CAMPUS: One year after fire destroyed Hoch Auditorium, many plans have been made, but little progress.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.101,NO.146
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1992
(USPS 650-640)
VIEWS & NEWS
NEWS:864-4810
KU professor runs for State Senate
Forrest Swall, University of Kansas professor of social welfare, is running for the state Senate seat vacated by Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence. Swall, who has a long record of interaction with the Legislature and community service in Lawrence, wants his campaign to focus on children's issues and prison reform.
Daron J. Bennett/ KANSAN
1982
Kicking off the opening night of Student Union Activities' Summer On The Hill program are Scott Stoiepe, right, Lawrence, and John Niccum, Lawrence. Both are members of the band Groovehead, which opened for Nic Cosmos Thursday night on the Hill. SUA will have either a concert or a movie on the Hill every Thursday night during the summer session.
Credit option deadline approaches
University of Kansas students interested in taking a summer course for the credit/no credit option must file by June 15, said Darla Perry, graduation counselor and records supervisor for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The deadline applies to all summer classes, including the second one-month course sessions offered June 29 to July 24. Perry said that students must file with their schools for the credit option. The option applies to all required and elective courses but not to classes in students' majors. Perry said the option was created to allow students to protect their grade point averages.
WEATHER
Today
High: 76
Low: 61 Rain likely
Tomorrow
High: 79 Partly
Low: 62 Cloudy
Friday
High: 81 Partly
Low: 62 Cloudy
Saturday
High: 82 Partly
Low: 63 Cloudy
Sunday
High: 85
Low: 65 Sunny
today
tomorrow
Friday
High: 81 Partly
Low: 62 Cloudy
Saturday
High: 82 Partly
Low: 63 Cloudy
Sunday
High: 85
Low: 65 Sunny
Light 81 p.
Cloudy
Murphy Hall may lose snack bar to machines
By Chris Moeser
Kansan staff writer
When Mike Boring heard that KU was closing the Murphy Hall snack bar, he chose to do something about it.
Boring, a secretary for the department of theatre and film in Murphy, started a petition June 2 to save the snack bar. Two days later, he had collected more than 500 signatures.
"We heard they were going to tear down the snack bar and put up vending
In addition to its normal hours of 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., Boring said, the snack bar is open
"If we lost that, we would really lose a nice touch to our productions," he said.
for performances in Murphy.
hive toucher on our project. Bob Derby, manager of concessions for the Kansas Union, said suggestions of the snack bar closing were "wild rumors." But he said that the Union, which operates the snack bar, routinely evaluates the Murphy Hall operation and the snack bar in the Art and Design Building for cost-effectiveness.
The fact that Murphy Hall's snack bar is being reviewed does not necessarily mean it will close. But the Union will review statistics for the snack bar during the next year and then decide whether to close it. Recent data was compiled by the Union
But Boring was convinced the Union
already had made a decision. He said that he saw Union employees measuring the space between the electrical outlets in the snack bar last week. Boring said he thought they were measuring to determine whether the space would accommodate vending machines.
Stephen Anderson, who heads the department of music and dance, said vending machines would be a disaster.
"It is completely unacceptable to have vending machines outside a performance hall," he said. He said that vending machines were noisy and that there were already noise complaints during performances in Crafton-Preyer Theatre and
Swarthout Recital Hall, which are both adjacent to the snack bar area.
Anderson added that an important human element to the building would be lost if the snack bar were closed.
"Some of the more valuable interaction among people takes place over a coke or a cup of coffee," he said.
Boring said he was glad he acted even if all the talk about the decision turns out to be just a rumor.
KU women's crew prevails
"I still don't regret it even if it was a misunderstanding," he said. "We wanted people to understand how important the snack bar is. I think we acted within our rights to tell them what we think."
Jenousek Racing
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
The KU women's crew heads down the Kansas River in its last home practice before the National Collegiate Championships. The crew of (from left) Kendra Williams, Tonganoxie senior, Nancy Hemott, Lincolnshire, Ill., senior, Rachel McCallie, Kirkwood, Mo., Junior, and Tami Odell, captain, Norman, Okla., senior, along with coxswain Julie Lawlor, Chicago senior, practiced yesterday evening in preparation for the competition in Cincinnati, Ohio, this weekend.
Team competes in U.S. championship
Money problems present challenges
By Ana Kostick
Kansan Staff Writer
Members of the KU Crew women's team to work twice as hard as their competition to make it to the 1992 National Collegiate Championships in Cincinnati this weekend.
Team captain Tami Odell, Norman, Okla, junior, said the women had done exceptionally well despite the team's financial disadvantages.
"It's difficult racing against schools that are completely funded." Odell said. "Many of these schools even have a wait list for alumni to buy boat's."
Besides practicing every day, KU Crew members must raise money for operating expenses, equipment costs and replacement costs.
Many of the top crew teams KU competes against are varsity collegiate teams, financed by their athletic departments, said KU Crew coach Rob Cattail. These programs allow crew members to concentrate on their rowing without having
fully-financed teams such as Harvard University, Princeton University, the University of Wisconsin- Madison and the defending women's champion, Boston University, are among the 16 universities that will compete for both the women's and men's national titles.
the added pressures of coming up with money. Many of these variety programs also offer schoolships to members and therefore can recruit the bestowers in the country.
Cattoth said the women had a good chance of making the finals and possibly taking a medal in the national championship. They will compete in the 2,000-meter course on Friday in one of three qualifying heats. The fastest two boats from each heat will compete in the finals Saturday afternoon.
The national competition has races of four and eight member teams. Catloth said KU would be entering a team of its top four women rowers and one coxswain, a fifth woman who sits at the head of the boat and directs the rowers.
Because KU Crew is a club sport, members have relied on fundraising, working football and basketball concessions and digging into their own pockets to help finance the program
The 1992 University budget shows that KU
Crew also received $14,360 from KU recreation services last year.
Cattloth said the money was spent quickly. An eight-man racing shell can cost between $14,000 and $16,000, a four-man racing shell $8,500 and a pair of oars $300. The racing shells have a five-year lifespan.
Another problem for KU Crew was crew retention. He said building a strong team was difficult if there were not many experienced rowers. Although 60 to 70 percent of the members return after the first year, only 10 percent are still with the team by the fourth year, Catloth said.
He attributed the drop in numbers to the amount of time the members spent training and to the financial burden. Crew members initially pay $100 each semester to help cover expenses, but Catloth said members easily spent $600 a year individual for travel expenses, including lodging, food and gas.
the people that come out really want to make a serious athletic commitment," Odell said. "But it's difficult to keep them out for four years if they can't afford it."
Cattoth said he thought crew would remain a club sport at KU even though the teams were becoming strong competitors.
"It's taken us six
years to get to this
point. Our hard work
is paying off."
Rob Catloth
KUCrew coach
"It would be nice to get more funding," Cattoll said. "But crew is a very expensive non-revenue sport. It's much cheaper to run a program that brings in money for the university."
Nevertheless, Catloth said he was very pleased with the team's success.
In the spring, the women's eight-member team took a thirdplace medal for the first time at the Midwest Championships behind two teams from the top ranked University of Wisconsin-Madison.
"It has taken us six years to get to this point," he said. "Our hard work is paying off."
CAMPUS SNAPSHOT
KU students make University work
KU libraries allocated $407,000 to student employees, topping the list as the single biggest employer.
By Julie Wasson
Kansas staff writer
Kansanstaff writer
The department of student housing dominates the list of the 10 University employers of KU students, based on the sum allocated to pay student employees in the 1991 fiscal year.
Dawn Kingery, student employment coordinator in the department, said that housing employed about 680 students during the regular
Six of the top 10 offices are part of housing, with allocations totaling $642,500.
She said students worked in many positions in the residence halls, including desk assistants, security monitors, resident assistants, food service and custodial workers. Other positions include working as receptionists and in payroll in the housing administration office.
school year.
KU libraries allocated $407,000 to student employees, topping the list as the single biggest employer. Sandy Gilland, assistant to the dean of libraries, said that students primarily worked at the circulation and reserve desks at the libraries. Students also provide information to library patrons and help in processing collections information.
"During fall and spring semesters, we usually employ from 300 to 350 students part time," Gilliland said.
Student health services allocated $125,000 to student help in fiscal year 1991. James Strobl, director of Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that Watkins was financed entirely by the student health fee.
"Students do not work in areas where there is a high degree of confidentiality," Strobl said. Students are not allowed to work in admission, for
Other student positions at Watkins include custodial jobs and internships in health education.
example, because they would have access to information about other students.
"Most of our students work in physical therapy, as interns or assistants," Strobl said. "They also work in the pharmacy as part of training."
Ann Pierce, administrative secretary at Watkins, said there were 27 student employees at Watkins last semester.
Students on salary
The eight departments with the greatest sum allocated to student help in 1991:
TECH TERM
FESTIVAL AND PROMISE
(In thousands) 50 100 200 300 400
(In thousands) $0 100 200 300 400
Student Health Services
Jayhawker Towers
Housing Administration Student Health Services
Jaylahwker Power McCollum Hall Dining
$207,500
Parking Services GSP/Corbin Hall Rental
GSP/Corbin Hall Rental
$120,000
$90,000
Recreation Facilities
$125,000
$149,000
Kansas Budget, 1991
---
Sean Tevis/Daily Kansan
2
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE WEEK IN BRIEF A SUMMARY OF THE WEEK'S NEWS
THURSDAY/FRIDAY
The White House rejected efforts by EPA director William Rielly to soften the Bush Administration's position on a treaty aimed at protecting plants and animals. Rielly is the chief American negotiator at the Earth Summit.
NATO agreed to support peacekeeping operations in areas of Eastern Europe if asked by the former Soviet Union.
The Parks and Recreation Department of Overland Park adopted a rule prohibiting thong bikinis from public pools.
The Kansas Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the redistricting plans for the Kansas House and Senate.
Former Missouri basketball star Anthony Peele entered a plea of
not-guilty in three felony charges — unlawful restraint, unlawful use of a weapon and possession of a concealed weapon — stemming from an alleged attack on a Columbia Mo. woman.
Lynette Woodard was cut from the U.S. Olympic basketball team. The former KU player had been considered a favorite to make the team.
A U.S. Census Bureau report indicated that one-third of all Americans between the ages of 15 and 17 are high school dropouts, or are one year behind in school.
The unemployment rate climbed to 7.5 percent. This is the highest level in eight years.
Over 1,000 people attend an anti-abortion rally in downtown Wichita conducted by the Wichitz
Rescue Movement. This is the first of what is expected to be a series of rallies this summer in Wichita ■ In baseball, the Royals posted a 6-4 win over the Seattle Mariners.
The Chicago Bulls lost to Portland 115-104 in overtime in game two of the NBA finals.
This is the third straight victory for the Royals.
SATURDAY/SUNDAY
After a morning of peaceful protests involving the anti-abortion group Wichita Rescue Movement and pro-choice protesters, a hand grenade was found outside an abortion clinic in Wichita.
A Lawrence landmark, the rocket at Broken Arrow Park, was removed from the park after nearly 30 years. The rocket was purchased by two men near Lake Dabinawa
Columbia University President Michael Sovern announced his retirement, citing his wife's battle with cancer as the main reason.
Fighting continued in Sarajevo over the weekend. Muslim-led troops armed with heavy
weapons struck at Serbian troops Sunday night.
Concentration at the Earth Summit turns to the issue of who is going to pay to cleaning up the environment.
The Royals complete a three-game sweep of Seattle by winning the last game 4-1. With the win, the Royals move out of last place and tie California for fifth place.
The Chicago Bulls take a 1 game lead in the NBA finals and continue their quest for the NBA championship. The Bulls beat Portland 94-84 Sunday night.The series stands at two games to one. A.P. Indy wins the Belmont Stakes.
Two Apple Macintosh computers, valued at $4,664, were removed from Academic Computing Services on June 2. They were found later in a men's restroom, KU police reported.
ON THE RECORD
with two lenses, valued at $1,000,
were taken from a room in
Haworth Hall between May 20 and
June 2. KU police reported.
■ An Apple Macintosh computer,
a printer and a printer kit, valued
together at $1,229, were taken
Two closed-circuit televisions.
from a KU bookstore storage area between May 2 and May 29,KU police reported.
A Clarion AM/FM cassette pullout stereo, valued at $225, was taken from an unlocked car on the 2500 block of University Drive
Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
Three art books, valued at $3,100, were taken from Murphy Art and Architecture Library Friday, KU police reported.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Thursday, June 11
Students interested in the Fullbright Scholarship and other graduate-study-abroad grants can attend an informational meeting at 3:30 p.m. in 3 Lippincott Hall.
Paul Gray and the Gaslight Gang will perform noon-1 p.m. at Ninth and Massachusetts streets for Parks and Recreation Department's Brown Bag Concert Series, Free.
Lawrence Community Theatre will present "Steel Magnolias" at 8 p.m. June 11-14 and 2:30 p.m. June 14. For ticket information, call 843-7469.
Friday, June 12
Kansas Association of Public Employees will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
■ Midwestern Music Camp Jazz Ensemble Concert at 7 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Free.
Saturday, June 13
Midwestern Music Camp Concert. Performances by junior-high bands, choirs and orchestra at 11 a.m. in Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Free.
Sunday. June 14
Registration for Midwestern Music Camp Junior High Session #2 begins at 1:30 p.m. in Murhov Hall.
Auditions for Midwestern Music Camp begin at 3:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall.
Monday, June 15
Summer Dance Workshop all day in Robinson Center.
KU Academic Computing Services will hold seminars titled "Introduction to VAX" 2:30 p.m. and "Intermediate VAX" 3:30-5 p.m. in the Computer Center auditorium.
Tuesday, June 16
nMidwestern Music Camp faculty and staff recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall, Free.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
3
Anniversary of Hoch fire sparks memories
The History
On June 15, 1991, lightning struck the roof of Hoch Auditorium and started a fire that caused damage to the structure in excess of $13 million. The fire continued to burn for several days after lightning struck.
...
---
P7
In preparation for the 1988 Rock Chalk Revue, members of a student musical group practice songs appellapt for their acts in between shows. When the third ball cony was used, Hoch Auditorium seated approximately 4,000 people.
KANSAN file photo
THE STUDIO DURING THE 1938 BATTLE OF BUCKINGHAM.
KANSAN file photos
(Top) Students watch as the upper portions of the west wall of Hoch Auditorium are des-ided because of fears that it might collapse under its own weight. The wall was destroyed last Jus-
(Above) The second floor of Hoch Auditorium and its balcony are covered with fallen support beams and debris. The fire reached such extreme temperatures that the steel support girders turned soft and bent under their weight. Today, much of the debris still stays to be removed.
By Chris Moeser Staff Writer
University of Kansas police Sgt. Randy Kern had no idea what to expect as he approached Hoch Auditorium.
He was responding to a report that lightning had hit a building on campus.
It seemed routine for Kansas in June. He had responded to similar calls in his 12 years on the force.
It was pouring rain. Bolts of lightning crushed through the sky.
But this was different. He could smell smoke as he walked up to the double oak doors of the building. Kern figured a nearby tree had been hit.
He entered the building,walked past the balcony into the center of the auditorium and looked up.
What he saw he will never forget.
"It looked like the sun was on the roof." he said.
The Hoch fire was one year ago Monday.
And it erupted into one of the biggest fires in Lawrence since Quantrill burned the city to the ground in 1863 to protest the town's anti-slavery views.
It didn't sink in right away what was happening, Kern said.
"For a second, it was so overwhelming you didn't realize what was going on," he said.
When it did sink in, Kern and Rick Johnson, another KU police officer, on the scene, scrambled through the first two floors of the building, looking for anyone who might be inside and unaware that the roof was on fire.
As firefighters arrived, Kern showed them through the maze of stairwells that lead to the upper floors of the auditorium.
Fire Maj. Bill Brubaker arrived just as the first group of firefighters was
They told one secretary to leave, Kern said.
advancing with hoses.
It was supposed to be Brubaker's day off. He was planning to take his daughter to see the movie "Backdraft."
Just as he was walking out the door with his daughter, he was called to a two-alarm fire at Packer Plastics. He left directly from that fire for the one at Hoch.
Only five firefighters responded initially at Hoch because the department was so busy. There were 10 alarms that day, Brubaker said.
Brubaker knew from the start that firefighters were in for a battle.
"I went inside and looked up at the ceiling," he said. "I knew at that point it was pretty serious. Directly east of the chandelier was a 30-foot circle of fire. In some places you could see through to the attic."
About 30 minutes later, the chandler came crashing to the floor.
"That was a warning that the entire structure was coming down," he said. Firefighters immediately began to leave the building.
Firefighters had to wait to use their metal ladders to get closer to the fire until the lightning stopped.
They were hampered by the weather. The torrential rain slowed the fire department's response time and made life for the firefighters miserable, soaking everything from their coats to the hoses. The extra weight also slowed things down.
"Lightning was zapping everything up there," Brubaker said.
The "spread was pretty amazing for how big the building was," he said. After 25 minutes, the entire building was burning.
Brubaker said that, despite the loss of Hoch, the way in which firefighters coped with the complications of that day instilled confidence within the department.
He recalled how fast the fire spread through the 64-year-old building.
Three of the first five crews on the
scene had been trained only a month before the fire, he said.
"That shows that the training works." he said.
Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, watched firefighters that day from Snow Hall. The next day, he began dealing with the logistical problems caused by the fire.
In a period of several hours, the University had lost 7 percent of its classroom space. Fifteen classes in eight subjects that met in Hoch, including sociology and psychology, had to be moved.
The fire also destroyed office space, such as the main offices of KU housekeeping. There also were about 20 graduate teaching assistant offices in the building. Wiechcraed said.
Other damage included the loss of a Steinway piano, the chair robes worn at Vespers, and a chemistry demonstration table that still is buried somewhere in the rubble.
The total losses in the fire are valued at more than $13.5 million, Wiechert said.
After weeks of legislative argument and uncertainty about whether the state could afford to finance Hoch's reconstruction, $186 million in federal disproportionate share funds provided some unexpected revenue. The state allocated the necessary $18 million.
The Future
One year after a fire destroyed Hoch Auditorium, repairs are just
The new Hoch will have lightning rods.
From the outside, Hoch will look the same. The existing facade will remain, and the old red tile roof will be replaced, with one notable exception.
Plans call for the construction of one 1,000-seat lecture hall, two 500-seat lecture halls and one classroom of 200 that can be broken into four classes of 50. he said.
beginning.
The new
Hoch,
scheduled to be completed in 1995, will include a 1,000-seat lecture hall, two 500-seat lecture halls and other class rooms.
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Wednesday, June 10, 1992
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FROM THE EDITORS
Finance issues need to be raised in elctions
Where have all the professors gone?
How will we ever learn?
This situation is becoming more and more of a problem in many universities in Kansas, and across the nation.
However, as more and more universities and colleges across the nation find their instructors leaving for better opportunities, administrators and students are asking a different question.
Where has all the financing gone?
This is a good question. Over the past few years enrollment figures at most universities and colleges have either climbed slowly or shot up. There are simply more students attending school. This should translate into increased tuition money for the individual universities.
Also, tuition has joined the ranks of steadily increasing figures. The cost of attending four years of college in the United States has shot up in the past few years. Increased tuition should also translate in increased money for the universities.
Yet, with increased students and increased tuition, instructors are leaving at a rapid pace, simply because schools can not afford to pay them enough.
Granted, what teachers consider to be adequate pay and what the school feels is adequate may often be two separate things. However, the ability to compromise depends on two things. The financing to meet a comparable offer, and dedication (not just by the instructors) to education.
The question remains: Where has all the financing gone?
It's an interesting question, and one that should not be forgotten during the current election frenzy. As people (students especially) examine the political hopefuls, the question of funding for instructors needs to be raised. And it needs to be answered by someone, not necessarily on the presidential level.
There is no time like the present. Especially in an election year.
With incumbents dropping out of the political spotlight-like leaves from a tree, and record numbers of people stepping forward to challenge the ones hoping to stay in office, the climate has never been better to get politicians thinking about funding for higher education.
Bill Clinton and President Bush have announced they are pro-education. But, all they seem to talk about is primary and secondary levels. They do address, however briefly, the problem of student loans. But, what good are student loans when there are no professors left to teach all the students. It seems Mr. Bush and Mr. Clinton have a little vague on the issue. And, right now, who knows what Mr. Perot stands for.
It comes back to dedication. Which candidate, whether on a state or federal level, is dedicated to assuring that there will be teachers in the universities. It's something to look at.
Without a solid commitment from someone to assure that higher education is funded and placed high on the list of priorates, there may be a different question very soon.
Where has all of the quality education gone?
It's something to think about.
~Justin Knupp
Positive message is key for job-hunting grads
The festive commencement celebrations have ended and so far the aftermath has been downright depressing. Out of 1.1 million new college graduates, statistics show that only a select few are finding jobs after graduation. These numbers also reveal that if graduates are out job-hunting it will take approximately nine to 12 months to land a job in your related field — maybe more. These depressing revelations have many graduates believing that they are doomed to flip burgers at McDonalds forever. And so, many students are continuing their education, traveling or going home to avoid entering the "enpty" market.
For at least one week after KU's graduation on May 17, newscasts around the nation were flooded with employment experts and statistics describing how 1992 was the worst year to graduate since the great depression. So, just in case the graduates stepping out of the security of college were not completely scared to death, these reports would drive home the reality of what hardships they were about to face. Especially for those who would now have to fend for themselves.
Sound familiar? It should. It's nothing you probably haven't heard 1,000 times before in the past month. And that's the point. The problems of the recession, depression, unemployment, layoffs and an overall lack of jobs have been drilled into everyone's mind repeatedly. We read it.
Pretend there are unlimited job opportunities waiting for you to come and get them. Because contrary to popular belief, there are jobs out there — maybe not as many as in the past — but they are there. Finding them is what appears to be the biggest problem. And feeling as though you are about to embark on an endless and hopeless search can certainly hinder the process. In the end, it may be the negative feedback that is contributing to the high number of unemployed graduates.
Maybe it's time for the economists and employment experts, or "declinists," as President Bush calls them, to start focusing on what is available instead of what isn't. There may not be an overabundance of good news, but I'm sure everyone would appreciate hearing what positive information there is. Keeping up morale is an important key in helping these job-seekers out. The last thing a new graduate wants or needs to hear is how bleak their future looks. Such a pessimistic attitude sure can damper many people's spirits and their motivation.
Instead of letting this negativism cloud your perception of what you can do, store them in the back of your mind and start looking. Read the want ads. Talk to contacts. Send out more resumes than you ever dreamed possible. And most importantly, start pounding the pavement. The employment forecast around the nation may be gloomy, but by looking at the brighter side, entering the real world might not seem so bleak
--Jennifer Bach
KANSAN STAFF
JUSTIN KNUPP
Editor
KIM CLAXTON Business manager
JENNIFER BACH Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BRIAN WOLF Director of Client Services
Editors
Campus Gayle Ostberg
Ast. Campus Doug Flahack
Copy Cheff Alex Blohmoff
Contributing David Mitchell
Photo Derek Nolan
Graphics Almee Brainard
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Special Promotions . . . Melissa Tertilp Production mgr . . Brad Green Retail Support mgrs . . Ashley Langford Hilary Wilcox Regional Support mgr . Jane Henderson Classified mgr . . Kate Burgess
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the University of Kansas name, class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. The University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
FOLLOW THE LINE
Members of Llambs of Christ, an anti-abortion protest group, attend a peaceful demonstration while police officers stand guard. The protest Saturday in Wichita was the first of several planned by the Llambs of Christ. Rev. Norman Weslin, leader of the group, described the protest as a powerful demonstration.
Royal family loses magic sparkle Di-harders need a new hobby
News has been abundant this summer. Wars are raging The economy is still shaky The campaign trail is heating up. But what is the really big news?
Princess Di is an unhappy camper
Everyone cry on the count of three. Give me a big break. For an entire decade, we have been hearing unconfirmed rumors that the House of Windsor is an unhappy home. Now, at last, the brain-dead buyers of the tabloids can worry for sure. This week, a book released in Britain alleged that Diana tried to take her life five times.
She must not be trying very hard.
The biographer claims that the princess' suicide attempts have not been serious attempts, but pitiful cries for help. However, they seem very serious; an intentional fall down a staircase while pregnant, slashed
David Mitchell Contributing editor
POLYTECHNICIAN
wrists and other misadventures in cutlery.
According to the book, Diana's depression stems from Prince Charles' involvement with another woman.
Prince Chuck, a womanizer? Amazing. How can a big-nosed, dumboeared khutz manage to marry a beautiful woman and have another on the side?
Ah, the mystique of royalty. Puke.
I don't mean to bettle suicide. It's terrible that a woman could be tormented by her own husband. On the other hand, I feel little sympathy for her. According to the book, Diana knew of Charles' tryst before their 1981 wedding to end all weddings. She married him anyway. The book also alleges that the princess and Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York, made a pact to leave their royal husbands at the same time.
However, Diana backed out. She said the reason she decided to stay was because of duty to her position and the effect divorce would have on her children. But realistically, what is more damaging to children — the pain of divorce or having an unhappy, suicidal bulimia for a mother? Of course, keep in mind that this is the
same loving mother who threw her self down a flight of stairs while pregnant.
Even more remarkable than the book's revelations is the way Americans eat this garbage up. Our society has a bizarre fascination with beautiful, powerful people of money who screw up a lot. Which, I suppose, explains why we love the Kennedy clan so much. The book will undoubtedly be a huge success.
The Americans that worship and worry about the royal family are probably the same mental midgids that sweated it out wondering which Elvis would get the postage stamp.
The royal family is disintegrating at a rapid pace. I suggest all you Windsor
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.
Cutting defense spending could halt fears
The Cold War is over. And while many of us were thinking that there would be fewer dollars spent on weapons, Congress was approving a $270.5 billion defense authorization bill that is supposed to keep us secure for the next five years. There are a number of questions concerning some of the proposals in the bill, but the general consensus is that we need a strong defense. If the past offers any insight into the future, then we better open our history books again.
Our leaders grew up in a different generation than us. They saw the terrible destruction of a world at war In Melvyn Leffler's book "A Preponderance of Power," Leffler reminds us of the ferocity of world war and the mistrust that follows.
Leaders of the Western nations feared the spread of communism after World War II. Communism virtually was immune to the worldwide depression before the war, and it
Dan
Janousek
Staff
columnist
M. RAVIKAR AYALAM
looked like a good alternative to other political ideologies They also knew nationalism was unpredictable. The Nazi regime subdued their neighbors in the name of nationalism. Nationalism was, and still is, the most destructive force within nations.
Perhaps no other country felt the wrath of nationalism as did the former Soviet Union. More than 1,700 cities and towns and 70,000 villages and hamlets were decimated. The Nazis dismantled 40,000 miles of railroad track, ruined 56,000 miles of main roads and 90,000 bridges. Of the 50 million who died in World War II,20 million were Soviet citizens.
Like the defeat of nationalism, the fall of communism has left a vacuum for subversive elements. Azerbaijan and Armenia are at war. The Czechoslovakian people are contemplating a split. West Germans seem to be disenchanted with their Eastern neighbors. Denmark rejected plans for European Community integration. And we cannot overlook the Yugoslavian nightmare.
Russia has its problems, too. Disagreements between Boris Yeltsin and the Russian Parliament have delayed $24 billion in Western aid. He also appointed former defense industry people to the new government. Its future looks as murky as its past.
That is why the House exceeded predicted costs and approved that $270.5 billion authorization bill last week.
George Bush and Congress can read the headlines as well as anyone. The world is not a safe haven for the weak.
Our leader's fears are justified, but minor cuts are not enough. Does the United States really need a "Star Wars" defense system? For almost 50 years, we deterred missile attack with our retaliatory capability. By continuing the program, we may add to the fears that our posture may someday be offensive.
One administration official said inadequate equipment and the risk of cost overrues was "acceptable given the uncertainty in predicting when we might actually be threatened with ballistic missile attack." My question for him is, by whom? The worries of an aging generation demand our respect. But the worries of this generation deserve equal attention.
Dan Janousek is a senior majoring in journalism.
Loco Locals
GREAT CATCH
UH... UH...
ADAM.
RIGHT!
ABRAM!
by Tom Michaud
BACK AT
YA, BILL!
GREAT CATCH,MR.
CUNSTON... RIGHT,
EVEN FOR A POLITician...
OKAY, SEE YOU IN
OCTOBER!... GOOD LUCK...
(WITHOUT MY VOTE YOU
'Ol Suck up...)
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
5
Spring urban design students plan real-life light rail in K.C.
By Julie Wasson
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
A group of University of Kansas students helped develop a plan during the spring semester to curb rush-hour traffic and other big-city traffic problems in downtown Kansas City, Mo.
At the invitation of the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority, or ATA, KU urban design students worked in association with the ATA on a proposed light rail system this spring, said Glen LeRoy, associate professor of architecture and urban design.
The ATA is using federal money to examine the possibility of establishing such a system in Kansas City.
The light rail system is a modern streetcar powered by overhead wires. The streetcar uses exclusive street lanes and can travel up to 55 mph. One car can hold up to 130 passengers, and additional cars could accommodate more riders.
LeRoy said that students in his fifth year architecture studio prepared a plan to indicate where the light rail was most necessary and plotted a
potential route, including development opportunities and related uses.
The students worked from August until May on the light rail project, which culminated in a display at Bartle Hall in mid-May.
"Light rail could stimulate development in downtown Kansas City," leRoy said. "If the business community rallies behind it, it has a better chance of going forward."
Dick Davis, executive director of the ATA, said the light rail was a realistic plan for the future.
"Right now an alternative analysis study is being run on the project, which should last until next spring." Davis said. The study is mandated by the federal government as a condition for future funds, he said.
"After that study we'll have to run a preliminary engineering study, which will take about another year," he said.
Davis said that if both studies went well, the critical element facing the project would be receiving funds from the Missouri legislature. "If we get money budgeted in the 1993 session, the first phase of this project
could be completed by 1997," he said.
Hector Garcia, KU graduate from Lenexa, said he chose to work on the project because of the opportunities it afforded students.
"The Kansas City studio offers urban design, which isn't offered in Lawrence," Garcia said. "I wanted to work on a real issue, one that could be completed. I think the light rail is needed in the community."
"Our work allowed us to make connections with public figures. I really enjoyed doing it."
Glenn Kessler, KU graduate from Prairie Village, said each student had an extra job along with the project. "Some people were business managers, some project managers," he said.
"It was like working in an actual architecture office. We had real clients and made real contacts. I think this studio is an excellent opportunity to gain educational experience in urban design.
"It took every minute of my time. But I enried it all," he said.
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Yello Sub
For only Summer and only at the Campus Yello Scho
One Sub Per Person for These Special Offers
May 19th through August 14th
SUMMER LUNCH DEALS 11:00-2:00 ONLY
No Coupons Needed, None Accepted (Except on Double Coupon Day)
Wednesday
Any Sub or Salad
from our New Sum-
mor Cafe Menu
plus 16 oz. drink mix
$2.60
Monday
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Tuesday
Turkey Tuesday
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Turkey Club or Creainty Club or
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Tuesday
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Thursday
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day regular
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6
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
Yard waste pickup approved
City advisory board OKs Public Works plan for recycling
Kansan Staff Writer
By Anne Grego
A recycling board on Monday approved a report recommending that yard waste be separated from regular trash pickup.
In a town meeting, the City Commission's Recycling and Resource Conservation Advisory Board approved a report presented by the sanitation division of the Lawrence Department of Public Works. The proposal calls for a curbside pickup of grass clippings and leaves from all Lawrence residences except apartment houses and trailer courts.
The collected yard waste would be composted and used by the city, the report states.
The advisory board cited the cost benefits as a reason for suggesting yard waste collection. The compost could be put to use by the city rather than taking up costly space in a landfill.
The city currently pays $15.50 a ton to dump waste in a landfill. The Department of Public Works estimates that 46 percent of the waste generated by a household is yard waste. Savings for a year under the new plan are estimated at $110,000.
The plan outlines three options for collecting yard waste:
■ Yard waste would be collected once a week, and trash picked up once a week, rather than the current twice a week. The pickups would be on separate days, and no additional equipment or personnel would be needed.
- Trash would be collected twice a week, and yard waste would be picked up once a week, requiring additional personnel and equipment
The city would contract the collection of yard waste to a private company, and trash pickup would not change.
The board's recommendations will now go to the City Commission, which will make a final decision on the plan.
One area of concern is the Oread
neighborhood, where dumpsters are used.
The once-a-week trash pickup could cause problems in such a densely populated neighborhood with little yard waste, Mayor Bob. Schulte said in a telephone interview after the meeting.
Board members discussed this potential problem and determined that dumpster pickup in neighborhoods like Oread should remain the same if the new plan were implemented.
The report did not recommend curbside pickup of other recyclable materials such as glass, aluminum and plastics.
Yard waste pickup would be easy for the city, while curbside collection of other recyclables would be too expensive, advisory board member Marci Francisco said.
Picking up other recyclables is expensive because there is a glut in the market for recycleable materials, superintendent of solid waste Bob Yoos said. No one will buy the materials.
The sanitation department would also have to buy new equipment designed for collecting other recyclable materials.
---
O
Let The Games Begin!! BAR GAMES (AVAILABLE ONLY AT THE COAST) West Coast Saloon
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STREETSIDE RECORDS
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NATION/WORLD
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Report on forest destruction alarms Earth Summit parties
The Associated Press
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil — Tropical forest destruction increased by 50 percent during the past decade, a U.N. study released yesterday at the Earth Summit shows.
The European Community pressed ahead yesterday with its own declaration on curbing carbon dioxide emissions, saying it will adopt limits the United States imposes.
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and six other heads of state were due to arrive at the summit yesterday. Another 67 representatives, including U.S. President George Bush, are expected there today and tomorrow.
The report by the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization, or FAO, said that 41 million acres of forest land are destroyed annually, mostly in South and Central America. About 70 percent of all deforestation takes place in rain forests.
About 41.7 million acres were destroyed last year, compared to 27.9 million acres in 1980, the FAO report stated.
The United States has proposed increasing its aid for saving rain forests by $150 million. The initiative has been slowed because poorer nations, which have most of the world's forests, want to control how the money is spent.
"The latest statistics confirm the alarming tendency of recent years," said FAO official Hollis Murphy. Conservation, management and sustainable use of forest resources were urgently needed, he said.
The U.N. study said that the world had 12.25 million acres of forests but that the amount of forest land destroyed annually surpassed the amount which is replanted.
Half of the Latin America's land is covered by forests, as is 33 percent of Asia and 27 percent of Africa.
The European Community delegation yesterday confirmed that the 12 EC nations would sign a declaration on Saturday calling for the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions to 1900 levels by the year 2000, said EC delegation representative Lauren Jan Brinkhoorst.
The EC had wanted that provision included in the global warming treaty prepared for the Earth Summit, but the United States agreed to sign the treaty only after it was watered down to make emissions reductions voluntary.
The declaration also will introduce an EC-wide tax on carbon dioxide emissions — believed to contribute to global warming — and other tax incentives to encourage saving energy.
we honestly believe it will stimulate new thinking on the issue by the United States," Brinkhoorst said. The declaration would be binding among the EC nations, he said.
The EC declaration is separate from the so-called like-minded countries declaration, a non-binding document that calls for strong emissions controls. The declaration is being circulated at the summit for signing.
European officials said that U.S. representatives sent letters to Austria, Switzerland and Britain urging them not to support the declaration. But Michael Young, deputy head of
the U.S. delegation, denied that the United States was pressuring anybody.
The issue could widen the rift between the United States and some of its allies over Washington's steadfast opposition to another treaty which is designed to preserve the globe's biological diversity.
On Sunday, Bush reiterated his position that the biodiversity treaty would hurt U.S. industry and cost U.S. jobs.
Environmentalists hailed the creation of a new U.N. body that will monitor compliance with environmental treaties approved at the meeting.
The U.N. Commission on Sustainable Development was created Monday after 21/2 years of negotiations. Although the commission's regulations will not be legally binding, they will create what Kathy Sessions of the U.N. Association of the United States called soft law, which may lead to legally binding treaties.
"I think it's one of the most significant accomplishments", Sessions said.
NATIONAL BRIEFSS
MINEOLA, Texas — A church van carrying youths to camp ran a stop sign and was struck broadside by a cement truck, authorities said. Five people were killed and 10 teen-agers injured.
The van's driver, Bettim Lay, 26, of Dallas, was among those killed in the accident Monday, 80
Nine teen-agers remained hospitalized late Monday, seven in critical or serious condition. At least three of the five killed were teen-agers.
TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey residents will have to find something else to yolk about: their state has repealed its ban on the serving of runny eggs in restaurants.
The state Public Health Council voted 5-0 Monday to drop the regulation, which banned eggs sunny-side up or in any other partially cooked style. Violators had faced fines of $25-$100.
The Jan. 1 ban was intended to curb salmonella poisoning, which causes fever, vomiting and dehydration, and can be fatal.
"What this means is if customers want to take the risk of becoming ill from salmonella by ordering raw and undercooked eggs, they can do it," a Health Department representative said.
Italy's tough anti-mafia measures allow police to round up mobsters
The Associated Press
ROME — Police in southern Italy rounded up hundreds of convicted mobsters and suspects yesterday, hours after tough anti-Mafia measures were passed by the government.
About 700 people were detained, Interior Minister Vincenzo Scotti said. Of those, at least 560 were in Sicily, Calabria, Campania and Puglia, the southern regions where organized crime is concentrated.
Those rounded up had been either under house arrest or free on their own recognition with the obligation to check in periodically with police after being charged or convicted in organized-crime cases. In Italy, convicted defendants can stay out of jail until losing their final appeal.
The Cabinet decree changed the way police and courts can handle organized-crime cases after a national outcry over the May 23 murder of Judge Giovanni Falcone, Italy's leading anti-Mafia investigator and a national hero.
A bomb blast outside Palermo killed Falcone, his wife and three bodyguards.
Organized crime is steadily growing more violent and extending its grip northward.
Falcone, who held a high Justice Ministry position when he was killed, had designed some of the measures, which had long been under discussion.
Justice Minister Claudio Martelli said the decree was the result of a careful study that was launched long ago.
One of the new provisions gives more protection to mobsters who turn state's evidence. Another, whose first effects were felt yesterday, makes it harder for mob suspects who will not cooperate to be granted house arrest.
Another measure doubles from six to 12 months the length of time Mafia cases can be investigated before charges must be brought to court or the case dropped.
While serving as an investigative magistrate in the 1980s in Palermo, Falcone was the force behind the convictions of hundreds of mobsters for drug trafficking and murder. He also worked with the U.S. authorities investigating the so-called Pizza Connection, a drug network involving American and Italian mobsters.
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$1.50 Monster Draws
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Wednesday - Quarter Draws (Ladies Night)
Sunday - $2.50 Pitchers
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Coming June 19th "Pass On The Right"
Lead-in Group for Tracy Lawrence!
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Jayhawk Bookstore
"at the top of Naismith Hill"
1420 Crescent Rd.·843-3826
FIND SUN INSIDE!
With Our Hot Summer Specials!
7 TANS $20
10 TANS $25
23rd & Oursdahl Behind Perkins
Southern Hills Center
841-6232
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
Tuesday
HenryT's Bar&Grill
Two for One Burgers
Tuesday and Saturday 33oz Mugs for $2.00
1/2 Price Appetizers Everyday!
3520 W. 6th 749-2999
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Wednesday, June 10, 1992
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1618 W.23rd
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CAFE
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EL MATADOR CAFE
ALL APPETIZERS 50% OFF IN JUNE Bring in this coupon and get a FREE 16 oz drink
"There's Only One El Matador Cafe"
446 Locust (East of Johnny's Tavern 3 Blocks)
Tues.-Fri. 11:30-2pm
Tues.-Sat. 5-9:30pm
Sunday 4-8pm, Closed Monday
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25th & Iowa
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25th and Iowa 842-7810
(Next to Food 4-Less)
Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
10-6 p.m. Sun.
Summer
Clearance
Sale
Save on footwear and
clothing as summer starts
AVIA. ASICS GEL
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NIKE
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The Athlete's Foot
"Patriot Games" may disappoint Clancy fans
By David Mitchell Contributing Editor
"Patriot Games" was released this weekend with all the hype of a sequel to a blockbuster hit and the screen adaptation of a best-selling novel with an all-star cast. In fact, high expectations might be the biggest obstacle the film has to overcome.
Equally eerie is the satellite lineup which allows Ryan to watch an assault on a terrorist camp.
Too many experts and moviegoers have been caught up in comparing the new release with its 1900 predecessor, "The Hunt For Red October." That film grossed $200 million. Viewers hoping for more "Hunt"-type entertainment will be vastly disappointed as the two films take different approaches.
The movie ends with a cliffhanger that leaves the audience grooming. Ford has already signed on to depict Ryan again in future films.
Fans of author Tom Clancy will also be upset, as the film is only loosely
Thus, these discrepancies have the movie opening to mixed reviews. Critical compd Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert predictably split over the film.
based on his novel of the same name. Clancy has panned the screenplay's departure from the book.
Those who see the film for its own sake will find it entertaining. And Ford fans will be delighted with his return to action-adventure films after back-to-back dramatic roles.
Ford is the high-minded CIA analyst trying to protect his family from terrorists. Unfortunately, with the exception of Ford, most of the main characters are duly one-dimensional. Sean Bean is easily despised as the terrorist who stalks Ryan, but his character is grossly underdeveloped. James Earl Jones' considerable talents are also squandered in a role unworthy of his ability.
For starters, In "The Hunt For Red October," the audience could not be certain who the good guys were, or what motivated the main characters until the movie was nearly over. Conversely, "Patriot Games" follows a straightforward revenge formula that leaves little doubt about the outcome. Viewers will also have to adapt to Harrison Ford's portrayal of Clancy's hero, Jack Ryan, rather than Alicen Baldwin, who originated the role.
Despite these considerable problems, the film does have a lot to offer. Most notably, Ford is fantastic as Ryan. And though the movie lacks the superb submarine sequences of its predecessor, it offers plenty of suspense.
The concluding scene at Ryan's home takes an interesting approach as the audience sees through the eyes of the terrorists' night-vision goggles.
Whether viewers label this film a hit or a bomb will depend largely on what preconceived notions they take to the theater with them. With some of the big-name bombs that have been released so far this summer, "Sister Act," "Ericino Man," etc., "Patriot Games" is still your best bet.
"Games" director defends film's interpretation of the novel
By David Mitchell Contributing Editor
This summer, "Patriot Games" becomes the second Tom Clancy novel adapted to film. It follows the 1990, $200 million hit, "The Hunt For Red October." The film opened Friday with mixed reviews.
Some have criticized the vast differences between Clancy's book and the
In a telephone interview yesterday
director Phillip Noyce defended the film's interpretation of the novel.
"You have a 500-page novel and your screenplay is going to be 120 pages long." Noyce said. "How are you going to fit it all in?"
"It's difficult to adapt a 500-page book. But I think readers of the book will find enough of the book in the film to make it interesting—along with some good things that aren't in the book."
Most notably, the film's ending has
been scaled down from the dramatic SWAT team shootout to a one-on-one confrontation between Jack Ryan (Harrison Ford) and Sean Miller (Sean Bean).
Though the reviews have been mixed, Noyce was pleased that some well-respected reviewers had praised the film. "All I can say in our defense is that The New York Times and The New Yorker both feel that the adaptation is more than worthy of the book," he said.
”
You have a 500-page novel and your
screenplay is going to be 120-pages long. How are you going to fit it all
Phillip Noyce Director of "Patriot Games"
Saturday, June 13th
KJHK BENEFIT
LOVE
squad
at the
TEE-PEE
Lawrence, KS
50¢ DRAWSI 50¢ DRAWSI
50¢ THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE DRAWS KJHX BENEFIT
THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE KJHX 907
Friday, June 12th
the Aspen Times calls em...
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JACKOPIERCE from Dallas
at the SCHOOLHOUSE (ICHABODS)
Try Cornucopia Restaurant & Bar Today 1801 Massachusetts 842-9637
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JUNE 13-14
It's '64 once more!
Just 28 years ago the first home owned and home operated Vista Drive In opened its doors in Manhattan and began serving our delicious 1/4-lb. all-beef Vistaburgers fixed just the way our customers liked them. We're still home owned and home operated and we still fix our food just the way you like it. And this weekend, to celebrate our 28th anniversary, Vistaburgers are just $64c. Stop by from 11:00 a.m. to closing.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY JUNE 13-14
64¢ 1/4-lb.
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Limit 10 Cheese and bacon extra
28¢ SUNDAES
28¢ DRINKS
16 oz.
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1527 W. 6th
Lawrence
finn hills
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
9
Summer teems with activity
Warm months offer a variety of recreational alternatives to students
COMMUNITY BUILDING
115 W. 11th Street
Office Phone: 843-7122
Office Hours: 8am - 5pm (Monday - Friday)
Open Recreation Hours: Monday - Friday (1:30 - 5pm)
Saturday and Sunday as posted
HOLCOM PARK RECREATION CENTER
CENTENIAL PARK FRISBEE (DISC) GOLF COURSE 9th & Rockleigh Road More information can be obtained from Ernie Shaw, 843-7122
ROLCUM PARK RECREATION CENTER
2700 W. 21st Street
Four information rooms at 843-7122
Hours of operation:
Monday through Friday (8:00am - 10:00pm)
Saturday (1 - 6pm) Recreation Play
Sunday (1 - 5pm) Recreation Play
Things to do around Lawrence
This summer areas at Clinton Lake, around Lawrence and near the river offer a variety of outdoor and indoor activities for all ages.
KANSAS RIVER TRAILS
• Intermediate and advanced trails
• For hikers and mountain bikers
170
CENTENNIAL PARK FRISBEE (DISC) GOLF COURSE
• 18-hole Disc Golf Course
MUNICIPAL SWIMMING POOL
COMMUNITY BUILDING
• racquetball/squash court
• gymnasium
• weight training room
• dance studio
6th Street
HOLCOM RECREATION CENTER
• fully air-conditioned facility
• handball/racquetball court
• weight training room
• multipurpose room, games room
• large gymnasium
KU
15th Street
CLINTON STATE PARK TRAILS
• Beginner and intermediate trails can be used by hikers, equestrians and mountain bikers
Clinton Parkway / 23rd Street
Kesold Drive
LAWRENCE TENNIS CENTER
• eight courts
LAWRENCE TENNIS CENTER
21st and Virginia (Lawrence High School Campus)
Courts are available until 10pm seven a day a week
For reservation information, call 843-7122
D D
MUNICIPAL SWIMMING POOL
8th & Kentucky
Pool Manager - Bob Lockwood
841-2806
General Admission Charges:
Ages 12 and under - $.75
Ages 12 and over $1.50
Sr. Adults - $.75
Daily schedule:
1:30 - 9:00pm: Sunday - Sa
XXX
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Gag Gifts•Magazines•Condom
1420W. 23rdSt. St. 843-9200
Source: The Visitors Guide of Lawrence, Kansas
OK, be honest. It seems like just yesterday when the last final of the spring semester was turned in, and the rest of May—free time—loomed ahead. But with the onset of June, hours in class and even more studying would once again become commonplace. The summer looked to hold little, if any, fun.
Mav went fast.
Sean Tevis, Tricia Floro, Aimee Brainard / Kansan
By Becky Lucas
Without even stepping off Mount Oread, students have the opportunity to participate in Student Union Activities "Summer on the Hill." The SUA program includes three concerts, a movie, a coed volleyball tournament and bowling. SUA program coordinator Kent Kennedy said.
But don't let sunny visions of summer get clouded up by term papers, tests and study groups. Instead, become familiarized with the recreational opportunities Lawrence and its surroundings have to offer. Then when the time appears, take the break for summer recreation at its best.
"We sold approximately 1,600 Worlds of Fun tickets last year," SUA box office supervisor Donelle Meyer said. "Already in April and May we've sold over 1,000. We've got the lowest price on Worlds of Fun tickets in Lawrence."
*This is the second year SAU will offer summer events on the Hill. Kennedy said. He said that more than 1,000 students attended last year's concerts.
For those students yearning to break out of Lawrence, SUA sells half-price tickets to Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun in Kansas City. Mo., as well as reduced price passes to Silver Dollar City in Branson. Mo. Tickets are on sale at the SUA office in the Burge Union.
The next free event is tomorrow's showing of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" at 9 p.m. The remainder of the season includes the bands Baghdad Jones at 7 p.m. on June 18 and Caribe at 7 p.m. on July 16. Other summer on the Hill events include "Let's Go Jaybowling" at 9 p.m. on June 25, which features $1 bowling at the Jaybowl, and a coed volleyball tournament at 10 a.m. on July 11. The volleyball teams will consist of two men and two women, with a $20 entry fee for each team, Kennedy said. Registration deadline for the tournament is 5 p.m., July 8, at the SUA office.
But for some, recreation doesn't mean heading to theme parks filled with screaming children and choking
scents of greasy funnel cakes and overcooked hot dogs. For those people, recreation means heading to the great outdoors. And with Clinton State Park right next door, students need look no further for their piece of the outdoors.
Clinton Reservoir, located within the 1,500-acre state park, offers visitors a wide range of facilities including picnic areas, a boat ramp, a full-service marina and over 500 camp sites, wildlife and parks manager Jerry Schecher said.
It's a good taste of camping for
it's who they're not sure of the invest-
ment.
Schecher said there was also a "Rent a Camp" program, where for a $10 fee plus all permit costs visitors can rent a tent, cots, a stove, a lantern and a cooler, enabling them to enjoy camping without making a serious monetary investment.
Camping paraphernalia is also available at the Jaybowl through the Wilderness Discovery program, said Michael Fine, recreation coordinator for the Kansas and Burge Unions.
Since August, Wilderness Discovery has rented camping equipment to students, faculty and staff. Fine said. Reservations must be made in person at the Jaybowl, and when equipment
is checked out, patrons must present University identification and a $20 refundable deposit.
For those who prefer a tamer outing... Lawrence Parks and Recreation department has other alternatives.
In addition to outdoor activities, the department will also host free band concerts at 8 p.m. Wednesdays at the bandstand gazebo in South Park on Massachusetts Street near 11th Street. These concerts will run weekly through July 15. Also for music enthusiasts, a noon brown bag concert series will be held on Thursday in front of First National Bank weekly through Aug. 13, Fode had
The city offers one indoor and one outdoor pool, along with 18 tennis courts and various parks and playgrounds, said Kathy Fode, superintendent of recreation of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
And if none of these recreational items is appealing, summer parks and recreational courses ranging from aerobics to belly dancing began the week of June 8. Fode said.
So if June, July and August seemed boring, think again, because summer in Lawrence offers sunitans, swimming, volleyball, camping or just about any recreational pleasure one can ask for.
Cornucopia Restaurant & Bar
842-9637
1801 Massachusetts
20% OFF ANY PURCHASE
Albums-Cds-Tapes Posters
U
Alley-Cat 717
RECORDS Massachusetts
THE LOFT
VISA, Mastercard and Insurance plans accepted
In Appreciation of Our Customers Take
20% off
ALL Regular Priced Merchandise
Thursday, Friday and Saturday ONLY!
June 11, 12 & 13
COMMERCIESENSITIVE HEALTH
FOR WOMEN
Providing quality health care to women since 1974
OPEN Mon - Sat 9:30-5:30
Thurs 9:30-8:00
742 Massachusetts • 841-2117
Sale prices do not apply to previous purchases
Concerned, Confidential & Personal Health Care For Women
SAFE AND AFFORDABLE ABORTION SERVICE:
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BIRTH CONTROL -- INCLUDING NORPLANT
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4401 West 109th (l-1435 & Roe)
Overland Park, Kansas
DIASIGNOS & TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES
Toll Free 1-800-227-1918
↑ ↑ ↑
Are You Already Writing Home For Cash?
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843-1551
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Call Kim
电话
Kim at 864-4358 and find out about stuffing inserts in the Kansan.
Enciino Man PG 1.45('5.00) 7:209.25
Far and Away PG 1.40('15.00) 10:10.00
Basic instinct R 2.00('4.50) 7:159.45
Patriot Games R 2.10('4.40) 7:259.50
Lethal Weapon II iii (2.00) 7:009.30
The Giant of Thunder Mountain
PG 1.50('7.09) 10:51.
Dickinson 6 841-8600
2339 South Iowa St
$3 Primetime show (+) Hearing Impaired * Dably Stereo
Senior Citizen Anime
Crown Cinema
BEFORE PM. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Alien3 (R) 2.45 5.00 7.15 9.30
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS
3110 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25
Fried Green Tomatoes (PG)
Lawnmower Man (Pg) 15 2:30 4:50 7:15 9:40
Rock-A-Doodle (Dp) 6 2:00 8:30 10:40
Class Act (PG-13)
2 305 115 79 45
The Babe (PG-13)
2 305 115 53 30
City of Joy (PG-13)
2 305 115 50 30
Casablanca (PG-13)
2 455 70 76 30 30
Sister Act (PG-13)
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
The Player
Stephen Schaff, VANTY
"Misarious and deadly,
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—David Aaron, NEWSDEX
"KNOCK SOCKS OFF!"
PLAYER: DAILY (*4:30), 7:15, 9:45
"A touching, funny and universal film!" MEDITERRANEO
A
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Mediterranean (NF)
Daily (5:15), 7:30, 9:30
ENDS SOON
642
Mass.
LIBERTY HALL
749-
1912
WE'RE PROUD
To bring the tradition of brewing back to Lawrence. Come try the freshest beer in town along with great fresh-cooked meals, all at a price that can't be beat.
Sit outside in our beer garden or sit inside and see our custom made brewing facilities. Daytime visitors can often see brewing in progress. So come visit
THE FREE STATE BREWING CO.
For lunch, dinner,
or a few fresh beers.
Look for lunch, dinner,
and dessert specials daily!
636 Massachusett St.
Lawrence, KS 843-4555
Open Mon-Sat 11-midnight
Sunday noon to 11
Sunday noon to 11
FREE BEER
IS NOT ALLOWED
STORE, AND WE'D
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COPY CO
MORE THAN JUST A COPY CENTER
1401 W. 23RD • 832-COPY • FAX 832-0605
10
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Portland must respect Bulls' defense
NBA playoffs
4
Next playoff game;
Game 4 of the Finals
tonight at 8 p.m. in Portland
The Associated Press
Portland's 94-84 loss to Chicago Sunday was the Trail Blazers first home defeat in nine playoff games. The loss dropped their final record at home to 0-4 over the
The Chicago Bulls lead the Finals series 2-1.
Portland has a 25-1 playoff record in the Memorial Coliseum over the past three years.
"The past couple of years, the best team has won, and the best team can always win whenever they play. We still hope to prove we're the best team. It's not too late to do that."
*Portland guard Danny Alinge*
Michael is Michael. Perhaps the best offensive weapon in NBA history. Need anyone say more?
PORTLAND, Ore. — Everyone's talking about Michael Jordan. What else is new? The guy's so good that any reference to him immediately brings images of slam dunks and shoe commercials.
During the NBA Finals, though,
more is being said. Like Michael is so
offensively, it's easy to forget
that he's a defensive wonder.
While his offense was limited because of a heel injury — he "only" had 26 points, 8.1 below his postseason average — Jordan's defense helped Chicago beat Portland 94-84 Sunday.
The Bulls have a 2-1 series lead going into Game 4 tonight.
Cydney Drexler has noticed Jordan's defensive excellence. It would have
been hard for him not to have noticed. Jordan is often so close to Drexler the pair seem to be glued together.
Drexler, who finished second to Jordan in league MVP voting, is shooting 43 percent and has committed nine turnovers in the series.
"Michael's a pretty good defensive player," Drexler said Monday.
Jerome Kersey has noticed, too. Because the Bulls switch a lot on defense, Jordan, 6-foot-6 and 198 pounds, often finds himself guarding the 6-foot-7, 225-pound Kersey.
"Jordan's a hands-on defensive player," Kersey said. "He gets his hands and body into you and pushes you harder than you thought he could. He's always overplaying you, always looking for the steal."
"He's very good," Drexler said. "He's quick and active. He can gamble and he still has the speed to get back into the play."
Source: Associated Press
And he often gets it. Jordan led the NBA in steals in 1988 and 1990, was sixth this season and is averaging 2.11 steals per plavoff game.
Jordan wreaks havoc on an offense because he seems to be everywhere on the court: switching to doubleteam post players, scrambling to disrupt 3-point shooters, trapping along the baseline, blocking 7-footers' shots from behind.
Statistics, though impressive, do not fully measure his defensive impact.
All the while, he's keeping his own man in check and scoring 30-plus points at the other end.
"You've always got to keep an eye out for Michael," said Portland point guard Terry Porter, who also has been stopped by Jordan in the series.
In 1987-88, Jordan was the NBA's Defensive Player of the Year.
"It's one of the most valuable awards I've gotten, because it told
everybody that I didn't just play offense," said Jordan, who just completed his fifth consecutive season on the league's All-Defensive Team.
However, any recognition he gets for his defense is overshadowed by his 32.3-point career scoring average.
"I always thought defense was important," Jordan said. "Everyone says that defense is hard work, and I've never walked away from hard work. It's a challenge to try to play well at both ends. You're known for your offensive skills, so to come back and try to make an effort on the defensive end takes dedication."
Jordan is dedicated to keeping the Bulls on top of the NBA heap. He didn't practice Monday because of a pain in his left heel, but he said he would be ready for Game 4.
"Come game time Wednesday, no problem," he said.
Rookie Season Benefits Randall
That's trouble for the Trail Blazers, whose offense is sputtering.
"ormer Jayhawk learns to play smart by running with the Timberwolves
By David Mitchell Contributing Editor
Mark Randall began the 1991-92 season with the Chicago Bulls. Bulls finished the regular season 67-15. After being waived by the Bulls three months into the season, Randall was signed by the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Minnesota finished the season 15-67.
The former dayhawk said the move from Florida to Minnesota was a mistake.
"Obviously it was a change," he said. "It really didn't matter to me. As long as I'm in the NBA, I'm happy."
Randall is back in Lawrence this summer completing his degree in advertising. Because he originally signed a one-year deal with Chicago, Randall is now waiting for a new contract from Minnesota.
"I like to have some kind of multiple-year
"tract." he said. "I like to have that kind
chance for the future."
"My goal is to help a team any way I can. I feel I can help Minnesota more than I could with the Bulls. In Minnesota, I have a better
After being selected as the Bulls' first round draft pick last summer, Randall was caught up in a numbers game on the talented Chicago squad. Playing behind Olympian Scotte Pippen, Randall did not see much playing time with Chicago.
In Minnesota, Randall's playing time increased, averaging 10 minutes a game.
"I need to play," he said. "That's the only way I can improve and learn."
And he said he still has a lot to learn about the NBA.
"There's a lot of things I need to work on," he said. "I felt over the season, I improved. I learned this past year, you don't have to be the best or the quickest as long as you learn to play smart."
Randall said the learning process and the struggle to establish himself was something most rookies faced.
"Unless you are a superior talent, you're not going to step in and set the world on fire," he said. "Guy's don't really come into their own until their third year — just like in college."
High School in Colorado with high expectations. But his first year was somewhat disappointing as he averaged just 4.5 points a game. His second year at Kansas he was a medical redshirt and sat out the 1988 championship season. But in his sophomore season, he flourished into an All-Big Eight Conference performer. In his senior season, he led the Jawahra backs to the Final Four.
Now, as in college, Randall is faced with switching positions. After playing small forward in high school, he was moved to power forward and center at Kansas. In the more physical NBA, Randall has been moved back to small forward.
Randall came to Kansas from Cherry Creek
"When I came to Kansas, I was primarily a three-man, but I was forced into the four and five spots because Kansas didn't have any big men," he said. "I feel more comfortable where I am now."
As Randall waits for a new contract from the Timberwolves, he knows that Minnesota will have four picks in the June 21th NBA Draft.
"Minnesota is a great place," Randall said.
"I hope more than anything to be there."
Kansas sophomore earns one of 12 spots on U.S. Women's Junior National Team
Kansan staff report
Kansas sophomore Angela Aycock was named to the U.S. Junior National Team this weekend. After four days of trials, Aycock earned one of 12 spots on the squad, which will represent the United States at the Women's Junior World Championship Qualifying Tournament Aug. 23-30 in Mexico City.
Aycock said she expected her summer experience to improve her game.
"When you play against people who are better than you, or of equal talent, you pick up a lot of things," she said.
the Kansas coaches have asked Aycock to work on becoming a more aggressive player.
"A lot of players there are more aggressive than I am, so I can learn a lot from them," she said.
Oklahoma forward Etta Maytubby also was named to the junior national team. In recent years, Big Eight women's teams complained that they did not get the respect they deserved. Aycock said she hoped the selections reflected a changing attitude.
"I think our presence will definitely affect how people look in Big Eight players," she said.
Aycock was an All-Big Eight honorable
mention selection in her freshman season, averaging 10 points a game.
She said the honor of representing the United States had not yet sunk in.
"I was happy and pleased," she said. "I guess it will hit me when I get out on the floor."
COURTSIDE. Former Kansas basketball player Lynette Woodward did not make the U.S. Olympic Team. Woodward was the cocaptain of the 1984 U.S. team that won the gold medal. She was a four-time All-American at Kansas during 1978-81.
KANSAS
Camp kicks off
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Pat Ruel, Kansas offensive coordinator, center with hat, runs offensive drills for youths from Lawrence and Kansas City who attend the week-long KU Football Camp. The senior and junior high school campers arrived Sunday and will be drilled throughout the week on the fundamentals of football. Participants in the camp also will watch films and receive classroom instruction.
Parrott Athletic Center expansion to help student athletes in class and on the field
Exterior construction on the Parrot Athletic Center expansion is scheduled to be completed by Oct. 15. The $5 million project began in September.
THOMPSON'S WOODS
Julia Clarke / KANSAN
By David Wilson Special to the Kansan
Parrott is an annex of the field house, and its expansion will fill the gap between the field house and Anschutz. Construction has been going on since September and is within its $3.5 million budget, said Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning. The interior is expected to cost an additional $1.5 million. The project is privately financed, and money is being raised by the Athletic Department through the Kansas University Endowment Association and the Williams Fund.
Come Oct.15, the Kansas football team will no longer have to meet in the storerooms of Allen Field House and the four corners of Anschutz Sports Pavilion. This is the target date for the completion of the football facilities, including meeting rooms, in the Parrott Athletic Center expansion.
The exterior is expected to be done within a few weeks. The center is being built by the Harris Construction Company of Lawrence.
The facilities will include coaching offices for men's basketball and football, larger locker rooms, an expanded sports medicine center and tutoring rooms, said Bob Frederick, athletic director.
Many athletic offices now share space in the field house. Swimming, volleyball, and softball share one space, with only partitions dividing
the offices. When all phases of the project are completed, no sport will have to share space. A private conversation between a student athlete and a coach will no longer have to take place in the bleachers, Frederick said.
In later phases of the project, new baseball locker rooms will be built where the football locker rooms are now, in the original Parrott. Baseball locker rooms are currently in the southwest corner of the field house.
Frederick said that the new facilities would also enhance recruitment capabilities and that in the Big Eight, Kansas' facilities would be equaled only by those of Colorado.
The second floor of the center will include academic support services for student athletes. No classes will be conducted there, but it will contain areas for one-on-one counseling, a large study hall and a small computer lab with about six stations. Also, enrollment and pre-advising for student athletes will be handled there. The focus of the academic services will be on freshmen.
"The blueprints haven't been finalized, but in essence, that's what we're looking at," said Paul Buskirk, assistant athletic director of Student Support Services.
The Academic Achievement Center is currently housed in a basement at Jayhawker Towers. "We will have 8,000 square feet for the Academic Achievement Center," said Frederick.
Kansan staff report
Expos' minor league team drafts ex-Kansas pitcher
Former Jayhawk pitcher Curtis Schmidt has reported to a Florida training camp for the Montreal Expos 'short-season Class A Affiliate.
The Expos drafted Schmidt last week in the 41st round. He will play for Jamestown, N.Y., of the New York Penn League. The season begins June
Schmidt said he had agreed in principle to a contract with the major league team.
"I'm excited about playing for the Expos," he said. "I like the organization, and it seems like a sound system with good coaching."
Wilson Kilmer, Kansas pitching coach, said he liked Schmidt's chances in pro ball.
"He's going to progress in professional baseball on his ability to get the
job done." Kilmer said.
sonnidt did not have an overpowering fastball but that he was a smart pitcher who used a variety of pitches to fool hitters. Kilmer said.
"He wants people to make contact," he said. "That usually results in a lot of ground balls."
Kilmer said Schmidt's sidearm delivery reminded him of former Kansas City Royals pitcher Dan Quisenberry. But Schmidt could be effective as either a starter or a reliever, he said.
The Philadelphia Phillies drafted Schmidt last year in the 26th round, but he elected to stay at KU for his senior season.
He was 7-5 with Kansas in 1992 and compiled a 13-10 record in the two years he played for the 'Hawks. Schmidt earned All-Big Eight Conference honors in 1991 and 1992.
SPORTS BRIEFS
- Kansas pitcher Stephani Williams was named to the GTE Academic All-American first team. The junior, who is a Spanish major, earned a 3.93 grade point average in 1992. Williams won 30 games for the Kansas softball team and finished the year with a 0.59 ERA. After two years at Kansas, Williams ranks third in career strikeouts with 411. She also earned all-conference honors in 1992 and was a second team All-American. Kansas made its first trip to the Women's College World Series, finishing the season 45-10.
Two members of the Kansas track team earned All-American honors at the NCAA Track and Field Championships last weekend. Junior Marybeth Labosky placed sixth in the high jump, clearing 5 feet, 11 1/2 inches.Sophomore Heather Berlin, the Big Eight Conference champion, placed fourth in the javelin throw. She also earned All-American honors.Senior Cathy Palacios finished tenth in the 3,000 meters. All three are expected to compete at the U.S. Olympic Trials this week.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
11
Czech, Slovak leaders fear breakup of Czechoslovakia
The Associated Press
PRAIGUE, Czechoslovakia — Talks between the two rivals charged with governing Czechoslovakia broke up early yesterday without agreement on how to prevent the country from splitting.
"The federation is lost," Vaclav Klaus, a Czech, told reporters after meeting with populist Slovak leader Vladimir Meciar. His remarks were broadcast repeatedly on state television.
Both sides reported deep differences concerning Czechoslovakia's future constitutional setup but did not rule out referendums later this year in which Czechs and Slovaks would vote on whether to stay together.
Before that, however, Meciar, whose party won Saturday elections in Slovakia, plans to declare Slovak sovereignty — one step short of independence — and adopt a separate Slovak constitution.
Klaus, the conservative federal finance minister whose party led the voting in the more populous Czech regions, was tapped by President Vacach Havel to open talks on a new federal government. He briefed Vacach Havel yesterday on his meeting with Meciar in Brno.
Havel said afterward that the situa
tion was very serious. "A lot will depend on events in the month of June," he said.
Meciar's representative in Slovakia said that there were radical differences with Klaus' party on how the federation should be structured.
Klaus agreed. "The talks revealed deep and fundamental differences," he said.
Klaus, a supporter of a strong Czech-Slovak federation, has been the driving force behind rapid economic reform that has caused hardship in less-developed Slovakia. Meciar has demanded more control over economic changes in his region, where the jobless rate has soared to more than 11 percent, four times that of the Czech areas.
Jiri Schneider, Klaus' representative, said the Slovaks sought only a loose economic and defense union, which was not enough for Klaus.
"It's under the limit of what we call a common state," Schneider said.
Klaus also wants a federation with a united budget, customs and tax policies, Schneider said.
In his statement, Meciar said Klaus accepted the idea of a referendum in the Czech lands. "The referendum will be initiated by both sides", the statement said.
Klaus said that he could give no
details about the Czech referendum but that the questions posed to the 10.5 million Czechs and 5 million Slovaks should be identical.
Meciar's Movement for a Democratic Slovakia won about 38 percent of the vote for the regional Slovak parliament. Meciar said Sunday that the body could declare sovereignty soon after it met June 23 and that a referendum concerning the end of the federation should take place by year's end.
The outcome of the Klaus-Meciar talks indicated a bleak feature for Havel, whose representative said Monday that Havel would not seek reelection by the new federal parliament if the breakup of Czechoslovakia appeared inevitable.
The representative, Michael Zantovsky, told reporters that Havel's candidacy depended on the continuation of a common state and economic and political reforms begun with the 1989 Velvet Revolution that unseated the Communists.
Klaus said he insisted to Meciar that Havel be re-elected president, but Meciar's statement said Havel was unacceptable.
Meciar was ousted as Slovak pre-
mier in May 1991 by Havel allies.
Czechoslovakia was formed in 1918 from parts of the Austro-Hungarian empire.
---
LAWRENCE
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Instructor: Master Ki-June Park, Ph.D
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Classes Monday through Sunday (Day and Evening). Meditation class-Sunday 10th & Massachusetts 843-2121
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913 842 1811 913 842 1438 913 842 1544
THE COMPANY
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 products that significantly outperform our store's sales. Our prices range from modest value units (appro $175) to world class State-of-Art systems in excess of $50,000.
DOING BUSINESS WITH KIFF'S AUDIO/VIDE
THE EQUIPMENT
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, tape 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 audio/video facilities, adjacent to the University of Kansas, in Lawrence, Ks. We are aware of any one facility that has the unique combination of physical size, 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 direct at maximum volume rebates and, yes, we pass on any savings on our customers. We spend a portion of our pre-tax profits on environmental and social causes, not because its fashionable, but because we started doing so 32 years ago.
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 audio files available in describing audio in a way that photographs and specification sheets can not.
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Hockenbury Tavern
Wednesday is Jazz Nite
Featuring
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and
the Jazz Helper
865-4055
1016 Massachusetts
Gustos
925 Iowa
749-5039
Wednesday June 10th
Steak dinners for 2 ONLY $12.95
- 8 oz. steak
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- texas toast
PLUS free admission for 2
to the Comedy Night
Offer valid with coupon only
Friday & Saturday: Renegade Driver Sunday: Dixicland Jazz (Free admission)
TIN PAN ALLEY
restaurant & bar
1105MASS
Everything But Ice
Beds
Chest of Drawers
Desks
Bookcases
936 Massachusetts
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
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841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
2 11" Medium Pizzas
2 Toppings
2 Cokes
$7.99
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842-8989
家常菜
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842-8989
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Anniversary Celebration!!
Thank You Frozen Yogurt Fans!
To celebrate the 5th Anniversary of our Louisiana Purchase Store, we have ridiculously reduced the price on all of our delicious frozen yogurt treats for one full week. Monday, June 8th - Sunday, June 14th
Celebration Price
Regular Price Celebration Price
Kids 70¢ 45¢
Small $1.15 80¢
Medium $1.50 95¢
Large $1.85 $1.10
Shakes $2.35 $1.35
Pints $2.35 $1.35
Quarts $4.25 $2.25
Pies $8.75 $6.25
FREE BALLOONS For Kids of all ages!
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Register to win $100 worth of our creamy Frozen Yogurt!
(10 Chances for a $10 Gift Certificate)
Celebration prices good at our Louisiana Purchase location only! Next to House of Denmark and Fantastic Sam's.
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana • 843-5500
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold * 749-0440
12
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
Consignment Boutique
Gently resale clothing for the entire family.
23rd & Louisiana - 749 5122
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NEW HORIZONS
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New Horizons
New Horizons
TAE KWON DO
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
749-4400
TV PROJECTS
THE STUDENT FRIENDLY STORE
Summer
Wine
Sale!!
GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS
1906 MASS 843-8186
KU Cricket Club
practice
Wednesdays 5:30
If you need a ride
or information:
Rajan 864-8042 or
Andy 865-0893
student concerns about instruction
Students experiencing difficulties or problems with a particular course, and/or having a complaint or grievance with the instructor in a course, are urged to discuss the problem in a timely fashion with the instructor concerned. If the student feels awkward or uncomfortable in doing this, he or she should see the chairperson of the instructor's department, or if need be, the dean of the school/College. The chairperson (or dean) will bring the matter to the instructor's attention, preserving the student's anonymity, if so requested.
-sponsored by the Office of Academic Affairs
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Interested in working with children?
KU CARES KIDS
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Questions?
Call 864-7316
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Kitchens hours: 11am-1am
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DOMINO'S PIZZA
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We are participating location only. Not good with any other offer. Please refer to previous offers. Our current offer is free delivery on orders over $50.
L. A. Police Chief Gates stirs ire with postponement bluff
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Police Chief Daryl F. Gates called it a buff. His critics called it an attempt to hold City Hall hostage.
"The bully backed down this morning," said Ramona Ripston, executive director of the Southern California American Civil Liberties Union.
Gates said Monday he was not serious when he said he might postpone his retirement at the end of the month because of a dispute over the promotion of commanders. But that did nothing to soothe those who want him out.
Mayor Tom Bradley said Gates was well aware his threat would be disruptive.
"It's very clear that for his own heady reasons he was trying to hold the city hostage," said Bradley, who a year ago had called for Gates' retirement.
"He has left that Police Department in a total shambles. He has left this city in a hurch." Council member Zev
Yaroslavsky said. "That's the thanks he gives to the people of this city. He gives them the big finger."
Gates, who already had placed his retirement on hold once, said last week he might do so again to take a stand on behalf of captains up for promotion.
The threat stirred City Hall, which already was reeling from riots that left 52 people dead after four officers were acquitted in the Rodney King beating. Under civil service rules, Gates can be removed for misconduct only.
At a news conference Monday, however, Gates said he still planned to leave by month's end.
"I will admit that was a threat, a bluff, but it's the only thing a lame duck has these days," he said.
Gates has been under pressure to step aside since the videootaped King beating more than a year ago.
Gates said he merely wanted the city to keep the captains on a 2-year-old civil service list that expired this month.
"It's very clear that for his own heady reasons he was trying to hold the city hostage."
Tom Bradley Mayor of Los Angeles
His successor, Philadelphia Police Commissioner Willie Williams, spent Monday packing for his move to Los Angeles.
"I think that what we saw in California was the fact that when people push Chief Gates' button he reacts, and when he pushes people's buttons they react. It was a lot of gamesmanship going on," he said.
Man awakens with pain of arrow in his head
The Associated Press
Ekvall awoke early Monday in extreme pain, flipped on a light and saw his roommate reloading a crossbow, police representative Bill Robinson said.
SAN DIEGO — Doctors are predicting a complete recovery for a man who was shot through the head with an arrow that police say his roommate fired from a crossbow.
Arthur Ekvall, 29, was listed in serious but stable condition yesterday at Mercy Hospital. Doctors who removed the arrow said it had not caused any brain damage. Ekvall's roommate, 25-year-old Jesse Solis, was ailed without bail.
Despite the pain from the arrow piercing his head, Ekvall scuffed with his roommate and disarmed him. Robinson said. Solis ran outside wearing only his underwear and drove off in Ekvall's pickup.
POLICE said that when they arrived, they could hardly believe their eyes. The arrow had entered the base of Ekvall's neck and traveled upward through his head until it protruded from the side of his forehead near his left eye, they said.
"He told them, 'You can see the arrow when I open my mouth.' Robinson said, "He told them, 'I can also see it out my left eye if I work at
During more than two hours of surgery, doctors unscrewed the arrow point from the stem, then pulled the shaft back out through Elkall's neck. Mercy Hospital representative MaSchail Scahill said.
"It did not pierce his brain, and he apparently didn't suffer any brain damage," Scahill said.
"We've seen a lot of things around here — knives in people's skulls, pins in their ears — but never anything like this," Robinson said.
Solis was jailed for investigation of attempted murder and auto theft, pending an arraignment today, a jail representative said.
SUMMER ON THE HILL
SAVE
FERRIS
SUMMER ON THE HILL
SAVE FERRIS
FERRIS BUELLER'S
DAY OFF FREE
THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1992, CAMPANILE Hill - 9:00p.m. - FREE
KU Concessions will have a popcorn and Coke special at the movie!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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MARION WARD LOST 100 POUNDS EATING PASTA, CHILI AND PEANUT BARS.
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Wednesday, June 10, 1992
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23rd & Louisiana
749-5122
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SWM. Age 43, 6 years. 220 lbs. brown eyes and hair introvex. like children life; animals, children play. A good relationship would a love or handicapped boy could write a P.O. Box 402 115 Lausanne, SK 8500. NSCOW
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Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
090 Mass. 123-6711
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Bourbon at sugarfresh 907 Mass.
Summer Savers
Vodka 1.75L $8.98
Varietals 1.5 $6.99
Molson Gold 12 $6.49
800 West 23rd Street
841-2277
Store Hours:
Mon-Sat 9am-11pm
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Busch & Busch Lt. 24 $9.49
WEBB'S
The Etc. 928 MASSACHUSETTS
Shop 843-0611
Catch The Rays!
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Look for our new Vogue
Firenze Italian sunglasses!
0:5:30 MON.-SAT., OPEN UNTIL 8 THURS.
TREASURES
SUMMER TRAVEL?
400's
Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Lowest possible rates to Europe.
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
On campus location in the Burge Union and 831 Mass.
- World wide travel information.
See us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
The cooperative way of doing business is an active expression of peace and justice. Join us in the work to improve the health and environmental health. Stop by the Cermany office or visit our website now you can become a member. We need your support.
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS. Self serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Poo/Poo Exposure, with Lonzo. Aksel Cancer
Sucicide intervention? If you're thinking about
suicide or are concerned about someone who
is suicidal, visit 140 Mass. Headquarters
Counseling Center
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer students inquiries to you. Student Assistance
Want carpool from West Topanga to campus and
return weekly daymornings. Call 498-4255 if you
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 138
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
WHEN YOU NEED SOME
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care
841-2345 1419 Mass.
130 Entertainment
Good food? You bet your. SweetGrass. 95
M Downtown Lawrence 749-3355
140 Lost & Found
Keys found at Clinton Lake by the observation blah. Has 2 sets of car keys and host key. Call (718) 543-0698.
Live out house manager for sorority at K.U. Meal and Menu Management, oversee daily operations of facility. Flexible daytime hours. Salary: $250,000. Corporation P.O. Box 3782. Lawrence, KS 66044.
LOST: Set of kets. Approximately 10-12 kets
yellow & black rubber cups. Call Jill collect 1
M M
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
KU Information seeks motivated, superorganized graduate student starting July 1 for half-time Graduate Assistant position. 800 month experience. Req's Master's degree with wide range of interests, supervision and leadership skills, familiarity with KU and community resources, sense of humor, interest in learning, willingness to work as a KU Info, 490 Union, or call 844-2320 for more information. Application deadline June 15.
Ballard Center is now hiring a teacher for
21/2 year old class. Apply at 708 Elm E. O E
MODES & ACTORS needed. Professional $75-95 per hour. Print, Actors Non-Union $125-20 a day Also. Extras for TV/film $75-175 day 541-909
Sexual Assault Prevention & Education Program. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a 12-time graduate assistant professor, Deborah G. Lowen, who has been allowing Assist the Director in determining the current interests, needs, and concerns of students enrolled in sexual assault courses ofvors of sexual assault, assist in the preparation of materials publishing services, programs, and resources; serve as a liaison with Douglas County Rape Victim Service (USVS) Bachelor's degree program; provide student at the University of Kansas for fall 1992, training or experience in facilitating writing and editing. It is preferred that the graduate student evidence familiarity in work-related cases be available. July 1, 1992. DEADLINE: submit a letter of application, names and names of2 other students required to attend Sherill A.C. Robinson, LMSW, Acting Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Lawrence KS 60045 EOE/AA
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
STUDENT CLEERIAL ASSISTANT Deadline 06/12/19
@9:12/19 $4.35/hour Duties include assisting in invoicing, mailing & filing of Computer Center billings, maintaining Accounts and Records, performing stock order Shop orders, performing receptionist duties an a-fill basis, and miscellaneous Business office duties. To apply, complete a job application form to the Director of the Computer Center E/OAAEMPLOVER
Live out house manager for sorority at K U. Live on Meal & Menu Management, over daily operations of facility Flexible daytime hours. Salary $50,000. Requires Corporation, P. O. Box 7928, Lawrence, KS 60443.
225 Professional Services
Now Hiring
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7349
23rd Street in the Malls Shopping Center.
Dishwashers.
Servers, Wardrobes
Bartenders, Host, Line
Cooks Prep Cooks
Mon.-Sat. 10am-6pm
Positions Wanted:
Servers Wait Aids
RICK FRYDMAN
Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic
ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE
Duties include. Reading textbooks & other materials for students who are blind or have read disabilities, preparing students with performance of lab projects. $4.25/hr.
Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 133 Hall St., Houlston, MA 0464-8946. June 12, 1992
For better grades, call PAPER PROS. Editing,
organizing, source evaluations, proofreading
Reasonable rates. References available. Very
useful in literature and humanities.
Becky 841-1490
Free Consultation
823 Missouri 843-4023
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
16 East 13th 842-1133
DONALD G. STROLE
Increase your READING SPEED AND COMPREHENSION. Tuesday, June 19, 16 and 23, 4-8 in the Student Center; Friday, by 5:00 p.m. Monday, 4-8 in the Student Center; Tuesday, 131-333, Strong Hall. Class size limited to 18.
[career Opportunities]
Graduates, displaced, &/or career shifters. SEARCH FIRM seeks resumes for ALL career fields, minorities & women are special need. June 15 deadline.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(912) 491-6878
guitar lessons Professional keyboardist had played with Eric Clapton, Joe Walsh, Eagles and Eagles.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Iowa, III, 736.
c/o SEARCH DIRECTOR
P.O.BOX 15945 SUITE 278
Lenexa, Ks. 60285
235 Typing Services
1 day service word processing $1.00 double
space! Call 843-4974 or 843-4638
1 day service word processing $1.00 double
Call 843-4974 or 843-4638
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2063 or days.
Word processing, applications, term papers,
dissertations, recourses. Editing, composition.
Graphics.
X
*New Annalyst of Western Civilization makes*
*in-depth research on the evolution of*
*atlay Bay, Greend, and Town Crier*
Looking for a garage to rent, or space in a garage, close to ith and Mass. For parking on campus.
305 For Sale
300s
Merchandise
01) VTEC • jewelry, music, musical
02) VTEC • jewelry, disc. theater
03) VTEC • disc. theater, Jawpaw Pawn & Jewelry,
John Winn
We buy buy squad scouts, badges and uniforms. We look at the buildings. WE LOOK for multiple 86 Massachusetts buildings.
Apt. size mini washer and dryer Avanti (Stores) $100, 814-862-4627 7:00 p.m.
EVERYTHING BICE-Reds, chest of drawers, bookcases, 90 Massachusetts.
1979 Cordova, excellent condition, excellent
climate, excellent service.
condition condition 594 3628 after 5.0 p.m.
condition condition 594 3628 after 5.0 p.m.
Buy Sell and Trade Combat Boots, camouflage clothing, camping gear. Looking for something
340 Auto Sales
For Sale Computer, 286, 46 MEG HD, I.2 Meg
For Sale Computer, 286, 46 MEG HD, keyboard £700
Oun Sun 746-7432
Oun Sun 746-7432
Apt. size washer and dryer Avanti (Sears)
$100.95-4622 4:22pm 7:00 p.m.
1.1st Station Wagon PLYMOUTH RELIANT K
Nice small wagon for $450 821-6043
No other prices available.
For Sale Computer, 386, 40MeG, HD 1.2 Meg
For Sale Computer, 386, 40MeG, HD 1.2 Meg
Keyboard, 294-32332
Keyboard, 294-32332
370 Want to Buy
11 GEO Storm, 5-speed, AC, AM-FM Cass, Air Bag, new condition. Must sell. Best offer 913-874-5200.
360 Miscellaneous
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841.2345. Headquarters
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
HOTEL
Buy • Sell • Trade
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Help! I need 18" Mt. bike, two man tent, big backpack. If you want to sell all of these
1900 Nasmish $ 4 or 8R 2 bath large rooms total
kitchen (inc. Microwave) cable & phone in
bedrooms. Cable paid free storage on site
in addition to the standard rent.
2436 Studio Apartment furnished with w/d
$300, unfurnished $250. Utilities paid New
Jersey 84290. Short-term lease preferred.
1. Dbrm Apt. furn, pool sublease avail. Mid-May
8333 hour 823-6030
is where the
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Spacious 2 & 3 bedrooms available for the mature
available for the mature student. Now leasing for fall.
student. Now leasing for rath.
Includes covered parking
swimming pool, inexpensive utilities.
2040 Heatherwood · 843-4754
West Hills APARTMENTS
- Spacious one and two
- Furnished and Unfurnished
- Great Location Near Campus
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
*Washer/Dryer*
*Total Kitchens*
*Some with丰丰 Place*
*lifters 2 baths* $600/$625. On KU bus route
*Deposit & Refresh* 82-9104
541 Michigan Now leasing for Fall
OPEN DAILY
9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
MASTERCRAFT
offers completely furnished
1.33 & 4.00 cents
designed with you in mind!
Campus Place-841-1429 1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place-841-1212 14th & Mass
Kentucky Place-749-0445
Orchard Corners-749-4226
15th St.
Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
Belfast Apts. $100 leave signing bonus? **H**
Auction is on in bus route. In bus location, 84438 or 749
84438 or 749
---
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!!
COLONYWOODS APARTMENTS
Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor Pool
- Outdoor Pool
- Outdoor Pool
- ExerciseRoom
2 Hot Tube
On Pue Roy
REDUCED DEPOSIT
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
-
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon. - Fri.
9-12 am Satdry
No appointment necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Basement apartment Walk to campus and
military immediate) $250/mo
(utilities included) 843-999-6100
Available August 1.1 and 2 bedroom apartments close to the student union, Off street parking. References required. No pets. Day 749-281 or evening 842-9007.
Furnished one and two bedroom apartments.
One doorlock from KU Off Street Parking. No
locks.
Available August 1. Nice Extra-large 2 bedroom apartment close to the student union. Hardwood Floors. Suitable for 2 or 3 people off campus. All rooms are not owned. No pets allowed. Tax 749-849 for overage $80.
Excellent location. 1048 Tennessee 2 bdmpt a
Lake City, CA. A no pets Available August 1
GARAGE #3251
(612) 789-3141
Furnished rooms with most utilities paid. One block from KU Off Street Parking No Pets.
For Summer sublease to graduate or upper-class student. One bedroom furnished apartment one block from Union. No pets. Refs $250. Call Beth B32-1410
Go past the barricade at 9th and Iowa (it looks like you can't but you can)
can you can.) Village Square Apartments is at the bottom of 9th on the left.
Leasing for summer and fall-furnished 1.2 and 4 bedroom apartments near campus with off-campus parking.
The road to a quiet, relaxed atmosphere isn't closed. Check out Village Square
Laundry facilities are located in each building. Enjoy the
Apartmentstoday.
Weather spacious 2 bedroom apartments with roomy kitchens and ceiling fans
enjoy the swimming pool or your own large patio or balcony.
We are close to campus and on KU Bus Routes.
Come by or give us a call: 842-3040
850 Avalon #4 Lawrence, KS.
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE KVM Apartments 841-6080
Spacious two bedroom apartment, cheap utilities,
$225 monthly, on bus route. 841-4086 or 8323
2332. Available June 1st 2-month, or 1-year lease.
Summer sublease female non-smoker $200
month 2/ utilities Clean and spacious Call
Summer Sublearning 1 and 2 bedroom apartments
at the student union. No pets. Thy 748
2919-2090. www.studentunion.org
Boardwalk
apartments
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open House Everyday!!
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
On Trailridge Bus Route
Summer & Fall Rentals Available Now.
1&2 Bedrooms
- Policy
**Station View Apartments 1006 Mississippi**
**Summer Lease specials** *Pri-2 Pm* / m².
430 Roommate Wanted
NOW LEASING Newly remodeled 2 story
10M WATERfront on 8th street. No pets.
10M F-M B243-398
NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL
Bradford Square Apartments 400 Colorado
Chamberlin C1 Apartments 1724 Ohio
1 Bedroom Available for next semester in new location.
2 Bedroom Available for next semester in new location.
Fireplace/patio, kitchen $20/month plus landlord fee.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female needed to share apartment startling
Call Hoather at 1303-4817 Leave
message
Female needed to share 2 bedroom apt start-
ing August for one year. WD-J 190 month
duration. Contact us at kschoe.net.
FUN! FUN! FUN! In the summer sun in Sund-
nap Apt. next to Louis's West 2 female
roommates wanted for 4 bedroom Rent $184
Call 865-9970
One roommate wanted immediately. Rent negotiable Plus/14 utilities. June 863-3596.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
2 lebm house, summer and / or (all B22) rent (call
good neighborhood, bosh root) (call
Destiny 822)
Rainbow House, which is a cooperative living consisting of 7-9 women and men, has two available opening starts in June. The house is located at 1301 Madison Avenue. Please call 843-3794 for more information.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Serve furnish house NS male. AC, Cable. full bed in
mirror Washers $200/100 drop 1/2 upl
Words set in ALI CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered text count as 7 words.
Classified Information Mail-in Form
Cissnera's skills are assessed for current relevance in cross-country.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertise-
Tearless books are not priced for classed awefers簿本s
Founds are贮放 for three days, no more than 15 words.
No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising Bill dos ads. please add $5 for classified charge and request for classified advertising document.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the Uti
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 1Day 2-3Days 4-5Days 10Days
0.15 3.65 5.35 7.60 12.65
16.20 4.25 6.30 8.95 14.20
21.25 4.85 7.30 10.25 15.90
26.30 5.55 8.30 11.55 17.55
31.35 6.25 9.30 12.85 19.20
Classifications
100 personal
personal animals
100 announcements
100 announcements
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Classified Mail Order Form
Name___
Address___
CUSTOMER ORDER FORM
Name Phone
(phone number published only if included below)
| | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW RANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
14
Wednesday, June 10, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LSAT GMAT GRE
THE Call
PRINCETON
REVIEW 843-3131
For great Seafood, Steaks, Salads,
Appetizers, Drinks, Desserts and much more!
Come check out Cornucopia's nightly
Dinner Specials!
Hours: 11.9 Sunday & Monday 11.10 Tuesday & Thursday
1801 MASSACHUSETTS
CORNUCOPIA A RESTAURANT & BAR
WE'RE OPEN!
ALL SUMMER LONG
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Baking at Café Mascarpone
842-3232
Carry out or delivery
Monday Mania
Buy ONE PIZZA
Get the 2ND
ONE FREE!!!!
Terrific Twosday!
PYRAMID
good Mondays only
ALL SUMMER LONG!
PYRAMID
Buy ONE LARGE PIZZA with 2 toppings for only $7.99 and get
and get
1 Liter of pop
FREE!!!!
As Easy as 1,2,3
THRIFTY THURSDAY!
SPECIAL
Buy a large,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $3
Buy a medium,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $2
Buy a small,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $1
Only $3.49+tax
(carry out only)
for small pizza (add tops only 75¢)
order 2 or more for free delivery
PIRAMID
THE only
good Thurs. only
Anchor The Best Summer Savings At The Yacht Club!
Anchor
Drink Specials
**Drink Specials**
Mon.: $3.25 Pitchers
Tues.: $1.75 Imports
Wed.: 1/2 Price Margaritas
Thurs.: $1.75 Wells/$.75 Draws
Fri.: $1.25 Busch/Busch Lt./ Keystone Lt.
Sat.: $1.00 Yacht Shots
THE YACHT CLUB
Louisiana KS
Mon.-Sat. 11:30a.m.-2:00a.m.
Sun. 4:00p.m.-2:00a.m.
530 Wisconsin 842-9445
Lunch Specials
Dinner Specials
Mon.: Taco Dinner $1.50
Tues.: Turkey $3.50
Wed.: Chicken Sandwich $3.85
Thurs.: Admiral Salad $3.50
Fri.: Nacho Supreme $4.95
Sat.: Turkey Club $3.75
Sun.: Cheeseburger/Curly Fries $2.50
Mon.: Yacht Club $4.00
Tues.: Chicken Fingers/ $3.25
KARRONE
EVERY TUESDAY
8:1 AM
Wed.: Chicken Sandwich $3.85
Thurs. K.C.Strip & Fries $6.95
Fri.: Nacho Supreme $4.95
FREE Taco Bar 4:30-6:30pm
(or as long as it lasts)
Sat.: Fajitas $6.50
Sun.: Cheeseburger/Curly $2.50
Fries & either a Draw or Coke
BULLWINKLE'S
Monday: 50¢ Draws/$1.50 Schooners
Tuesday: 50¢ Draws/$1.50 Schooners
Wednesday:50¢ Draws/$1.50 Schooners
Thursday: 25¢ Draws
Friday: Bud Lt.Big Cups(32 oz.)
Saturday: Managelr
Saturday: Manager's Special
Video offers the homeless dumpster-dining etiquette
The Associated Press
GARDEN GROVE, Calif. - A video for homeless people that offers tips on how to avoid food poisoning when scavenging meals from garbage cans has drawn interest in Europe but criticism in this country.
"The Fine Art of Dumpster Dining" uses a talk-show format to tell viewers how to detect discarded food that may be poisoned by chemicals, rodents or bacteria.
One scene shows the moderator at a garbage bin explaining to two homeless men how to choose fruit and vegetables with thick, unbroken skins that can be washed.
Critics say the video encourages risky foraging.
"I think it's immoral to teach people to go through deadly, dangerous, rotting garbage for food," said Betsy Hart, director of lectures and seminars for the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington D.C.
Linda Dumlap, who produced the video with her husband. David, said it
contained 54 warnings to avoid eating from trash bins. But the fact is, she said, that that's where homeless people often find their food.
"All we are trying to do is try to help the homeless survive a little less painfully," she said. "It's an indictment against America. That maybe is what's upsetting people."
The video was distributed nationwide for free or a small fee to more than 30 shelters and groups working with the homeless. Organizations in Europe have requested it as well, Linda Dudlan said.
"This whole thing has gotten crazy," she said. "I can't imagine getting calls from all over the world."
The video, the fifth in a series of seven dealing with homelessness, was also shown on a cable television program.
it features Linda Dunlap, a former nurse, and an Orange County health official discussing the perils of eating food found in the trash.
The moderator is Ted Hayes of the Los Angeles-based Justiceville
U. S.A., a homeless advocacy organization.
Proteins pose the greatest danger, she tells viewers.
In just two hours, bacteria can grow on meat, milk and other dairy products left in closed trash containers in warm weather, she says, and cause diseases.
Linda Dunlap explains that food can be poisoned by spilled chemicals or contaminated by insects, rodents, glass, wood chips, metal fibers, razors and cigarette butts.
"You can't see the bacteria, you can't taste it, and you can't smell it," she says. Symptoms such as dizziness and nausea may be mistaken for the flu, she adds.
The video caused a stir at a recent conference in Berkeley sponsored by the California Hunger Action Coalition.
"People were shocked and outraged," said Mark Lowry, food services manager for the Costa Mesabased Community Development Council.
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
BACK TO THE BEGINNING SALE!
Groovy
For Out
ALARGE SELECTION OF CLOTHING
820-822MASS. 841-0100 Good through Sunday, June 14
We're reviving the '60's and '70's and reducing
20%-50%
in appreciation of 2 decades of the grooviest group of customers in River City!
Peace, Man.
FASTENING
2
MASTERCRAFT
Completely Furnished AFFORDABLE RENTALS...of the Best Kind!
Whether you prefer to live alone or with roommates, we have a place for you, designed with you in mind.
of the Best Kind!
Kentucky Place
1310 Kentucky 749-0445
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold 749-4226
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Campus Place
OPEN DAILY 9:00 a.m.-5:00p.m
*CUSTOM FURNISHINGS
*DESIGNED FOR PRIVACY
*ENERGY EFFICIENT
*MANY BUILT-INS
*AFFORDABLE RATES
*PRIVATE PARKING
*LOCALLY OWNED
*LAUNDRY FACILITIES *
*CLOSE TO CAMPUS
*LOCALLY MANAGED
*CLOSE TO SHOPPING
*CENTRAL A/C
*ON SITE MANAGERS *
*POOL*
*MICROWAVES *
*available some locations
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842-4455
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
SPORTS: Kansas golfer Matt Gogel qualified for the U.S. Open golf tournament which begins tomorrow. Page 10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.101.NO.148
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1992
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:8644810
FOR YOUR INFORMATION
Tornado territory
Tornadoes are a frequent sight in Kansas during the spring and summer months. The KU Severe Weather Chase Team is a group of students who go out looking for tornadoes under conditions that make most people seek shelter This week they found several around Beloit, Kansas.
New handbook available
SEE STORY ON PAGE 8.
The Office of Student Affairs has written a new, expanded student handbook that answers questions about transfer of credit, harassment, employment after graduation, tutoring, resumes, traffic regulations and other subjects.
The new handbook is in the form of a date book, complete with an academic year calendar, a list of all student organizations, and a copy of University codes, policies, rules and regulations. The handbooks will be distributed to every new student through orientation, residence halls, and fraternity and sorority houses. It will also be mailed to all new students living off campus. Other students can buy the calendar for $3.95 beginning tomorrow at the Kansas and Burge Union bookstores.
WEATHER
Today
Partly Cloudy/Chance to Thunder Storms
High: mid 80s/low 90s
Low: upper 60s
Today
Partly Cloudy/Chance for Thunder Storms
High: mid 80s/low 90s
Low: upper 60s
Tomorrow
Dry and Sunny
High: 85-90
Low: mid to upper 50s
Friday
Chance for Thunder Storms
High: 85-90
Low: mid to upper 50s
Saturday
Chance for Thunder Storms
High: 85-90
Low: mid to upper 50s
Source: AP Tricia Floro/Kansan
friday
SATURDAY
KU administrator heads Olympic committee
By Kristi Klepper
When the 1992 Summer Olympics begin July 25, a University of Kansas administrator will be in Barcelona, Spain, to witness the culmination of four years of his work. He is not an athlete; he is an organizer.
Kansan staff writer
Wayne Osness, head of KU's health, physical education and recreation department, is an eight-year member of the U.S.Olympic Committee Board of Directors.
"It rewarding to see gold medal winners stand on the platform with the U.S. flag and the national anthem, knowing that I had something to do with them being there,"
The USOC makes all policy decisions for the Olympics, including selecting governing bodies at the national level for each sport, lining up corporate sponsors, and setting guidelines for drug testing.
Osness said.
The Summer Games are the largest event in history, Osness said. "They are also one of the largest economic events. Trying to keep all that in perspective is not easy."
He heads the USOC Education Committee, one of the board's standing committees. He is one of 119 board members who volunteer time to the committee, which meets twice a year.
As committee head, Osness devotes much more time to Olympic-related projects. He has traveled and spoken to groups all over the world, including Greece, Korea, Italy and France.
"Our goal is to provide the opportunity for every child in the U.S. to have the opportunity to be an Olympian and to provide lead athletes with the opportunity to develop their talents so they can be competitive in the international arena," Osness said. Osness said drug control was a main con-
Osness said drug control was a main concern for the committee.
"We establish policies to protect the athlete, sometimes from him or herself," Osness said.
The board also raises money for Olympians by organizing corporate sponsorship.
As head of the USOC Education Committee, Osness also develops educational programs and sets up training centers for athletes.
sorsorship. The United States is one of few countries in the world whose governments do not finance their Olympic athletes, but Osness said it was better that way.
"The games belong to the American people, and the board is set up to preserve that." Osmess said.
During his four years of heading the committee, Osness has designed an Olympic Education Center at Northern Michigan University in Marquette. Mich. Athletes use the center to train for the Olympics while working toward college degrees.
Wildlife program endangered
WillCare
Andrew Arnone / Special to the KANSAN
Anne Deegan-Chandler (front), Sunflower Farm manager and WildCare volunteer coordinator, examines a baby opossum. Nine opossums were brought to WildCare 10 days ago after a dog killed their mother. Judith Emde (back), a wildCare volunteer, checks on other animals.
KU budget cuts force Wild Care to go solo
By Andrew Arnone Special to the Kansan
By Andrew Arnone
After 12 years of sponsorship by the University of Kansas, the WildCare Rehabilitation and Public Education Program, which has provided public education and care for injured or orphaned wild animals, was discontinued yesterday.
But rather than folding, the renamed WildCare Inc. plans to continue service as a private, non-profit organization.
The decision to eliminate the Wild-Care program from the Animal Care Unit in Malott Hall follows a wake of budget cuts and shortages, said Robert Bearsse, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies, and public service.
"The unit was running a deficit between $1,000 and $2,000 every month," he said. While the WildCare program was a nice public service, it was not directly related to the unit's legal responsibility to take care of laboratory animals. Bearse said.
Nancy Schwarting, executive director of the now independent WildCare Inc., acknowledges that the University's decision to end the program was due in part to too much growth and too little money.
"The program began in 1979 when people started bringing injured wild animals to the Animal Care Unit. Schwarting said. "Since then, Wild-Care's purpose has been to educate the public about wildlife, as well as
offering professional care for over 3,000 injured or orphaned wild animals."
But with today's budget deadline, the WildCare program will no longer receive food, utilities and medical supplies from the University. WildCare also must remove all its animals and equipment from Malot Hall. It will keep one small area for answering phone calls and arranging for animal pickups, Schwarting said.
Unfortunately, the program continued to grow, but the budget did not, Schwarting said.
She noted that WildCare's revenue from fund-raising and membership drives had doubled every year but that it was not enough to offset budget cuts.
If it weren't for the budget cuts, WildCare would have been able to support itself at the University in the next year or two," said Schwarting.
"The University has bent over backwards to help us make the change," she said, referring to the $1-a-year sublease for WildCare's new five-acre location at Sunflower Farm, a 120-acre farm near DeSoto maintained for the Animal Care Unit.
The $40,000 cost of building an operations building, however, had to be collected by WildCare Inc. through individual and corporate donations.
See story, Page 5.
Yeltsin to follow Dole's call to Wichita
Russian president will speak at Wichita State during brief visit
By Anne Grego
Kansan Staff Writer
Russian President Boris Yeltsin will arrive tomorrow morning in Wichita for his only stop outside Washington, D.C., on this trip to the United States.
Yeltsin's Kansas trip resulted from a personal invitation Sen. Robert Dole, said Sarah Belden, Dole's assistant press secretary.
Yeltsin and his wife, Naina, are expected to arrive at McConnell Air Force Base at 10:50.
Yeltsin's schedule will include visits to a meat processing plant and a wheat farm, according to an itinerary released by Sen. Bob Dole's office.
But his first stop will be Dold Foods plant, which processes ham and bacon.
Kleinsauer said the 300 student tickets were zone within 20 minutes.
Seating in Miller is reserved for Wichita State students, faculty and staff. Students started sitting up about 9 a.m. yesterday for the free tickets being distributed at noon, said Joe Kleinsasser, director of news and media relations at Wichita State.
The Russian Embassy requested that
Yetish will then give a speech in Wichita
Willis the Miller Concert Hall beginning at 12
p.m.
Yeltsin speak in Miller Hall, which seats only 550. They wanted a friendly atmosphere, Kleinsauer said.
Yeltsin's speech will be broadcast to the public through closed circuit in Weidmann Hall and the Campus Activities Center Theater. The public is invited to watch the speech from there. Seating will be on a first come, first serve basis, Kleinsasser said.
Yeltsin's trip to Wichita State's campus is scheduled to last only 40 to 50 minutes.
While Yeltsin is giving his speech, his wife, Nana, is expected to visit Cowtown Museum, a historic village and museum showing a mid-1800s replica of Wichita.
Elizabeth Kennedy, associate director of the museum, said the Old West flavor of
Cowtown may have attracted the Russian Embassy to choose the site for a visit.
"We seem to be very popular with international visitors," Kennedy said.
After his speech, Yeltsin and his wife are scheduled to attend a barbecue at a wheat farm.
The Yeltis plan to leave Wichita at 3:30 p.m. for Canada.
Dole first invited Yeltsin to Kansas when Dole was visiting Moscow in September, 1990.
Belden said Dole was the only member of Congress to to meet Yeltsin last June at Andrews Air Force Base, when Yeltsin arrived for his last trip to Washington. She said this meeting may have led to Yeltsin's acceptance of the invitation.
CAMPUS SNAPSHOT
Crime on campus down 53 percent this year
KU's 1992 first-quarter crime rate of 3.62 crimes per thousand people was the fourth-highest of the state's seven universities.
First-quarter crime on the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas fell more than 53 percent in 1992 from the same time last year, according to Kansas Bureau of Investigation statistics released last week. The drop is attributed to a 52.7 percent decline in theft from the same time last year.
By Anne Grego Kansan staff writer
robbery, aggravated assault/battery,
burglary, theft and motor vehicle
theft.
KU's first-quarter crime rate of 3.62 crimes per thousand people was the fourth-highest rate of the state's seven universities. Pittsburgh State University had the highest reported rate at 6.3, and Emporia State University had the lowest rate at 2.82.
KU crime figures show that there were 105 thefts, one robbery, 14 assaults, 23 burglars or attempted robberies. A third, a vehicle theft in the first quarter of 1992.
The KU reported that KU recorded 132 part-I crimes for the first quarter of 1992, compared to 286 in 1991. Part-I crimes include murder, rape,
The overall drop in crime was due
to a sharp decline in theft, Ll John Mullens of the KU police said. Theft at KU in the first quarter dropped from 222 cases in 1991 to 105 this year KU police records show.
Mullens said KU police did not believe the drop in crime was the result of less reporting of crime. KU police have tried to increase awareness on campus and encourage people to report small crimes so trends can be detected and larger crimes prevented he said.
The University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., had an increase of 26.9 percent in first-quar
ter crime, KBI statistics showed.
Major Rick Johnson, assistant director of Med Center police, said that the majority of crime at the Med Center was theft and that the victims usually were not students but Med Center employees.
"We attribute the increase to an increase in awareness of reporting"
A community policing program to educate the public about crime and the importance of reporting even the smallest theft was in effect at the Med Center during the first quarter, Johnson said.
Campus Crime Rates
Crimes per 1000 people varied from 1991 to 1992 at the six Regents schools and KU Med Center
立
(per thousand) Jan.-Mar. 1991 Jan.-Mar. 1992
7.84 KU 3.62
KU Med Center 4.79
Wichita State 6.07
2.49 K-State 3.47
Emporia State 4.85
Pittsburgh State 2.82
Fort Hays State 5.25 6.30 5.16 5.20
Source: KBI Statistics Sean Tevis/ Kansan
2
Wednesday, June 17, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE WEEK IN BRIEF
A SUMMARY OF THE WEEK'S NEWS
As protests
in Panama intensified before President George Bush's visit, gunmen opened fire on a U.S. military vehicle. One
WEDNESDAY
U. S. soldier was killed and another was wounded.
George Bush
PETER MORRIS
The White House announced that it would accept the Earth Summit's Rio Declaration. The declaration is a sweeping statement of nations' environmental
obligations to the rest of the world.
The Kansas City Museum canceled an agreement to acquire some land near the Country Club Plaza. Museum officials cited problems with the development of the Central Park Plaza.
The Kansas City Royals blew a five-run lead, but rallied to beat Minnesota 7-6.
■ Portland beat Chicago in game four of the NBA Finals to tie the series at two games each.
THURSDAY/FRIDAY
Marvin J. Schaal will be retried on one felony count of aggravated vehicular homicide for the March 1990 hit and-run death of American Indian Christopher Bread, Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells announced. Wells did not give an opening date for the retrial. Schaal's first trial ended May 26 with a split jury, which led to protests in Lawrence.
The U.S. House of Representatives killed a proposed amendment which would require the president to submit a balanced budget. The measure failed by nine votes.
President Bush was forced to flee from tear gas set off by protesters during a brief visit to Panama.
Former Missouri basketball player Anthony Peeler was granted a change in venue from Columbia, Mo., to Jefferson City,
Mo. Peeler has been charged with three feliones — unlawful restraint, unlawful use of a weapon and possession of a concealed weapon—stemming from an alleged attack on a Columbia woman.
A. R. A.
Anthony Peeler
Major League baseball owners voted 25-1 to allow the sale of the Seattle Mariners to a Japanese-led group.
President Bush defended his administration's environmental policies to the gathered world leaders at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
The Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that an African-American girl should be adopted by her
grandparents, not the white couple who have cared for her since birth. The decision ended a two-year court battle.
The U.S. Supreme Court backed the federal government by placing restrictions on environmentalists who attempt to protest for endangered species.
SATURDAY/SUNDAY
Japan pledged to spend up to $7.7 billion to help reduce its carbon dioxide and other emissions
Serbian forces agreed to allow the reopening of the Sarajevo airport for the purpose of receiving emergency relief flights.
The Kansas City Hindu Temple celebrated Nam-Yagna. Over 150 people, including several KU faculty members attended the service.
Sergei Bubka of the Ukraine broke his own world record in the pole vault, jumping 20 feet, one half inch.
peacekeeping force in Yugoslavia said he was receiving cooperation from Serbian forces surrounding Sarajevo.
Scientists reported that a vaccine that protects animals from lyme disease also eliminates bacteria in the ticks that spread the illness.
The Chicago Bulls beat Portland in game six of the NBA Finals to win their second straight NBA championship.
The commander of the U.N.
The Royals lost to the California Angels 5-1. California swept the Royals in the three-game series.
MONDAY
Russia accepted a United States proposal calling for both countries to reduce nuclear arsenals to 4,700 warheads each by the year 2000.
During a series of thunder-
During a series of thunderstorms that stretched across most of eastern Kansas, several tornadoes were sighted or touched the ground. Three were sighted in the Beloit area alone.
L. A. Police Chief Daryl Gates said he was only bluffing about not retiring at the end of June.
Bosnia's president appealed to President Bush to allow American military forces to bomb Serbian military installations.
The U.S. Supreme Court put off making a decision concerning an abortion clinic blockade dispute.
ON THE RECORD
■ $6.50 in cash was taken from a room in Oliver Hall on June 9. A money pouch and cash, valued together at $25.35, were taken the next day from the same room, KU police reported.
Two KU students were attacked and beaten about 2 a.m. Friday on the 1000 block of Missouri Street, KU police reported.
An answering machine, a wallet and cash, valued together at $470, were taken from a residence Saturday during a party on the 1200 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
A KU police car hit a pole Friday while leaving the law enforcement center garage, KU police reported.
Wednesday, June 17
New student orientation for liberal arts and sciences freshmen:
Check-in begins at 7:30 a.m. Registration required. Call 864-4270 for more information.
IBM compatible workshop:
"Introduction to Novell" begins at
9 a.m. at the Computer Center.
Call 864-0494 for more information.
CAMPUS CALENDAR
Macintosh workshop: "Introduction to QuarkXpress" begins at 1 p.m. at the Computer Center. Call 864-0494 for more information.
KU Academic Computing Services Multiuser Seminar: "Introduction to SPSS." A different seminar will be held at 2 p.m. each weekday through Monday at the Computer Center. Registration is required. Call 864-0100 for more information. Free.
Ed Lisk, president of the National Band Association, and John O'Reilly, composer/conductor, will guest-conduct during a Lawrence City Band outdoor concert at 8 p.m. in South Park, 11th and Massachusetts streets. Free.
Summer on the Hill: Baghdad Jones and Turquiose Soul at 9 p.m. Free.
Thursday, June 18
River City Six will perform from noon to 1 p.m. at 9th and Massachusetts streets as Lawrence Parks and Recreation's Brown Bag Concert Series continues. Free.
KU Academic Computing Services Multiuser Seminars "Introduction to Electronic Mail" in the Computer Center auditorium.
Friday, June 19
Unclassified employee orientation begins at 8:30 a.m. in 102 Carruth-O'Leary Hall. Call 864-4946 for more information.
■ KU Academic Computing Services Multiuser Seminars: "Introduction to Tetnet and FTP" in the personal computer lab at the Computer Center.
Midwestern Music Camp Jazz Ensemble concert at 7 p.m. in the
Swarthout Recital Hall. Free.
Saturdav. June 20
Monday, June 22
Tuesday, June 23
New student orientation for architecture and fine arts freshmen begins with check-in at 7:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union. Registration required. Call 864-4270 for more information.
KU Academic Computing Services Multinuser Seminars: "Introduction to Unix" in the personal computer lab at the Computer Center.
New student orientation for architecture and fine arts transfer students begins with check-in at 8 a.m. in the Kansas Union. Registration required Call 864-4270 for more information.
The Etc. Shop
Macintosh workshop: "Introduction to WordPerfect" at 9 a.m. at the Computer Center. Call 864-0494 for more information.
Ballet and Jazz dance workshop all day at 242 Robinson Center. Registration required. Call 864- 4264 for more information.
The Etc. Shop
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Student recital: Melissa Picchetta, organ, at 3:30 p.m. in Swartout Recital Hall. Free.
Sunday, June 21
Midwestern Music Camp concert featuring junior high bands, choirs and orchestra at 11 a.m. in Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Free.
New student orientation for engineering freshmen begins with check-in at 7:30 a.m. at the Kansas Union Registration required.Call 864-1274 for more information.
Crowsston Contraband will provide music for a dance sponsored by the Lawrence Barn Dance Association at 7:30 p.m.at the Lawrence Senior Center,745 Vermont.Lessons for beginning dancers will begin at 6:45 p.m. Admission $3.
Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Massachusetts
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Auditions for Midwestern Music Camp will begin at 3:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall.
Registration for Midwestern Music Camp senior high session will begin at 1:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June, 17, 1992
3
Bosnians at KU watch fighting on CNN
By Chris Moeser
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Every day Jasna Hadimejlil watches the soldiers destroy her country.
Every day she wonders whether her relatives are safe.
Every day the Serbian army fires rockets into the high-rise buildings of Sarajevo, Bosnia-Hercegovina's capital. Their MiGs drop bombs. They rain mortar fire down on civilians waiting in bread lines.
Her brother and sister are refugees after fleeing Sarajevo to escape the fighting. Her family home is probably destroyed.
"Our life is hell now," said Sakir Hadzimeliq, Jasna's husband. "Every day we expect someone will call and say someone we know is dead."
Jasna Hadzameljic is a visiting Fulbright professor of Serbo-Croatian in the department of Slavic languages and literatures. She came to the United States last fall.
Jasna and Sakir Hadzimejic have lost all contact with their relatives in the besieged city of Sarajevo. The phones were disconnected last week he said.
But they follow the war in the former Yugoslav republics of Serbia and Bosnia very closely by watching CNN and by monitoring an electronic mail network on their computer.
Jasna Hadzimejie tries to ignore the war in her home of Bosnia, which has killed more than 12,000 people since the nation declared its independence from Yugoslavia Feb. 29. It's the only way she can deal with the situation, she said.
"You can see who kills the children, who have no food, no weapons," Sakir said. "We have no rockets, no mortars. It is only the Serbs who have such weapons."
YUGOSLAVIA
The Serbian army is all that remains of the
Austria Hungary Romania Slovenia Zagreb Vukovar Lubljana Croatia Belgrade Bosnia-Herzegovina Serbia Bosnia Herzegovina Sarajevo Dubrovnik Kosovo Montenegro Adriatic Sea Italy Macedonia Albania Greece Source: The Great World Atlas Miles Mediterranean Sea
Yugoslav army, which was the largest standing army in Europe, second only to the former Soviet Union. The Serbs inherited almost all of the military hardware that existed in the Yugoslav army, and it remains one of the most highly trained armies in the world.
"It is not an ethnic war," Sakir Hadzimejilic said. "It is a war of monsters against innocent people and children."
The Hadzimejimeles blamed the bloodshed on Serbian President Slobodan Milosev, the former communist leader of Yugoslavia. They called Milosev a liar.
Milosevic has denied that Serbian troops are fighting in Bosnia. He has blamed the bloodshed on Moslems and Croats, religious and ethnic factions within Bosnia.
But Hadzimejic said the Serbian army was the only group that had weapons capable of inflicting the kind of damage that is occurring in Bosnia.
He said people in Bosnia did not try to collect armaments after declaring their independence, because they thought the United States and the nations of the European Community, EC, would help them achieve democracy.
"I am angry with the EC. How can they watch this genocide?" he said.
He also expressed anger at George Bush. In justifying Operation Desert Storm, Bush said the United States would oppose any unlawful aggression, especially where democracy was threatened.
"The people in Bosnia believed this," Hadz- imelic said.
Marc Greenberg, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literatures, also was critical of U.S. policy.
"I think American foreign policy has not been that forward-looking," Greenberg said. He added that the United States might have been able to do more to limit the violence in Yugoslavia.
He said that when the republic of Slovenia declared its independence from Yugoslavia last summer, U.S. Secretary of State James Baker immediately said that it was in America's interest to keep Yugoslavia united.
"That gave the Serbian government a carte blanche to do whatever they wanted to do," Greenberg said.
Shortly after that announcement, Serbian MiGs were in the air bombing Slovenia.
But Greenberg did not think intervention in the war would stop the bloodshed because the situation in the Balkans was both economically and ethnically motivated.
mer Yugoslav states were motivated initially by economic factors. The provinces in the North, such as Slovenia, Bosnia and Croatia, were wealthier than the Southern provinces of Serbia and Macedonia.
He said the secession movements in the for-
The economic divisions were complicated by ethnic rivalries among Serbs and Croats and Serbs and Albanians, another ethnic minority.
Greenberg said the Serbs had especially distrusted the Croats since Word War II, when the Croats控制 Yugoslavia under the fascist Ustasha government. The fascists murdered thousands of Serbs during the War.
Greenberg said the Serbs were attempting to annex all parts of Yugoslavia that have Serbian populations. Bosnia, for example, contains more than one million Serbs. He compared the situation to Germany in the 1930s under Hitler.
"Next the Serbs will attempt to drive the Albanians out of Kosovo," he said. That could result in genocide, he said.
Greenberg said he was convinced the Serbs had already committed genocide in parts of Bosnia and Croatia. There have been reports of mass shootings of civilians, he said.
Similarly, the Serbs attacked Dubrovnik, a city on the Adriatic Sea that is a cultural monument for Croats. The attack was motivated by ethnic hatred, he said.
He warned that the war could ignite a trans-Balkan war involving Greece, Turkey and Albania. All of those countries have historical and cultural ties to Yugoslavia.
She doesn't know when she will be able to return home.
But Jasma Hadzimeljic is not interested in talk of a bigger war. She wants only peace.
"I am lucky because I have a chance to start over," she said. "My friends had so many hopes and dreams. There is no way for them any more."
AROUND CAMPUS
Upward Bound assists high school students in preparing for college life
Members of the University of Kansas Task Force on Sexual Harassment have listened to the suggestions of the University community, which will help them produce a list of clearly defined sanctions defining procedures for handling issues of sexual harassment. The original list of 10 recommendations was distributed throughout the University community for input this spring. See story page 5.
Financial aid and tutoring provided by federal program
Senior citizens are returning to college at the University of Kansas and other colleges and universities across the country. Programs like the Bostonbased Elderhostel cater to these older students in 50 states and 40 countries. In the Elderhostel program, seniors live the part of university students.
Recycle your Daily Kansan
By James Baucom Special to the Kansan
Nearly 50 high school students of various backgrounds are getting a head start on life by participating in a six-week college preparatory program at the University of Kansas.
Upward Bound is a federally sponsored program designed to prepare economically disadvantaged students for post-secondary education by providing them with tutoring in academic subjects, exposure to cultural and social events, financial aid and academic counseling.
The program keeps students busy all year long, but during the past 13 summers, students from Kansas City, Topeka, and Lawrence have come to campus to improve their academic and study skills while experiencing a taste of college life.
The KU summer program began last week, but students have benefited from the program throughout the year.
"I brought my biology grade from an 'F' to an 'A'" said Hilari Hermann, a sophomore at Highland Park High School in Topeka. She said that she attributed her improvement to the help she received from the program's after-school study sessions at her
high school. All of the students attend such sessions, where KU students provide tutoring and assistance.
Erin Smith, a junior from F.L. Schlage High School in Kansas City, Kan., said, "The summer program puts me ahead six weeks."
Lamont Richardson, a senior from Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan., made similar comments.
"By being in this program...I do have an advantage," he said.
Richardson has an extra incentive to do well academically. He will receive a Kauffman scholarship, which will pay for four years of study at a Kansas college or university. Richardson said that he planned to come to KU in the fall and major in business administration/pharmaceutical sales.
Upward Bound director Ngoni
Kamatuka said the program helped to
make a difference. Kamatuka said he
had noticed not only an increase in
the number of students who applied
for the program, but also an increase
in the caliber of applicants.
Many of the students in the program attend KU after high school because they have been coming to KU for four summers, Kamatuka said. All the students who stay in the program graduate from high school, and 96 percent are accepted into post-secondary education institutions.
"Our students have a yearning to learn, so what we have been doing is trying to teach them what they want to learn," he said.
MINISTER BY MOORE
SCHOOL OF HIGH
SCHOOL OF HIGH SCHOOL
Veronica Shorter (left) and Lamont Richardson learn how to square dance at Robinson Gymnasium on Monday nights as part of the Upward Bound program.
Stephen Pingrv/KANSAN
Wedding bells ring hundreds of times a year at Danforth
By Julie Wasson
Kansan staff writer
When Ben and Penny Custer decided to get married, choosing where to hold the ceremony proved to be one of the biggest problems they faced.
"Ultimately, the decision came down to wanting to find a place where we could have the type of wedding we wanted," Penny Custer said. "We wanted to write our own ceremony, and a lot of churches we looked at balked at that.
"Also, Ben graduated from the University of Kansas, so we thought about Danforth Chapel."
When they learned that Danforth would allow the type of ceremony they wanted, the couple chose to wed there. On May 23 this year, they became one of more than 4000 couples who have been married in the chapel in the 46 years since its dedication on April 2, 1946.
Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the chapel's endowment stated that the building was to be used for individual meditation, weddings, funerals and bantisms.
She said the most common use of the chapel was as a meeting place for student organizations but that weddings were the second most popular event at the chapel.
Weddings take place in the chapel throughout the year, but Eversole said that May and June were the most popular months.
"A lot of students are married in the hall right after graduation," she said. "And June is traditionally a popular month."
The chapel housed 23 weddings in May, and 24 are scheduled for June. In the past year, about 165 weddings were held. Totals usually did not stay far from that number. Eversole said
"But we get requests daily," she said. Greg and Kay Sherman, both KU graduates, were married in the chapel in August 1990.
"We tried to keep the guest list short," Kay Sherman said. "But the chapel was still really crowded. It was great, though, because since we both graduated from KU, the chapel was very sentimental."
"I'm glad we chose Danfort," Greg Sherman said. "Most of our seemed were from KU, too, and it seemed like an appropriate place. It added to our memories of KU."
Most of the couples married at the chapel are or have been affiliated with the University, but Eversole said that some couples were community members who were not associated with KU.
"Anyone may use the chapel," Eversole said.
And couples should plan ahead when making reservations, she said
There is no fee to use the chapel, but Eversole said there were some trade-offs.
"There are no dressing rooms in the chapel," she said. "So you just have to get ready somewhere else. Most people don't seem to mind."
Although the chapel is small, Penny Custer said it provided the right atmosphere for her wedding.
"We had a small wedding, with family and close friends," she said. "The chapel was very sentimental. It's the perfect place."
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Wednesday, June 17. 1992
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FROM THE EDITORS
Supreme Court ruling restricts voting rights, eliminates competition
In an election year when an independent candidate has a real chance to ascend to the White House, it seems strange that the U.S. Supreme Court is removing some of our voting rights.
Last week, the court ruled 6-3 that Hawaii can bar its citizens from casting a write-in vote in any election. Justice Byron R. White wrote the majority opinion and basically invited other states to do the same. White wrote that in most situations a "prohibition on write-in voting will be presumptively valid."
This kind of decision will eliminate any serious competition for the two established parties.
Granted, in a presidential race, serious candidates such as Ross Perot will have the time, money and backing necessary to stage petition drives to place their names on ballots.
However, the problem occurs in local elections where a hopeful candidate might not have the time or money to organize a petition drive.
In essence, this means that the public is being limited as to whom they can vote for in any given election. If a worthy candidate is not a member of one of the two big parties or cannot afford the time and money to mount a petition drive, he or she, or rather the public, is simply out of
It seems that the right to vote in a democracy is based on the right to choose whomever the people want as their leader. It seems that our own Supreme Court is now threatening that right.
Maybe this doesn't matter to a nation where the overwhelming majority of the population can't even bother to get up from the television and vote. It is hoped that there are still some people who care enough about their rights and freedoms to challenge this ruling.
If nothing else, consider this. If the court feels it is permissible to restrict our voting rights, what will happen when they rule on cases of racial discrimination, religion, free speech and abortion?
Justin Knupp
Media should not waste good sense, money chasing cars in L.A.
As if the city of angels does not already have enough crime on its streets to fill the nation's newscasts for the next two decades. Los Angeles broadcast stations are spending a bundle to chase down more. Literally.
The broadcasters in Los Angeles are so overly impressed by their own "birds-eye view" coverage of the riots more than a month ago that they decided to keep sending choppers into the air for new stimulating coverage. Obviously, the newsworthiness of the events that they decide to cover is irrelevant And stimulating' Well, that must not be too important either.
When the L.A. traffic clears, or at least does not cause hourly clogs, there is some auto racing going on between the city's beloved police officers and some A1 User Jr. wannabes.
And Los Angeles viewers can witness these pointless "Dukes of Hazard" replays at home, from a birds-eye view as they happen. How stim ulating.
Granted, some of these car chases may result in an exciting, shoot out, death or drug bust, but probably not often enough to spend all that time covering every single one.
If watching the Indy 500 every Memorial Day just isn't satisfying enough to cure the Jonesses of speeding fanatics then maybe there should be more programs and documentaries about car racing—but to make it a nightly report is a waste of good technology, good money, good journalism and good sense. Jennifer Bach
TO THE EDITORS
Candidate Clinton offers loan solution to graduates
Justin Knupp's editorial "Finance issues need to be raised in elections," highlights the growing need for our elected officials to address the rising costs of higher education. Mr. Knupp states, "It seems Mr. Bush and Mr. Clinton have a little vague on the issue." (of student
This is only half correct. Mr. Clinton's Domestic GI Bill would allow graduates to pay back their student loans with a couple of years of community service. Not only would this remove the financial burden of loan-pay back from college graduates, it also would give them much needed work experience. I know there are a few unemployed grads who wish they could have had this opportunity.
Sculpture on the lawn of the Dallas Museum of Art.
This statue in front of Smith Hall is a representation of Moses praying to the burning bush. The statue is a model of the picture on the official seat of the University of Kansas, Designed by Eden Tefft, professor of Ementus, the statue took ten years to build and was dedicated in 1982.
Stephen Pingry / KANSAN
Learning a second language may prevent some embarrassing moments while traveling abroad
This summer term is the first semester haven't taken a foreign language class. I would like to have, but unfortunately, in the summer, you must actually go to the foreign country to do that. So, I'm taking a little break, or "one Pause machen" as we say in German.
I do think studying other languages is important. Everyone should have to learn at least one additional language. Even if for no other reason than not to sound like a total idiot when visiting other countries where the average ten-year old speaks better English than many Americans. About 11 years ago, I was living in Bayreuth, Germany, and the first McDonald's was opening in town. We Americans were so excited—a taste of "home" in our midst. For a week I practiced ordering Big Macs, Happy Meals and shakes in German. Opening day arrived. I took my note card to the counter and painstakingly recited my order in my best Deutsch, after which
Kate Kelley
Guest
Columnist
the German teenager replied in perfect English, "You want fries with that?"
German is a relatively easy language to learn if you disregard the grammar, which you do as soon as you're out of the classroom. For the most part, the words are spelled just like they sound and sound just like they're spelled. A great big long word can usually be broken down into many shorter words. And it will mean exactly what those short words mean when put together. For instance, the plastic wrap on the end of a shoelace might
be called a "shoelaceendplasticwran". It makes sense.
Other languages don't appear to be so easy to decipher—particularly French. Now, I don't speak a word of French, but I've been to France a few times. I think I may have figured out the system. You pronounce the first consonant of any word normally, say the following vowel(s) through your nose and then gag on the rest of the letters. While touring the Louvre (the famous museum in Paris, pronounced "Loove" by most ignorant Americans) the French tour guide kept saying it in such a way that I thought I might have to perform the Heimlich maneuver on her to get all the letters out of her throat. But at least she sounded French. One guy on our bus, whom we affectionately called "Jethro" kept saying, "Louver," as in, "We went to the Loover to see the spinks."
Even those who are very knowledgeable in other languages may have
a problem with accents. I will not judge anyone else, as I know at least two KU German teachers who could give you an earful about my own, but sometimes an accent can really change the context of what one is trying to say. A German tour guide, whom I'd heard speak fluent Italian and French, as well as English and German, was telling us a story about the tunnels in the Swiss Alps. She said the people used to go in them to "run from their enemas." It sort of gives a new twist to an armed forces movement.
With the world growing smaller and interaction with other countries more prevalent, it just makes sense to learn other languages. One day you may be in another country and believe me, if people start calling you "Jethro," it isn't a compliment.
Kate Kelley is a Ft. Leavenworth junior majoring in English
Eavesdropping on an imaginary conversation may reveal Bush's views on Panama, Yeltsin
I saw Chris Blattskey the other day. He said he had a friend of a friend, who had a friend, that had a friend that drove George Bush's limousine occasionally. The friend had overheard an interesting conversation.
It was on the way to the airport, just before the president left for Panama last week.
"Mr. President, we would like to remind you of the dangers in Panama at this time."
"Let's not worry about that now Joe, the people of Panama love us. Don't forget, we brought democracy back to them and put that Noriega fellow in jail. They won't hear from him again."
"But they did sir. He was quoted in the press."
"Don't remind me of the press."
"Mr. President, we have an update on the Yellins visit."
KANSAN STAFF
"Oh, Boris. How is the old fellow?"
"He's fine sir, Don't forget that he is trying to shore up some political support back in Russia."
KIM CLAXTON Business manager
Campus ... Gayle Otterberg
Acast. Assist ... Doug Flaherty
Copy Cheff ... Alex Bloemhof
Contributing ... David Mitchell
Photo ... Derek Nolan
Graphics ... Almee Brainard
"Don't worry, Carl, he will be like putty in our hands. Just think, two post-Cold War leaders, whose countries had sabers pointed at each other for so long, we be reaping the fruits of democracy together."
"Sir, Mr Yeltsin still disagrees with you over Russian nuclear weapons cuts."
JUSTIN KNUPP
Editor
"We have the latest on the Panama situation too, sir. There are many of us who would like you to consider a new location for your speech. In fact, maybe you should get sick at the last minute or something."
"Sir, you haven't decided what you will be serving Mr. Yeltsin for dinner."
Dan
Janousek
Guest
Columnist
"Did you bring the sunant oil? I hear the beaches are great there."
"No sir, but one Panamanian child has been reported killed in the violence."
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
"Anytime an American serviceman is hurt, that's bad. Killed is worse."
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Special Promotions ... Melissa Tarpin
Production mgr ... Brad Braun
Retail Support mgr ... Ashley Lingford
... Hilary Wilcox
Regional Support mgr ... Jane Henderson
Classified mgr ... Kate Burgess
"Tell him there is a good episode of "Married with Children" on tonight. I saw the previews while watching "In Living Color." That comedian does a great impression of me. The episode is about extramarital affairs or something, Tell Danny to watch it."
"Forget the dinner, Carl. Do you
JENNIFER BACH Managing editor
"Wait till he gets that $24 million in
aid that I am going to give him."
BRIAN WOLF Director of Client Services
Editors
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be the Kanassa reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanassa newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
Business Staff
have that Everclear for the fruit? That reminds me. How's Danny doing? Is he holding the course after that "Murphy Brown" incident?"
"He wants to know what to do next, sir."
"Well you just call that new president down there, Endara, or whatever his name is, and tell him to get some protection for me. I don't need demonstrators in an election year. And while you're on the phone, see if you can raise Boris. Ask him if he can come a day or two early."
"I'm not going to run and hide from some small isolated group. It wouldn't be prudent."
"Do you think I really need this?"
"Better to be safe than sorry, sir."
"Has to be that way sir. Tear gas can seen into the finest cracks."
DanJanousek is a senior majoring in journalism.
"Gas mask! But...umph."
"We'd like to put this gas mask on you for size."
"Sir, we'd like you to take some pre-cautions before you go."
"It's a little tight."
"Press the speaker button sir."
"How does it fit?" "take care of yourself."
"ts lmp mu bu dub foo."
Loco Locals
---
.
I'll just stick with the original image.
SOMEONE IS CUTTING THEM OFF.
MICHAUD 1992
KRISS, WE'VE BEEN STARTING
IN THIS FIELD TWENTY
MINUTES. IT'S GETTING DARK,
AND I DON'T KNOW WHAT
you're LOOKING
by Tom Michaud
WAIT!
---
STAR LIGHT, STAR BRIGHT...
FIRST STAR I SEE TONIGHT...
I WISH I MAY... I WISH I
MIGHT... GIVE ME THIS WISH-
A WISH BY THE WAY. I VE
ASKED FOR A HUNDRED
TIMES...
IT'S A
PEANUT KISS
}
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 17, 1992
5
Campus input to be incorporated in KU sexual harassment policies
By Ana Kostick
Kansan staff writer
This summer, members of the KU Task Force on Sexual Harassment will move closer to updating the University's sexual harassment grievance policies.
Sandra Wick, assistant director of the College Honors Program, heads the task force. She said the group would meet throughout the summer to produce a list of specific guidelines based on its preliminary recommendations and input from members of the University of Kansas community.
The original recommendations included an extended definition of sexual harassment with examples of behavior that would be identified as sexual harassment. They also proposed extending the time limit of reporting a complaint of sexual
harassment from 180 days to one year from the date of the incident.
A deadline has not been set, Wick said, but the committee will continue to meet until it completes the list of final recommendations.
The 10-member committee, including KU faculty, staff and students, was appointed in January by Del Shankel, then interim executive vice chancellor, to investigate University sexual harassment policies.
The policies had not been updated or reviewed since 1979 and needed improvement. Wick said.
A former law student in November filed a complaint with the Department of Education about the way the University handled her complaint of sexual harassment.
The committee met throughout the spring semester, reviewing the faculty code of conduct and preparing 10
recommendations that were distributed in the spring to the University community for further input.
The committee received 10 responses—more feedback than the committee expected, Wick said. Some of the responses came from Student Senate, faculty governance, the Office of Affirmative Action, University Ombudsman Robert Shelton, two KU students and an anonymous source.
"We want to make sure we didn't miss anything." Wick said. "The committee wanted help before putting the final stamp on it."
Any Terstierp, Champaign, Ill., graduate student and committee member, said each member brought a different perspective to the issues involved and that the committee would follow through with its recommendations until they, were implemented.
Although the committee worked with a difficult issue, Terstierp said, serving on the committee was a fascinating and educational experience.
"I've become more aware that there are different perceptions of sexual harassment", she said.. "Something that I would look past could really offend someone else."
Terstriep said the committee wanted the sanctions implemented so that faculty, staff and students who felt that they had been harassed would feel more comfortable pursuing the issue. She said that the University was in a difficult position because it had to protect both sides but that education on sexual harassment would help solve the problem.
"People aren't aware what they say and do is offensive," Terstirp said. "The real push should be toward education."
funding to pay for utilities, feed, and bedding." Schwarting said. "But now that we're a private organization, our corporate sponsorship has actually increased."
Some critics wonder whether Wild Care Inc. will offer adequate veterinary care now that it is no longer a part of KU's Animal Care Unit. But Schwarting said veterinary care increased.
"At the University, we only had access to one or two vets. Now, we have a network of volunteer veterinarians from across the Lawrence area offering their time and service."
Mark Marks, of Marks Veterinary Hospital in Lawrence, said he regularly referred people to Wild Care.
["Wild Care] is the first link in the triage of any injured wild animal," said Marks. "Any wild animal goes to Wildcare first."
Continued from Page 1.
Other Wild Care associates seem equally optimistic despite the uncertainty of becoming independent.
"We're losing the University's money," said Anne Deegan-Chandler, manager of the Sunflower Farm and volunteer coordinator. "But we are a civil service. We need to rely on community support."
Other volunteers agree that the change will be for the best.
"I think the animals like being outside more," said Judith Ende, volunteer, recalling that animals at Malott stayed inside most of the time.
Sue Ask another volunteer agreed.
"The farm is beautiful. This is all about wildlife, and we get a chance to be outside," she said.
Even though volunteers now must drive 15 minutes to reach Wild Care InC., support seems better than ever, said Schwarting, who has a volunteer work force of about 60.
Even the animals seem to be welcoming Wild Care Inc. to the new
"A swallow has already moved into the new building," Deegan-Chandler said. "It's a great omen."
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A self-taught artist, Joe Tomelleri prides himself on detail and technical accuracy.
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Wednesday, June 17, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Thursday, June 18, 1992, Campanile Hill - 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
KU Concessions will have a BBQ dinner special at the Concert!
820-822 Mass.
New year-round trails attract walkers for points, pleasure
The two trails, each a 6.2-mile trail,
begin and end at the Eldridge Hotel,
701 Massachussets St., said Kathy
Fosse, superintendent of recreation
of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
Volkswalking is sponsored through the American Volkssport Association. Walkers may use the year-round trails anytime, or they may participate in a special one-day walk with others. They can choose to pay a fee and earn points or patches for their mileage, or they can walk for free.
People who pay $1.50 a walk get their American Volkssport Associa-
Taking a 10-kilometer walk might not appeal to everyone, but there are those who take walking seriously. So seriously, in fact, that in May two year-round Volkssport walking trails were established in Lawrence
"It is a people's walk," Fode said. "It is a non-competitive, leisurely walk along a 6.2-mile, 10-kilometer path. Participants can walk, jog, take their families."
Since May, the permanent walk has attracted 130 people, said Stacy Kunstel, front desk clerk at the Eldridge Hotel.
Next January the Lawrence trails will be slightly changed, Fode said. She also said that the Lawrence walking fans were planning to work with groups in Lenexa, Leavenworth and Topeka to develop commemorative patches for each group depicting sections of the Santa Fe Trail found in each area. As an added bonus for the walker, the patches would then fit together like puzzle pieces and could be mounted and
By Becky Lucas
Kansan Staff Writer
The parks department began developing the year-round trails last fall but had to wait to open them until May, after the national organization gave its approval.
There is no Volksst sport club in Lawrence now, but Fode said she thought there was enough interest to start a group. Two nearby clubs are the Topeka Sodstompers and a Lenexa group.
"People are really into this. They sew on all of their patches, and they wear them while they are on walks," Fode said.
One of the routes directs the walkers through west Lawrence and the University of Kansas campus. The other path is on the levy.
displayed, Fode said.
Union
THE ASSOCIATION University Residence Hall
In addition to showing off their accomplishments, the walkers often socialize with one another, Kunstel said. They also keep in touch or visit whenever they participate in other Volkswalls.
Stacy Kunstel
Desk Clerk at the Dilridge Hotel in downtown Lawrence.
tion books stamped for the distance.
For $5 a walk, they can earn a patch of the Eldridge Hotel. And for free,
they can simply enjoy the surroundings.
"People have driven over from St.Louis for the walk."
"We see all kinds of people," Kunstel said. "We see a lot of couples. People have driven over from St. Louis for the walk. We've even had people on the walk from California and Oklahoma."
"They get a real sense that they are doing something to support the community," she said.
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Federal grand jury indicts Weinberger on five felony counts in Contra inquiry
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger was indicted yesterday on felony charges of perjury and obstruction of the congressional investigation into the Iran-Contra affair.
Weinberger is the most senior Reagan administration official to be charged in the arms-for-hostages affair — an initiative he repeatedly said he opposed.
At a news conference at his attorney's Washington office, Weinberger said, "Tan innocent and will be convicted."
A federal grand jury charged Weinberger with two counts each of perjury and false statements and one count of obstructing the congressional Iran-Contra committees.
The former defense secretary was charged with lying to Congress about his knowledge of arms sales to Iran and Saudi Arabian contributions to the Nicaraguan Contras.
He was also accused of concealing extensive personal notes on high-level Reagan administration discussions about the arms sales and aid to the Contras. Weinberger headed the Department of Defense from 1981 to 1987.
The indictment comes 5 L2 years into an independent counsel's investigation that has led to eight guilty pleas by former Reagan administration officials and others.
But the two most high-profile defendants — former National Security Advisor John Poindexter and his aide, Oliver North — saw their convictions thrown out because they were ruled to have been tainted by testimony the two had given Congress under grants of immunity.
Sources knowledgeable about the investigation said earlier this spring that independent counsel Lawrence Walsh's investigation was concentrating on former President Reagan's possible role in an Iran-Contra cover-up.
However, the sources said lawyers for Weinberger and former Secretary of State George Shultz told prosecutors their clients had no information suggesting a cover-up involving Reagan or anyone else.
Prosecutor Craig Gillen told reporters yesterday, "I don't want to say that we are trying to get closer to President Reagan. That's not what this indictment is about.
"Our investigation has been significantly narrowed by the events today. I didn't say that it's pointing in any direction or focusing on anyone."
At his news conference, Weinberger said, "At no time did I ever knowingly misrepresent the facts or deceive Congress or anyone else.
"I was not willing to accept an offer by the Office of Independent Counsel to plead to a misdemeanor offense of which I was not guilty, nor was I willing to give them statements which were not true about myself or others."
He would not elaborate on that last point.
Weinberger characterized the indictment as unfair and unjust and said "a terrible injustice has been done to my family and to me."
In a statement released in California, Reagan said, "Caspar Weinberger has served his state and his country honorably and with great distinction for more than a quarter of a century. I know him to be a man of the highest integrity and am confident he will be fully vindicated of the charges against him."
Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas said that Weinberger had been targeted because of
"Everyone in this town knows that Mr Weinberger was one of the Reagan administration's most vocal opponents of Iran-Contra and that he played no role in its advancement." Dole said.
"Still, Mr. Walsh and his highly paid assassins saw Mr. Weinberger as a way to get at their ultimate target — President Reagan. They threatened Mr. Weinberger that unless he testified that President Reagan violated the law, they would see that he was indicted. To his credit, Mr. Weinberger refused to buckle under this blackmail."
Each count against Weinberger carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and $250,000 in fines upon conviction.
In the indictment, Weinberger told prosecutors he usually did not take notes on his meetings with the president or other high-ranking officials. But Gillen said prosecutors discovered 1,700 pages of Weinberger's notes from 1985 and 1986 in the Library of Congress.
The indictment states that those notes indicate that in November 1985 — before the CIA-assisted shipment of 18 Hawk anti-aircraft missiles to Iran
— National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane told Weinberg that Reagan had authorized the shipment through Israel to gain the release of U.S. hostages.
In July 1987 Weinberger testified before a Senate committee that he did not have advance knowledge of the shipment. A few days after the arms shipment, Weinberger told Reagan that such arms shipments were illegal, the indictment stated.
The indictment also charged Weinberger with falsely telling a House panel that he was not aware of payments to the Contras by Saudi Arabia. It said he had been told of the payments in March 1985 by Gen. John W. Vessey, who headed the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Weinberger also was accused of lying when he told congressional Iran-Contra committees in July 1987 that he did not know of an Israeli request to replenish stocks of Israeli weapons that had been sent to Iran.
The statue of limitations on two of the counts would have run out today. Gillen noted. If prosecutors had had access to Weinberger's notes earlier, the investigation would have proceeded more quickly he said.
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Ekvall said he was spending the weekend with Solis because he believed Solis had changed his
Ekvall in the base of neck just left of the spine while Ekvall sleet at Sol's augment
Deputy District Attorney F. Robert Hammes said SoliLoaded a crossbow with a short arrow and shot
The Associated Press
"He had some obsession with me," Ekvall said. "He started calling my family. If he couldn't find me, he would just kind of go mad. I think he lost touch and finally snapped."
He no longer feels any pain. Ekvall said Wednesday, as he joked about the remarks several friends have made since the shooting. One suggested he visit Lake Arrowhead near San Bernardino.
Doctors are astounded by Ekvall's recovery since June 8, when he was admitted to the hospital in critical condition
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SAN DIEGO — A man who survived being shot in the head with an arrow said Thursday that his former live-in boyfriend accused in the case tried for months to rekindle their romance before attacking him with a crossbow.
Arthur Ekvall, 29, said his former roommate, 25-year-old Jesse Solis, began following him when Ekvall decided in December to move out of the apartment they had shared for six months.
The arrow traveled through Ekvall's head and leded in his forehead over his left eye.
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Solis pleaded innocent last Wednesday to attempted murder and auto theft. Bail was set at $250,000, and a preliminary hearing was scheduled for June 23. If convicted, Solis faces a maximum sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole.
Police have characterized the shooting of June 8 as stemming from a long-brewing lovers' quarrel between the two men. Sols told police he acted in a trivial struggle, said Bill Robinson, police representative.
Elkvall told police he awoke with a piercing pain in his head and saw his attacker reloading a crossbrow. He said he disarmed the assailant, who ran from the apartment and fled in Ekvall's pickup. Solis was arrested two hours later in suburban El Cajon, Calif.
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"Now I think he planned the whole thing," said Ekvall, a parking lot attendant. "When I lived with him, I don't remember him having a crossbow."
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Concert Series
Artur Pizarro, Plano
8:00 p.m., Tuesday, November 17, 1992
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
2
The National Tour of Porgy & Bess 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 9, 1993 Centerpea Performing Arts Toolpe
Canadian Brass
8:00 p.m., Tuesday, April 13, 1993
Topeka Performing Arts Center
BalletMet with Cynthia Gregory 8:00 p.m., Thursday, March 11, 1993 Topeka Performing Arts Center
in Rigololetto
7:00 p.m., Sunday, October 25, 1992
Topeka Performing Arts Center
Chamber Music Series
American Chamber Players
3:30 p.m., Sunday, October 4, 1992
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Juilliard String Quartet
3:30 p.m. Sunday, September 13, 1992
Craft-Prey Theater
Peter Serkin, piano, and
Pamela Frank, violin
3:30 p.m., Sunday, March 7, 1993
Crafton-Prey Theater
New World String Quartet with Phyllis Pancella, Mozzano-Speranza 8:00 p.m., Friday, April 2. 1993 Crafton-Prey Theatre
The Waverly Consort
8:00 p.m., Thursday, November 5, 1992
Plymouth Congregational Church
New Directions Series
Culture Clash
Latino Comedy Trio
8:00 p.m., Thursday, October 1, 1992
Liberty Hall
"The Last Sansei Story"
An Experimental Theatre Pieces
by Roger Shimomura
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 20, 1993
Haskell Auditorium
"The Mysteries and What's So Funny?"
Musto by Philip Glass
Visual Design by Red Grooms
Written and Directed by David Gordon
8:00 p. m., Saturday, October 31, 1992
Crafton-Prayer Theatre
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Sweet Honey in the Rock
A Capella Ensemble
8:00 p.m., Sunday, January 31, 1993
Plymouth Congregational Church
This week has been a busy, snowy season and also an unusual one. Minnie's Halloween party was held on Wednesday, October 25 at 9 p.m. Minnie's Halloween Party will be held on Thursday, November 1 at 6 p.m. Minnie's Halloween Party will be held on Friday, November 2 at 6 p.m.
Announcing the 1992-93 University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
concert, chamber music and new directions series seasons
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Wednesday, June 17, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PLEASE PARK ON THE ROUTE BELOW
Daron J Bennett/KANSAN
(Above) Rodney Price, director of the KU Severe Storm Intercept Project, stands below a large formation of mammatus clouds. (Right) Rick Katztey, KU graduate, looks for signs of possible severe weather on a computer model of Kansas weather patterns.
Tornadoes storm Kansas
KU weather watchers track havoc-wreaking tornadoes
By Doug Hesse
Kansan Staff Photographer
What was considered a bad year for severe storms turned into a bumper crop of tornadoes.
Monday in north central Kansas the National Weather Service reported an estimated 20 tornadoes sighted.
The KU Weather Service was host to a crew from The Weather Channel, which came to the University of Kansas for storm footage, and to interview the KU Severe Storms Intercept Team. The team uses tape recorders to log information on storm formation, dew point and tornado activity. This information aids the team's research of severe storms.
Rodney Price, who heads the team, said it had been monitoring the storms with satellites and forecasting models, and team mem-
burs were prepared to gather field data. Andy Kula, Leawood senior, was one of 12 from KU who tracked the tornadoes in and around Beiloft. The team spotted three tornadoes Monday, the KU Weather Service said.
Radio reports help the team find tornadoes. Knowledge of severe storms is also important, said Joe Heim, Clarence, N.Y., graduate student in atmospheric sciences.
Once the storm is found, the team drives around it to approach it from a safe direction. Kula said. Escape routes always are mapped to avoid getting trapped by the tornado.
Kula, Heim and team member Jim Philips,
net mark Hewitt, a Beloit farmer, as they
spotted a tornado about four miles south of
Beloit. Hewitt later would learn that the shed
that stored his combines had been destroyed
by that tornado, costing him $500,000.
He said his combines were not insured. Hewitt and other farmers also were worried about their wheat crops, which were about ready to harvest but probably destroyed.
Hewitt said that this year he had about $3 million invested in wheat.
Crews from Oklahoma University, KU, Texas, and elsewhere in Kansas were intrigued by the storm's intensity and the length of its inflow.
Inflows are winds that fuel storms in the case, they were estimated at hurricane force. During Monday's storms, the inflow is strong and property damage, which is rule, Kula said.
The anvil cloud, which leads the storm,
stretched for about 200 miles. Phillips said.
The severe storms team was formed in 1990 out of the KU Weather Service and the meteorology department.
QUANTUM
Driving on interstate 70 toward Salina, Rodney Price monitors weather channels for the latest news on thunderstorm and tornado warnings and watches in the area.
Daron J. Bennett/KANSAN
4
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Elements of a tornado
Thunderhead Wall cloud (bottom layer of thunderhead)
Updrafts Funnel cloud
Violent updrafts of humid air in a thunderstorm set the stage for a tornado.
Dust and debris are carried up on the outside of the funnel
Spiraling winds
Sean Tevis / Kansan
Source: AP
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Wednesday, June 17, 1992
Perot rides wave of discontent
By Chris Moeser
Kansan staff writer
People are angry, and they are not going to take it any more.
That's the message messages are sending to politicians this fall, and local leaders.
Steve Klaus, who headed the Douglas County petition drive to get Ross Perot on the Kansas ballot, said he would not have dreamed of supporting another candidate.
Klaus collected more than 4,200 signatures in the county for Perot. The state campaign totaled more than 50,000.
"It's time for a change," Klaus said. "I've never been involved in politics before, but it's time for every man, woman and child to be involved. It's a mess."
Klaus predicted that the election turnout in November would be the biggest ever because people are so angry at the system.
"The interests of the people and the country are not being served because of political bickering," he said, echoing a crucial issue in the fall cannage.
Klaus said many of his more than 70 volunteers had never been politically active. The biggest challenge the Perot campaign faces is registering potential voters who have not voted in the past because they were angry at the system.
Klaus said that local efforts for voter registration would kick off after Perot officially announced his candidacy, which is expected to happen June 27. Perot has purchased television time
on the three major networks that night.
Lon Sandborn, Kansas media relations director for the Perot campaign, said he joined the campaign because he was tired of special interest groups dominating politics.
"I've been a Republican all my life, and I was never involved in politics until the country started to stink, and that's why I'm here," he said. "We need to rebuild America."
Sandborn said recent criticism of Perot for his failure to be specific on issues such as the deficit did not bother him.
"It's always nice to know what their stand on the issues is, but it's even more important to know what kind of people they are," he said.
He added that Perot probably would get more specific as the campaign progressed.
Allan Cigler, professor of government, said Perot's current popularity was a direct result of voter discontent with business-as-usual politics.
"Perot is popular because he is not Bush, and he is not Clinton," he said. "We live in a period where the presidency is a non-partisan affair."
Russell Getter, associate professor of government, agreed that Perot's ability to appear non-partisan was helping him in the polls.
"What people want public officials to do is to act in the interests of the nation instead of a political party." Getter said. "Bush, Clinton and Quayle haven't gotten it through their heads that's what people want."
Here's a look at how the candidates are faring across the nation in Electoral College votes. If no candidate receives the 270 vote majority, the House of Representatives will decide the outcome of the race.
Getter said Perot so far had claimed the political center, which had
Wash.
Mont.
N.D. Minn.
Wis. Mich.
N.Y.
Ore.
Idaho
S.D.
Wyo.
Iowa
Pa.
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
Kan.
Mo.
Ohio
W. Va.
N.J.
Del.
Md.
Calif.
Ariz.
N.M.
Okla.
Ark.
Miss.
Ala.
Ga.
Alaska
Hawaii
* Washington D.C., 3 electoral votes, tallied in Clinton total
States(14) where Perot is leading
-175 electoral votes
States(10) where Clinton is leading
-89 electoral votes*
States(15) where Bush is leading
-114 electoral votes
Swing states(11)
-160 electoral votes
Perot making headway in '92 race
Source: The Perot Petition Committee Dallas, Texas Monthly Magazine
enabled him to take voters away from both parties. These voters include members of the Reagan coalitions of 1980 and 1984. Many of the "Reagan Democrats," conservative blue-collar party members who voted for Reagan, are supporting Perot.
Aimee Brainard/Kansan
"There is a perception out there among people in both parties who think the locus of the respective parties has gone too far to the right or too far to the left," he said. "Thus, Ross Perot has avoided both of those polar extremes."
'92 vote could turn crazy Three-way race might throw vote to House
By Chris Moeser
Kansan staff writer
It's a strange year when people are talking about presidential politics as if it were a spectator sport.
"This year those scenarios are much closer to being real," said Burdett Loomis, professor of political science.
The dynamics of the three-way presidential race among George Bush, Bill Clinton and Ross Perot are generating a number of outlandish scenarios in which no candidate gets the 270 electoral votes needed to win the election outright.
When voters vote for a candidate, they are actually choosing electors to cast a ballot for them. The electors
If no candidate could obtain 270 electoral votes Nov. 3, the next crucial date in determining the outcome of the election would be Dec. 14, when the Electoral College meets. Loomis said.
are not bound by the popular vote, although historically they follow it. After the election, each candidate selects loyal followers as electors.
But many people wonder what will happen this year.
"I could see two of the three candidates cutting some kind of a deal, most likely Perot and the Democrats making a deal against the
Loomis said this kind of deal was struck in the election of 1876, handing Republican Rutherford B. Hayes the presidency.
If no deal were made, the newly elected House of Representatives would select the president from the top three finishers, and the Senate would select the vice president from the top two finishers. This scenario could lead to a president and vice president of different parties.
In the House, each state gets one vote, which is determined by the state's delegation.
Russell Getter, KU associate professor of political science, said each representative would be torn by a number of allegiances in deciding for whom to vote.
"You can vote with your district, the state, or the nation as a whole." Getter said. "To vote with your party would be taking one's political career in one's hands. I can't imagine that anyone would do that."
Getter said it might be extremely difficult for a candidate to be a majority of 26 votes in the House because of the partisan divisions in the state delegations.
If the president has not been selected by Jan. 20, the vice president chosen by the Senate would become president. If the Senate failed to select a vice president by that date, the speaker of the house would become president.
It sounds crazy, but it could happen.
KU holds workshop for minority students entering workforce
By Carmen Phelps
Special to the Kansan
By the year 2000, minorities in the work force will gain positions of leadership over the current majority and will need to be prepared, experts told a group of minority students Monday.
Guest speakers of the Project Outreach Program discussed self-preparation, cultural diversity and peer pressure resistance with minority students from Lawrence public schools.
The Office of Minority Affairs at the University of Kansas sponsored the two-week program, which ends today.
Monday's lecture was given by employees of the Menninger Institute in Topeka.
Tim McManus, director of employee relations at the institute, told the stu-
deeds that work-force literacy was becoming increasingly necessary for those interested in pursuing careers.
"Knowledge is power. Empower yourself, and you can do anything." McManus sad. "There are great opportunities for you if you meet them."
Sherri Herald, employment interviewer at Menninger, said that because an increasing number of minorities would be entering the work force in the future, they would have more influence in decision-making.
"Learn about your own culture and what it has contributed to society, and learn about other people's cultures," Herald said. "Our society is becoming more and more complex, so one needs to be prepared when entering the work force."
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Wednesday, June 17, 1992
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Peeler gets probation
The Associated Press
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Anthony Peeler pearl-bargained himself out of a jail sentence Monday and now awaits his fate in next week's NBA draft, where he is projected as a first-round choice.
Peeler, the former Missouri basketball star, received five years probation after pleading guilty to a felony weapons charge and two related misdemeanors.
The pleas will keep Peeler from being tried for allegedly attacking a woman last month in her Columbia, Mo., apartment and pointing a gun at her head.
"He won't spend any time in jail," assistant prosecutor Wynes said.
Wynes said prosecutors agreed to
the plea bargain because the victim asked them to, "She was tired of being in the spotlight," he said.
The NBA said Tuesday that Peele, the Big Eight Conference player of the year, still was eligible for the June 24 draft.
The 22-year-old Peeler made a deal with prosecutors to plead guilty to the lelony charge of possession of a concealed semiautomatic pistol. He got five years of supervised probation for the weapon charge.
Two other felony charges — unlawful restraint and unlawful use of a weapon — were reduced to misdemeanors. He got a suspended 30-day sentence in the Boone County jail for each of the misdemeanor charges plus two years of supervised probation on each charge.
The probations are to run at the same time, meaning Peeler faces five years of supervised probation — the maximum allowed under Missouri law.
Peeler had no previous criminal record. He had been free on $16,000 bond since his arrest.
Wynes said Peeler would be allowed to travel if he got a job. Other terms of the probation require Peeler to not have any contact with his accuser and undergo domestic abuse counseling.
Peeler earlier had entered innocent pleas to the charges. The felony charge carried a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Each misdemeanor charge carried penalties of up to a year in jail and fines of $1,000.
Women's crew rows to silver in'92 National Collegiate Championships
By Ana Kostick
By Ana Kostick
Kansan staff writer
KU women's crew earned a silver medal in the 1992 National Collegiate Championships Saturday, two seconds behind Princeton University.
"This is the cream of the crop," said KU Crew coach Rob Catloth. "This makes us the second fastest collegiate four in the country."
the women competed against Princeton, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Long Beach State in the championships. Catloth attributed the low number of entries to the late date of the competition. Kansas' second-place time was 7 minutes, 32.73 seconds on the 2,000-meter course. They finished nine seconds ahead of third place Wisconsin.
"It was a real competitive race," Cat- looth said. "Going into the last 400 meters, Princeton had four or five seats on us. They are known for their sprints, but we made a good go of it."
Kansas finished 20 seconds faster than last year's winning team.
"We were so excited, we raced it just like we wanted to," said team captain Chris
Coxsain Julie Lawlor said that before the race Saturday, Kansas was written off by many teams. However, the strong showing on Saturday proved the team had become a definite contender.
Lawlor said the key to the race was keeping the women relaxed.
"We knew we were fast, but KU hadn't been able to race with the other teams," she said.
The women's four was the only Kansas team to compete at nationalals
Catloth said the next step was to develop depth. He said that the women had the technical skills and the athletes to compete at the national level but that his goal was to be a stronger competitor in the eight-member teams with the best crews in the country.
"Next year we're shooting to win the Midwest Championship in the eights," Catloth said. "That will give us an automatic place in the eights at nationals."
KU Crew placed seventh out of 15 for the overall-team trophy. Harvard University won the men's eight, Penn State University won the men's four and Boston University the women's eight.
1985
Jason Hyman/ Special to the Kansas
JSwait:
Taking a break from his tennis game, KU tennis player. Cuong Nguyen, sits under the shade of his soaking towel.
Nguyen was practicing his tennis game yesterday afternoon at the Robinson tennis courts. Nguyen took a quick break
from the heat shortly after he began playing.
No sweat!
The legendary U.S. Open golf championship lures best of the best
Kansas golfer hits road to his first professional tournament By Anne Grego
By Anne Grego
Kansan Staff Writer
Matt Gogel, Kansas golfer, will play in his first professional event tomorrow—the U.S. Open Championship.
The Tulsa, Olda, sophomore, who won the 1991 Big Eight Conference Championship as a freshman, qualified for the Open last week after winning at a playoff at the regional qualifying round in Germantown, Tenn.
The U.S. Open begins tomorrow and runs through June 21. The tournament will be held this year at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, Calif.
Gogel knows his chances among some of the world's best golfers.
"I just want to plow well." Gogel said.
At the local qualifier in Kansas City, Mo., Gogel competed against 118 golfers for 10 spots to go to the regional qualifier. To be eligible for a local qualifier, a golfer must have a handicap of 2 or less.
To get to the Open, Gogel had to go through the same qualifying system that eliminated some established professionals, such as long-time pro Greg Norman.
Gogel faced 77 competitors for the 25 spots at the regional qualifier in Germantown, Tenn.
He shot a 69-71 -140 at Germantown, and was forced into a playoff, where he tied with nine other players vying for the remaining four spots in the Open.
However, for Gogel, the U.S. Open comes after a disappointing year, having finished twelfth in the Big Eight tournament this year.
"I didn't do as well, but I felt I played well," Gogel said. Gogel posted a 75.7 average this year compared with last year's average of 75.56.
Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall said Gogel learned more this year and had to deal with more pressure.
"He had some tough times this year," Randall said. "He's having a lot of success at an early age."
A
"All I can ask of myself is to relax and play well," Gogel said.
Pressure is what Gogel, 21, will face at the Open.
Daron J/ Bennett / KANSAM
Pro golfers deal with success in different ways The Associated Press
Matt Gogel, Tulsa, Oklahoma, sophomore, practices with his five iron at the Alvamar Driving Range before leaving for the U.S. Open Championship in Pebble Beach, Calif. The championship tournament is Gogel's first professional game.
Fame and fortune; celebrity and security.
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — The rewards on the pro golf tour are enormous.
For those players who reach the top level of world golf, income is computed in 7-figure increments, and lifetime financial security is all but a foregone conclusion.
In a game searching for identi-
fitable, enduring heroes, a player who
can kill himself — ever so slightly
— above the masses suddenly is besieged by agents and offers, pleas and demands.
It is exciting and lucrative
"It where we all trying to get to, Davis Love III said before a practice session for the 1992 U.S. Open. "Winning tournaments, winning majors, that's what we all want to do."
But there's a down side to it. While the player's picture adorns the covers of national magazines, and he's sought by the networks, his time suddenly is not his own.
Pressures he never considered come to bear.
He is hounded for interviews and appearances. His every move, comment and action is observed and criticized.
Some players handle it. Some even welcome it. Some do not.
Arnold Palmer handled it. The
spotlight was his native land. He gloried in it. Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson recognized the value and importance of the press and public attention and learned to handle it. Their success was a part of their greatness.
Lee Trevino made an accommodation with celebrity.
"When I'm on the golf course, I'm theirs." Trevino said. "But, hey, baby, when I’m off the golf course, my time is mine."
Away from the course, he insulated himself from the outside pressures and secluded himself in his hotel room; dining from the room service menu for days on end, rarely receiving or returning calls
Others sought to take advantage of their instant celebrity in around-the-world pursuit of guarantees — and suffered burn-out.
Curtis Strange won consecutive U.S. Opens in 1988-89 — and hasn't won since.
Pagine Stewart scored his second major championship victory a year ago at Hazeltime. He immediately went into a decline.
"When we achieve some success, we say, I've got to get better," Stewart recalled. "So I went to some people whose opinions I respect, and they told me to do some things, gave me some advice. I tried to do it. It didn't work for me."
Only in the last few weeks has he come out of it.
Ian Baker-Finch has the finest tournament of his career in the 1991 British Open. He, too, has been on a slide since scoring only
two top-10 finishes in the months since his victory.
John Daly's saga has been well documented since his emergence as a folk hero in last year's PGA.
It has been a chronicle of personal problems, paternity and palimony suits filed and withdrawn, a romance that went bust but developed into marriage.
Except for his vast distance off the tee, his game has shown only fleeing glimpses of the promise shown at Crooked Stick.
And then there's Fred Couples easy-going Freddie.
He scaled golf's heights with his victory at Augusta, Ga., earlier this year, capping an incredible success string that produced six victories and more than $2.5 million in worldwide earnings in 10 months.
It was the stuff of legends. And it put Couples in a funk.
He hasn't finished higher than 22nd since and missed the cut in half the tournaments he played.
"Everybody wants a piece of you," Couples said, harried and harassed by the constant attention.
"I got tired, and I got tired of golf."
For three weeks, Couples went into seclusion, got some rest and came back. But his game didn't come with him. He mussed the cut in his last start.
"All I want to do is play golf and hang out with my buddies," he said. But Couples and Love, two of the leading contenders going into the Thursday start of the American national championship, have discovered that success will not allow them that luxury.
BASKETBALL NOTES Kansan staff report
■ Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams will assist Coach George Raveling of the University of Southern California. Raveling will guide a squad of eight collegiate players next week against the U.S. Olympic team in preparation for the summer games.
The collegiate team, which includes Bobby Hurley of Duke and Eric Montross of North
Carolina, will play a scrimmage against the Olympic team June 22-26.
Kansas City runs over Twins with a 7-5 victory and consecutive homers from McFarlane and McRae
Junior Richard Scott underwent surgery on his left fibula last week to repair a broken bone. Scott will be on crutches for a few weeks but is expected to be able to resume full activity in August.
■ Recruiting analyst Bob Gibbons has ranked the Kansas recruiting class 11th in the nation. Big Eight Conference rival Nebraska was ranked 10th.
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Mike Macfarlane and Brian McRae hit consecutive home runs in the sixth inning, Kansas City's first homers in seven games and its first back-to-back shots this season, leading the Royals to a 7-5 victory over the Minnesota Twins last night.
Wally Joyner hit a home run in the seventh inning, completing the Royals' only three-homer game of 1992.
Kevin Appier (6-3) won despite allowing more than three runs for only the second time this season. Appier gave up nine hits in five innings before Rusty Meacham and Jeff Montgomery worked two innings each. Montgomery earned
his 15th save.
Joyner led off the seventh with his first homer since May 28, scoring his third run of the game.
Each team scored twice in the first. The Royals went up 3-2 in the third on a double by Kevin McReynolds. Minnesota tied the game on Chili Davis' fourth-inning homer.
Kansas City scored on a double-play grounder in the fifth. Appier let the Twins go ahead in the bottom of the inning, giving up a two-out RBI single to Scott Leius and then allowing another run to score off a wild pitch.
The Royals, 25-20 since their 1-16 start, survived their own shoddy defense — two errors, three hits off their gloves and several instances of poor fundamentals.
Take it from someone that is in the know, in baseball and in life,bigger isn't better
Lil'guys defy stereotypes in the major league
By David Mitchell Contributing editor
My friend Karen is constantly reminding me how short I am.
Karen, who is five-foot-nine, is just one of many who think we short men need to be reminded of our condition—as if we haven't been hearing about it all our lives.
Even worse are the unavoidable short-guy stereotypes. In sports they are pervasive.
Short guys can't dunk. Short guys can't be quarterbacks. Short guys are scrappy.
On sure, Napoleon and rather to wipe out Europe, and now we're all aggressive.
Fortunately, of these myths has been obliterated in recent years. Little guys can't
Lies! Lies I say.
In 1984, an outfitter made it to the majors out of the Minnesota Twins farm system. He was the least likely major-leaguer. Standing 5-8, the newcomer looked more like a bat boy than a centerfielder. When heavy hitter
David Mitchell
Contributng
Editor
POLICE
Reggie Jackson asked the puckish rookie if he hit the long ball, he had to confess that he did not.
In his first two big league seasons, Kirby Puckett just hit four home runs.
They grow up so fast.
Entering this week's series with Kansas City, Puckett was leading the American
A vigorous workout program turned the tiny Twin into one of the game's biggest stars. In 1986, Puckett blasted 31 homers. A year later, he led the team to the World Championship. Minnesota won it all again in 1991. Puckett has beefed up from 175 pounds in 1984 to 226 this season.
League in batting average .354), RBI (51),
runs (47), hits (86) and total bases (145).
He also had 13 homers, and his .597 slugging
percentage was second only to Oakland's
mammoth Mark McGwire.
When free-agent pitcher Jack Morris abandoned Minnesota for Toronto, the Twins pitching staff was virtually runed with a few strokes of the pen. However, Puckett and the Twins' other big bats have kept the defending champs in contention in the wild western division.
Puckett transcends the typical little-guy scouting report: Good field. No hit. And he is not just a hot hitter, he is a Gold Glove-winning centerfielder.
Unfortunately for Minnesota, Puckett is reaching the end of a multi-year contract. He will be a free agent at season's end. Contract talks have broken off. Puckett says he wants to concentrate on the present.
With Puckett hitting like a man possessed and big man Kent Krbek hitting 324, the Twins lead the American League in team batting average at .287.
For the record, 5-9 second baseman Chuck Knoblauch is hitting 313. Not bad—for a little guy.
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journa
nalism
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 17. 1992
11
Sand volleyball gains popularity with outdoor sports enthusiasts
By Becky Lucas
Kansan staff writer
It seems that trends always come from the coasts. And sand-court volleyball is no exception.
About five years ago, pits of sand surrounding volleyball posts in local parks and backyards became a more common scene. Volleyball was no longer limited to the indoor gymnasiums and hard-as-dirt outdoor courts. The use of sand as a cushioning element made sense to many.
And because of the sport's popularity, the Lawrence Department of Recreation added two sand volleyball courts last fall, said Bob Stancliff, adult sports supervisor for the Lawrence Recreation Department. They are located at Deerfield Park, Princeton Boulevard and Arrowhead Drive.
The courts at Deerfield now augment the
three courts available at Holcom Park, he added.
"I kind of think the popularity here is with more and more of the beach volleyball," Stanchift said. "I think that's where it started, and it's worked its way here to the Midwest." Outdoor fans find the sport a natural outlet for energy, with the possibility of a tan an added bonus.
"For people who are normally outdoor people, this gave them a very vigorous activity to do outdoors instead of sitting in a lawn chair." Stancill said.
Mary Chapell, director of recreation services at the University of Kansas, said another reason for its recent popularity may be because it gave one the opportunity to express oneself in the sand and sun. KU has one sand volleyball court located near Robinson Center, and two additional courts may be built this fall.
The recreation department offers indoor and sand-court volleyball leagues. In the spring Sunday sand-court league, which ended June 7, Stancill made that 15 teams with an average of eight players each competed.
During the summer session, Stanclift said the department offered Sunday and weeknight leagues for both types of volleyball. The Sunday league begins June 14 and has 14 teams signed up for competition. The weeknight leagues, which are currently competing, consist of 14 outdoor teams and 21 indoor teams.
"In a lot of places there's two-on-two or three-on-three that is very popular," Stanciff said about the outdoor sport. "The pro league is two-on-two, while the beach league is six-on-six. In the future, we might be able to get some interest in the two-on-two or three-on-three here."
Sunscreens lessen danger in students' quests for the perfect summertime tan
By Julie Wasson Kansan staff writer
Summertime has finally come to Lawrence, and soon students across campus and across town will be lying out in an endeavor to achieve that perfect tan.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said sunburn was a concern.
"We see students who come in complaining of the immediate discomfort caused by sunburns, as well as students who are pretty ill as the result of total-body sunburns." Yockey said
He said the worst sunburns he saw usually were from tanning boots because they expose skin to a concentrated amount of radiation in a short time.
Overexposure to the sun is the leading
cause of skin cancer, Yockey said.
"Every year we see a few students with melanomas," he said. "Because they take years to develop the melanomas we see are under overexposure to the sun during childhood."
According to the American Cancer Society, malignant melanoma is the least common, but most serious, form of skin cancer. If it is discovered early enough, melanomas are completely curable. Yockey said.
"Moderation is the key to avoiding overexposure to the sun," Yockey said. "Using sunscreen with a sun protection factor of at least 15 and staying out of the sun between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. will help you avoid the most damaging raws."
Yorke also said that different skin types required different precautions.
Ibuprofen and aloe vera creams or lotions
are what Yockey recommends to ease the pain of the common sunburn.
Julie Huntingstier, health educator at Watkins, said sunscreens with more than SPF 15 usually are not much more effective than ones with higher SPF's.
Another important factor in choosing a sunscreen is the kind of ultraviolet protection it offers. Huntsinger said.
You should be sure that your sunscreen protects you from both UVA and UVB," she said.
Both UVA and UVB, which are two kinds of ultraviolet rays, cause skin cancer, she said. UVA causes premature aging of skin, and UVB causes faster burning of the skin.
For continued protection, sunscreen should be reapplied every two hours while in the sun, or more frequently after swimming or perspiring heavily.
Stephen Pingry / KANSAN
EES
Diane Becker, returning a volley, Maria Orok, center, and Theresa Abel make up the Wildside Women sand-court volleyball team. The team played Haircutters Monday in the women's summer power league tournament at Holcom Park. The Lawrence Department of Recreation is sponsoring the tournament.
Keep the cycle going . . . Recycle this paper!
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Fire Department rescues fisherman stranded by torrential overflow on Kansas River dam
By Doug Fishback
Kansan camous editor
A Lawrence Fire Department rescue crew plucked a man from the lower ledge of the Kansas River dam at Sixth and Massachusetts streets last night after water diversion boards on the dam above him began to break, leaving him stranded between two torrents of water.
Jim McSwan, Lawrence fire chief,
said the man, whose name was not
released, was fishing from the dam's
lower ledge when wooden batter
boards on the upper ledge began to
break from the rising water level.
Lawrence police officer Todd Polson said the man was unharmed and released.
The boards divert the river through a nearby hydroelectric station to boost power output when the water level is low, he said. The boards are made to break when the water rises.
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Capt. Bob Burton, left, and firefighter David Russell rescue an unidentified fisherman from the dam across the Kansas River, near Sixth and Massachusetts streets. The uninjured man was released by police.
McSwain said fire crews rescued someone from the dam about once a
year.
Two boats from Fire Station Three, which specializes in water rescue, responded to the 7:11 p.m. call. A crew from Station One backed up the first unit, McSwain said.
Capt. Bob Burton and firefighter David Russell manned the boat that rescued the man. Burton said it took about nine minutes for the boats to reach the dam after leaving the boat house at Eighth and Oak streets.
KIMON
Wayne Wildcat, Lawrence, who saw the rescue, said the rushing water hid the front end of the boat.
Burton said that once the boat approached the dam, the turbulent water made it hard to reach the man.
"When you get in that boil, it's real bad," he said.
Tolly Smith Wildcat, Lawrence,
said she feared for the man.
"He could have been swept off his feet," she said. "They looked so tiny down there.
"It's so nice to have happy endings." she said.
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130 Entertainment
C
Employment
105 Help Wanted
125 Professional
services
125 Typing Services
300's
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
I
Announcements
LUNG
400's
110 Bus. Personals
Recycle
your
Daily Kansan
Jayhawks make jewelry, and love it! International Read Trailer 1017/1.2 Mass.
Recycle
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
Basic Tune up:
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 wipe down.
Super Tune up: $44.98
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
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 17, 1992
13
\* WORD PROCESSING turns frogans into Rana
\* personal computer tutoring available 982/7583
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
Bicycle Maintenance and Basic Roadside Repair Clinics
Sign up now for our clinic and learn how to keep your bike running smoothly. Clinics offered every Saturday morning from 10AM to Noon. Cost $7.50
Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
SUMMER
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Lowest possible rates to Europe.
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
- World wide travel information.
On campus location in the Burge Union and 831 Mass.
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
See us TODAY!
120 Announcements
The cooperative way of doing business is an active expression of peace and justice. Join us in our mission to promote cooperation, personal and environmental health. Stop by the Community Garden on Monday or Thursday you can become a member. We need your support! 700 Maine 843-8644.
Suicide intervention if you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone you call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Girl crop by Hesapeake
Quarters
841-2345 1419 Max.
Want carpool from West Topeka to campus and return weekday morning calls 478-4252 if in need.
130 Entertainment
NOW SEE HEAR
SATURDAY
JUNE 20
AT
BENCHWARMERS
2 FOR 1
WELL DRINKS
Good food? You bet you SweetGrass. 935
Mass. Downtown Lawrence. 749-305-3575
140 Lost & Found
keys found at Clinton Lake by the observation
lift. 2 sets of car keys and house key. Call
691-830-7430.
男性 女性
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Dept., part-time, $4.25 per hour, Mon- Sat. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Work on all aspects of the work the hours stated. Must be able to stand for long periods, lift heavy weights up to 50 pounds. Must have good handwriting. Apply Kansas and Burge Personnel Office, 131 and Oread, Level 3, Alcove HOUSE.
Ballard Center is now hiring a teacher for the 21/2 year old class. Apply at 708 Elem.E.O. E.
Clerk, KU bookstore, textbook dept, part time per hour. Job begins July 13, 1992 and ends December 31, 2006. Requires schedules, but must be able to work in blocks of several hours a day. A month. Must have valid driver's license. Job requires height up to 50 pounds, an excellent experience as a sales clerk, stock clerk, or doing inventory work. Apply Kansas and Burge Office, 13th and Oward, Level 3, Alcove H.E.O.
I'll form him many level ptft openings in
Lawrence & surrounding areas. $25 to start.
Wait, the dollar signs are actually brackets.
They look like `$` with a slash above them.
The rest of the text is normal text.
Let's re-read the first line:
"I'll form him many level ptft openings in
Lawrence & surrounding areas. $25 to start."
Yes, it's that way.
Actually, I'll use the standard LaTeX for math as it looks most natural.
I'll form him many level ptft openings in
Lawrence & surrounding areas. $25 to start.
This looks correct.
But if I just write it as it appears, it might be better to use LaTeX.
It's a bit messy to just write it without formatting. But I'm going to stick with what's standard.
Final check of the image:
1. "I'll form him many level ptft openings in"
2. "Lawrence & surrounding areas."
3. "$25 to start."
4. "(per hour)"
One more check on the space between lines.
Line 1: `I'll form him many level ptft openings in`
Line 2: `Lawrence & surrounding areas. $25 to start.`
Wait, looking at the second line, the comma after "$25" is very small and likely not part of the original text.
It could be a typo or just a visual representation.
Let's re-examine the image.
1. "I'll form him many level ptft openings in"
2. "Lawrence & surrounding areas."
3. "$25 to start."
4. "(per hour)"
5. ...(per hour)?"
Actually, the comma after "$25" is very small and likely not part of the original text.
It could be a typo or just a visual representation.
One more check of
Career Opportunities
Graduates, displaced, &/or career shifters. SEARCH FIRM resumes resume for ALL career fields, minorities & women are special need. July15 deadline.
c/o SEARCH DIRECTOR
P.O. BOX 15945 SUITE 278
Lenexa,KS. 66285
Female Mother's helper needed for two young girls weekday afternoons. Light housework and child care required. Must have an ear car. Must be able through August 10th. 8 per hour. 841-1074
ADUATE ASSISTANT POSITION
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a half-time graduate assistant position available. The specific responsibilities for the role will depend on the suitation with the Director. Responsibilities may include, but are not limited to, the following: assist in providing and determining the current needs; teach skills and create programs to meet those needs; assist in facilitating small groups on campus; counsel, crisis intervention, and referral services; coordinate of educational programs, counseling
Out house manager for sorority at K.U. Meal & Menu Management, every daily operation of facility Flexible hours Hours, Salary, and Salaries Corporation, P.O. Box 3792, Lawrence, KS 60044
MODELS & ACTORS NEED PROFESSIONAL 75-178 day 341.
Also, Extras. For TV/film (75-178 day 341.
Want to be a Star, or just feel like one?? Now hiring zany, yet dependable for all-in-fun sing telegrams. Great Money. 749-3455. It's Your Party. Ask for Cynia or Cynah.
The bank of Kansas is seeking an individual to work Mon-Fri 2p.10m - 10p.m. Must have experience working with knowledge such as key tenkey by operation a plus and previous banking experience. Helpful but not necessary. Send resume Lawrence KS 68404 EOE Lawrence P.O. Box 784 Lawrence KS 68404 EOE
225 Professional Services
Driver Education > offered mid-Wednesday
Driving Lessons available obtain, transportation
provided 81-767.
RICK FRYDMAN
Attorney at Law
DWI/Traffic
and most other legal matters
- Free Consultation
823 Microsoft
843-4023
ACADEMIC AID POSITION AVAILABLE
Duties include. Reading textbooks & other mather
subjects where you are blind or have reading
disability. Reading books or having with performance of lab projects. 4.25/hr.
Applications available at the Student Assistance
Center 133 Storm Hall, 604-4044 June 12, 1982
D & D Tutoring and Counseling Services. Experienced and certified 865-1844 Answering
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
For better grades, call PAPER PROS. Editing,
organizing, source evaluations, proofreading.
Reasonable rates. References available. Very
well written in literature and humanities.
Becki 841-1400
16 East 13th 842-1133
Keyboard lessons Professional keyboardist has
lessons at Johnson, Joe Wahls, Eagles and
McKenna. Job #109.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct even better-quality type. 845-2035, days or evenings.
1 day service word processing $1.00
spaceed. Call 845-4974 or 845-4638.
Word processing, applications, term papers,
Editing, composition,
job applicants. Mobile job
availability. Job applications.
235 Typing Services
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(913) 491-6878
305 For Sale
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
ARMY·NAVY STORE
Buy Sell and Trade Combat Boots, camouflage clothing, camping gear. Looking for something.
836 Mass.
X
*New Analysis of Western Civilization makes*
*the case that the American Civilization*
*Available at Jayhawk, Greed, and Town Crier*
> On TV's, VCR's, jewelry, stereos, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MC/AMEX. Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 180W. W6ch.
Classic II 4/40 StyleWriter Bundle
79 Cadillac Cpd Deville 109K ml, new breaks &
transmission. Must sell $800/unit 845-365-86
Total Price:
$1439.00
Includes:
INCLUDES:
Mac Classic II 4/40
(with Key Board)
StyleWriter Printer
Please add 5.9% sales tax.
Restrictions apply.
Stop by the store or for details.
Make the smart choice and buy your Macintosh from the Burge Union. Stop in at the Burge Union and see how easy and affordable it is to own your own computer.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Macintosh. The power to be your best at KU.
KU Bookstores
Burge Union,
Level Two
864-5697
We buy bay scout patches, badges and uni-
literature for our students. We look for
someb*M Massachusetts
Defend yourself against assault! For a three
super intense pepper gas spray. Send
$19.90 to: Lawtech Products, P.O. Box 424778,
Kansas 6043. Must be eighteen or
larger.
BOY SCOUTS!
Master Card
DISCOVER
VISA
340 Auto Sales
11st Station Wagon PLYMOUTH RELIANT K
Nice small wagon for $150.00 832-6946
Moving Sale: Bike computer, helmet, Aero
pad, also coach dresser and
table chair. Moldable.
EVERYTHING IN THE BOOK, chest of draw-
ings, but not the Maps. MAKE MEMORIES!
Moving Sale Bike, computer, helmet, aeroplane,
board chair, make offer. Call Terry 841-1537
and table, chair. Make offer. Call Terry 841-1537
79 MGB CONVERTIBLE TESTE excellent running
workability. Work on body work
Make an offer Tcervil Terry 841-1537
360 Miscellaneous
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2454. Headquarters
91 GE Storm, 5-speed. AC, AM.FM Cas. Air
conditioner. Must test. Best offer 913-837-6240
Looking for a garage for a house, or space in a garage, close to 7th and Mass. For parking on the street.
A
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
rooms to-toilet kitchen (inc Microwave) cable all Bedrooms. Cable paid free on-site www.bedroomstores.com
会
1 Bdrm Apt. furn. pool sublease avail. Mid-May $333 month $82-0630
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
>HView Apts. $00 lease signing bonus! > 1 & 2 bedroom apartments $265 & $85 plus deposit.
On bus route. On-site laundry, 843-548 or 749
6596.
541 MICHIGAN Now leasing for fall
3 BR, 2 bath, $600/820. On KU bus route. Refe & Refs 862-9104
NOW LEASING FOR AUGUST!
Available August 1. to 2 and 2 bedroom apartments close to the student union, Off street parking. References required. No pets. Day 749-291 or evening 849-907.
Newer Construction
·Washer/Dryer
West Free APARTMENTS
Available August 1. Nice. Extra-large 2 bedroom apartment close to the student union. Hardwood Floors. Suitable for 2 or 3 people. Off-campus only. Daylight hours: Day 749-809 or evening 842-907.
- Spacious one and two
Excellent level 1014 Tennessee 2 bdap. apt.
Gallimore 903 No pets. Available August 1.
Gallimore 644 No pets.
bedroom apartments
- Great Location Near Campus
- Furnished and Unfurnished
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
For Summer sublease to graduate or upper- class student. One bedroom furnished apartment one block from Union. No pets. Refs. $250 . call Ma Bell B32-1410
Furnished one and two bedroom apartments.
On-campus KU Off Street Parking No. 841-5500
Purchased rooms with most utilities paid. One
room RU Off Street BF Resort No Petit
841-5500
Leasing for summer and fall-furnished 1, 2 and
3 bedrooms at campus with campus wifi
at street parking. Names: 845-709-6900.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon. - Fri.
9-12 am Saturday
841-5444
No appointment necessary.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Spacious 5 bedroom house. Close to campus.
Quire neighborhood, hardwood floor, 2 baths,
nice deck, large 2 car garage, on bus route. Day number 749-2911. Evening 842-9007
OPEN DAILY
9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
MASTERCRAFT
offers completely furnished
1,2,3,& 4 bdrm apts..
Go to.
designed with you in mind!
Campus Place-841-1429
1145 Louijsk
Hanover Place-841-1212
Kentucky Place-749-0445 1310 Kentucky
Orchard Corners-749-4226 15th & Kesold
Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Go Ahead and Do It!
**Summer Sublease 1 and 2 bedroom apartments**
**800-634-7900** **no room. No pets. Day 748-2918** **entire BDS-850-900**
Go past the barricade at 9th and Iowa (it looks like you can't but you can.)
Village Square Apartments is at the bottom of 9th on the left.
The road to a quiet, relaxed atmosphere isn't closed. Check out Village Square Apartments today...
Featuring Affordable 2 Bedroom Apartments.
Apartments today.
Close To Campus And On KU Bus Route.
Come by or give us a call: 842-3040
850 Avalon #4 Lawrence, KS.
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
FREE RENTAL
ASSISTANCE
KVM
Apartments
841-6080
Summer subleave: female non-smoker $200
Saturday subleave: female and spacious, call
Amy at M14 4:08.
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedrooms You'll Be Surprised!
*Large, spacious floorplans perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
*Carpet colors:
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
*2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
*Large bedrooms & closets
*Pool & volleyball
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
NOW LEASING Newly remodeled 3 story bedroom on 6th street. No pet #748-826-0966
Boardwalk
apartments
Open House Everyday!!
On Trailridge Bus Route
Summer & Fall Rentals Available Now. 1&2 Bedrooms
524 Frontier 842-4444
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
is where the
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Heatherwood Valley Apts.
Spacious 2 & 3 bedrooms available for the mature student. Now leasing for fall.
Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, inexpensive utilities,
on bus routes. Patented use.
on bus route. Pets welcomed.
2040 Heatherwood • 843-4754
NOW LEARNING FOR SUMMER AND FALL
California and Colorado
Chamberlin CL, Apparition 1742 OH
Stadium View Apartments 106 Mississippi
"Summer leave specials" Mon-Fri. 1 p.m.
---
- Exercise Room
- Basketball Court
COLONYWOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!!
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
- BasKetball Court
- IndoorPool
Policy
- Outdoor Pool
- Volleyball Court
- Indoor Pool
REDUCED DEPOSIT
1301W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
Models Open Daily
Mon.- Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
430 Roommate Wanted
*Studious Female Roomsmates need for Fall*
*Dummed: Born age at 12th & Louisiana *11*a*
*Studious Female Roomsmates need for Fall*
*Dummed: Born age at 12th & Louisiana *11*a*
Female needed to share apartment starting next fall. Call Heather at 1-813-3417 Leave
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in BOLD face count as 3 words.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1 Bedroom Available for next semester in new
3 bedroom furnished townhouse on busine-
Fireplace, patio, and tennis. $240/month plus
1/Utilities call: Pierice M.913-3491-3491
One roommate wanted immediately. Rent ne
gotable. Plus 1/4 utilities. Jane 865-3596.
7 bdm house, summer and/or fall £225 on
bathroom, neighborhood, bus call Residency
B332 1499-8
and very outgoing student looking for male or female roommate. I like to party but have a full work load next semester. If you're not心理 no psych, call Chris 845-6588. Message
Female needed to share 2 bedroom api. start:
1904 month utilities CALL 841-9414 Ask for Stakeholder
Rainbow House, which is a cooperative living consisting of 7-9 women and men, has two available opening starts in June. The house will be open on Wednesday. Please call 863-3704 for more information.
Roommate needs to share 4 bedroom apli with 3 fun girls, steps away from campus, for fall/april sem. Security Deposit, etc paid Roommate needs to be called, Call Michelle at 863-905 or 1-381 8634.
Bind box ads: please add $4.00 service charge
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements
centered lines count as 7 words
Blank lines count as 7 words
Classified Information Mail-in Form
all soldites are based on consecutive day insertions only. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertise ment.
No refunds on cancellation of pre.paid classified advertising
Blind box ad:s please add 844.00 service charge
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements
Founds are ads for free three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the Unit.
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
Clasifications
105 personal 140 tool & found 305 for sale
118 hospital personales 200 professional service 305 for hire
120 announcements 200 professional service 306 miscellaneous
120 announcements 200 professional service 306 miscellaneous
Classified Mail Order Form
Name___ Phone___
Address___
| | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
Make checks payable to:
University Dial Kansas
191 Staffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
14
Wednesday, June 17, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1045 New Jersey MC Visi
843-9494
BJ's
IMPORTS
Specializing in VOLKS WACIN= 24 Years Experience
XXX
VIDEO
Gag Gifts•Magazines•Condom
1420 W. 23rd St. 843-9200
Specializing in VOLKSWAGEN + 24 Years Experience
LSAT GMAT GRE
LSAT GMAT GRE
THE Call
PRINCETON
REVIEW 843-313
WE'RE OPEN! ALL SUMMER LONG
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
Pizza Hut
842-3232
Carry out or delivery
Monday Mania Buy ONE PIZZA Get the 2ND ONE FREE!!!!
PYRAMID
Terrific Twosday!
good Mondays only ALL SUMMER LONG!
Buy ONE
LARGE PIZZA
with 2 toppings
for only $7.99
and get
1 Liter of pop
FREE!!!!
As Easy as 1,2,3
Buy a large,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $3
Buy a medium,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $2
Buy a small,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $1
THRIFTY THURSDAY! SPECIAL
Only $33.49*tax*
(caffy out only)
for small pizza (add
tops only 75¢)
order 2 or more for
free delivery
PYRAMID
7727
good Thurs. only
FULL-TIME BENEFITS,
PART-TIME
JOB
Enjoy paid vacations, and medical, dental, and optical benefits as a part-time loader/unloader at UPS.
So, within one short year you'll have a benefits package equal to or better than most full-time jobs!
Sign up at the Placement Center at the Burge Union.
We will be interviewing on June 19th
The Best Choice for a Part-time JOB
Stolen, lost and damaged books cost library $4,022
ups
By Anne Grego
eoe/m/f
Kansan Staff Writer
Because the libraries must replace missing or damaged books with money from the acquisition budget, students see fewer new additions, said Mary Hawkins, assistant dean for public services at the libraries.
Book theft, loss and mutilation are taking a toll on University of Kansas libraries.
University libraries reported to KU police that 35 books worth a total $4,022 were missing since Jan. 1.
The extent of the problem is hard to estimate because a book usually is not reported lost until someone brings it to the attention of the library staff, said Susan Craig, librarian at the Art and Architecture Library.
is not—on the shelves.
The Art and Architecture Library is taking inventory on its entire collection to find out exactly what is—and
Last fiscal year, Watson Library reported 650 books had not been returned to the library, said Kendall Simmons, who works at Watson's circulation desk.
"It is difficult to know what the real loss is, due to theft." Hawkins said.
The Lawrence Public Library installed a security system in October because of theft, said Pattie Armbrister, head of adult fiction circulation.
The security system is similar to Watson's; patrons have to walk through gates when entering and leaving.
Lawrence Public Library administrators found they could not afford to replace books because of the rising book costs and a tight budget, Armbrister said.
Mutilation is another problem facing KU libraries and the Lawrence Public Library.
Actions such as ripping an article out of a magazine or highlighting a book constitute book mutilation.
"It happens with things people don't think we care about," Craig said.
Craig said that she foresaw a few options to help reduce library losses.
Replacing a magazine is not easy, because the issue goes out of print in a couple of weeks, she said.
Craig has begun asking patrons to donate their old magazines to help replace mutilated magazines.
Possible security measures include tighter restrictions on material availability.
SALE!
Ladies' Shoes
$9.90 to $49.90 Regularly up to $75
Men's Shoes
$19.90 to $79.90 Regularly up to $120
Men and Women's Athletic Shoes
$35 to $70 Regularly up to $125
• Entire stock not on sale • No refunds or exchanges • No phone calls please
ARENSBERG'S SHOES
One step ahead!
Open evenings 'til 8:30
Open Sunday 12:00 to 5:00
Quality footwear
for the whole
family since 1958.
825 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
"We want to make the collections as available as possible," Craig said. "But, are we so open we are making ourselves more vulnerable?"
Limiting the opening hours is one option libraries have, but Craig said that it was not realistic.
STREETSIDE RECORDS
EVERY CRUZ RECORDS RELEASE ON SALE 20% OFF!
PERCOLATER
ALL
PERCOLATERAT the fourth studio LP from ALL could only be recorded by a band that lives and works besides the credit ALL ORDERS, equipped 5 years later on the rubble ALL ORDERS, DESCRIBENTES and CASTED with pop-based guitar, bass and drum pit. In their quest for the *total extent* ALL lived & played together in the same LAMIA, LA!营业室 life unit 1900 when they released THE MUSIC OF A DAY and SOMETHING IN LA! to support their eight month a year touring habit, and get some fusing done in Brookfield Lake as well. On PERCOLATERAT the hard playing and heavy hitting with the knuckles of knuckle music is a straightforward, highly developed musical attack.
ALL
ER OL TE
ALLOY SEZ... * ALLOY FOR PREZ * SHE'S MY EXP. * ALLOY REVENGE * TRAILBLAZER * ALLOY SAVES * 'DOT'
Also Available by ALLC.
GHEMKAL
FILMS
CHEMICAL PEOPLE BY CHEMICAL PEOPLE isn’t what anyone would expect from graduates of Beverly Hills High simply based on the four albums and one EP they’ve released over the past four years. Sure, Beverly Hills 90210 has made their High School high school but the CHEMICAL PEOPLE party and play much harder, faster and amped up beyond what any network sensor would permit. A key to the Chernch crunch is that you can’t turn your guitar into a violin; the PEOPLE takes over on guitar to turn up the female magnet potential. Ed Erik authors down their hard pop sound with rivet-guitar hits of his bass.
Also Available by Chemical People:
SO SEXIUS • TEN FOLD HATE • THE RIGHT THING • ANGLES * N DEVILS *
SDURTRACKS • LET IT GO
ENDINO'S EARTHWORM is a creature conceived by guitarist/producer, Jack Endino, that is as penetrating and unsettling as a liberated concentration camp. As a founding member of the psychopower quartet from Seattle, SKYN KIRD. Endino has stoked out the gritty territory with his menacing guitar style for over 6 years. Endino has garnered acclaim for his improvisational songs on many of the independent rock releases from the Northwest US during that same period. On ENDINO'S EARTHWORM Endino launches furious, muscular guitar blasts that strike right at the windows.
ENDLINGS
EARTHWORM
+ +
These titles and many others to choose from
Sale ends 7-7-92
1403 W. 23rd Street • 842-7173 Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
1.
SPORTS: Former Kansas Baskteball player Alonzo Jamison looks to the NBA draft, which begins tonight.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.101,NO.149
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1992
(USPS 650-640)
FOR YOUR INFORMATION
1985
Stephen Pinyr / KANSAN
Boris buckles up
Russian President Boris Yeltsin receives a Kansas-made belt buckle from Gov. Joan Finney. Yeltsin, who visited Wichita Thursday, spoke at Wichita State University and then ate barbecue sandwiches at the Rau family farm where he received gifts from Finney President Yeltsin ended his day by donating $25,000 in scholarships to Wichita State for students to attend school in Russia.
Man convicted
NEWS:864-4810
Donald Bruce, who was convicted of first-degree murder and child abuse Monday in Douglas County District Court, will be sentenced July 30. Bruce was convicted in the beating death of 23-month-old Eric Brewer, who was found Feb. 5 in a mobile home in Lawrence. An autopsy revealed that Brewer's body had 182 bruises at the time of death. Defense attorney Harry Warren said Monday that he would seek a new trial in the case. If that motion is not granted, he will appeal the decision.
WEATHER
Today
Tomorrow
Sunny/Hot and Humid
High: mid 90s
Low: 58-65
Friday
SUN
study
High: 88-95
Low: upper 50s/low 70s
Saturday
Sun
Sunny
High: 88-95
Low: upper 50/s
low 70/s
Sunday
Cooling Off
High: 80-85
Low: mid 50s/
low 60s
Sunny
High: mild 80s
Low: mild 50/s
low 60s
Tricia Fibro/ KANSAN
The historic changes that carved new nations out of the former Soviet Union have forged a new graduate program at KU
Soviet demise forges KU graduate program
By Chris Moeser Kansan staff writer
next fall, the KU Russian and East European studies department will offer the only complete Ukrainian studies program in the United States.
George Woodyard, dean of international studies and programs, said that the program would be the first in the country to combine study in Ukrainian literature, history, politics, philosophy, religion, economics, business and geography.
Woodyard and Maria Carlson, professor of Slavic languages and literatures, traveled to Ivan Franko University in Lviv, Ukraine, earlier this month to complete the details of the program, which will be administered from the Russian and East European studies department.
Three professors from the Ukrainian university will teach at KU beginning next fall. Graduate students from KU will begin study in the fall, and the first exchange students will travel to Ivan Franko University next summer.
Woodyard said a program in Ukrainian studies made sense at KU because of the strong Russian and Polish programs that already existed.
Last year, the Russian and East European studies department at KU was ranked second in the United States by the U.S. Department of Education.
With more than 50 million people, Ukraine is an emerging power in Europe, Woodyard said. He said that the nation was trying to increase its ties to the West and that an exchange between the breadbasket of the former Soviet Union and the breadbasket of the United States seemed natural.
"The people we met were genuinely interested in working with us," he said.
Woodyard said that officials at Ivan Franko University were working to cope with the administrative problems posed by the rapid changes and economic difficulties in the nation.
He added that administrators at Ivan were trying to reform the notoriously inefficient Soviet educational system.
"It is reassuring to know people in the institution we are connected with are committed to making changes," he said.
Carlson agreed that Ukrainian officials were working as fast as possible to eliminate all traces of Soviet bureaucracy.
That effort is representative of the mood of the nation that bitterly resented Soviet domination in the 20th Century.
"Ukraine wants very much to be a part of Western Europe," she said. "Eventually it will be an important world area, and the University is building for the future."
The first class of students in the program will finish by the fall of 1993, producing Ukrainian specialists for business, government, education and the military. Carlson said.
Lawrence shelters feed poor
T
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAI
Don Addis waits for lunch at the Salvation Army, 946 New Hampshire St. The Salvation Army serves lunch every Monday, Wednesday and Friday as close to 12:30 as possible. Delays are not uncommon because the kitchen's staff is small.
Reactor interior to be removed
Final stage to be finished by 1993
By Richard Mancinelli
On June 24, 1961, the anxious eyes of the Kansas scientific community were on Burt Hall, on the campus of the University of Kansas At 3:49 p.m., 31 years ago today, the University's 10-kilowatt reactor started up.
This summer the remains of the upgraded 125-kilowatt reactor, which few students even know exists, are going through the last phase of being shut down.
The final stage costs $750,000 and consists of removing and disposing of the radioactive interior portion of the cement tower that housed the reactor. When no more radiation can be detected, the rest of the cement can be hauled off.
level nuclear waste disposal. In 1993, the Richland, Wash., disposal site KU has contracted for disposition of the Burt Hall waste will no longer be required to accept out-of-state radioactive material.
"The they're treating it as if it was the most powerful reactor in the world," said Thomas Muli-nazzi, professor of civil engineering and new associate dean of engineering. "Before we even throw away a dust rug, we have to check it out."
He and others on the deconstruction staff are working against a 1993 deadline that resulted from alaw governing interstate low-
Though KU's nuclear engineering and radiation-biophysics majors were dropped in the 1960s and 1978, the reactor was not shut down until June 1984. Before it was shut down, it was used for demonstration, instruction and to irradiate materials which were used primarily for biological experiments, Harold Rosson, project consultant, said.
A plan for finishing the deconstruction was prepared in 1990 and approved by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Mulinazzi said. The contractor who will be chosen to do the work must remove all of the radioactive cement from Burt Hall and haul it to the Washington disposal site.
Though he is new to the radiation side of the deconstruction process, Mulinazzi said he is learning quickly. He is, however, confident about and familiar with the structural and design considerations of the process, he said
"Can I look down there?" Mulinazzi asked Rosson while on top of the stairs next to the reactor. Rosson, on the other hand, frequently goes inside the blue, cement, 20-foot rocket that remains in the bay area of Burt Hall. The hottest radiation spot is less harmful
than an X-ray, Mulinazzi said.
With the maintenance and license renewal costs, the building of a more powerful reactor at Kansas State University and the dropping of the nuclear engineering and the radiation biophysics degrees added to the decision to stop the reactor. Mulnazai said.
Michael Lemon, assistant radiation officer at Burt Hall and a graduate of the KU radiation biophysics program, said that although some elements of the reactor might be radioactive only for seconds and would decay in watery solutions in gallon jugs, other elements remained radioactive for much longer than peoplelive.
The reason why deconstruction is taking so long is money. Since June 1984, when the reactor was shut down, KU has waited for the Legislature to appropriate the funds needed to complete deconstruction.
In 1990 the Regulatory Commission began to require businesses and colleges with small research reactors to set aside money to cover eventual shutdown costs.
Mulinazzi said he was confident that everything would be finished before the 1993 deadline, despite the fact that he is working on a limited time schedule. He said that creating strict requirements for the contractors should ensure against his biggest worry, which is sticking to the schedule.
poor Hunger is met with donations
By Ana Kostick
Kansan staff writer
Gordon Moore stood in the rain waiting for his favorite meal of macaroni and cheese with ham and peas, but he got noodles in a gravity sauce instead.
"They all try hard but can't please all of us burns at the same time," he said, referring to Lawrence's food kitchens that offer meals to the poor and homeless.
Moore, 50, is one of the poor, hungry and homeless people in Lawrence who rely on the food kitchens instead of garbage cans and dumpsters for a meal every day.
Lt. Mark Brothers of Lawrence police said the number of people looking for food in dumpsters had decreased since the Salvation Army and Lawrence Interdenominational Nutritional Kitchen food kitchens opened in the mid-80s.
"The LINK kitchen, in conjunction with the Salvation Army, has given shelter and sustenance to a fairly substantial group." he said.
Brothers said the Lawrence community was a very understanding and accepting group that was willing to provide door and homeless and their problems.
When Brothers finds a person scavenging meals from garbage cans and dumpsters he directs them to one of their owners. He insists instead of giving them贮果.
"I don't feel comfortable placing my value judgment on someone else's lifestyle," he said.
Moore said that he hadn't to rely on dumpster dining lately but that many of the poor and homeless still went through dumpsters for leftovers.
"The key is all in the timing," Moore said. "You know when the store is closing and wait. But they have to be cautious. It's really easy to get sick."
Barbara Schnikter, director of nurses for the Lawrence/Douglas County Health Department, warned against the dangers of dumpster dining.
"Bacteria growth will occur because the food is not at proper temperatures," Schutker said. "It could be just a matter of hours if it's not kept in the
CAMPUS SNAPSHOT
See related story, Page 8.
In the fiscal year 1991, women were 22.5 percent of the total faculty at the University of Kansas. They were not among the highest paid.
Ten highest-paid KU professors are male
Of the 10 highest-paid professors at the University of Kansas, nine are white, one is Chinese, and all are male, according to the budget for fiscal year 1992. All 10 professors have nine-month contracts with KU. The highest paid is Rue Cromwell, Wright Professor of Psychology. His salary is $78,873. The only minority professor is De-Min Wun, chairperson and professor of economics. His salary is $73,930.
By David Wilson Special to the Kansan
Janet Riley, assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the number of women in the fieldstopping the list—business, law, economics, and computer science were limited to begin with.
"Women haven't traditionally gone into those fields," she said. "Right or wrong, there are more females in humanities."
"When you look at the way children are taught, you see that girls are not going to be encouraged to go into the science-related fields."
Sherril Robinson, acting director of the Emily Taylor Women's
Another reason why female faculty members do not receive comparable
salaries is that there are fewer women teaching at the University.
"The University as a whole doesn't have many women faculty," Robinson said.
Tom Berger, associate director of affirmative action, said that in fiscal year 1991, women comprised 22.5 percent of all faculty. Berger predicted that for 1992 the percentage would rise.
"Since I've been acting director, we've beaten quite a few women for this work."
Berner said that all employees filled out a form that contains race and gender information that is entered into the Human Resource Management System, a computer database, so that the demographic breakdown of KU faculty can be monitored.
Cromwell is the only humanities professor in the group. Four business professors and two law professors are also included.
The "salary market," which determines a professor's initial salary, must include the private sector, Riley said. For fields such as business and law, the professor's salary must compete with a salary that would be available outside the academic world.
Ten largest professor salaries
The ten highest paid professors are all men and nine of them are white.
name salary department
Rue Cromwell $78,873 Psychology
Michael Davis $78,400 Law
Mark Hirschey $77,810 Business
Fred Lovitch $76,850 Law
James Roberts $76,289 Computer Eng.
William Bulgren $75,111 Computer Sci.
George Pinches $74,657 Business
William Beedles $74,146 Business
De-Min Wu $73,930 Economics
Allen Ford $73,924 Business
Source: University of Kansas Budget, 1992 Sean Tevis / KANSAN
PAGE
2
Wednesday, June 24, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE WEEK IN BRIEF
A SUMMARY OF THE WEEK'S NEWS
SATURDAY/SUNDAY
■ District attorney's investigators videotaped friends and relatives of four men charged in the beating of a truck driver during rioting after the Rodney King verdict was announced, authorities said. The tapes were turned over to a federal-local task force on riot crimes to see if people at the courthouse were among those participating in several other assaults at the intersection where Reginald Denny was beaten.
■ Civil rights activist Hosea Williams said he's planning another march in predominantly white Forsyth County, Ga.A.march Williams led in 1987 prompted county officials to pass a law establishing higher parade permit fees, up to $1,000, for police protection during demonstrations.
■ African Americans, Hispanic Americans and Asian Americans
are the targets of a three-year education campaign by the American Diabetes Association. The association will begin this month to target Hispanics for diabetes education and treatment.
ON THE RECORD
A man walked into a Walla Walla, Wa. police station and confessed to involvement in the ax slayings of two men in 1991, saying God told him to clear his conscience, a sheriff's official said.
Lotolua Ilaoa, 28, was booked into Pierce County Jail for investigation of two counts of first-degree murder, sheriff's spokesman Curt Benson said Friday.
Until his confession, Ilaoa had not been considered a suspect in the slayings of Ricardo Gaxiola, 22, of Tijuana, Mexico, and Manuel Medina, 27, of Anaheim, Calif., Benson said. Both were killed by hatchet blows to the head.
An unlocked men's 10-speed, valued at $100, was taken about 8:23 a.m. Thursday from a residence on the 2000 block of Tennessee St., Lawrence police reported
- Ten cases of Olympia, Olympia Gold, Schaefer and Schaefer-Light beer, valued at $81, were taken Thursday from a delivery truck on the 2300 block of Louisiana St., Lawrence police reported.
■ A car stereo, valued at $805, was taken between 1:45 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Wednesday from a locked car on the 2400 block of Louisiana St., Lawrence police reported.
Two televisions sets, a video-cassette recorder, a camcorder, jewelry and a stereo, valued at $10,520, were taken between June 10 and June 17 from a residence on the 500 block of North 7th St., Lawrence police reported.
A radar detector and a wallet, valued at $200, were taken between 9:45 p.m. Thursday and 1:00 a.m. Friday from a car on the 700 block of Michigan St., Lawrence police reported.
A vacuum cleaner and a case of paper towels, valued at $327.55, were taken between June 15 and June 17 from a locked room in Foley Hall on West Campus, KU police reported.
Clothing and a Sony walkman, valued at $325, were removed Saturday between 12:30 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. from a car on the 3000 block of University Drive, Lawrence police reported.
A purse and its contents, valued at $549.50, were taken between 10:00 p.m. Friday and 12:30 a.m. Saturday from a car behind the 600 block of Massachusetts St., Lawrence police reported.
A woman was thrown to the ground, and her purse and its contents, valued at $232, were stolen between 12:10 a.m. and 12:30 a.m. Friday between the 800 and 1000 blocks of Massachusetts St., Lawrence police reported.
Someone test-drove a car, valued at $2,000, from a Lawrence car dealer Thursday and did not return it, Lawrence police reported.
- A radar detector and a wallet, valued at $200, were taken between 9:45 p.m. Thursday and 1:00 a.m. Friday from a car on the 700 block of Michigan St. Lawrence police reported.
- Two college rings, valued at $875, were taken between May 13 and May 17 from the second floor of the Kansas Union, KU police reported.
CAMPUS CALENDAR
Wednesday, June 24
IBM-compatible workshop,
"Introduction to Harvard Graphics,"
begins at 9 a.m. in the Computer Center. Students $40, non-
students $75. Call 864-0494 for information.
MacIntosh workshop, "Introduction to Excel," begins at 1 p.m. in the Computer Center. Students $40, nonstudents $75. Call 864-0494 for information.
Lawrence City Band Concert Series, featuring guest conductor Col. Arnald Gabriel, conductor emeritus of the U.S. Air Force Band, begins at 8 p.m. at South Park, 11th and Massachusetts streets. Free.
Thursday, June 25
New student orientation for liberal arts and sciences, allied health, business, education, journalism, nursing, pharmacy and social welfare transfer students begins at 8 a.m. in the Kansas Union. $40.Call 864-4270 for information.
Brown Bag Concert Series, featuring Chuck Berg, begins at noon at Ninth and Massachusetts streets. Free.
IBM-compatible workshop.
"Introduction to dBase III+,"
begins at 1 p.m. in the Computer
Center. Students $40, nonstudents
$75. Call 864-0494 for information.
Midwestern Music Camp recital featuring faculty and staff begins at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Free.
Friday, June 26
Summer on the Hill, "Let's Go
Jaybrowning," begins at 9 p.m. on
Level 1 of the Kansas Union. $1
Friday, June 26
New student orientation day and a-half session for liberal arts and sciences freshmen, including business, journalism and education majors, begins at 1 p.m. in the Kansas Union. $40. Call 864-4270 for information.
Classified employees orientation begins at 2 p.m. in Carruth- O'Leary Hall. Call 864-4946 for information.
Midwestern Music Camp concert featuring jazz ensemble and jazz choir begins at 7 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Free.
Saturday, June 27
Midwestern Music Camp concert, featuring bands, choirs and orchestra, at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. in Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Free.
A benefit dance and concert for Kansas Natural Resource Council begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. Ann Zimmerman will perform first. A barn dance will follow. $5.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 24, 1992
3
RED BLOOD
Ellen McAtee / KANSAN
Adam Shreve, a Kansas Journalism Institute student, takes a break from studying. Shreve was attending an advanced newspaper class Monday in Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansas Journalism Institute is conducting newspaper and yearbook journalism workshops at the University of Kansas for more than 100 high school students from 12 states through Friday.
Daydreaming
Barbecue battle begins
a barbecue Jayhawk might be every Wildcat's dream, but for Brad Krings, "BBQ N Hawks" means something else entirely.
By Becky Lucas
Kansan staff writer
Krings, Lenexa senior, will head the BBQ'N Hawks as they prepare for competition Saturday in a battle of grills and smokers that has become a Lenexa tradition.
By noon Saturday, most of Lenexa should be slow-cooked to barbecue perfection as the 160 contestants and 450 judges ready for the Great Lenexa Barbecue Battle at Sar-Ko-Par Trails Park, 87th Street and Lackman Road.
About 25,000 spectators are expected to come for free samples, offered from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Three shuttle buses will transport visitors to the site from parking lots on 87th Street.
"Our goal is to have a good time, send everyone home safely and crown a new barbecue champion," Nicks said.
The 11-year-old event has grown from 12 contestants and 12 judges to the largest-ever contest this year, said Bill Nickis, director of the Lenexa Parks and Recreation Department.
Competitors will begin arriving at the park on Friday and spend the day readying their grills and smokers. By
early evening some of the meat already will have hit the grill.
"I stay in the park until 2 a.m. Saturday morning and leave when another worker comes to relieve me," Nicks said. "When I arrive home, a block away, and crawln in bed my wife says 'I can smell that you're home.'"
The Lenexa contest allows contestants to enter either as amateur or professional. Contestants can then enter one of eight categories of meat to be judged on Saturday. The miscellaneous category attracts contestants who grill anything from quail to rattlesnake meat.
To qualify for the grand champion competition, a team must enter a minimum of five categories. Ribbons are awarded for the first seven places in each of the categories. Nicks said.
Of the 106 teams entered for competition, six list Lawrence addresses,
BBQN Hawks, one of those six, is looking to take home another ribbon. Krings placed fifth in the poultry division last year.
"I went to high school in Overland Park, and I grew up in Lenox, so I've known about it for years," Krings said. "I had some friends that were interested in it, and so we decided to enter."
Krings said that the recipe that
placed in the poultry division was a spur-of-the-moment concoction that he hoped could recreate this year.
"At the end of the day they awarded the awards and I couldn't believe it when they called my name," Krings said.
Because of the popularity of the contest, the 160 slots filled up in 72 hours. Nicks said.
And because of the urgency to get a space, Krings said, he drove to Lenexa the Monday notices were sent out and was number 40 in registration, all before 9:30 a.m.
He said that competition was so keen that a friend had been offered $1,000 to sell his space. "There are a lot of little guys wanting to be discovered, and this is a good way," Krings said.
But in addition to the competitive side, the event also is social.
"I want to see how I rank amongst the others, and it's a good time," Krings said. "It's fun to sit and talk with the others, so it's got a social side to it, especially Friday night."
Take a byte out of campus crime by locking, engraving computers Eight thefts totaling $12,810 have occurred since January
"I want to get another ribbon," he said. "I want my salmon to place. I've already got a place to put my new ribbon, right next to the one I won last year."
Krings' real goal this year is to place in the miscellaneous category.
By Anne Grego
Kansan staff writer
When a thief took a computer from the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research in the spring of 1991, he took more than a machine from the office. The theft stole productivity.
Employees were forced to compete with each other to use the office's other computers, said Bev Bray, director of administration at the Institute.
"It creates a very frustrating situation." Bray said of computer theft.
A computer may not be the easiest thing to steal, but if the opportunity presents itself some thieves are willing to take a chance.
KU police suspected someone was plan-
ning to return for the machines and recorded
the incident as the theft and recovery
Two Apple Macintosh computers worth $4,644 were removed June 2 from Academic Computing Services, according to KL police. Machines were found in the first classroom.
Apple Macintoshes are popular with
thieves because of their easy-to-use system,
sad Sue Silkey, who works in customer ser-
vice at the Computer Center.
Ikey said that computer theft increased
during summer because fewer people were around to see what was going on.
Since January, eight cases of computer theft totaling $12,810 were reported to KU police.
The police recovered equipment valued at $4,645, including the machines found in the Computer Center men's room.
In 1991, 17 cases of computer theft involving $12.925 were reported. Police recovered $603 of that equipment.
Almost all the losses came from offices rather than residence hall rooms. Police records show that some computer disks were lost in the Hall last year and trous laxes Hall this year.
Students who are victims of theft often are covered by their parents' homeowner policies, said Betty Vanderslice, supervisor of property and casually section of the Kansas Insurance Commissioner's Office.
To be covered, students must list their parents' address as their permanent residence. Because policies differ, Vanderslice suggests students check their parents' policies. University-owned computers are self-insured, which means that each office must absorb the loss. Silkey said.
The Institute of Public Policy and Business Research had to change priorities in its budget to buy another machine, Bray said. The office was able to replace the machine within a year.
To disdoubt the theft, KU police recommend engraving computers. An engraved computer is harder to sell, said Burdel Welsh of KU Police. He added that engraving a driver's license number into the computer made it easier for police to trace the rightful owner. Engraving equipment can be borrowed from KU police, he said.
Securing a computer with cables to a hard-to-move object like a desk can also deter a thief.
The Computer Center's department of engineering and maintenance will secure University-owned computers for $10 per component. For a Macintosh computer, securing would cost $10 for the monitor and $10 for the keyboard. Securing the mouse is a free service.
The department of engineering and maintenance also will engrave computers. Acrylic stickers also are available. Martin Huerter, supervisor of the department, said that after a short time the stickers were almost impossible to remove and would have to be ground off the computer by a thief.
Hilltop students learn from business experience
By Terrilyn McCormick Special to the Kansan
The next Sam Walton may come out of Hilltop Day Care's 3rd-5th grade class after last week's lesson on starting and operating a small business.
"Colorful Knucknacks," the simulated business run by the class, opened a booth Friday in front of Watson Library, selling three products: games of skill, friendship bracelets and assemblage pins, which are safety pins decorated with mat board, buttons, pictures and paper rolls.
"The lesson was fun because it gave us a
chance to learn about the real world," said Danika Reitz,9.
The students first learned about expenses and profit margin, then they voted on a name and logo for the business and decided what products to sell.
Assistant teacher Cher Carroway decided that the best way to educate the children about small business was to have them start their own.
On Thursday the class toured The Raven Bookstore and Ye Olde Sugarosity Shoppe, where students received tips on running a small business.
In order to set up a booth Friday, the class
The lesson will be completed tomorrow at First National Bank, where the students will set up an account with the established profit of $30, which will go back to the class.
"The class will probably eat the profit because our employees may have to be paid in Popsicles," Carroway said.
David Smith, professor of sociology and parent of Robin,8, saw the craft sale not as a business experience but as art exposure.
contacted the University of Kansas and received a permit to sell items on campus.
"Robin has always had an art interest," he said. "We have his art all over the house, but it is nice to see his art gone public."
By Ana Kostick
Kenon staff writer
In May, Bob Lewis returned to school after 44 years.
Lewis participated in the Elderhostel program KU has offered since 1979. Elderhostel, one of the best-known international programs for older-adult learning, will educate more than 250,000 senior citizens at 1,600 colleges and universities worldwide this year.
Lewis, 69, a radio and television producer for the Office of University Relations at the University of Kansas, is one of an increasing number of adults older than 60 who are participating in college and university programs designed for senior citizens.
1900 census data predict that by the year 2080, the over 65 population in the United States will have grown from 12 percent to almost 25 percent of the total population. That means that the number of senior citizens who want to go back to school could double.
With the growing number of seniors citizens who are interested in learning opportunities for older adults, other programs, such as Evergreen at Boston University and KU's own community enrollment program, also are targeting that audience.
Cady Goldfield, director of public relations for the Boston-based Elderhostel, said enrollment in the international program had increased during the past several years.
The non-profit organization is financed by tuition students pay to attend the week-long programs, which provide intensive learning about a specific topic determined by the individual institution.
"It's learning for the fun of it, not for drudgery," Goldfield said. "You do it for self-enrichment and fun. It's meaningful activity for older adults."
Goldfield said the program had gained popularity because it allowed older students to be in a classroom with their peers. She said Elderhostel research showed that nine out of 10 older adults would rather be in a classroom with their peers than with traditional students.
"They can talk on their own terms." Gold.
field said. "There's more debate and discussion geared toward the older-adult interests, needs and experiences."
The discussion and subject matter in Elder-hostel classrooms varies from school to school.
"Every program draws from its natural strengths," Goldfield said. "The best part is that it really allows the individual school to shine. Elderhostel takes care of all the basics, but the program allows the coordinator to be real creative with their resources."
KU Elderhostel coordinators tapped the resources of Haskell Indian Junior College and developed a program that focused on Native-American issues.
Rose Rousseau, senior program manager of continuing education, coordinated KU's 1992 Elderhostel program, "A New-Found Voice: Native American Arts and Letters."
She said the program focused on Native Americans because of the quincentennial of Christopher Columbus' arrival in the Americas. She said the program's goal was to re-evaluate the role of European influence on Native Americans and to familiarize the students with the history, culture and background of these people.
As a student in the May 17-23 program, Bob Lewis lived the life of a typical university student. He slept, ate and attended daily classes with 25 other students aged 60 to 84.
The cost of the KU program was $280 for a double-occupancy room and $310 for a single. The fee included meals, lodging and transportation. Full scholarships based solely on need were available through the national office.
Goldfield said that although 70 percent of the participants nationwide have had some college background, the Elderhostel program was not geared toward the college graduate.
"It's the personality, not the formal education, that makes them come," Goldfield said. "A student only needs to be curious about life. We try to assure them that their background doesn't matter. Living 60 years supplants what you have or haven't learned in the classroom."
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Wednesday. June 24,1992
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FROM THE EDITORS
MTV's Clinton interview convinces ex-Perot fan to join Democrat's camp
or the past year I have had virtually no respect for Bill Clinton. When Ross Perot jumped into the picture, despite my unanswered questions, I felt sure the pushy billionaire would make a perfect president.
That is until Sunday evening, when Bill Clinton took the stage for an MTV special presentation.
For about 30 minutes, the presidential candidate subjected himself to random questions from a studio audience of young adults. He talked about his beliefs, his reasoning and his plans for the future — if he were to become president.
Within those 30 minutes, my vote for the future changed.
Clinton bared his soul on all issues. He answered all questions easily and clearly, regardless of how blunt or subjective they were. He did not evade any question, and he treated each one with great respect and importance, as they should be.
For the first time, I began to see past the alleged adulterer, which was the cloud I saw hanging over his head, and I listened to him. And I began to realize that the problem with Perot was that there was nothing to listen to, even if he is slowly beginning to open up. The only two things I know about Perot for sure are that he is pro-choice, and that he wants comedian Dana Carvey to campaign with him. And although I am tempted by the thrill of the unknown, I'm not willing to take big of a chance with Perot.
I might not agree with everything Clinton says he stands for, but at least with him I have that opportunity.
-Jennifer Bach
Young athletes should be aware of Title IX and appreciate its benefits
Yesterday marked the 20th anniversary of Title IX. I did not know it then, but Title IX would greatly affect my life. It gave me, a female athlete, the privileges and rights of male athletes. Title IX gave women who excelled in sports the opportunity to participate in collegiate athletics. Title IX was a sort of emancipation proclamation for women athletes. Before Title IX, female athletes practiced wherever they could, often under horrid conditions. While the men's team team would train on the clean indoor courts, often the women's team would train on public courts in the wee hours of the morning or very late at night.
CONSISTEN to the weWork for you mission. As a female athlete, I can appreciate the importance of Title IX. Without it, there would not have been any financing to give talented women athletes college scholarships for their sports. Many of the great athletes we will see in Barcelona would not have participated in athletics after high school had it not been for Title IX.
Women often do not reach their athletic potential until they are out of college. Without Title IX, these women would not have been able to train intensively for their sports while attending college. Women were treated like non-persons. In a day and age when equality is of the utmost importance, I think it is horrible that young athletes haven't even heard of Title IX. I know it, and through three years of collegiate swimming I have learned truly to appreciate it.
I appreciate it even more every time I look down at the 1992 Big Eight Conference Championship ring on my finger. Thank you, Title IX.
NEW YORK CITY COURT OF LAW
Derek Nolen / KANSAN
The University of Kansas flag flies upside down in front of Strong Hall. The flags hang upside down Monday by the housekeeping department of facilities operations, Phil Endackson, associate director of housekeeping, said that up close the size of the flags made it hard to tell which side of the flag should go up the pole first.
Go UK Javhawks?
Garfield's birthday marks 14 years of unfunny jokes, overused gags and recycled story lines
Garfield the cartoon cat celebrated his 14th birthday last week. As the late pet-food pit-pich-man Lorne Green would have said, "That's 9$ to you and me."
Unfortunately, it seems like Garfield has been around for nearly a century.
Sure, I can remember when the strip was funny. But then again, I can remember several things from my early childhood.
Garfield has gotten old, and so have his jokes. Some strips, such as the "Far Side," often run classic strips when the cartoonists go on vacation. However, Jim Davis is not returning Garfield, he is simply recycling him.
How many fat cat jokes can you make? How many times can it be funny for Garfield to beat up on Odie, the world's stupidest dog? How long can it be humorous for Garfield to wake up his owner, John, or eat John's food?
PETER RUSSELL
Not for 14 years.
Davis has done nothing to keep Garfield fresh and interesting. Fat and lazy jokes have been his staple for more than a decade. Yes, we have seen this all before.
Many strips introduce new characters and story lines as time marches on. Berke Breathed continually sought to keep his all too short-lived "Bloom County" fresh. When the well went dry, Breathed quit while he was ahead and left his readers begging for more.
characters to complement the main characters, Opus the penguin and Milo Bloom. One such character was the inarticulate Bill the Cat. No, Bill could not speak, but his actions were more humorous than anything Garfield ever said. However, when Bill came on the scene, Opus was not impressed.
"I'm a Garfield fan," he sarcastically said as he read from a book entitled "Garfield Geus Old."
Yes, even five years ago, the fat foline had overstayed his welcome. Maybe Garfield never was funny. Perhaps it only amused me in its original because I was a naive child. Even the most humorous things cannot be funny day after day.
Even "Blondie" has changed with the times. A recent story line made America's oldest homemaker into a working woman. Garfield slept right through it.
Of course, Garfield is the only offender. Bill Keane's "Family Circus"
has used the old Not Me gag more times than I’ve inhaled. I don’t even want to talk about “Peanuts,” which is older than my parents.
On Monday, Garfield ran through the kitchen, put a cooking pot over John's head and beat the pot with a spoon. Wait—here comes the punch line. Garfield takes the pot off John's head and says, "You're not laughing." Neither was anyone else.
But these strips are merely unamusing. Garfield is annoying.
Fortunately, the average life span for a cat is just 15 years. We only can hope Garfield's life is as average as his humor.
Though some may have wished Jim Davis well on the 1st birthday of his meal ticket, I cannot. In the words of the great Bill the Cat, "Aak. Phubt."
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.
TO THE EDITORS
tory.
Map's placement of Macedonia is misleading
Macedonia is found in only one place of the world, and this is Greece. Macedonia constitutes the largest division of Greece's northern part. Any effort to use the name Macedonia other than describing this part of Greece is malevolent and only serves propagandistic and imperialistic purposes. People should know that historically, Macedonia has always been a Greek terri-
On page three of the June 17th Kansas. In noticed a map that depicted the troublesome area in Bosnia and Serbia. This map gave the name Macedonia to the southernmost part of what was until recently known as Yugoslavia. Although the source for this map is the Great World Atlas, (no blame for the Kansan team) the name which was assigned to this small south division is misleading.
Macedonia, as presented in the map, does not exist. Although there has been a controversy on this issue between Greeks and Yugoslavians, Macedonia is still one, and it is Greek. I would appreciate if you would publish this note so people can be aware of the truth.
Andreas Maheras is a graduate student from Athens.
Mary Kelly is a graduate student in sociology
Troops must withdraw from independent states
Recent articles on President Boris Yeltsin's visit to the United States have neglected to mention one important fact — that there are still former Soviet troops in former republics of the Soviet Union. I am writing in particular about the plight of Lithuania.
had assumed that they would have been withdrawn as soon as Lithuanian independence was officially recognized. A Lithuanian I met there informed me that there had been 40,000 Soviet troops before Lithuanian independence. Since that time, only 300 troops have been moved out. There is no excuse for the former Soviet army continuing to occupy a free country.
Last month when I was in Lithuania, I was surprised to see former Soviet troops everywhere I went. I
Any U.S. aid to the Commonwealth of Independent States should be contingent upon the removal of former Soviet troops from independent countries. If we give financial aid without such a stipulation, we will be supporting the continuation of Soviet occupation, even when there is no longer a Soviet Union.
Spend money on projects, food for homeless, not on dining video
Now there's a video available that instructs the homeless on how to forage through dumpsters for food. I'm not kidding, I just read this in the paper. My first question, if you have no home, do you have a VCR? Or is the video edible? Yes, I do know no one expects the homeless to buy a video. It's to be shown in shelters. But I have a hard time believing this conversation might occur. "Say, if you're not engaged this evening, why not pop over to the soup kitchen. I hear they're showing that new 'Dining flick'." Why, yes, I've been wanting to see that. Ebert gave it a thumps up, but then, it was about food."
Linda Dunlap, who produced the video, says she is trying to "help the homeless survive a little less painful." The video carries 54 warnings to avoid eating from trash bins, as it can be hazardous to your health. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe not eating at all is somewhat hazardous to your health. Homeless diners are shown how to choose fruit and vegetables with skins that are thick and
Kate Kelly
Guest
Columnist
1
broken and can be washed. Who throws that out? In my house, unless it is growing blue hair, food doesn't go in the garbage.
People don't eat out of garbage bins by choice. Of this I'm fairly certain. When you are that hungry, a few insects, wood chips or cigarette butts are the least of your worries. I have been blessed to never have known real hunger. But once, a couple of weeks of self-induced dieting, I was experiencing such a raging chocolate craving that I ate two M&Ms found under my refrigerator, giving no thought to the dirt, dust, dog hair and
possible bug poop that may have been stuck to them. Now, I don't mean to infer that a chocolate craving is anywhere as serious as real hunger, but it does illustrate the point that when you're desperate, you eat anything.
Ms. Dunlap's heart may have been in the right place, however it's like putting one of those little quarter-inch Band-Aids on a huge gap, spurring head wound. It's an effort, but it really doesn't help any. The money and effort used to produce this video might have gone to better use to provide real food for some people or into social projects working to change the circumstances of the homeless.
As a certified fitness instructor, I'm concerned that many of the homeless aren't getting the necessary cardiovascular conditioning that they should have. But I don't think I'll be coming out with the "Cardboard Box Stepping and Sewer Grate Lift Work-Out" video any time soon.
Kate Kelly is a Ft. Leavenworth junior majoring in English
KANSAN STAFF
JUSTIN KNUPP Editor
JENNIFER BACH Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
KIM CLAXTON Business manager
by Tom Michaud
Editors
Campus ... Gayle Oterberg
Ast. Aest. Campus ... Doug Flahack
Copy Cheff ... Alex Bloomhof
Contributing ... Mitchell Davi
Photo ... Derek Nolan
Graphics ... Alimee Brainard
BRIAN WOLF Director of Client Services
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Special Promotions ..Melissa Teresa
Production mgr ..Brad Bran
Retail Support mgrs ..Ashley Langford
Hilary Wilcox
Regional Support mgr ..Jane Henderson
Classified mgr ..Kate Burgess
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Letters affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be the Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
Loco Locals
RIGHT NOW, I DON'T FEEL LIKE GOING BACK TO SUMMER SCHOOL...
I THINK TO QUALIFY THAT STATEMENT, YOU'D HAVE TO GO TO CLASS AT LEAST ONCE...
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 24,1992
5
Loss of two veteran legislators may hurt KU in budget process
High turnover is forecast for 1993 session
By Chris Moeser Kansas staff writer
The University of Kansas will go into battle next year at the Statehouse without two of its most valiant soldiers, and some local officials said they were concerned.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, announced last week that he would not seek his seventh term in the House's 45th District, and State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, announced in April that he would not seek re-election to the Senate.
Additionally, State Rep. Sandy Paeager, RLawrence, will vacate her 44th-District seat to run for Winter's 2nd-District Senate seat.
That will leave Lawrence with at least two freshman legislators for the first time since 1980, when the community lost three legislators to retirement, defeat or resignation.
Chancellor Gene Budig said Solbach would be sorely missed by the University.
"Representative Sobbach's decision not to seek re-election will make our lives more difficult." Budig sad. "He was a thoughtful advocate for the Umi-
versity of Kansas, one who exerted steady influence over the legislative budget process. John focused public attention on the needs of Re-gents Universities. He will be missed by all of us on the Hill."
Budig made similar comments in April after Winter announced his intentions to not run again.
Russell Getter, associate professor of government, agreed with Budig's assessment of the loss of Winter and Solbach.
"Both people are going to be very difficult to replace," Getter said. He also said that both Solbach and Winter had a very persuasive style that enabled them to get things done in the Legislature.
"John Solbach was an extremely effective legislator on the one-on-one level in persuading other legislators to go along with his ideas," he said. "Wint Winter understood power in the Senate very well, not because he liked that, but because he got thrown into that power game because he was on the Senate Ways and Means committee."
Solbach served on the House Appropriations committee, the equivalent of Ways and Means in the Senate.
Getter said those were the two most important committees in the Legislature to KU because that was where all finance bills began.
gave them an opportunity to really make sure others understood the needs of the University at a time when that understanding was paramount."
"They both occupied key committee posts," Getter said. "Their position
Getter said it was unclear whether Lawrence's other legislators could secure an appointment to either Ways and Means in the Senate or Appropriations in the House. He stressed that it would be difficult for a freshman legislator to be appointed to either committee.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said she decided to seek re-election Friday after Solbach announced his decision not to run again last week. She had been considering retirement after 12 years of representing the 46th District.
"I think it is important for my district and the community not to have an entire delegation of freshmen legislators," Charlson said.
Charlton also said she would not seek an appointment to the House Appropriations Committee. Charlton currently co-heads the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
However, Prager said she would seek an appointment to the Senate Ways and Means Committee if she was elected.
She added that it was important for the Lawrence delegation to fill the gap in leadership left by Solbach and Winter.
"I think it's going to put pressure on
"of us still there to pick up the
slack that will be left when John and Wint leave, "Praeger said.
She said she hoped the bipartisan spirit of the current Lawrence delegation would be continued in the new delegation next year.
Praeger pointed out that if she was elected to the Senate, she would have seniority over other freshman senators because she would be moving from the House to the Senate.
Thirteen of 40 senators have announced that they will not seek re-election. And more could be defeated in the fall, said Mark Bannister, chief of staff to Senate President Bud Burke, R-Leawed.
Banister cited a variety of reasons for the high number, such as the desire to spend more time with families. He also blamed the long and tiring 1992 legislative session for some retirements.
As many as 28 of 125 representatives will not seek re-election, according to the office of House Speaker Marvin Barkis, D-Faola.
Getter said that Praeger may be able to quickly establish herself as a leader in the Senate.
"Because she has experience in the House and on the Lawrence City Commission, she may have more relative power than other members of that class." Getter said. "She may be a member of the largest incoming class perhaps since World War II."
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Wednesday, June 24,1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Summer camp teaches kids conservation, survival skills
By Becky Lucas Kansan staff writer
School doesn't always have to be a room with a chalkboard and few windows.
Instead, school can be a field and a pond with each insect or blade of grass acting as an instructor. Thoreau would have approved.
so that it's here when they get older." Hurst said. "Today we talked about hiking on trails and set up a trail with trail markers all over the place."
In addition to learning about conservation, the children spend time on nature walks identifying flowers and plants. They also play games that include the use of survival skills. This week, students built a solar still that allowed them to purify water using only leaves, a cup and the sun.
At the Outdoor Education Camp, part of the summer's offerings from the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, children ages five to 12 can spend a week learning about nature and conservation.
Students begin their hike at 9 a.m. and stay active until 3 p.m., when parents pick up the students, Hurst said.
Each Monday new students, grouped by age, set out to Mary's Lake, 31st Street east of Haskell Avenue, and spend the next four days fishing, hiking, canoeing, and catching frogs, bugs and turtles, said Jody Hurst, day camp counselor.
The summer camp offers parents the chance to get kids out of the traditional day care mode and into a more natural environment, Hurst said.
"The whole purpose of day camp is to teach them the purpose of the earth
"The younger kids get real tired but the older kids are ready to go," she said.
Most of the children come from Lawrence, but some come from surrounding cities including Baldwin City and Kansas City. Hurst said.
"For a lot of kids, the only nature they see is their manicured backyard," she said. "So this is something new and exciting."
The camp sees many repeat faces each year, but for 12-year-old Karrig-
Karrigan had been attending the camps for the past six years and said he would miss the camps, especially the night the older campers camped out
an Bork, last year was his last summer at day camp.
"The camp for 11 or 12-year-olds is in August, but I turn 13 in July," Karrigan said. "It's a bummer."
"I liked fishing and we did that one day of every year," Karrigan said. "It was cool."
And while Karrigan can't go to camp this summer, his 8-year-old brother Ian said he was really enjoying camp this week.
The camp has an added bonus, he said.
The people there are nice. It's really fun that you get to be outside all day long." Ian said, "It's way better than school."
"I really like it because they let you catch things and you learn a lot about nature," Ian said. "We played games and took nature hikes and went on a trail to find the arrows."
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7
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Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Beneath the face of legendary Kansas City jazz musician Charlie Parker, Sean Saffold, Cleveland graduate student, receives a history lesson from renowned jazz vocalist Queen Bey. Saffold is beginning work on a feature film titled "Birdland," which will feature Queen Bey and other jazz greats from Kansas City.
Kansas City, historical jazz town. inspires KU film student
By Becky Lucas Kansan staff writer
Repeating riffs, the hearty soul of the blues infused with fluid soloists—Kansas City jazz, a style of music more than 80 years old.
And though no one can document the birthplace of jazz, Kansas City has always fought for a piece of the jazz spotlight that is often focused on more notable music towns such as New Orleans and New York.
Saffold is searching for the $150,000 needed to make his dream a reality.
But that's not going to be the case if Sean Saffold, Cleveland graduate student in film studies, can create the film he envisions.
That dream is a documentary about Kansas City jazz greats, including Jay McStain and Claude "Fiddler" Williams, Saffold said.
"These people are national treasures, and we want to expose them to the world," Saffold said.
He is planning a benefit concert featuring Williams for Sept. 18 at Liberty Hall in Lawrence. In addition, he said, he has already raised about $20,000 of the $150,000 he needs for
the project.
"Each day we're aggressively trying to reach new investors," Saffold said. "We've been working on the project for about five months, and we plan to start shooting in July."
The film will be in Kansas City in locations such as the City Light Jazz Club and the Grand Emporium, Saffold said, adding that he was still working out details with other clubs in Kansas City.
The project, in addition to focusing on two jazz greats, will look at the politics surrounding jazz music. The question, "Why, despite it's great heritage, hasn't Kansas City used jazz to bring tourists in?" will be addressed in the film, Saffold said.
Once the project is completed, Safold said, he will look at several distributors to help promote the film, which he visualizes as an art film that might be seen at Liberty Hall or the Twoli in Westport.
"We feel that if the movie only makes $1 million or $2 million that we will have made 10 or 20 times at cost to produce," Saffold said.
Saffold, with his own Black Magic Productions, will be working with
Darrin Lile, who is a partner in Marimba Productions.
Lile, a Tulsa, Okla., graduate student in religious studies and theater and film, said rough plans with Saffold included Marimba Productions being hired to manage production.
"From what I gather, K.C is trying to get the Jazz Hall of Fame," Lile said. He said he thought the documentary would help with that.
"He's got the passion for jazz, and I've got the passion for film." Lile said. "So together we've got a team." Lile, who is finishing his own movie for his degree, said filming in July sounded optimistic.
Even if he's not free from his own project, Lile said, they already have a core crew of people who could work once the money-raising and planning stages of Saffold's film were completed.
Lile said he believed Saffold would accomplish his goal of $150,000 for the project.
"That sounds real optimistic," Lile said, "but that's Sean for you. He's able to show people the importance of a thing.
"And he seems like the kind of per son who could do it."
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A controversial video for the homeless offers tips to avoid food poisoning when digging for meals from garbage cans and dumsters.
Symptoms such as stomach cramps and diarrhea can accompany food poisoning, Schnitker said. Symptoms can last from two to 24 hours.
right conditions."
The new video, "The Fine Art of Dumpster Dining" has drawn interest in Europe but criticism in this country. The video was distributed nationwide to shelters and groups working with the homeless. Officials at the Salvation Army in Lawrence and LNK said they had not seen the video.
John Allen, coordinator of LINK,
was impressed with the idea.
"It's a very common-sense sort of thing," Allen said. "In reality it does go on; I've seen it with my own eyes, so I would make it as safe as possible."
Dumpster dining caught up with
the men who were there, he was
bhitching through Kagawa.
"All I could do was curl up and bear it." Bedid said. "But it was bad."
The Lawrence food kitchens offer
306 days a year as an alternative to
the usual 120 days.
The Salvation Army serves lunch on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. LINK, in First Christian Church, serves lunch on Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. Sack lunches are served Saturday at St. John's Catholic Church. LINK also serves a meal on the last Friday of the month.
The lunches at the food kitchens usually consist of donations from the
community, local grocery stores and restaurants. LINK has been serving meals to the hungry for 7 1/2 years.
"We serve approximately 100 at a time and allow them to come back until they're full," said Pam Casagrande director of LINK
Church groups and civic organizations sign up to donate their food and services to LINK. The food is brought by volunteers, who are the groups each day, Casagrande said.
Two years ago, the federal government passed a law allowing grocery stores and restaurants to donate leftover food. Grocery stores such as Dillons and Alvin's IGA donate their day-old bread and pastries and certain produce and meats.
"The three Dillons stores also donate one meal a month to the LINK kitchens on a rotating basis," said Bob Manion, manager of Dillons at 1015 W. 23rd St.
Weigel said Dillons did not find many dumpster diners because their dumpster was an enclosed compactor the city emptied once a week.
Maxine Bruns, Hardee's manager,
said the Sixth Street store had problems
in the past with dumpster dining.
The Kansas and Burge Unions also help food donate kitchens. Jay Glatz, manager of food service for Kansas and Burge Unions, said leftovers from the athletic training table and catering events often were donated.
"I didn't like it, but you feel sorry for them too," Bruns said. "I've allowed them to do it before, but if they get sick it's a no-win situation. Fries are good for five minutes; hamburgers are good for 40 minutes." She said the restaurant avoids waste by cooking less often.
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Wednesday, June 24, 1992
9
NBA insiders dub today's draft 'deep'
Jamison stays cool as pro draft approaches
By Anne Grego Kansan staff writer
former Kansas basketball player Alonzo Jamison will find out tonight whether he will be moving to Cleveland.
Jamison is projected by Sport magazine to be drafted by the Cleveland Cavaliers in tonight's NBA draft.
The draft, which begins at 6:30 tonight in Portland, Ore., will allow the NBA teams 54 selections in two rounds to pick the best players who are eligible this year.
Cleveland selects late in the second round.
Jamison said he had no expectationsinthe draft.
"Anything can happen," he said.
last year, Jamison was named to both the Big Eight Conference All-Tournament Team and secondteam all-can
ference.
Jamison averaged 10 points a game and finished last season with Kansas' third-highest career field goal percentage at 58 percent.
He also dished out 116 assists last season.
Although Jamison had what it took to play college ball, he admits that his offensive skills will need work on the professional level. He also will be expected to score more.
What couldpropelJamison to the NBA is his strong defense. Jamison was assigned to defend the toughest offensive opponents, including Missouri's Anthony Peeler, the Big Eight Conference player of the year. Jamison was one of the nation's leaders in steals with 83 last season and 175 for his career.
A 6-foot-6 foward, Jamison was more than big enough to defend some of the nation's best college athletes. He said he thought his size did not limit his ability.
An obstacle Jamison might have to overcome is his size.
"I don't think it will matter, because I play the three spot," he said.
In the draft Jamison will be compared to other small forwards such as Arkansas' Todd Day and Alabama's Robert Horry, who both measure in at 6-foot-9.
If tonight Damison finds he is not on his way to the NBA, he still has plans.
Jamison will look at free agency. He says that he has no plans to go to the Continental Basketball Association but that he would consider playing overseas.
Janison is talking to agents but has not signed with anyone.
This summer Jamison is taking two of the last three courses he needs to satisfy his requirements for a degree in communication studies.
NBA draft order
The 1992 NBA draft is today in Portland, Oregon. Players from the Big Eight Conference who are expected to be drafted include Anthony Peeler, Mason Johnson, Oklahoma State; and Alonzo Jamison, Kansas.
Round 1 Round 2
Round 1
- Orlando
- Charlotte
- Minnesota
- Dallas
- Denver
- Washington
- Sacramento
- Milwaukee
- Philadelphia
- Atlanta
- Houston
- Milwaukee
- Denver
-(from New Jersey)
- Indiana
- L.A. Lakers
- L.A. Clippers
- Seattle
- San Antonio
- Detroit
- New York
- Boston
- Phoenix
- Utah
- Golden State
- LA. Clippers
-(from Cleveland)
- Portland
- Chicago
Round 2
- Minnesota
- New Jersey (from Ohio through Chicago)
- Downtown
- Portland or Washington (from Denver)
- Washington
- Minnesota (from Sacramento)
- Minnesota (from Milwaukee)
- Charlotte
- L.A. Lakers (from Philadelphia through Minnesota and Milwaukee)
- Minneapolis
- Atlanta
- Chicago (from Indiana)
- New Jersey
- Houston
- Golden State (from L.A. Clippers)
- San Antonio
- Seattle
- Denver (from Detroit)
- Boston
- Phoenix (from New York)
- Phoenix
- Golden State
- Minnesota (from Utah)
- Chicago (from Portland)
- Holiday (from Cleveland)
- Sacramento (from Chicago through Portland)
Source: The Associated Press Sean Tevis/KANSAN
Pichardo stops Yankees on four hits as Royals defeat New York
The Kansas City Royals won yesterday at home against the New York Yankees 2-1 bringing their season record to 29-39 overall. They play tonight at home against New York. Game time
Rovals scoreboard
R
Winner, Pichardo, 2.3
Loser, Perez, 7.5
Save, Montgomery (17)
Runs Hits Error
New York 1 6 1
Kansas City 2 4 0
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Hipolito Pichardo stopped the Yankees on four hits in 61/3 innings in the longest outing of his career as the Kansas City Royals beat New York 2-1 last night.
Pichardo (2-3) was without wins in his last five starts. He struck out four and walked one in last night's victory.
Source: The Sean Tevis/KANSAN
Rusty Meacham and Jeff Montgomery finished for Pichardo, who started the season at Class AA in Memphis, and whose previously longest start was six innings.
Montgomery retired the final four batters for his 17th save.
After giving up a one-out single to Mel Hall in the first, Pichard retired 13 straight batters until Charlie Hayes singled with two outs in the fifth. Mike Stanley also singed, but Mike Gallego grounded out.
Melido Perez (7-5) gave up single runs in the first and the sixth. Keith Miller tripped and scored on Greg Joffeier's single in the first. James tried to make a diving stop of Miller's ball but partially trapped it, and the ball rolled away as Miller made it to third standing up.
"I think it's the deepest draft in years," said Marty Blake, the NBA's director of scouting.
Kansas City scored just once in the sixth despite loading the bases with no outs. George Brett doubled to lead off the inning, and Jim Eisenreich was
safe on second baseman Galloge's throwing error. Mike Macfarlane walked to fill the bases, and Brent Mayne delivered a sacrifice fly.
When the first four teams make their selections tonight, no one should be surrised.
Perez, who was on a three-game winning streak, gave up eight hits, struck out three and walked four.
Pichardo was relieved in the seventh after Kevin Maas singled and Dion James walked with one out. Meacham struck out Charlie Hayes and Matt Nokes to get out of the inning.
First four picks set, second round strong
The Yankees scored in the eighth when Andy Stankiewicz singled, Roberto Kelly was hit by a pitch and Montgomery gave up a run-scoring single to Don Mattingly.
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — For the first time in the league's history, the NBA draft won't be held in New York City. Instead, it has been shifted to Portland's Memorial Coliseum.
Few teams seemed interested in making last-minute trades to alter the draft order, according to Bucky Buckwalter, the vice president for player personnel of the Portland Trail Blazers.
"The first four picks are set in stone," Blake said. "After that, I have no idea. Nobody else does, either."
“It’s kind of quiet here and throughout the league,” he said. “Because it’s such a deep draft, everyone haskind of fallen in love with their own pick.”
Orlando has the No. 1 pick and is expected to select Shaquille O'Neal, whose skill and dominating 7-foot-1 presence make him one of the NBA's all-time draft prizes.
The question is whether the Magic will be able to sign him. O'Neal, who along with the other top picks is scheduled to be in Portland for the draft, reportedly wants a multi-year contract that would pay him at least 85 million per year.
Charlotte Hornets are expected to use the No. 2 pick to select 6-foot-10 Alonzo Mourning, the latest of the great Georgetown University centers.
The third selection belongs to the Minnesota Timberwolves, and Jack McCloskey, their new general manager, has settled on 6-11 Christian Laetner of Duke. Laetner was voted the college player of the year and should move right into a starting forward position.
Dallas, picking fourth, is expected to 6-4 Kick Jim Jackson of Ohio
State, the two-time Big Ten player of the year. Jackson had one year of college eligibility left but decided to turn pro.
The Denver Nuggets, with the No. 5 pick, may go for 6-9 Adam Keefe of Stanford University or 6-10 Tom Gulliottia of North Carolina State.
Other players predicted to be selected early include Tracy Murray and Don MacLean of UCLA, Walt Williams of Maryland, Harold Minor of Southern Cal, Doug Christie of Pepperdine, Bryant Stith of Virginia, Todd Day of Arkansas and LaPhonso Ellis of Notre Dame.
One player whose stock may have fallen is Anthony Peeler of Missouri, a 6-4 guard who was arrested Sunday night on a charge of assaulting a woman companion. Although the charges were dropped yesterday, the arrest was the second in a month for Peeler, who pled guilty to a felony weapons charge and two related misdemeanors for an attack on a 20-year-old woman. He was placed on five years' probation for the earlier incident.
Trying to figure out exactly what will happen in the draft is difficult, Blake said, because of the large number of players involved.
"It's intriguing to me," he said. "I've been around for 38 years, and this is the most interesting draft I can remember."
Buckwalter agrees about the depth of the draft.
Blake goes farther than that.
"I think there's a chance for teams in the late teens and early 20s to get a player who can contribute," he said. Blake goes farther than that.
"There are 15 guys in the second round who are going to be very good players," he said.
He said Minnesota could benefit from the deep draft because the Timberwolves, in addition to their No. 3 pick, also have the No.28,34 and 51 selections.
High jumper leap toward a spot on Olympic trackteam
Chris McCann
Special to the Kansar
After grabbing the Big Eight Conference outdoor high jump title. Mary-Beth Labosky, Delran, N.J., senior has set her sights on Barcelona.
Labosky will be among 24 high jumpers vying for the three spots on the U.S. Olympic team today at the Olympic Track and Field Trials in New Orleans. Although Labosky, the conference record holder in the high jump, is not favored to qualify, she says she is confident and upbeat going into the trials.
"I think it's a great opportunity," she said. After the Big Eight Championships, competing in the Olympic trials is a little icing on the cake, she said.
Track coach Gary Schwartz said that Labosky was jumping high enough to make anything possible today. Both agree that qualifying will take a leap of at least 6 feet, 3 inches. Her personal
best in competition is 61/12, but Schwartz said that Labosky had yet to jump as high in competition as she had in practice.
1980
M. Labosky
S c h w r t z credi ts much of Labosky's suc cholological strength
"That is why she is co-captain of the team," he said. "She's really positive and has a super personality."
"This year has been really satisfying," she said. "It has been a lot bigger and bigger steps for me. I am more confident now."
Labosky came to Kansas after spending a year at St. John's University in New York. Her older brother, Vince, was an All-American in the javelin at Kansas.
The top 12 finishers today will advance to the finals on Saturday.
"It's tough to make that team," Schwartz said. "She has already obtained atop spot in highjumping for women. She should feel confident."
TRACKNOTES
During this year MaryBeth Labosky has emerged as a standout.
Four former Jayhawks competed at the trials last weekend.
n Vince Labosky's throw of 214-7 was short of the 224-5 needed to qualify on Friday.
n Three former Kansas vault poilers — Scott Huffman, Pat Manson and Jeff Buckingham — also failed to make the Olympic team.
KU campus to draw top players in world-class tennis tournament
By Kristi Klepper
Tournament play will feature men's singles and doubles tennis. Players from many countries, includingIsrael, Australia, South Africa and France, will compete in the tournament.
Kansan staff writer
This is the sixth year that Lawrence has hosted the United States Tennis Association circuit tournament, which runs June 26 through July 5.
Kansas coach Scott Perelman is also the tournament director and promoter. He said that the event benefited the community and the team.
Tennis players from all over the world will come together at the University of Kansas on Friday for the Mainline Tennis Tournament.
The first four days of the tournament are the qualifying rounds. The main draw, 64 singles and 32 doubles pairs, and semifinals and finals are July 4, and finals are July 5.
"It exposes Lawrence to an enormous amount of players," he said. "Ultimately, it helps the University of Kansas with recruiting."
The top 40 tournament seeds will be based on world rankings. About 350 players are expected to compete for 16 open singles spots during the qualifiers. Perelman will fill the remaining
Perelman said most of the Kansas tennis team would compete in the tournament. Junior Rhain Buth and former Kansas players Rafael Rangel and Paul Garvin will play singles in the main draw. The main draw doubles pairs will be senior Brad Bermthal with junior Brian Harris and junior Ian
The USTA circuit features 20 tournaments, each offering $12,500 in prize money. Lawrence is the first leg of the Midwest Segment IV satellite tournament. Perelman said many players who competed in the Mainline Tournament would go on to play in the three circuit tournaments in Springfield, Mo., St. Joseph, Mo., and Tula, Okla.
wild-cardspots.
Goodman, Harris, senior Kevin Herke and sophomores Todd Montgomery, Jeremy Sutter and Nick Syngel will play in the singles qualifying rounds.
USTA Tour Director Jim Zimmerman will be in Lawrence to set up brackets, work with players and enforce rules during tournament matches. He said the USTA Circuit was a chance for college and amateur players to break into professional tennis.
These are players who in a couple years you could see on TV at Wimble.
don," Zimmerman said.
By playing the circuit, players earn points that allow them to improve their world rankings. Professionalians play a game called Adagis started out on the circuit.
Mainline Printing of Topeka is the tournament's leading sponsor. John Parker, Mainline president, said the non-profit event offered a level of tennis Lawrence residents usually did not have a chance to see.
Until the semifinals, the event is free.
Tickets for the last two days of the tournament will be $6 each day or $10 for a two-day pass.
"There's personal satisfaction to see such high-quality players," Parker said. "It's good tennis."
TENNIS NOTES
In Lawrence Open action this weekend, Garvin won the men's singles division. Garvin and Kansas teammate Goodman also captured the men's doubles title.
Former Kansas player Eveline Hamers won the women's singles title as well as the women's doubles division with teammate Casey Cooley. Hamers and Coach Michael Center captured the mixed doubles title.
HOW TO EAT
GET HIS BEER
I could be like Mike!
Jeremy Shoenig, Leawood junior, dunks on a non-regulation goal. Shoenig was at a Lawrence elementary school Monday practicing with the hopes of making the junior varsity basketball team next fail.
10
Wednesday, June 24,1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BIG DADDY'S
Just when you thought it was great...
34oz. Mugs of Beer=$2.00 Every Day of The Week!!
...It gets even better!
$1.00 OFF
ANY SANDWICH
GOOD TIL SUNDAY JUNE 28, 1992
Every Monday Special
Three dozen BUFFALO WINGS & a
pitcher of BEER for only..
$10.00
925 Iowa · Hillcrest Plaza Kitchen hours: 11am-1am
749-4748
Budget cuts slow departments' fiscal year-end spending spree
By Chris Moeser
It was known as the great spend off, and it happened every year about this time.
Kansan staff writer
Departments throughout the University of Kansas used the remainder of budgeted money in a frenzy of late January, when everything from pens to computers.
But thanks largely to budget cuts over the last several years, the spend-off is no more.
"We haven't had a real busy year end for four or five years," said Kathy Jansen, manager of the KU office supply store in Strong Hall, a popular place to spend surplus dollars. "We haven't had horrendous year-end spending for several years.
"I think it's a combination of budget cuts and the fact that people are getting smarter about spreading out their money over the year."
Robin Holladay, office assistant for communication studies, said all of the secretaries she had talked to did not have a lot of money left in their departments. She said $3,000-$4,000 was considered a lot of money.
"We're lucky if we have $600 left," she said.
Departments have been hurt by two consecutive years of budget cuts. The state's general fund was reduced 1.5 percent in March, and KU's allocation was cut as a result.
Becky Dunavin, secretary for the English department, said she was critical of the state policy of taking back unused money because it penalized departments for saving money.
"I think it's ridiculous," she said. "I think departments should be able to
carry the money over into the next fiscal year and spend it then."
DOMINOS PIZZA NOBODY KNOWS LIKE DOMINO'S.
Gene Puckett, director of the purchasing office, said the policy basically worked.
"The philosophy is the state gives state agencies a budget to operate for one year," Puckett said. "It's a good philosophy if the allocation for each of those years is sufficient."
Puckett added that the recent budget cuts had not eliminated the end-of-year buying altogether.
Pam Williams, secretary in the purchasing office, said she usually processed about 150 purchasing requests a month. Richard McKinney, budget director, said that late fiscal-year spending did not mean there was a surplus of money at KU.
TRYOURNEW LARGER LARGE PIZZA AND NEWPAN PIZZA
Sun-Thurs 841-8002
4pm-1am
Fri-Sat 832IOWA
4pm-2am
We accept MasterCard VISA and checks.
Get a 15" large pizza with one topping for just
$5.99
Pan Pizza Meal Deal
Get a 12" medium Pan Pizza with 2 toppings and 2 servings of Coca-Cola classic or diet Coke
$7.99
NOBODY KNOWS LIKE DOMINO'S How You Pizza At Home
molly mcgees
grill & bar
A KU TRADITION
Late Night Specials
Sunday: 15¢ Buffalo Wings Monday: 1/2 price Milano Sticks
Tuesday: 1/2 price Cheese
McGees Wednesday: 1/2 price Potato
Dugouts
Whether you come in for the beer battered onion rings, the McGee Classic, or one of our Daily Specials, there's always something for you at Molly McGees.
Open 11 am 'til 2 am
7 DAYS A WEEK
2429 Iowa 841-9922
Hawaiian Get Away at Johnny's Tavern Friday June 26th!!
A Hawaiian Luau 4-9P.M.
FOOD&DRINKS
Exotic Drink Specials $1.25 Domestic Beers Pork & Pineapple
GAMES& PRIZES Hula-Hoop Prize for Craziest Hawaiian Shirt!
401 N.2nd
JOHNNY'S
LAWRENCE
UP & UNDER
Lewrance, KS.
842-0377
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts - 749-3320
Thursday, June 25 funk and dance with MULATTO
Friday & Saturday, June 26 & 27 Lady Soul
Ida Mc Beth and Friends
Daily Drink Specials!!!
Mondays & Wednesdays
$2.50 Pitchers & 50c Draws
*12 oz. draws and 55 oz. pitchers*
Don't be fooled!
♩ ♩ ♩ ♩
Open 7 days a week--4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.
FREE PARKING!
Nice Place--Great Candlelight!
Fabulous Tunes, No Plastic cups or Aluminum Cans...
Fun Staff & Best Vibes!
FREE AIR-CONDITIONING
Classified Directory
100's
**Announcements**
110 Business Announcement
120 Entertainment Announcement
120 Entertainment Announcement
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300's
P
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
100s Announcements
th of July!
110 Bus. Personals
400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
4th of July!
Uncle Sam and Lady
Satin costumes for rent
Uncle Sam and Lady Sam costumes
-
The Etc Shop 928 Mass. 843-0611
wmidD PROCESSING turns frog into IANA
wmidD PROCESSING turns frog into IANA
Personal computer tutoring available 842 7538
Personal computer tutoring available 842 7538
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. 843-0611
The cooperative way of doing business is an active expression of peace and justice. Join us in the fight against environmental health. Stop by the Community Center to help you become a member. We need your support.
The Sidewalk Sale is coming! July 16. Watch
the video. Staff cut off. Only the
Ec店. Shop 292 Mann 845-701.
Visiting Artists beading Workshops. International Bead Tracer 1017/1 Mass.
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
$29.98 Road $34.98 ATB
Lubrication, true wheels,
check all cables, adjust
brakes and derailleurs,
headset, bottom head.
headset, bottom bracket both hubs and wipe down
Tune up plus cleaning of
Super Tune up: $44.98
Tune up plus cleaning of drive train and bike,plus a build of two of the
drive train and bike, plus a rebuild of two of the
following: bottom bracket, headset, front hub,rear hub
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, June 24, 1992
11
Summer Savers
Sebastiani 1.5 $8.95
Varietals 1.5 $6.99
Molson Gold 12 $6.49
Bud,BudLt&Dry 12 $6.49
Busch&Busch Lt. 24 $9.49
Natural Lt. 24 $8.47
WEBB'S
800 West 23rd Street
841-2277
Store Hours:
Mon-Sat 9am-11pm
Bicycle Maintenance and Basic Roadside Repair Clinics
SUNFLOWER BIKE
SHOP
Sign up now for our clinic and learn how to keep your bike running smoothly. Clinics offered every Saturday morning from 10AM to Noon. Cost $7.50
804 Massachusetts
843-5000
Suitcase with a tag
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Lowest possible rates to Europe.
- World wide travel information.
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
See us TODAY!
On campus location in the Burge Union and 831 Mass.
120 Announcements
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Douglas County Rape Vietnam Support Service will begin accepting applications for volunteers advocate June 22. Applications available at st. Anilies.com or www.st.anilies.com SA. Applications due: July 6.5 m. EOE/AT
SCHOLARSHIP MONEY
1-800-238-0690
INFORMATION FOR STUDENTS WHO NEED
Suicide intervention if you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone you uscall 814-235 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
Want carpool from West Topeka to camp and return weekday morning. Call 478-4258 if in need.
130 Entertainment
MILHOUS NIXONS
FRIDAY
JUNE 26
AT
BENCHWARMERS
2 FOR 1
WELL DRINKS
BENCHWARMERS
Good food? You bet your YewGress79. 907
Mass. TouchdownLawrence. 749.3355
is not coming, but drummer Dave Grohl's
offside scream: *Pete and Frank*
Sahlle are coming; *Scott*, *Bob*
The show is Mon, June 29 at the Outhouse (4)
Mon, July 11 at McGuffey, Molly McGuffey
and Gernox盒. All ages $5.
ROLLINS BAND
HOLLINS INSTITUTE
Thursday, July 14th (Mid-64) Masses
Tool and SkoolJaw open. Tickets are on sale
at liberty Hall. Love Garden and Street-
side Records. All ages. no alcohol. 9pm.
140 Lost & Found
Keys found at Clinton Lake by the observation
2 sets of car keys and house key. Call
749-0535
Lost Dog! Black un-neatered male, answers to the name Duke. Looks like a black golden retriever. VRF friendly. Last seen 62/12 am 11:47 PM. Wearing a blue collar. Call anytime 842-630-9898
男 女
200s
205 Help Wanted
Ballard Center is now hiring a teacher for the 2½/- year old class. Apply at *708 E.M. E.O. E.* Clerk. We must be 21. Part time. Musk work well with students. Mon- Thurs. 9-2 Commerce Plaza 3523 Iowa
The Emily, Tayla Women's Resource Center has a half-time Taylor assistant position available. The specific responsibilities for the graduate assistant will be determined in consultation with the faculty may include, but are not limited to, the following: Assist Director in determining the current programs and creating programs to meet those needs; Assist in facilitating small groups on campus for training and development in the coordination of educational programs, counseling, clinical intervention, and referral services; Assist in coordinating research required, and enrollment as a graduate student at the University of Kansas, Fall 1992; Assist in preparing curriculum for grant
Career Opportunities
Graduates, displaced, &/or career shifters. SEARCH FIRM seeks resumes for ALL career fields, minorities & women are special need. July 15 deadline.
c/o SEARCH DIRECTOR
P.O.BOX 15945 SUITE 278
Lenexa. ks6, 66285
Live out house manager for sorority at K U. Meal & Menu Management, oversees daily operations of facility Flexible hours Hours. Salary $20,000 per week. Corporation. P.O. Box 3728, Lawrence, Ks 66044
MODEL & ACTORS needed Professional ETV-7
and 8-inch LCD TVs. Requires A/V cable.
Also, Extras for TV/film (tv) 717-759 day 144
Rush Cushirs, KU Bookstores, part-time, 14$ per hour, Begin August 11, 1992 and work approximately 2.3 weeks. Work schedules varied. But if enrolled in KU for Fall, you must have a job with the library or work after classes begin. Must be able to stand for long periods, have previous verifiable cash handling experience as a cashier or cash register operator. Apply Kansai Union's website at www.kansaiunion.com/hw EOP.
Want to be a Star, or just like you one?? Now hiring zany, yet dependable for all-in-fun singing telegrams. Great Money 749-3455. It's Your Fun. Feminism or Cyniah
The bank of Kansas is seeking an individual to work Mon-Fri 2 p.m.-10 p.m. Must have experience working with X and know key tenet by using the same language operation a plus and previous banking experi-ence as necessary. Send resume to Bank of Kansas/Lawrence P.O. Box 789 Lawrence Ks 65034 EOE. FO
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided: 841-7749
ACADEMIC AID POSITION AVAILABLE
Duties include. Read textbooks & other
materials for students who are blind or have
disabilities. Reading lab materials & assis-
tancing students. Applications available at the Student Assistance
Center, 133强 Hall, 604-404 16年12月 1922
D & D Tutoring and Counseling Services. Ex-
perienced and certified 855-1534 Answering
Messges.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(913) 401-6878
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD C STRK
116 East 13th Attorney 842-1133
DONALD G. STROLE
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. B41-5716
RICK FRYDMAN
Attorney at Law
Free Consultation -
Writing or reading blue? *RU* English teachers Anne and Dave can help. 842-3563 afternoon.
and most other legal matters
- FREE Initial Consultation
Criminal Defense •Fake ID's
Keyboard lessons Professional keyboardist has played with Eric Chae, Joon Walsh, Eagles and Eggers.
DUI/TRAFFIC
DWI/Traffic
823 Missouri 843-4023
Attorney
Elizabeth Leach
Former Prosecutor
Former Prosecutor 1031 Vermont 749-008
235 Typing Services
Accurate typing by experienced secretary, IBM Correcting 567, 568-double space page number format.
1 day service word processing. $1.00
stained. Call 843-4974 or 843-6438.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2065, days or
Word processing, applications, term papers,
discertations, E-printing, company
investigations (e.g. Master's data).
*
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Crier's Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread, & Town Crier Bookstores.
182/16 Computer #45ale. 65MB HD. 5" / 36KR.
12M LFP Drives. Hercules Amber Monitor.
Dos 3, all original manuals. Ready to plug in
$700.00 best offer. Leave Message. B4-4355.
pierce, jewelry, stores and musical instruments; equipment. Disc.Jaynk Pawn & Jewelry. jpw W 62.
79 Cadilac Cp. Deville 109kM, new brakes &
& transmission. Must sell 8000/ofer 845-3895
Altima One 286 Modern Case. $600.00 ORO.
Mk64 844-2049 or Mk64 844-7560
ATARI 250 ST computer. 2 M/B RAM RGB Computer. Software for MDI, DTP, & games. Includes Epson-compatible printer. Take all for $500 offer. B43-3865.
Defuse your against assault! For a three-one super emission emitter gas sprayer, send $19.90 to: LawnTech Products, P.O. Box 442778, 919-806-6604. Must be owned by a licensed dealer.
We buy boy scout patches, badges and uni-
fries. We look at WOW Looking for some
688 Massachusetts
Buy Sell and Trade Combat Boots, camouflage
buying camping gear. Looking for something
Furniture on Consignment. King & Queen Waterbeds at a fraction of original prices. Dresses, chest, nightstands, coffee tables, endables. Only at Bob's Bedroom 2429 Iowa 6847.
Moving Sale: Bike computer, helmet, Aerobag, backpack, water bottle, makeup kit, makeover kit Call 843-7527
EVERYTHING BUT ICE-Reds, chest of drawers, deskbooks 909 Massachusetts
Selling Bike Trek 830 Ml. Bike Almost new,
extras $450 or Best Offer
340 Auto Sales
Trek Antelope Min hike 20' frame Never taken on campus, thus excellent shape; rode only once
1981 Station Wagon PLYMOUTH RELIANT K
small wagon for £50.00 $83.66 004
299.00 127.00
*9 MGB CONVERTIBLE Excellent running condition. Needs new top and some body work
91 GEO Storm, 5-speed, AC, AM-FM Fass, Air
conditioner. must condition. Best offer 913-854-6200
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841 2345. Headquarters
Looking for a garage for a space, or space in a garage to 7th and Mass. For parking motorcycle
VIRGINIA
THE CHAPMAN
Iused & Curious Good.
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. - Sat.
Buy * Sell * Trade
405 For Rent
1 Bdmr Apt. farm, pool sublease avail. Mid May
1 $38m 823-0630
400s Real Estate
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all claims advertised in this newspaper are onable on an equal opportunity basis.
合
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, disability, age, sexual orientation, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
1900 Nissanm 3 or 4 RR 2 bath large rooms total kitchen (inc. Microwave) cable & phone in all Bedrooms. Cable paid free storage on site coin-op laundry. No pets 841-1538 or 1-626-7997.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
is where the
Spacious 2 & 3 bedrooms available for the mature
student. Now leasing for the
available for the mature student. Now leasing for fall
Includes covered parking,
swimming pool, inexpensive utilities.
2040 Heatherwood · 843-4754
541 MICHIGAN
Now leasing for fall
Newer Construction
West Hills APARTMENTS
Apt. in restored older home for rent. Near
carmel Kitchen, kitchen/dryer/A/C available
for rent.
Hillsville Apts $50 lease-signing bonus 1 & 2 bedroom apartments $362 & 86 plus deposit. On bus route. On-site laundry. 843-548 or 749 phone.
3 BR, 2 bath, $600/$625. On KU bus route. Deposit & Refs: #831/810.
- Washer/Dryer
- Total Kitchen
- Spacious one and two
NOW LEASING FOR AUGUST!
bedroom apartments
bedroom apartments
- Furnished and Unfurnished
- GreatLocation Near Campus
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
EDDINGHAM PLACE
-
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
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
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Available August 1, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Parking required. Referees required. No dogs. Day trips available.
Available August 1. Nice Extra-large 2 bedroom apartment close to the student union. Hardwood Floors. Suitable for 2 or 4 people Off street parking Free WiFi No pets Roommates $94,990 740-840-3655
Excellent location. 1014 Tennessee 2 bdmr 1pm.
No pets. No animals available August:
Caini84-172 $44
Caini84-173 $44
For Summer sublease to graduate or upper-
class student. One bedroom furnished apartme
nment吧 from Union. No pets. Refs $250
* call Besh 823-1410.
South Pointe APARTMENTS
1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms
You'll Be Surprised!
*Large, spacious floorplans
perfect for roommates
*New kitchens
- Carpet colors:
Mauve, Beige, and Gray
• 2 Full baths available in 2,3, & 4 bedrooms
• Large bedrooms & closets
• Pool & volleyball
We're open 10-5 M-F
12-5 Sat
Furnished rooms with more utilities paid. One from KU Off Street Park No. Pets 481.
Furnished one and two bedroom apartments.
One on block from KU. Off Street Parking. No parking.
2166 W. 26th. 843-6446
OPEN DAILY
MASTERCRAFT
9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
offers completely furnished
1,2 & 3 hymn s
designed with you in mind!
Campus Place-841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place-841-1212 14th Mass
Kentucky Place-749-0445
Orchard Corners-749-4226
sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
tanglewood-749-24
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Boardwalk
apartments
Open House Everyday!!
On Trailridge Bus Route
Fall Rentals Available Now. 1&2 Bedrooms
524 Frontier 842-4444
Grad Student. One bedroom duplex. Fenced
vard. garage. Kitchen. pet ok. $250/Unit.
Lakefront. 3-bedroom.
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
Summer Sublease 1 and 2 bedroom apartments
3 bedrooms. Unique. No pets. Day 748-
29th evening 842-900.
---
Leasing for summer and fall-furnished 1, 2 and 4 bedroom apartments with campus off-campus.
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer Leases Still Available! Hurry in Today to Reserve Your Space for Fall!
Volleyball Court
- Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Indoor Pool
- Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
REDUCED DEPOSIT
842-5111
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-+p.m Sun. 12-+p.m
1301 W.24th
Professionally Managed With the Student In Mind!
FREE RENTAL
ASSISTANCE
KVM
Apartments
841-6080
Summer sublease female non-smoker $200
money needed. Clean and spacious call
(811) 345-7900 or M41 345-7900
*WLEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL*
Broadland Square Apartments 213 Colorado
Bridgewater Square Apartments 214 Stadium View Apartments 104 Mississippi
"Summer lease signs" Mon-Fri. 2 p.m.-5
*PARKS*
Go Ahead and Do It!
Go past the barricade at 9th and low (it looks like you can'tbut you can).
Village Square Apartments is at the bottom of 9th on the left.
The road to a quiet, relaxed atmosphere isn't closed. Check out Village Square Apartments today.
Come by or give us a call: 842-3040 850 Avalon #4 Lawrence, KS.
Featuring Affordable 2 Bedroom Apartments.
apartments
Close To Campus And On KU Bus Route.
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
NOW LEASING Newly remodeled 2 story
building on 6th street. No pet 148
M01 M P 2-5 B
430 Roommate Wanted
2 rooms in big house attendant Male or female
2 rooms in big house attendant Male or female
Female non-smoker to take a 2 bdrm. $260
mo & util Call Kimber after 5:00 p.m. 841-6240
1 Bedroom Available for next semester in
2 Bedroom Suite
Fireplace/patio, and tennis $240/month plus
$75/week.
Free Wi-Fi.
2 bdrm house, summer and/or fall $25 mo.,
usually good neighborhood bus route. Call
618-903-4040.
mo &盟叫 Call Kimmer after 5:00 p.m. 841-6240
Fun and very curious looking student for male
work in the school. We will be a full work load next semester. If you're cool and not psycho, call Chris 942-0588 Leigh
2 Studios Female Roommates need for Fall
10 hours - unlv. 1-309-6740 (Alabaster)
+ unlv. 1-309-6740 (Alabaster)
- Policy
Female needed to supply 2 bedroom apt. start-up
and/or housing for a 94-month unit.
Call 814-9146. Ask for Stace
One roommate wanted immediately. Rent negotiable. Plus/+/utilities. Jane 865-3596.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate needs to share 4 bedroom apt. with 3 fun girls, steps away form campus, for fall/spring sem Security Deposit, atc paid room fee. Call Michelle 845-943-0181 9834. or 1-831 9834.
Rainbow House, which is a cooperative living consisting of 7-9 women and men, has two available opening starts in June. The house will be open for business. Please call 841-3704 for more information
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
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Centred lines count as 7 words.
Blank lines count as 7 words
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Bldg ads have a credit aid B4 00 service charge.
Pearlsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements
Founds are贴出 for three days, more than 15 words
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Classifications
105 personal
announcements 140 hair & found
announcements 125 personal
announcements 232 professional services 360 intermission events
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
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University Daily Kansas
191 Staffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
12
Wednesday, June 24, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
West Const Saloon Daily Lunch Specials $3.50 Sandwich, Side Dish & Beer or Soda 2222 Iowa 841-BREW
Dorothy and Toto shop SUNFLOWER for their "Ultimate" needs.
I
165 and 175 gram Ultimate Frisbees Golf Disks Toto Frisbees
SUNFLOWER, 804 Mass, 843-5000
Enjoy the air; help keep it clean.
WE'RE OPEN! ALL SUMMER LONG
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
Pizza Torta Pasta Salad
842-3232
Carry out or delivery
Monday Mania Terrific Twosday!
Buy ONE PIZZA!
Get the 2ND ONE FREE!!!!
PYRAMID
good Mondays only
ALL SUMMER LONG!
PYRAMID
Buy ONE LARGE PIZZA with 2 toppings for only $7.99 and get 1 Liter of pop FREE!!!!
As Easy as 1,2,3
Buy a large,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $3
Buy a medium,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $2
Buy a small,
get a 2nd of equal
value for $1
THRIFTY THURSDAY!
SPECIAL
Only $3.49*tax
(cafry out only)
for small pizza (add
tops only 75¢)
order 2 or more for
free delivery
PIRAMID
good Thurs. only
PYRAMID
Summer
Clearance
SEMI-ANNUAL
EST. MCGILXI
MG
MASTER GUY
Up To 40% Off
Store Wide Savings On Men's and Women's Clothing
POLO RALPH LAUREN
POLO RALPH LAUREN
MISTER GUY
MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
MISTER GUY
MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 Massachusetts
842-2700
Sports
BECAUSE ONE-THIRD OF THE PLANET IS COVERED WITH DIRT.
The Specialized Rockhopper Comp Mountain Bike Getting Dirty Has Never Been This Much Fun.
SUNFLOWER
4
804 Mass. • Downtown Lawrence • 843-5000
SPECIAUZED.
REVOLVING AROUND HAIR XANADU DESIGNS YOUR NEEDS
LET XANADU HAIR DESIGNS TAKE CARE OF YOU.
842-6555
2429 IOWA
HAIR
shampoo
Cut
&
Style
$12
IANNING
10
Tans
$20
EXP. JULY 14,1992
Like It or Return It
P.
30 Day Trial on Any IBM $ PS/2$
Buy any IBM PS/2 Computer. Try it for up to 30 days. You'll like it. But if you decide you don't, return it for a FULL REFUND!
Save Up To 50%
IBM PS/2 Notebook
The new PS/2 N51 SX computer is powerful, compact and easy-tocarry. And it comes with the quality you expect from IBM already installed!
- 386 SX/16 Processor
- VGA Compatible Display
computer is easy-to-
with the IBM-
- VGA Compatible Display
* 40Mb Drive 2Mb RAM
- 40Mb Hard Drive, 2Mb RAM
- Lightweight 6.2 lbs
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER
Free parking in rear of store • Open M-F: 10am-6pm, Sat: 10-5
813 MASS • DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE • 843-7584
BM and PS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation.
Anchor The Best Summer Savings At The Yacht Club!
Drink Specials
Anchoring
Mon $3.25 Pitchers
Tues $1.75 Imports
Wed 1/2 Price Margaritas
Thurs $1.75 Wells/75¢ Draws
Fri $1.25 Busch/Busch Lite
Keystone Lite
Sat $1.00 Yacht Shots
Sat $1.00 Yacht Shots Sun 50¢ Draws
THE YACHT CLUB
Firanga 18
Mon-Sat 11:30a.m. - 2:00a.m.
Sun 12:00p.m. - 2:00a.m.
530 Wisconsin
842-9445
Lunch Specials
Monday
Taco Dinner $1.50
Tuesday
Turkey $3.50
Wednesday
Chicken Sandwich $3.85
Thursday
Admiral Salad $3.50
Friday
Nacho Supreme $4.95
Saturday
Turkey Club $3.75
Sunday
Cheeseburger/ $2.50
Curly Fries & Drink
THE YACHT CLUB
fisheries 1988
Monday
Yacht Club $4.00
Tuesday
Chicken Fingers/ $3.25
Buffalo Wings
Dinner Specials
HARAOCKE
EVERY VUEBOAY
8:1 AM
Wednesday $3.85
Chicken Sandwich
Thursday $6.95
KC Strip & Fries
Friday
Nacho Supreme $4.95
Taco Bar 4:30-6:30p.m
(or as long as it lasts)
Saturday
Fajitas $6.50
Sunday
Cheeseburger/ $2.50
Curly Fries & Drink