunday represented a victory over enemies at home and abroad. The opposition boycotted the elections and international observers disregarded them. The only candidates were from Milosevic's Socialist Party — former Communists — and allied ultra-nationalist and Communist groups. In Montenegro. Communists reportedly edyed won overwhelmingly. Results in Serbia were expected yesterday. A coalition of opposition parties in Serbia yesterday described the international sanctions as "Serbia's worst defeat in history." "We view with deep concern, anguish and bitterness the position into which the current regime has forced the Serbian people and the Serbian state through its irrational policies" the opposition said. In Belgrade, Serbia's capital, drivers lined up their cars for mules overnight to wait for gasoline. Gasoline prices doubled at midnight. The newspaper Politika, consid. drew close to Milosevic's government, said Yugoslavia would stop repaying its estimated $8 billion foreign debt because of the sanctions. Potiika said Yugoslavia had the resources to survive for 18 months. The sanctions banned trade, froze Yugoslavia's foreign assets and imposed an oil embargo. Serbian Premier Radoman Bozovic told reporters today that Serbia had increased its domestic oil production to meet a third of its needs, up from a fifth. He said Serbia had taken other steps to prepare for the sanctions but did not elaborate. At the United Nations in New York, Bosnia's U.N. envoy said at a news conference Monday that the world must act swiftly to deliver humanitarian aid to his people. "It is realistic to expect those hudied in bunkers and running out of food and water in Bosnia to wait until the Serbians and Montenegren runs out of gasoline," said Ambassador Mohamed Sacirby. Where Are You Living Next Semester? Kaw Valley Management is pleased to represent the following living areas: Ridge Court Townhomes ... 28th & Ridge Court Red Oaks Apts ... 2408 Alabama Pin Oaks Townhouses ... 2406 Alabama Alabama Place Apts ... 2400 Alabama West Meadows Condominiums ... 15th & Westbrooke Eddingham Place ... 24th & Eddingham Fountain Homes ... Jana Drive Also featuring many single family homes, duplexes and fourplexes in great locations. Let us assist you with your housing needs, at no cost to you! Kaw Valley Management, Inc. 901 Kentucky Suite 205 841-6080 KVM Sure, You Have a Choice Whether you're ready for lunch, dinner, fresh beer or coffee and dessert. CYCLING Race on down and Enjoy the fresh tastes of the FREE STATE BREWING CO. Experience the unique atmosphere of the first legal brewery in Kansas since 1880. Open Mon-Sat 11-Midnight, Sun Noon-11 Canadian Brass 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, April 13, 1993 Toperma Performing Arts Center Chamber Music Series Concert Series 1992 2 The National Opera Company of Italy in Rigoleto 7:00 p.m., Sunday, October 25, 1992 Topea Performing Arts Center Juilliard String Quartet 3:30 p.m., Sunday, September 13, 1992 Crafton-Peyer Theatre Artur Pizarro, Plano 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, November 17, 1992 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Peter Serkin, Piano, and Manda Franklin, Violin 3.30 p.m. Sunday, March 7, 1993 Crafton Theatre American Chamber Players 3:30 p.m., Sunday, October 4, 1992 Crafton-Prayer Theatre New World String Quartet with Phyllis Pancella, Mozzo-Sepano 8:00 p.m. friday. April 2, 1993 Crafton-P剧院 Theatre 6 BalletMet with Cynthia Gregory 8:00 p.m. Thursday, March 11, 1993 Topeka Performing Arts Center 1 New Directions Series 99 Culture Clash Latino Comedy Trio 8.00 p.m., Thursday, October 8, 1992 Liberty Hall 9 The National Tour of Porgy & Bess 8.00 p.m., Tuesday, February 9, 1993 Topeka Performing Arts Center "The Mysteries and What So Funny?" Music by Philip Glass Visual Design by Red Grooms Written and Directed by David Gordon 8:00 p.m. Saturday, October 31, 1992 Craft-Preyer Theatre The Waverly Consort 8:00 p.m., Thursday, November 5, 1992 Plymouth Congregational Church front & center Sweet Honey in the Rock A Capella Ensemble 8.00 p.m., Sunday, January 31, 1993 Plymouth Congregational Church CLIP A COUPON! "The Last Sanssei Story" An Experimental Theatre Piece by Roger Shimomura 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 20, 1993 Haskell Auditorium Announcing the 1992-93 University of Kansas School of Fine Arts KNOCK SOCKS OFF concert, chamber music and new directions series seasons "Hilarious and deadly, WONDERFULLY SUBVERSIVE ...this movie is nothing if not fun." -David Arnesen NEWSWEEK **Summer vacation** Special offers may apply on sale in Murray Hill from morning to 5 p.m. Murray Beach from noon to 5 p.m. Murray Beach from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Player Dickinson Dickinson 6 2335 North Lowe St. M1 800-749-2335 "A touching, funny and universal film" MEDITERANEO The Player: Daily(*4:30), 7:15, 9:45 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST FORENGLISH LANGUAGE FILM The Player 图 Encino Man PG1 0:00 9:00 *5:00* 7:00 9:25 Far and Away PG13 1:10 *4:50* 17:10 10:00 Basic Instinct R2 4:00 4:50 *19:45* Lethal Weapon III R 2:00 3:00 *4:30* *5:30* 7:00 9:00 9:30 Wayne's World PG13 1:45:(4:00)7:20 9:20 $3 Primetime Show (+) Hearing * Dolby Senior Citizen Anytime impaired Stereo Mediterraneo: Daily 7:30 & 9:30 The Playboys: Daily *5:15 only Ends Thurs. 642 Mass. LIBERTY HALL 749- 1912 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Complete Auto Repair *Machine Shop Service *Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street The $2 Million Dollar Loan Sale No tents, clowns or singing dogs; just the absolute best values on new and used car, boat, and RV financing. Mos. 60 48 36 New Cars A Fixed Rate 9.0 8.5 8.0 Year 92-91 92-91 92-91 %Finance 100% 100% 100% Boats Year New Used Fixed Rate 9.0 10.5 Fixed Rate Mos. 54 9.0 48 10 42 10 36 10.5 Used Cars Year 91 90 89 87-88 Vehicle %Finance 100% 90% NADA loan value RV's Year Mos. Fixed Rate %Finance New 84 9.0 90% of cost Used 60 10.5 80% of cost AUTO MOBILE CREDIT UNION An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union KU This offer is available for a limited time only. Call KU Credit Union today at 749-2224 for membership information and loan approval. Summer Clearance Sale Save on footwear and clothing as summer starts AVIA asiCS GEL CONVERSE CORVERSE NIKE Reebok Nobody knows the athlete's foot like Athlete's Foot The Athlete's Foot 914 Massachusetts 841-6966 8 Wednesday, June 3,1992 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BJ's IMPORTS Specializing in VOLKSWAGEN 24 Years of Experience 1045 New Jersey Owner Lawrence, Kansas 66044 BILL Jackson 913-843-9494 Visa and Mastercard This Week At 925 Iowa 749-5039 Adiacent to The Pool Room Gustos Wednesday Night Comedy Showtime · John Mallery & Whitney Garbanzo 9 p.m. Thursday Night • T.B.A Country Western Night Free Dance Lessons 7:30p.m. Friday Night • Coors Dry BikiniSquad Promo w / Black Pearl V.D.R. 9 p.m. - Saturday Night • Reggae w/ DNA & Cryout *Bring in your K.U. ID and 2 get in for the price of 1* The Total Entertainment Club and Restaurant... K. U. STUDENT SPECIAL $1 OFF COUPON World's Greatest Haircut Reg. $795 BUT WITH COUPON $695 HIS OR HERS $45 REDKEN PERMS $2995 COMPLETE WITH CUT! BODY WAVE or CURLY STYLE Long Hair, Spirals. Extra 73 Under 12 KIDS KUT $5 - Orchards- 14th and Kasold SNIP N'CLIP MIDWEST'S FAVORITE HAIRCUTTERS OPEN NIGHTS & SUNDAYS, JUST DROP IN 842-5151 *Westridge 6th and Kasold 865-5822 Expires Sept. 1, 1992 --don't mind paying more for our kids." Balloons-N-More *temporarily closed due to an accident For deliveries and other information, call our other store. it's your PARTY 749-3455 1601 W23rd Late Nights are Great Nights at molly mcgees grill & bar Late Night Specials (9pm-Midnight) Monday: 1/2 price Milano Sticks Sunday: 15¢ Buffalo Wings (cheese sticks) Tuesday: 1/2 price Cheese McGees (served in a wheelbarrow) Open: 11 a.m. 'til 2 a.m. 7 DAYS A WEEK 2429 IOWA 841-9922 School finance plan OK'd by Legislature Wednesday: 1/2 price By Chris Moesser Human staff writer Potato Dugouts Kansan staff writer The Legislature, in a whirlwind of activity during the final two weeks of the 1992 session, approved a new school finance plan that combines property tax relief with increases in state income and sales taxes. The plan will drastically alter the way education is financed in Kansas. Supporters claim it will improve the opportunity of all children across the state to receive an equal education. Opponents have labeled the measure an economic disaster for the state. Highlights of the bill include the introduction of a statewide 35-mill property tax levy by 1994, which will slash property tax revenue by an estimated $251 million. A mill is one dollar of tax per $1,000 of assessed property value. The loss in revenue will be made up by an increase in the state sales tax, which jumped from 4.25 to 4.9 percent June 1. Additional measures include income tax increases on middle and upper-income taxpayers, and the elimination of sales tax exemptions for new construction. The tax changes are expected to yield an overall revenue increase of $88 million. State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said the plan was a historic reform of education financing in Shore cited statistics indicating that residents in his district would pay between $3,000 and $5,500 each in taxes under the new plan. The state average is around $1,000, he said. "It will mean more educational opportunity more uniformly across the state," he said. "Ultimately, it is in the interests of all of us that children, regardless of where they are born in Kansas, have an equal opportunity to education." Kansas. Shore said one town in his district, Satanta, had a revenue shortfall of $102,000 under the plan. Sobach said the school finance plan would provide a significant tax reduction in most school districts. It is a progressive tax system, because people at upper income levels will be paying more under the new plan than those at lower income levels. "They terminated four teachers and that's not fair," he said. "They can't keep their doors open and keep the same number of employees." Shore said the reason behind the talk of secession was to demonstrate how angry people were. The decrease in property taxes will make it easier to own property in the state. Soibach said this would be worth considering. But other legislators were not so complimentary of the finance plan. State Rep. Eugene Shore, R-Johnson, said he opposed the plan because it took away local control of school districts. Shore, whose southwest Kansas district includes the towns of Elkhart and Ulysses, sponsored an amendment during the session which alluded to the possibility of secession by districts that opposed the finance plan. The amendment did "We don't want to pay more taxes for kids in Wichita and Wyandotte County," Shore said. "They give their taxes away in abatements for businesses. We "I'm a fifth-generation Kansan, and I have kids after me," he said. "But there comes a time when you pay and pay, and you don't get anything in return. You start to wonder. Fair is fair, but this has gone overboard." State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said many people in rural western Kansas felt like an oppressed minority. Because the apportionment of representatives is now based on population instead of land area, there has been a shift in power to the cities, she said. Welcome Back! Charlton said Douglas County would not be adversely affected economically by the plan. Sorry, noel carpet and we don't have aaping enough to bake you all a cake. But here's what does await you at our stairs: More than 2500 used compact discs - most for $8.00, all guaranteed! Buy - sell - trade 7 days a week! - Lots of new alternative releases - Pavement, Dog Nasty, HR, Big Chief, Grateful Dead & more - Stacks & stacks of used LPs & cassettes - T-shirts - Spinal Tap, Flaming Lips, Pearl Jam, Pixies and Joes more; - Tickets on sale for GWAR & Skinny Puppy - ...so unpack your bags, have a nice sit - down meal, then come up and see what's new at the Love Garden!! Love Garden Sounds 936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs) 843-1551 "in the heart of downtown" Welcome STUDENTS! 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Lawrence Donor Center 816 W. 24th (Behind Laird Noller Ford) Open Monday - Friday 8 am - 6 pm, Saturday 9 am - 1pm UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday. June 3.1992 9 Earth summit to begin Activists fear little progress will be made at Rio talks The Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — The atmosphere is festive in Rio on the edge of a world summit devoted to the planet's well-being. Thousands of diplomats, ecologists and native leaders have packed the city's bars, restaurants and taxis, easing the pain of a protracted recession. Residents are reveling in the world's attention, and dozens of special events and concerts are planned. But beneath the bustle, many activists fear that little progress will be made in addressing serious environmental issues. And some Brazilians say the same delegates who are trying to protect trees and animals have shown little interest in human beings—especially Brazil's poor. The Earth Summit, formally known as the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development opens today at the Riocentro convention center. 25 miles west of downtown Rio. Related events were scheduled for yesterday. Twelve thousand environmentalists from 164 countries were to open The Global Forum, a parallel, non-governmental conference. Groups ranging from the Esperanto Association to Friends of the Earth were to meet in 36 green-and-white striped tents at Flamengo Park. At the Earth Summit, delegates from 185 countries will debate and negotiate until June 11. An estimated 100 presidents, premiers and kings will meet for the final days. Much criticism has been directed at U.S. President George Bush. Bush pressured European leaders to remove goals and timetables from an agreement to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. The United States produces about one-fourth of the world's carbon dioxide, which scientists think contributes to global warming. Last week, Bush also said he would not sign a "biodiversity" agreement to protect the world's plants, animals and resources. Officials have since hinted that he might change his mind. "The Bush administration has recklessly undermined the Earth Summit," Greenpeace summit coordinator Josh Karliner said Monday. "The summit would be better off if he didn't come." Officials admit that little real progress may be made. "The conference is not a finish line or a definitive ecological pact," said Paulo Nogueira Neto, adviser to U.N. summit coordinator Maurice Strong. "It is, above all, a second step that will make possible new and bigger steps." Brazilian criticism of the conference has taken a different tack. Some critics say it is a plot to strip the country's control of the Amazon region. The Workers Central Union, Brazil's largest labor federation, has unveiled billboards臂visiting not to ignore the country's poverty while attempting to protect its forests. it's your PARTY For all your party supplies 749-3455 1601 W23rd Everything But Ice Bookcases 936 Massachusetts 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 6/30/92 1618W.23rd Chest of Drawers Beds Empty Your Closet and Fill Your Wallet Make a profit on the clothes you no longer wear. Bring them into Lasting Impressions and we'll sell them for you. 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Other restrictions may apply. $1439.00 Total Price: KU Bookstores Burge Union, Level Two Master Card KU KU BOOKSTORES Please add 5.9% sales tax. Restrictions apply. Stop by the store or call for details. APPLE 864-5697 Macintosh. The power to be your best at KU. DISCOVER DISCOVER VISA Master Card PER HOUR $8.00 FINANCE YOUR COLLEGE CAREER WITH UNITED PARCEL SERVICE WE CAN OFFER YOU: - M-F (NO WEEKENDS) - POSSIBLE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES · MEDICAL, DENTAL, AND VISION CARE BENEFITS · SHIFTS TO FIT YOUR SCHEDULE · PAID VACATIONS / HOLIDAYS We will be interviewing June 5th on campus for part-time loader/unloader positions.3-4 hour shifts. ups Sign up at the Placement Office EOE M/F 110 Burge Union to schedule an interview ups EOE M/F WORKING FOR STUDENTS WHO WORK FOR US UPS DELIVERS EDUCATION 10 Wednesday, June 3,1992 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS REVIEW Today is the first issue The University Daily Kansan has published in more than a month, but Kansas athletes and coaches have been hard at work despite our absence. The NCAA Track Championships begin tomorrow, and Jayhawks Cathy Palacios, Harun Hazim, Julia Saul, Marybeth Labosky and Heather Berlin will be on hand to represent Kansas. The Kansas softball team was eliminated from the College World Series on May 23 after consecutive losses to Fresno State and Arizona. The Wildcats edged the Jayhawks 1-0 in 17 innings. Senior Eveline Hamers advanced to the third round of the NCAA Women's Tennis Championships before being eliminated May 19. Hamers was the first Kansas tennis player to earn All-American honors four times. Senior basketball player Rex Walters has been named a preseason All-American by Playboy magazine. Walters was a first team All-Big Eight selection last season. Two Kansas football players, junior kicker Dan Eichloff and senior defensive tackle Dana Stubblefield, also earned preseason honors from the magazine. Coach Roy Williams was contacted by the Los Angeles Lakers in mid-May when Laker coach Mike Dunleave left the Lakers following the playoffs. But Williams, the 1992 Associated Press Collegiate Coach of the Year, is still a Jayhawk In other Kansas coaching news, football coach Glen Mason has yet to sign a new contract. And Jerry Waugh was named coach of the women's golf team. Waugh, a former Kansas basketball player and assistant coach, coached the men's golf team in 1960-61. 'Hawks aim for select teams KANSAS 20 STATE Jayhawks guard Stacy Truitt, left, and forward Alana Slatter, center, have been named to the Big Eight Conference Select Team. The squad will take on the Canadian Junior National Team later this month. By David Mitchell Contributing Editor Kansas womentry for spots on olympic team Tomorrow, former Kansas basketball player Lynette Woodard will find out whether she will move one step closer to rejoining the U.S. Olympic Team. The team will make cuts tomorrow before announcing its final roster on June 12. Woodard was a four-time All-American at Kansas from 1978 to 1981. She was selected to the Olympic team in 1980, but the United States boycotted the summer games that year. However, Woodard got another chance in 1984 when she was co-captain of the gold-medal winning U.S.队. Because she gave up her amateur standing to play with the Harlem Globetrotters and overseas, Woodard was not eligible for the 1988 games. However, rules have changed to allow professionals to participate. Now 32, Woodard is once again in Colorado Springs, Colo., vying for a spot on the U.S. team. "Lynette has had an extraordinary career," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "She's done everything." When Washington signed sophomore Angela Aycock as a high school senior, she made comparisons to Woodard and her heralded recruit. After a standout freshman season, Aycock is also in Colorado Springs. She is fighting for a spot on the U.S. Junior National Team. Aycock earned all-conference honorable mention after averaging 10 points and five rebounds a game in Washington said that though the athletes had comparable talents, Aycock needed to improve herstyle of play. "Lynette loved the basketball, and she loved to find a way to get it in the basket," she said. "The one area Angela's had to work on is to be more aggressive." "She has the opportunity to compete against future Olympians. You've got to compete hard and be very aggressive. I think she'll have a lot more confidence next fall." Washington also said that Woodard and Aycock had enjoyed the opportunity to watch each other compete in their respective trials. "Angie called me this morning and told me Lynette looked good, and Lynette called me last night and told me Angie looked good," she said. "I'm real proud of them regardless of what happens." Two more Jayhawks, sophomore forward Alana Slatter and senior guard Stacy Truitt have been selected to BigEight Select Team. Truitt led Kansas in scoring last year, averaging 12 points a game, and was second in assists. "Stacy is one of the premier players in the conference. Washington said, 'I'm real pleased for Slatter took on an important role near the end of the season as injuries took their toll on upper-classman. In conference play, Slatter averaged eight points a game. She was especially hard on Iowa State, hammering the Cyclones with 43 points in two games. KU coach is first woman president of association Slatter said she would use her summer experience to work on many things. "I'm going to work on every aspect of my game," Slatter said. "I will help me in every way. Everyone says that it's a great experience, so I'm excited." Kansan staff report Marian Washington is the new president of the Black Coaches Association. Washington, Kansas women's basketball coach, became the first woman elected to the position The 98-percent male, 3,000-member organization concluded its fifth annual convention Saturday. Washington will serve one-yearafterhavingserved as vice president last year. Washington said she wanted to pursue several issues, including: addressing the lack of African-American football coaches, gender equity for coaches, gaining a stronger voice in the NCAA, installing a full-time executive director, producing a BCA journal, putting the organization on stronger financial ground and continuing efforts to encourage high school student athletes to meet academic requirements. Entering her 20th year at Kansas, Washington has led the Jayhawks to a 347-216 record. During 1990-91, the team earned its fifth Big Eight Conference Championship despite enduring an injury-plagued season. Washington was named the conference's coach of the year. Notes—Kansas' recruiting class was ranked 20th in the nation by Blue Star Report magazine. The ranking was the best of any Big Eight team. Washington said the group had been underrated. The Jahawk newcomers include first-team Parade magazine High School All-American Charise Sampson, third-tier Parade All-American JaNet Davis and transfer Michelle Leathers. Leathers helped guide her team to the junior college national championship last season. NBA playoffs Most minutes played in NBA playoffs: in NBA ffs: Minutes Wilt Chamberlain 7,559 Bill Russell 7,497 Magic Johnson 7,403 Dennis Johnson 7,004 Knight-Ridder Tribune SOURCE: Sporting News NBA Guide Bulls are ready to defend NBA title, but they won't overlook Portland The Associated Press What the Bulls beared the most was the embarrassment of not being able to reach the NBA Finals and defend their title. Now that they've made it to the final round, they believe they can play better. "It's a great relief. There was a great amount of pressure on us to do good job and get back here," said Scottie Pippen, the catalyst in Friday night's 99-94 victory against the Cleveland Cavaliers that wrapped up the Eastern Conference finals. CHICAGO—With talk of sweeping the playoffs long since past, the Chicago Bulls feel they can play under less pressure against the Portland Trail Blazers. Pippen struggled for four games against Cleveland before snapping out of a slump with 29 points, 12 rebounds, four blocked shots and four steals in the series finale. "There's definitely been a lot of pressure on me for not being able to produce," he said. "Now we just have to go out and play. It's a great feeling." expected from the Bulls, who went 15-2 in postseason last year en route to winning the championship. The team came back with a 67-15 record for the best mark in the NBA this season. Before the playoffs started, there were some who thought the Bulls might go 15-0 in the playoffs this season. The expectations increased after a three-game sweep over Miami. It hasn't been easy because so much was However, Coach Phil Jackson said the prediction was ridiculous. And the Bulls proved it, losing three games to the New York Knicks and two more to the Cavaliers. There is no talk of a sweep over the Trail Blazers, though Michael Jordan called the victory in the sixth game over Cleveland a great confidence builder. Jordan had a miserable performance in the first three quarters of Game 6, missing 15 of 20 shots before scoring 16 points in the final period to share scoring honors with Pippen at 29. "There were a lot of guys who stepped up and kept us in the game until I could get myself going," Jordan said. Jordan also said it was tougher defending the championship than winning it for the first time. There is no fear of taking the Trail Blazers for granted. They had the best record in the Western Conference at 57-25, and they knocked off Utah in six games by winning at Utah 105-97 Thursday night. "It hard to get back, but we're back now, so let's win it," he said. "It was a trying season mentally, but we passed the test because we got back to the pinnacle of our game." "Portland is one of the most athletic teams in the league," Jordan said. "It's a big challenge. We're going to have to play very smart and with a lot of good defense. We have to play four quarters, control the boards and take control of the game offensively." Games 1 and 2 will be played at Chicago Stadium tonight and Friday night, then the series shifts to Portland for games on Sunday and the following Wednesday. If needed, Game 5 also will be in Portland June 12. The sixth and seventh games would be played in Chicago June 14 and June 17. Portland comes into the NBA Finals with a record of 57-25. They beat Utah in six games by winning at Utah 105-97 last Thursday night. The first two o games will be played in Chicago. THE BLAZERS Former Mizzou basketball star is charged with three felonies COLUMBIA, Mo. — Ajudge granted a two-day delay yesterday for former Missouri basketball star Anthony Peeler's initial court appearance on felony kidnapping and firearms charges. The Associated Press Peeler, charged in a weekend incident involving a woman, could not attend a hearing yesterday because he was in Chicago for an NBA tryout camp, said Pat Eng. Peeler's attorney. Assistant Prosecutor Tim Wynes said he agreed to a delay in the hearing. Peeler, 22, who is expected to be a first-round NBA pick, is charged with kidnapping, carrying a concealed weapon and brandishing a weapon, all of which are felonies. Wynes sad he also was preparing a misdemeanor assault charge against Peeler. A new hearing was set for 1:30 p.m. The Big Eight player of the year, Peeler was charged after he allegedly bit a woman four times and held a pistol to her head in her Columbia apartment early Saturday. He was arrested several hours later. tomorrow before Boone County Associate Circuit Judge Larry Bryson. The Kansas City, Mo., native was suspended for one game last season after Coach Norm Stewart learned that Peeler had skipped a couple of classes earlier in the year. He was academically ineligible for the first semester of the 1991-92 season but brought his grades up and played the second half of the season. Royals win on McReynolds'homer the one allegedly used to threaten the woman was found in Peeler's car, police said. A gun matching the description of Stewart is vacationing in Europe and has been unavailable for comment Eng said he had told Peeler not to talk about the charges. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kevin McReynolds hit a two-run homer in the eighth off Scott Radinsky, the first home run given up by the White Sox pitcher in almost a year, to lift the Kansas City Royals over Chicago 2-1 last night. The Associated Press Frank Thomas hit a sacrifice fly off Mark Gubicza (6-3), giving Chicago the lead in the top of the eighth. Sox pitcher Jack McDowell led off the bottom of the inning by walking Gregg Jefferies, and Radinsky (2-2) came in to relieve McReynolds followed with his eighth home run of the year, the first Radinsky has given up in 50 innings since last July 27. Gubicea four hits in eight innings, striking out three and walking four. Jeff Montgomery pitched in the ninth for his ninth save of the season. McDowell, who has lost three consecutive decisions since opening the season with seven straight wins, gave up five hits and struck out three. Jefferies was 0 for 3, snapping his hitting streak at 18 games. Ron Karkovice led off the eighth with a single and beat catcher Mike Macfaarlene's throw to second when Tim Raines sacrificed. Rob Ventura was walked, loading the bases, and Thomaslined to deep center. THE BOYS BASEBALL CLUB Daron J. Bennett/KANSAN As part of the Dave Bingham Baseball Camp, Gerry Camara, Bronx, N.Y., senior and former Jayhawk third baseman, shows participants how to field and throw a ball quickly during the infield test in Anschutz Sports Pavilion. The one-week camp, supervised by KU Baseball coaches and players, teaches youths the fundamentals of baseball. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 3, 1992 11 Before L.A. riot hearings begin, some theft charges are dismissed The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — More than a quarter of the riot-related looting cases to come up for preliminary hearings || who made multiple arrests were have- trouble identifying suspects. "The main problem seems to be identifying the body in the courtroom as the person who was arrested during the riots," John Lynch, head of the district attorney's Central Trial Division, said Monday. Of 820 cases that had gone through preliminary hearings by Friday, 227 were dismissed. In the remaining cases, 547 defendants were held for trial, and 46 changed their pleas to guilty, he said Lynch said that he had expected more dismissals and that he was surprised by how well officers had done in murdering suspects arrested in the chaos. In some cases, 30 or 40 people were arrested together, he said. Some officers tagged their suspects with wristbands that matched the numbers on their arrest reports, he said. Others took Polaroids of suspects and attached them to arrest reports. About 4,000 defendants were arraigned on riot-related charges. In addition, the city attorney has been processing some 3,000 curfew violators and misdemeanor cases. Also Monday, more than a dozen church leaders urged African Americans to keep money in their community and promised to invest more than $6 million a week in parish funds in three African-American-owned banks. Fifteen churches plan to set up tables Sunday for opening new bank accounts. The changes are intended to spur economic revival in neighborhoods devastated by brioting "We're not trying to cripple anybody. We're trying to empower our own banks," said the Rev. Edgar Boyd, whose Bethel AME Church had banked at Bank of America. "It seemed that most Black folk have been for so long duped to understand that the white man's ice was colder," Boyd said. Separately, U.S. Energy Secretary James Watkins said that his department was accelerating expansion of a program that deposits in minority-owned banks penalties paid by oil companies for violating price controls in the 1970s. LSAT GMIAT GRE Previously, $22 million was to be released nationally. 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SPECIAL Only $3.49+tax (cafry out only) for small pizza (add tops only 75¢) order 2 or more for free delivery PYRAMID good Thurs. only Lied Center to become home for performing arts by end of'93 Construction to be finished on schedule despite minor delays By Chris Moeser Kansan staff writer Construction on the Lied Center, KU's new performing arts center, is running slightly behind schedule but will meet the scheduled September 1993 opening. Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said that the project so far was within its $14.7 million budget and that some minor construction delays would not prevent the center from opening on time in September 1993. Universal Construction Company of Kansas City, Kan., is building the center, which is located on West Campus near the intersection of 15th and Iowa Wiechert said that work on the concrete superstructure was finished and that workers had started laying bricks on the exterior of the building. Exterior construction should be completed by May of 1993, with interior construction, including carpet, seating and acoustical work, ending by the September opening. streets. The center will contain a 2,080-seat recital hall, several lobby and reception areas, and offices for the KU Concert Series, Wiechert said. The center is designed to be expandable in the future, either by adding a smaller recital hall or expanding the existing main hall. Faculty in the School of Fine Arts said the center would be an important addition to KU's performing arts program. *Everything on the concert series will be located there.* said Jacqueline Doyle. In addition, the center could be home to faculty lectures, Student Union Activities, and Rock Chalk Revue. Davis said the center would allow the University to more easily accommodate both performers and audiences. The largest existing concert hall on campus, Crafton-Preyer Theatre, seats 1,182 people. The new hall will be more than 900 seats larger. The Lied Center also will be more accessible than either Crafton-Preyer or Hoch Auditorium, which was used for large performances before last year's fire. The center will contain several rehearsal rooms and dressing rooms, which will provide better facilities for performers than currently exist at KU, Davis said. Summer theater group to stage seasonal classic By Julie Wasson Davis also said the first performance in the center would take place sometime in Fall 1993. But the details of the concert are not completed. Kansan staff writer Early summer is a great time to perform a romantic comedy. That is one of the reasons director John Gronbeck-Tedesco gave for choosing William Shakespeare's "As You Like it" for this summer's University Theatre production. "It has seasonal aptitude," said Gronbeck-Tedesco, head of the department of theatre and film. The play will run June 10-12 and 17-19. All performances will be at 8 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Admission is $6 for the general public and $3 for KU students. Gronbeck Tedesco said that he chose not to stage a traditional performance of the play. Instead, the setting will be the United States during the 1930s. He said that the characters in the play also helped him decide on that "The U.S. was going through the Great Depression at that time." Gronbeck-Tedesco said "Right now the U.S. is in a recession, which I think could be more accurately described as a depression. So there's that connection." "The locals are country folks, basically," Groebke-Tredeco said. "The rest of the play is essentially the story of people with these people in the woods." Gronbeck Tedesco also plans to use clothes and music from the 1930s. "It's going to be a lot of fun, I think," he said. FredScheff, Lawrence graduate student, portrays two characters in the play. "This play will be different for me because I have always done opera and musicals," he said. "This will be my first non-musical — the first time I'll have to learn lines instead of music." Scheff said that he was glad to be doing Shakespeare. "He's an aw-en-inspiring playwright," he said. "I think this production will be challenging, but I think Tilley enjoy." The play is about a group of people who have left a royal court because of a scandal. They go to the woods and meet the townspeople. The request would increase CLA spending on the Iraqi effort to $40 million. The size of the proposed increase for fiscal 1993 reflects an admission that the U.S.led effort to oust Hussein has been ineffectual to date, according to unnamed government sources. The request follows a year of U.S. frustration and embarrassment over Hussein's ability to survive the political and military punishment from Operation Desert Storm and to reconsolidate his hold over Iraq. The Rush Is On! Don't be left in the Cold... 9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. OPEN DAILY "Some of the characters in the play are criminals — gangsters, really," he said. "Gangsters and crime were mythologized in the U.S. during the 1930s." Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415 LOS ANGELES — The Bush administration has proposed nearly tripling the $15-million budget for covert action to help overthrow Iraqi President Sadam Hussein, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday. Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212 - CUSTOM FURNISHINGS Bush requests more money for Iraqispying The Associated Press - CUSTOM FURNISHINGS - DESIGNED FOR PRIVACY - ENERGY EFFICIENT - MANY BUILT-INS - AFFORDABLE RATES Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226 era. - AFFORDABLE RATES - ON SITE MANAGERS* - POOL* - CLOSE TO CAMPUS - LOCALLY MANAGED - CLOSE TO SHOPPING - CENTRAL A/C - CLOSE TO CAMPUS - LOCALLY OWNED - MICROWAVES* *available some locations - LAUNDRY FACILITIES* CENTRAL A/C Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 - PRIVATE PARKING Kentucky Place 1310 Kentucky 749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255 - CLOSE TO SHOPPING MASTERCHAFT offers a wide variety of furnished apartments in numerous locations near campus. Whether you prefer to live alone or with 1,2, or 3 roommates, we have a home for you. We offer Studios, 1,2,3, and 4 bedroom apartments, 2 and 3 level townhomes, all designed with you, the K.U. student in mind. Affordable Rentals Call or visit our leasing offices MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY You've Seen Social Distortion In Concert. Now Re-live The Experience! PLEASE READ THE SUPPLEMENTARY NOTICE BEFORE PURCHASING THIS PICTURE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. COPYRIGHT © 1995 BY JONATHAN HALL AND THE CREATIVE MASTERS, INC. SOCIAL DISTORTION SOMEWHERE BETWEEN HEAVEN AND HELL including BAD LUCK-GOLD FEELINGS WHEN SHE BEGINS SOMETIMES I DO $9.99 CD $6.99 Cassette 1403 W. 23rd Street 842-7173 Sale ends 6/9/92 SOCIAL DISTORTION SOMEWHERE BETWEEN HEAVEN AND HELL including BAD LUCK; COLD FEELINGS WHEN SHE BEGINS SOMETIMES I DO 1403 W. 23rd Street 842-7173 Sale ends 6/9/92 STAY STREETSMART, SHOP STREETSIDE! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday,June 3,1992 13 Japanese admits guilt in World War II abductions The Associated Press ABIKO, Japan — Half a century has passed, but Seiji Yoshida cannot forget kicking away clinging, wailing Korean children as his men herded young mothers into trucks to become sex slaves for the Japanese Imperial Army. Yoshida, 78, is the only Japanese to have publicly confessed involvement in the systematic kidnapping of women from Korean villages to be raped over and over again by Japanese soldiers during World War II. "I am prepared to be killed for what I did," Yoshida says quietly. "I am just like the Nazi officials who operated the gas chambers." Yoshida plans a journey of penitence to South Korea next month to hold a private ceremony of prayer and formal apology for the women called "anfu" or "comfort women" by the Japanese. As a young man, Yoshiida led one of the many "labor recruitment groups" acting under military and government orders to capture Korean men for work and women for sexual enslavement during Japan's occupation of the peninsula. No official figures are available, but Korean and Japanese historians estimate the number of "comfort women" at between 70,000 and 200,000. Yoshida says he personally supervised the abduction of 1,000 Korean women, shipping them to Shimonoseki, southwestern Japan, where they were sent to the battlefronts of China, Southeast Asia and Okinawa. They were forced to have sex with dozens of soldiers a day in buildings resembling iainhouses. "A scene from hell" was how Eizo Kitazawa, a former soldier, described it in a newspaper article. The men formed lines outside, each holding a ticket bought for atoken price. Many of the women died of venereal disease. The women were left to starve and face air raids alone when the troops began their retreat late in the war. A few filed lawsuits in Tokyo in the past year, angrily demanding reparations from Japan. Four were in Tokyo District Court on Monday for the first hearing of their case. Japan, with a record of covering up wartime horrors, long denied the military's involvement. But government documents surfaced in January showing the army controlled recruiting women and running "comfort centers." Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa apologized in Seoul but stopped short of offering compensation. Yoshida believes Japan should give compensation and has offered to testify in parliament. In a recent book, feminist historian Yuko Suzuki questioned Miyazawa's sincerity — "Considering the age of these women, their current plight and the days they have left, the treatment goes beyond procrastination and can only be called cruel." But he becomes testy when asked what his feelings were Japanese admits guilt in World War II abductionsthen. "That's a postwar concept. We just carried out orders. We were at point zero psychologically. It was just business." "I felt nothing. I was busy, I was desperate, I was possessed." He said all Japanese were brain-washed under militarism, even into forming suicide units. When Yoshida began looking for sex slaves on Korean farms in the 1940s, almost all the young already had left to work in Japanese-operated factories, leaving behind the elderly, teenage mothers and their toddlers and infants. With about a dozen men aided by local military police, Yoshida would encircle a village. His people would storm the village, beating the women with sticks. "The people were in a state of panic. Dogs barking, babies crying. It was horrible. That's one scene I can never forget — a child shrieking and trying to follow his mother, then someone kicks him away, and the truck drives off. "Those children must be in their 50s by now. There's no way they would have forrotten." Others involved have not come for ward fearing retaliation. Classified Director 100's 200's Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Personal 120 Entertainment 140 Lost & Found Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 235 Typing Services 100s Announcements X 300's 105 Personals Jayhawks make jewelry and love it! International Head Trainer 101.7/Mass 400's Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban Sunglasses The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. 843-0611 110 Bus. Personals A SWM Age 43, 6' 220 lbs. brown eyes and hair. introduce female for dating and possible serious relationship would a foreign or handicapped be interested in writing a P. O. Box 441 154 Ls **tinalBead Trader:** 10171/2*Mass.* The cooperative way of doing business is an active expression of peace and justice. Join us in our mission to promote community health. Stop by the Community Mercantile Food Co-op and find out how you can become a member. We need your sup- Catch The Rays! TUTORS: List your name with us we Refer to you to the student. Student Assistance 133.580 Don't head for the sun without your new shades! Etc. Shop has "NYY, Levi's li's, Rayban, & The Etc. 928 MASSACHUSETTS Shop 843-0611 Merchandise 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 370 Miscellaneous 380 Want to Buy Real Estate 405 For Rent 430 Roommate Wanted WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 123 Look for our new Vogue Firenze Italian sunglasses! 10-5:30 MON.-SAT., OPEN UNTIL 8 THURS. COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange MainLobby, Kavvys Kansas Union 120 Announcements WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE THERE REALLY LISTEN Call or drop by Headquarter. We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Musu. We're always open. Cape Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Suicide intervention if you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who someone is叫 841-259-6 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Carlos O'Kelly's Now Hiring Mon.-Sat.10am-6pm Positions Wanted: Servers, Wait Aids, Bartenders, Host, Line Cooks, Prep Cooks, Dishwashers. 23rd Street in the Malls Shopping Center. Part-time aide at licensed home day care. Experienced necessary 842 2150. STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT Deadline: 06/12/12 $/Hour; $4.35/hour Hours include assisting in invoicing, mailing & filing of Compter records, maintaining the Receivable ledgers; assisting with Repair Shop orders; performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis; and miscellaneous Business office tasks. To apply for a job application form visit www.computer.org from 2 to 4 of the Computer EOIAEMPLOYER STUDENT HOURLY POSITION AVAILABLE. Must be available through May 15, 2024 and some breaks. Some breaks Duties receptionist; filing; do errands; type position application immediately. $42/hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 131 Strong /864-4064. Deadline: May 15. READ THIS! GRADUATE ASSISTANT position for publications, publicity, & information gathering: Responsibilities include the design & layout of brochure & program materials; preparation of minutes, newsletter articles & training materials. Requirements include: Bachelor's degree or equivalent in word processing or desktop publishing, writing ability, ability to do layouts, carry out instructions with minimal supervision. Required experience must include receipt by 5 p.m., Friday, 12 June, 1982, at the Student Assistance Center, 131 Strong Hall, University Kansan, Lawrence, KS, 606-844-7000. Reading for Comprehension Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K. U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841.7490 225 Professional Services Summer School **Help Wanted:** BAR, 520 N3rd 841-9607 **MODELS & ACTORS】SURPRISED. Professionals** 95 per hour. Print. Hours Non-Union 8129-230 Also. Extras for TV/film 8717-175 day 95 per hour. and Speed Tuesday, June 9, 16, and 23 2-4 pm (six hours instruction) Class size limited to 18! Register and pay $19 materials fee by 5p.m. on Monday, June 8 in 133 Strong Hall Experienced maintenance person needed for property management company, flexible hours, apply in person at Bradford Square Apartments 50 Colorado #B1, MJ 7:00 0:5.00. GRADUATE ASSISTANT POSITION Sexual Assault Prevention a Education Program, University of Kansas. Resource Center has a 1/2-time graduate assistant position available. Responsibilities include the inclusion of women students; serve as an advocate for aurition interests; and concern of current interests, needs, and concerns The Student Assistance Center 卫生间 205 Help Wanted 200s Employment Romance Language Tutoring Services * French * Spanish call the linguist call Fhunsu at 843-7643 **driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 814-7749** RICK FRYDMAN Attorney at Law and most other legal matters - Free Consultation - Free Consultation 823 Missouri 843-4023 ACADEMIC AID POSITION AVAILABLE Duties include: Inure textbooks & other materials or students who are blind or have read limitations, provide assistance with performance of lab projects. $4/25r. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 133 St. Hornell Hall, 804-643-6044, June 12, 1992 For better grades, call PAPER PROS. Editing, organizing, source evaluations, proofreading. Reasonable rates. References available Very well in literature and humanities. Becky 841-1490 TRAFFIC-DUI'S BUY, SELL, LOANCASI On TV's VOC, jewelry, stereo musical instrument, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MC/AKEM. Jazz Dj Jaynack Pawn & Jewelry, 18W,6th H. Fake ID'D & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE Graduates, displaced &/or career shifters, SEARCH FIRM seeks resumes for ALL career fields; minorities & women are special need. June 15 Deadline. Increase your READING SPEED AND COMPREHENSION. Tuesday, June 9, 16 and 23, 4-p.m. $19 materials fee by 5:00 p.m. Monday, $29 materials fee by 6:00 p.m. Monday, 133 Strong Hall. Class limit is 180. 16 East 13th 842-1133 X Word processing, applications, term papers dissertation, management, composition diploma, master's Degree. PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services (913) 491-6878 Attorney 235 Typing Services Keyboard lessons Professional keyboardist has more than 541 more books. Joe Walsh Eagles and many more. RESUME UPDATE c/o SEARCH DIRECTOR P.O. Box 15945 Suite 278 Lenexa, KS, 66285 300s Merchandise Epson Equity 1+ computer, 3 yrs. old but use for light word processing jobs than half that of a standard printer. The paper print fewer than 10 &pill; black within 9 yr war cost less than $200. Best of box paper, cable, extra ribbon, 1000 or best bag of paper, cable, extra ribbon, 1000 or best Wus buy boy scout patches, badges an niforms Top dollar for OA or WWW. Looking for something #86 Massachusetts. Books desk, bookscase, chest, claw of dress, desks, bookcases #86 Massachusetts. Twin Bed for Sale. Great for student $25.00. Includes mattress and box spring 86-291 340 Auto Sales Buy Sell and Trade Combo Boots, camoflage camping, camping gear. Looking for something, you need. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use it Available at Jayhawk, Oread, & Town Crier Bookstores. Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716 Zenith desk computer 20 meg. hard disk. 16 GB. various software. Must sell $500 ebm d-411s $800 ebm d-411s 305 For Sale 1979 Cordova - excellent condition, excellent motor 318, color white, red interior, excellent condition. Ruth 594-3628 after 5.0 p.m. Price negotiable. ARMY-NAVY STORE 360 Miscellaneous Government photos, passports, immigration, portfolios, APW, color, Call Tom Sweens 90-81 623-475-3077 For anonymity info and support for AIDS con- cerns, call 841-243. Headquarters Help! I need: 8' Mt. bike, two man ten bag, to want to sell any of these, call me 841-0099. 370 Want to Buy 400s Real Estate EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 合 All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, ethnicity, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination' 1990 Naimath 3 m 4 BRF 2 bath large rooms to all bedrooms. Cabinets paid free on storage site at all bedrooms. Cash paid free on storage site at all bedrooms. Silhive Apts. $50 lease-signing bonus! 1 & 2 bedroom rooms at $265 & $465 deposit. On bus route. On-site laundry, 843-5458 or 749-608 Available August 1, 1. and 2 bedroom apartments with no parking. Required. No parking. References: Parkings. No patio. Data. Tswy8-1405. Available August 1. Nice Extra-large 2 bedroom apartment close to the student union. Hardwood Floors. Suitable for 2 or 3 people Offices are available. No pets. Day 78, September 21 evening 8:45 AM Basement apartment. Walk to campus and metro (medical) at $250/mo. (all fulltime) 842-968 (all fulltime) 842-968 For Summer sublease to graduate or upper- class student. One bedroom furnished apartmen- t one block from Union. No pets. Refs. $250 m. Call Besh B32-1410. One bedroom app and studio apt. available in Baltimore, Missouri, ATL and lots of windows. Not pet or kids allowed. Spacious two bedroom apartment, cheap utilities, $225 monthly, on bus route. 841-4066 or 832- 2332. Available June 1st 2 month, or 1-year lease. Short-term or long-term 3-month? - 2-bdrm, 2-bath, fully furnished, apartment. No deposit for phone or utilities. Good location. Call Jim 865-3178. is where the Heatherwood Valley Apts. Spacious 2 and 3 bedrooms available for the mature student. Now leasing for fall. Includes covered parking, swimming pool, inexpensive utilities, on bus route. Pets welcomed. 2040 Heatherwood *843-4754* Heatherwood Valley Apts. Summer special 1/2 June rent! Own bath in A/C; W-C D/ Non-moking Details 485-7244 Summer Subleases 1 and 2 bedroom apartments 1980-1984 No. pets Day 749 2911 or evening 843 9007 Summer sublue: female non smoker $200 may have 127Utilities and spacecalled Coffee $249 A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere NOLEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL Bradford Square Apartments 50 Colorado Montana Springs Apartments 50 Colorado Stadium View Apartments 100 Mississippi "Summer lease special" Mon-Fri. 2 p.m. 560 W. 79th St. VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Close to campus • Spacious 2 bedroom • Laundry facility • Swimming Pool • Waterbed allowed FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE KVM Apartments 841-6080 **offer's completely** **furnished** 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 MASTERCRAFT designed with you in mind! Go to 9th & Avalon 842-3040 Campus Place-841-1429 Orchard Corners-749-4226 15th & Kasold Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas 1145 Louisiana Hanover Place-841-1212 Kentucky Place-749-0445 1310 Kentucky MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 1. Bdm Apt sublease available July 1 $340 2. camp free campus basic & water call 865 1720 Boardwalk apartments Open House Everyday!! Summer & Fall Rentals Available Now. 1&2 Bedrooms On Trailridge Bus Route 524 Frontier 842-4444 EDDINGHAM PLACE 24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers) Open 6 days a week for your convenience. Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!! Office Hours: 12-6 pm Mon. - Fri. 9-12 am Saturday No appointment necessary. 841-5444 841-5444 Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc. 1 Bdmr Apt. furn, pool sublease avail. Mid May $333 month 8269.09 COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS - Basketball Court - Indoor Pool - Outdoor Pool - Exercise Room - 3 Hot Tubs - On Bus Route - Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!! - Volleyball Court REDUCED DEPOSIT 842-5111 1301 W.24th 430 Roommate Wanted Models Open Daily Mon.- Fri 10-6 p.m. Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m. Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind! 1 Bedroom Available for next semester in new building. Fireplace/palette and penns $2/tonth plus dining room. 2 bdm house, summer and/or fall 2$25 inc. on neighborhood, bus. root Call Destiny 8329 - 6810 Female to sublease gorgeous large private immediate until August 1; $80.00/mo, 847-4948 Female needed to share apartment starting next fall. Call Heather at 1-381-5471. Lease THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Policy FUN! FUN! FUN! In the summer sun in Sund- 庭 Apte. next to Lesley's West. 2 female roommates wanted for 4 bedroom Rent $184 Call 865-9970 Rainbow House, which is a cooperative living consisting of 7-9 women and men, has two available openings starting in June. The house will be located at 2317 N. 6th Street. Please call 833-7949 for more information. Policy Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words Words set in BOLD Face count as 5 words Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words Blank lines count as 7 words. Classified rates are based on consistent user interests only. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement. ment no refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising Prepaid Order Form Ads Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are for three days, no more than 15 words. Just MAIL in the classified form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the Uni Deadlines Deadline is on Monday at 4 p.m 2 days prior to publication Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m 2 days prior to publication CLASSIFIED RATES 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 Classifications 105 personal customer contacts 140 office & fund 280 for sale 120 insurance claims 262 professional service 300 miscellaneous accounts 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted Classified Mall Order Form Name___ Phone. (phone number published only if included below) D1. [ ] ___ new box | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Date ad begins ___ Total days in paper ___ Amount paid ___ Classification ___ Make checks payable to: University Dialkansan 119 Staffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, KS 60454 14 Wednesday, June 3,1992 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Perot campaign heats up Kirkpatrick rumored to be top contender for running mate The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Former U.N. ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick is being sounded out as a potential running mate for unannounced independent candidate Ross Perot. Republican sources say. A perotrepresentative called such speculation premature. ney're having hot and heavy conversations with Kirkpatrick," one source said, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Kirkpatrick has been believed to be on Perot's short list for some time. GOP sources not directly connected with the Perot effort said that interest in her on the part of Perot's lieutenants has sharpened recently. In Dallas, Perot representative James Squires said that a lot of people were being promoted for vice president. But he said serious discussions were not yet taking place with anybody. place wimily today. Kirkpatrick did not return a phone call but was quoted by the New York Daily News in Monday's editions as saying she might support Perot. While declining to comment on whether she had been approached by Perot or his top aides, she told the newspaper, "I agree with whoever thinks that Perot and I can be a great team." Meanwhile, final negotiations were reportedly under way between Perot and two political veterans he apparently hopes to hire to manage his general election campaign. Democrat Hamilton Jordan and Republican Ed Rollins. Both net in Dallas with Perot over the past two days. Jordan, former campaign manager and chief of staff to President Carter, is currently vice chairperson of White Communications in Knoxville, Teen. Rollins is a Washington political consultant who managed President Reagan's 1984 re-election campaign. Neither Jordan nor Rollins returned phone calls. Neither Jordan nor Koums returned phone calls. Soures confirmed that Perot had talked to them but said that neither had been hired as of now. said. Analysts from both parties have said that getting Jordan and Rollins aboard would be a major political coup for the Dallas computer tycoon. "It might happen, and it might not happen," Squires said. Perot aides had told both Rollins and Jordan that they would be paid as much as $5 million for their services, sources in both parties said. One prominent GOP consultant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Monday he was told by Perot aides that the Dallas computer tycoon was prepared to spend more than $100 million on his campaign. The consultant, who said he turned down request for a job interview, said he was told that Perot did not take it. "Yeah, I didn't think you depend that much," the consultant said she/heDid Perot's representatives. "They said, 'No, no, you don't understand. He'd spend many, many of this." Perot, who is worth at least $3 billion, has said he would spend what it takes, often pointing out that the $100 million figure banded about was just an estimate made by journalists, not himself. Squires said he could not believe that a Perot representative would make such a statement. "That is so alien to everything I see and believe. That sounds like Sini Doctor stuff," he said. reroft's professional staff continues to grow while his effort to get on every state ballotpliers forward. On Monday, he qualified for Arkansas' general-election ballot, his 12th, following a weekend nominating convention. And journalist Marilyn Berger, a former reporter for the *Washington Post* and NBC, has joined Perot's team as a consultant on the Middle East, sources said. On the subject of a vice presidential selection, Squires said, "We're in the list process here. I don't think there is one list. Think there are lists." Besides Kirkpatrick, only rumored potential running mates include Peter Ubererbeth, the former baseball commissioner who is now in charge of a task force dealing with the riot aftermath in Los Angeles; 1988 Democratic presidential contender Jesse Jackson; and Connecticut Gov. Lowell Wecker. LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! Berkeley FLATS Studio,1 & 2 bedroom apartments 11th & Mississippi 843-2116 DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS 843-2116 A VACUUM TANK THE STUDENT FRIENDLY STORE Welcome Summer Students!! GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS 1906 MASS 843-8186 The Athlete's Foot. 914 Massachusetts 841-6966 LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL *Self-Defense* *Self-Discipline* *Self-Fulfillment* *Self-Confidence* *Self-Esteem* *Men and Women of all ages* Learn self-defense from an original master. Instructor: Master Ki-June Park, Ph.D SPECIAL STUDENT RATES! Classes Monday through Sunday (Day and Evening). Meditation class Sunday 10th & Massachusetts 843-2121 LIVE MUSIC!!! BENCHWARMERS SPORTS BAR & GRILL Southern Hills Mall • 1601 West 23rd DRINK SPECIALS Sun, Mon & Tues $3 PITCHERS! Wed $1 BIG BEERS (24 oz.) Thurs $2 PITCHERS Fri & Sat $2 FOR 1 WELLS JUNE 6 - THAT STATUE MOVED JUNE 19 - HOLMES vs. HOLLYFIELD Closed circuit, Lawrence exclusive! Advance tickets. Call For info...913-841-9111 SUMMER ON THE HILL STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS For info call SUA AT 864-3477 THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1992 Nic Cosmos WITH GROOVEHEAD CONCERT ON THE HILL 7:00 p.M. CAMPANILE Hill - FREE! THE ASSOCIATION University Residence Halls Shirts Illustrated 804 NEW HAMPSHIRE 841-7821 THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1992 FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF MOVIE ON THE HILL 9:00 p.m. CAMPANILE Hill - FREE! KU KU BOOKSTORES Thursday, June 18, 1992 With TURQUOISE Soul CONCERT ON THE HILL KU CONCESSIONS will BBQ BEGINNING AT 6:00 p.m. prior to EACH CONCERT ON THE hill! BAGhdAd JONES 7:00 p.M. CAMPANILE Hill - FREE! THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1992 LET'S GO JAYBOWLING 9:00 p.M., LEVEL 1, KANSAS UNION $1 Bowling, Video GAMES, Billiards GAMES, TOURNAMENTS AND PRIZES SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1992 SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1992 Co-Rec Volleyball Tourney 10:00 A.M. Allen Fieldhouse LAWN Sign - up, SUA Office - Burge Union $20 per Four person Co-ed IEAM Co-Sponsored With KU REC SERVICES Thursday, July 16, 1992 CARIBE WITH NEW RIDDIM BAND CONCERT ON THE HILL 7:00 p.m. CAMPANILE Hill - FREED 1